Um, wash/rinse/repeat...this discussion has been a regular thread every year. Texas has played a very good schedule thus far this year (shocking to be honest) and the do seem to have a more organized offense and while their schedule of conference games is significantly harder, I am not sure I am worried. If we get to play them in the final four, great, the game will decide but I am still significantly more bullish on our scoring depth and our offensive execution than anything Vic can put on the court. I guess we can always ask our long time member
@cferraro04 to give us a hypothetical match up on the current stats to prove my point of the players. We are significantly deeper than Texas, though to be fair they are pretty deep with more offense coming off the bench with better shooters as well.
You bring up an interesting thought though, I have started to use the efficiency/game score calculations for the team comparison. The top 5 teams are interesting. From a Massey perspective, here are their Rankings and efficiency scores. I will add my comments below the stats
1. UConn 85.4 and 123.6 (3rd) vs. #2 OOC ranked schedule
2. Texas 81.68 and 120.3 (5th) vs. #6 OOC
3. SC 85.94 and 125.3 (2nd) vs. #5 OOC
4. LSU 79.42 and 144.5 (1st) vs. #66 OOC
5. UCLA 78.49 and 120.3 (4th) vs. #3 OOC
So according to Massey and my efficiency scoring, SC is neck and neck with UConn, not Texas but it is close.
LSU, while having a "gaudy" 144.5 efficiency rating, has built that vs. a pathetic #66 OOC with only the Duke (#23) win against a team in the top 123 (Georgia Southern #123). This number will tumble. Most troubling for LSU is the rather high number of Turnovers (15.5 per game) which is the worst especially considering how poor the opponents are/were.
Texas does play SC twice this conference season (before the SECT) so that will be interesting.