Plebe, while "Getting floor-mopped by a top team does not earn a higher seed" is snarkily correct, it apparently doesn't hurt either. Case in point is South Carolina who got "floor-mopped" not once, but twice by top teams, yet will still be a #1 seed, possibly #1 overall.
Lots of problematic takes here.
Actually, it did seem to hurt them, because they were #2 in the first reveal and then, after losing to us, were down to #5 in the 2nd reveal.
Whether their losses hurt them enough to lower their seeding
relative to other teams in the final bracket is a separate question as it requires
comparing their resume, with all its high and low points, to those of other teams. I notice you fail to mention how well they've performed since losing to us. I don't know why folks always want to reduce the entire resume to just one thing and disregard everything else.
Regarding Creighton holding serve and not losing to anyone worse than a NCAA tournament-bound team, that can't be said of some teams that have been given a seeding above the Blue Jays, can it? For instance, #7 seeded Oklahoma State, who lost to last place (5-25) Houston and 11th place Kansas during Big 12 play, after playing a non-conference schedule at the beginning of the year that would make Kim Mulkey blush with pride.
Yes, Oklahoma St has two bad losses and one horrible loss, but you conspicuously fail to mention their quality wins over TCU, Kansas St, Baylor, W. Virginia and Utah. That's FIVE wins that are far better than anything on Creighton's resume. Again we see the imperative of not cherry picking only the worst or the best result. Gotta broaden the lens, hold multiple thoughts in the head at once, and factor in the good with the bad.
Here's the eyeball test issue that is conveniently ignored by the bracketologists, and frustrating to fans of beautiful, team basketball: Creighton has been "judged" by 31/32 AP voters and 31 WBB coaches over the last six weeks as being somewhere between the 21st and 26th best team in WCBB. That should correspond to a 6 or 7 seed. In fact, the latest AP Poll showed Creighton appearing on 27 of the 32 ballots from voters all across the country, with five voters ranking them between #14 and #19.
So, while you might be playing Devil's Advocate to posters who wonder why the Blue Jays - with an experienced team that went to the NCAA's last year as a #7 seed (despite losing to every ranked team they played and not making it to the BET finals) and wound up losing a very close 2nd round game to UCLA at Pauly Pavilion - are currently looking at a #8 seed with bracketologists, I would say their consternation is well founded.
No, there is no “should correspond” between polls and seeds. This a classic case of why the polls aren't used and shouldn't be used to determine seeding. The polls are notorious for overrewarding teams for simply avoiding losses. It is one of their well-known flaws.
Last year's tournament seeding and results are irrelevant. What is relevant is the fact that Creighton got destroyed by UCLA in THIS season on a neutral court. And also got completely destroyed by Kansas State, a projected 5 seed. And their best win is over a bubble team. It's nice that they don't have any bad losses to non-tournament teams and that's the main reason they're as high as an 8.