southie
Longhorn Lover
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What I’ve really been considering is the impact that the sheer size of the SEC has on strength of schedule. Right now, Massey has SOS as Texas, South Carolina, UCLA, Tennessee and LSU. Oklahoma, Kentucky and Vanderbilt are in the top 15. I think this is something of a ‘rising tide carries all boats’ phenomena. At the end of the day, it doesn’t matter how tough the schedule is, teams still have to win the games. LSU played a cupcake non conference schedule but has 5 ranked wins (plus Duke, not ranked at the time). LSU get criticism on this board a lot, but they won meaningful games. Tennessee hasn’t. Personally, I think losing 9 of 11 games at the end of the season along with the rest of their body of work should keep them out. It probably won’t, but it should.
You make several good points. But, the use of a subjective word like "meaningful" stood out to me. Is that the exact word in the committee's guidelines? Or, are you using that word to describe Q1 wins? Tennessee is 5-11 in NET Q1 which include wins over Kentucky, Alabama, and Georgia. Those 5 wins are "meaningful".
- Those 5 wins are more than the 4 NET Q1 wins which TCU has and the Frogs are projected to host a sub-regional; TCU's strength of schedule is 154, while Tennessee's is 21
- Those 5 wins are more than the 3 NET Q1 wins which West Viriginia has and the Mountaineers are projected to host a sub-regional.
- Those 5 wins equal the number of NET Q1 wins which Minnesota has and the Gophers are projected to host a sub-regional; Minnesota's strength of schedule is 179, while Tennessee's is 21
- Those 5 wins are more than teams like North Carolina, Texas Tech and Georgia who are all projected to be seeded higher than Tennessee
- Those 5 wins are the same quantity as teams like Michigan State, Ole Miss, and Kentucky who are all projected to be seeded higher than Tennessee and borderline chances to host a sub-regional; all three of them have SOS greater than 118
I think several posters are spinning their personal dislike of Tennessee and ignoring the facts. Tennessee is in and will be no worse than a 9-seed, and most likely a 7-seed, IMO. They scheduled non-conference games like UCLA, Louisville, and NC State which is a much better trio than so many teams like LSU; committee will not punish them for scheduling "tough" despite losing those games.
The NET Nitty Gritty Report for NCAA Women's College Basketball | WarrenNolan.com
The NET Nitty Gritty Report for 2026 NCAA Women's College Basketball. This Is a Duplication of the Report Used by the Tournament Selection Committee to Determine At-Large Teams with Quadrants