I think I am confused by Creme's logic.
By RPI, Louisville has 1 more quadrant 1 win, but by RPI, Stanford is ranked 4th and Louisville is *7th*. So if we care about RPI for quadrant calculations, why don't we care about RPI overall? Louisville's second best win per Q1 analysis is Central Michigan (RPI 18). Does anyone think they're the 18th best team in the country? If not, why do we care about that win? (Massey ranks Stanford 5 and Louisville 8.)
"Cards better in SOS"? Per WarrenNolan RPI, Louisville is 26th, Stanford is 27th. Okaaaay. (Massey has Stanford at 10th and Louisville at 18th.)
And yes, Louisville beat Oregon, which beat Stanford. But Stanford beat OSU, which beat Lousiville, as Creme admits.
Might as well just come out and say it: it's more convenient for everyone involved if the PAC-12 only gets one #1 seed, and *someone* from the ACC should get one...
It's all academic right now, and Stanford still needs to take care of business vs. UCLA and U$C first, but I kind of don't think there's a world where the PAC-12 can get two #1 seeds no matter who else loses unless they're really really bad losses. And I am confident that if Stanford loses to UCLA, they will drop by much more than Louisville non-dropped losing to a (worse) FSU team.