Thanks for the correction. For some reason I totally forgot about this. I remember reading that it indeed weights away wins higher than home wins.
Regarding your second point. Is it fair to say that 1-15 Binghamton (RPI 345) is the same as playing against 11-5 Hawaii (RPI 206)? ... I doubt it. I totally disagree.
Also I don't think whether a specific player is playing or not should be taken into account. It makes the formula unnecessarily complex and how can you really tell the impact an specific player can have on a game against that specific team. Our best bet is to keep that out of the formula. You either win or you lose, and your chances of getting to the NCAA should be based solely on wins/loses not who plays that game...
I also dont think its necessary to take into account the amount of points a team wins by. This can be very misleading and this doesn't say anything about how good a team is compared to another. If you add that to the formula You will have teams blowing out other teams just for the sake of boosting the ranking
The RPI is the fairest method that the NCAA could qualify teams without falling into pit falls. I would leave it the way it is
Well, this sort of proves my point, since I think one problem is that Hawaii is probably under-rated in the RPI because of its methodology. Hawaii is 55 places higher in Kenpom and 62 places higher in BPI.
For a Top 50-100 team, Binghamton (KenPom 336/BPI 342) isn't comparable to (underrated by RPI) Hawaii isn't the right, but 6-7 Byrant (KenPom 201/BPI 218) or 7-8 BU (KenPom 202/BPI 195) or (sigh) 7-10 South Florida (KenPom 213/BPI 206).
If Bryant played Binghamton, Bryant wins...but to a top team, there's hardly a difference, yet the RPI, in particular, makes distorts reality as if there were...I mean, merely
playing a low level team hurts you deeply.
And, look, you've presented your opinion fairly here, but let's not pretend there isn't something here biasing you. The Big East looks absurdly good by the RPI's measure. Also, according to the RPI, a 13-4 Providence (which lost to Brown [RPI 226/KenPom 244/BPI 264] is the 13th best team in the country (KenPom has them 50, BPI 42).
According to RPI, your team is better than
Louisville (RPI 23/KenPom 9/BPI 11)
Maryland (RPI 17/KenPom 19/BPI 17)
And a host of other schools (UNC, West Virginia, etc.) that I don't want to include the numbers for... including UConn (RPI 63/KenPom 30/BPI 36).
The RPI is a crock.
And as for accounting for who plays in the game...
of course they should factor that in...and the NCAA always has.