nelsonmuntz
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As the efficiency ratings and RPI have become more seasoned with additional games, the results are fairly consistent across NET, Torvik, KenPom and RPI. The Big 10 and Big 12 are essentially tied, followed by a gap then the ACC, followed by a smaller gap, then the Big East, followed by a huge gap then the MWC, WCC, A10 and everyone else, with the mid majors clumped pretty close. The efficiency ratings and RPI do not meaningfully disagree on the vast majority of leagues.
Then there is the SEC. The efficiency ratings, and particularly KenPom, believe this year’s SEC is one of the...
Then there is the SEC. The efficiency ratings, and particularly KenPom, believe this year’s SEC is one of the...
I started a thread three months ago about the interconference records compared to the power ratings, and questioned why the SEC was so highly rated when the actual game results would indicate a much less impressive conference.
KenPom had the SEC at +19.46 going into the tournament, making it the 5th best conference of all time for KenPom, going back to the late 90's.
Well, after the first weekend, the SEC only got 4 of 10 teams into the Sweet 16, but it is worse if you dig in.
Sweet 16 SEC teams:
Alabama - impressive win vs. Texas Tech, but they literally had a major drug dealer on their roster. If there was ever a reason for a team to be forfeited out of the tournament, this would be one. NL yet for next round.
Arkansas - Beat a 13 and 14 seed, and the High Point game was close. +8.5 in the next round.
Texas - Beat BYU and Gonzaga, who were both missing key players. +7.5 in the next round
Tennessee - beat one of the weakest 3 seeds in recent history. +4.5 in the next round.
There is a reasonably high chance that the SEC exits the tournament in the next round.
SEC Teams who didn't make it to the Sweet 16:
Florida - lost to a team 8 slots below it
Vanderbilt - respectable loss
Texas A&M - obliterated by Houston
Kentucky - needed a miracle to beat Santa Clara, and was easily handled by an Iowa State team missing one of its best players
Georgia - demolished by St. Louis in first round
Missouri - first round exit in game that wasn't close
The SEC is 3-6 against the major conferences in the tournament, with two of the wins close and 4 of the losses blowouts.
Does this look like the 5th best conference of all time? There were several homages to KenPom's brilliance as a predictive model. Did KenPom predict that the 5th best conference of all time would fall flat on its freaking face? My theory Is that the SEC was overrated in the efficiency ratings because it ran up the scores against the bad teams on its schedules. I am open to other explanations for how the efficiency ratings systematically overrated SEC teams.