Yes, but if you look at a listing of years a team made the EE it includes the years they advanced past it.
So Kansas has not been to 7 EE in the time span? Ok gotcha, thanks for clarifying Alex.That works, but it isn't the case here.
No other sport crowns their champion based on a 68 team single elimination tournament either. I do think FF's and EE's matter because of the unique structure of the postseason.I still think getting credit for is highly overrated. No other sport I can think of gives so much credit to teams/coaches for losing last. No cares about the semi-finals loses at Wimbledon, the NBA Finals, the NBA, MLB, etc. It deserves mention because it is an accomplishment, but we need to pump the brakes a bit.
Wow did not realize this. Still, they should win a lot more games with the talent they get year after year. I still hold my opinion that we should definitely be ranked higher than them since 2000. Kansas: 4 FF, 1 NC. UConn: 4 FF, 3 NC. The national championships speak for themselves.
Playing in the toughest conference in the history of the sport puts that lack of consistency into context. Duke and Kansas would not have the same records and conference titles had they been in the Old BE, and we did all our damage during the conferences peak.We've had this general discussion in different terms in many threads in the last year or so. The general consensus from these types of articles and from unbiased Yarders is that UConn's championships definitely weight heavily in this but they get knocked down some for the lack of consistency. Kansas and Duke have been more consistent and have overall had more dominating regular seasons. UConn hasn't won as many regular season championships in their conferences. That's illustrated in UConn's winning percentage since 2000 being 15th. While championships are definitely great and the ultimate goal I don't think you can totally dismiss the other 30-35 games during the season.
If you start this a year earlier, 1999, then UConn is #2
The UConn - Kansas comparison is an interesting one. The list puts a lot of weight into winning percentage. Kansas (2nd with .820 gets +14, UConn 15th with .716 gets only +1). But I don't think there's any doubt that had KU played most of the last 15 years in the Big East like we had, they wouldn't be sitting at .820. The Big 12 has helped them go on an incredible streak of conference titles and great records with sporadic challenges from conference mates (Texas, OU, Ok State, K State, Mizzou and Iowa State all having good years at some point), but I can't help but think that KU runs through weak conferences and doesn't get prepared enough facing the toughest teams. This might account for them reaching 7 Elite Eights and 4 Final 4's but not having national championship success. The flip side would be UConn. Kemba's year we went 9-9 in conference and finished 8th. But obviously we were battle tested and it showed in the tournament. In the end the rankings don't matter much. Even if Kansas is ranked higher, the titles more than make up for not having the consistent winning of Kansas.
To that point, we should be running the AAC and raising our regular season % up, getting more conference championships and more tournament appearances than in past years going forward. At least while we are in the AAC.
Name a level other than the titles (which obviously is the most important and should be weighted the heaviest), because you cannot.I'd also add that our 4 year cycle wasn't even interrupted by a NCAA suspension. You might even say it rallied us.
Also...Kansas is total B.S. on almost all levels.
Did you look at the article and see it was a simple point system? 1+1=2, that is all that it is.Surprised so many people are trying to justify UConn being #4. Using overall winning percentage is flawed because there is no commonality in the scheduling structure. Look at these numbers and tell me Kentucky belongs ahead of UConn:
Tournament appearances: Kentucky 13, UConn 10 (should be 11 if you discount the NCAA mafia parachuting down on Calhoun)
Sweet Sixteen: Kentucky 7, UConn 5
Elite Eight: Kentucky 6, UConn 6
Final Four: Kentucky 4, UConn 4
National Championships: Kentucky 1, UConn 3
Essentially, they're valuing Kentucky's additional three tournament appearances and additional two sweet sixteen's over UConn's additional two championships.
I disagree with what you're saying but if you want to argue semantics, I would tend to say it in the opposite order. For example, since the 98-99 season, UConn has made 7 E8s, 5 FF, and won 4 titles. That makes it easier to discern how successful they are once reaching each level.That works, but it isn't the case here.
From a future recruiting standpoint I think being number four is OK. The main reason we are number four is winning championships. Not too shabby in producing NBA players (long term as well). This should give some recruits a reason to pauseKansas has also won the big12 reg season title 12 years in a row...so i think they're winning plenty, and don't be cliche and say "they're not winning when it counts." They've been to just as many FF's as us in that span, and had more tourney appearances overall. Winning that NC game is a huge step, and we've been lucky to have elite college guards like kemba, bazz, and boat to get us over the hump.
I have no problem with where he put us on the list. If we want to push the debate for a higher spot in our favor we need to be more consistent each year and start winning some regular season trophies as well. No question the NC is a 1000x more important, but it's a crap shoot every year to win the NCAA (who knows who you'll run into, and who's getting hot at the right time, etc). Much more straightforward to win a regular season title or conf tourney since you know what you're going to run into so we need to start doing that as many people on here are starting to harp on
Kansas has also been to 26 straight NCAAs, the longest active streak. It's more than just national championships.
Name a level other than the titles (which obviously is the most important and should be weighted the heaviest), because you cannot.
People banging on what KU has accomplished just do not know what they are talking about.