Rick Pitino and Tom Izzo made it pretty clear how they feel.
Clemson's coach Brad Brownell went public in February with accusations that the Big 12 was gaming the NET by scheduling weak opponents in order to blow them out.
His team then dominated puffed-up NET darling Baylor in the NCAA tournament.
Major props to Brownell who 100% exposed the silliness and then backed it up on the court.
And of course NET darlings Mountain West, SEC and Big 12 have generally gotten their clocks cleaned in postseason play,
while NET deadbeats ACC, Big East and Pac 12 are pummeling teams the "experts" thought were good.
The NCAA needs to look at itself in the mirror. They clearly have no handle on things - and the metrics they rely upon are just a smokescreen with no genuine added value.
Somebody needs to intervene!
As I suggested long before the tournament started, a little common sense would help. Take the Top 3 teams from each of the major conferences automatically. If there is a tie, let the conferences themselves set the tiebreakers. The regular season has to count for something. Keep the conference tournaments. If the 6th place team wins it, then the 3rd place team loses its automatic bid. The penalty is confined to the conference, not used as an excuse to kick out a quality mid-major like Indiana State.
If some conferences deserve at least 4 teams, okay. Just spell out before the season begins that the Big Ten, ACC, Big East and SEC get 4 teams automatically.
The Mountain West gets 3. The Pac 12 gets 3. The Atlantic 10, West Coast and the American get 2.
Just spell it out - based on the previous season. Be transparent! Reward conference wins and losses. Make the conference games matter a lot!
Do not incentivize teams to schedule weak opponents and blow them out. Do not penalize teams severely for losses in the non-conference.
So thats 32 conference tournament winners plus 3 more from the 4 top conferences, plus 2 more from 2 conferences, plus 1 more from 3 conferences.
Total of 51 automatic bids. Every automatic qualifier deserves their bid. No whining about "bid-stealers."
Then (and only then) does the NCAA get to start selecting 17 at-large teams, with their flawed metrics.
Give them something to do... but stop the charade.
Using this approach, Houston, Iowa State, Tennessee, Alabama, Duke, UConn, Marquette, Creighton, Purdue, Illinois, NC State, Arizona, Gonzaga would have all automatically qualified.
Thats 13 of the Sweet 16.
Alabama would have been in a tiebreaker with South Carolina for the 4th SEC spot, but an obvious "at-large" candidate.
Clemson would not have qualified automatically, having finished 11-9, in a 3 way tie for 5th in the ACC.
San Diego State would not have automatically qualified, having finished 5th in the Mountain West.
Seton Hall would have received an automatic bid. Pitt's automatic bid for finishing 4th would have gone to NC State.
Thanks for reading. If the NCAA adopts this approach the world will be a happier place.
Clemson's coach Brad Brownell went public in February with accusations that the Big 12 was gaming the NET by scheduling weak opponents in order to blow them out.
His team then dominated puffed-up NET darling Baylor in the NCAA tournament.
Major props to Brownell who 100% exposed the silliness and then backed it up on the court.
And of course NET darlings Mountain West, SEC and Big 12 have generally gotten their clocks cleaned in postseason play,
while NET deadbeats ACC, Big East and Pac 12 are pummeling teams the "experts" thought were good.
The NCAA needs to look at itself in the mirror. They clearly have no handle on things - and the metrics they rely upon are just a smokescreen with no genuine added value.
Somebody needs to intervene!
As I suggested long before the tournament started, a little common sense would help. Take the Top 3 teams from each of the major conferences automatically. If there is a tie, let the conferences themselves set the tiebreakers. The regular season has to count for something. Keep the conference tournaments. If the 6th place team wins it, then the 3rd place team loses its automatic bid. The penalty is confined to the conference, not used as an excuse to kick out a quality mid-major like Indiana State.
If some conferences deserve at least 4 teams, okay. Just spell out before the season begins that the Big Ten, ACC, Big East and SEC get 4 teams automatically.
The Mountain West gets 3. The Pac 12 gets 3. The Atlantic 10, West Coast and the American get 2.
Just spell it out - based on the previous season. Be transparent! Reward conference wins and losses. Make the conference games matter a lot!
Do not incentivize teams to schedule weak opponents and blow them out. Do not penalize teams severely for losses in the non-conference.
So thats 32 conference tournament winners plus 3 more from the 4 top conferences, plus 2 more from 2 conferences, plus 1 more from 3 conferences.
Total of 51 automatic bids. Every automatic qualifier deserves their bid. No whining about "bid-stealers."
Then (and only then) does the NCAA get to start selecting 17 at-large teams, with their flawed metrics.
Give them something to do... but stop the charade.
Using this approach, Houston, Iowa State, Tennessee, Alabama, Duke, UConn, Marquette, Creighton, Purdue, Illinois, NC State, Arizona, Gonzaga would have all automatically qualified.
Thats 13 of the Sweet 16.
Alabama would have been in a tiebreaker with South Carolina for the 4th SEC spot, but an obvious "at-large" candidate.
Clemson would not have qualified automatically, having finished 11-9, in a 3 way tie for 5th in the ACC.
San Diego State would not have automatically qualified, having finished 5th in the Mountain West.
Seton Hall would have received an automatic bid. Pitt's automatic bid for finishing 4th would have gone to NC State.
Thanks for reading. If the NCAA adopts this approach the world will be a happier place.