RPI and the ACC

Now that we’ve seen what the RPI rankings of Final Four teams look like, let’s look to see how various ACC coaches have done with respect to the RPI rankings and head-to-head comparisons.

Notes:

– For simplicity, I will only look at those coaches who have taken their team to the NCAA tournament at least twice during the last four years.
– Al Skinner and BC were included for informational purposes only. Meaningful comparisons will have to wait until BC has played an ACC schedule.
– Only years from current ACC coaches were included.
– The years that a team appeared in the NCAA tournament are noted in RED and BOLD.

Final RPI Ranking

 

2002

2003

2004

2005*

NC State

37

53

17

65

Duke

4

12

1

4

Georgia Tech

82

76

16

27

Maryland

2

37

18

57

North
Carolina

19

6

Wake Forest

24

7

20

7

Boston College

40

49

22

9

*New RPI formula implemented.

Interesting Trivia #1
In 2003 and 2005, NC State had the lowest RPI ranking of any team receiving an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. This doesn’t prove that State was the last team in, but it sure is a strong suggestion.

Interesting Trivia #2
Much was made in the comments of a recent entry about State having to play a lot of ACC teams who were also top-10 teams…thus claiming that Herb’s miserable record versus the RPI Top-50 is skewed and misleading. However, the ACC only had two top-10 teams in 2002 and only one top-10 team in 2003 and 2004. This raises the question of what exactly is happening here…skewing statistics or scrambling for excuses?





Record vs RPI Top-50

 

2002

2003

2004

2005

Cumulative

Winning Percentage

NC State

3-7

2-8

7-7

4-8

0.348

Duke

11-2

4-2

10-4

7-2

0.762

Georgia Tech

3-11

2-6

8-7

2-7

0.326

Maryland

9-3

2-5

7-9

3-4

0.500

North
Carolina

7-7

6-3

0.565

Wake Forest

5-8

3-3

8-7

6-3

0.512

Boston College

4-7

1-5

6-6

6-3

0.447

Interesting Trivia #3
In Doherty’s last year, UNC went to the NIT with a 5-8 record (38% winning percentage) against the RPI Top 50. That same year, State went to the NCAA tournament with a 2-8 record (20% winning percentage) against the RPI Top-50.

Interesting Trivia #4
Herb has only exceeded Doherty’s 38% winning percentage against the RPI Top-50 (from 2003) one time.

Combined Regular Season and ACC Tourney Results

NC State’s Record vs:

 

2002

2003

2004

2005

Overall

Duke

0-3

1-2

1-1

0-2

2-8

Georgia Tech

1-1

1-1

2-0

2-0

6-2

Maryland

1-2

0-2

1-2

2-0

4-6

North
Carolina

0-2

0-2

0-4

Wake Forest

0-2

1-2

2-0

1-2

4-6

Boston College

0-1

0-1

0-2

Interesting Trivia #5
In Doherty’s last year, UNC was 6-10 in the ACC. In Roy Williams first year, UNC was 8-8 in the ACC, ie only two games better. However, Doherty was 0-2 against State in 2003 and Roy was 2-0 against State in 2004.

So What Does This Mean?
Where does Herb and NC State rank in the ACC over Herb’s best four years? I think that most rational people would rank Herb and State behind Duke, UNC (with Roy), Maryland, and Wake Forest. Much like Lee Fowler has forgotten Herb’s first five years, I am sure that very few people (other than certain State fans) make any attempt to recall Doherty’s last two years at Carolina.

You can argue about Sendek vs Hewitt (because of Georgia Tech’s run to the NCAA title game), but I would think that the head-to-head record and four straight trips to the NCAA tournament put Herb and State ahead of Georgia Tech. As mentioned previously, there is not enough data to make good comparisons with Boston College.

Attempts have been made to excuse or ignore State’s losses to teams rated in the RPI Top-10. However, I will go one better. What is Herb’s record vs the top four ACC coaches (by my evaluation) when State had the same or better ACC record? (Of course, this stipulation removes Duke from the comparison.)

Year

State’s Record

Opponent

Opponents

Record

State’s Record vs

Opponent

(includes ACCT)

2002

9-7

Wake Forest

9-7

0-2

2004

11-5

Wake Forest

9-7

2-0

2004

11-5

North
Carolina

8-8

0-2

2004

11-5

Maryland

7-9

1-2

2005

7-9

Maryland

7-9

2-0

 

 

 

Total:

5-6

Once again, Herb comes out on the short end.

I have recently pointed out many of the mistakes I see State fans make when analyzing or discussing NC State athletics. I have no interest in making those (or any) mistakes. I am not interested in compiling or skewing stats to justify some preconceived opinion or conclusion. I am simply listing facts and trends that I have seen over the last several years of the Great Herb Debate. If someone has some conflicting data, then by all means present it. However, I am not interested in doing some statistical study that someone else dreams up…so don’t waste your time suggesting that I do it.

I am sure that no one expects to change the past. However, I am constantly amazed that State fans can’t even agree on what the facts are.

Rhetorical Questions
Why does discussing Herb’s record constantly get labeled as being critical or negative? If his record is considered out-of-bounds, then what are we supposed to talk about….Seeds of Greatness?…or maybe the latest uttering from some 16 year old phenom?

About VaWolf82

Engineer living in Central Va. and senior curmudgeon amongst SFN authors One wife, two kids, one dog, four vehicles on insurance, and four phones on cell plan...looking forward to empty nest status. Graduated 1982

General NCS Basketball Stat of the Day

86 Responses to RPI and the ACC

  1. Jeff 12/14/2005 at 7:39 AM #

    LonChaney is my new favorite poster. Dude, come post your thoughts any time!

  2. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 8:15 AM #

    Team Record verse TOP 25 TOP 5 Played W’s verse Top 5

    NCSU 13-27 15 3…look it up

    TEXAS 16-22 12 0…yes…0

    ARIZONA 17-14 7 2

    FLA 10-18 4 1

    I realize the formatting in the comments section is difficult, but I can’t figure out what this data is and what it is supposed to mean. Could you take just NC State and break down each column into a row so that I can figure out whatever point you are trying to make. (Is this four year’s worth of data?)

  3. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 8:49 AM #

    I looked strictly at Top 25 records over the last four season and then took the time to actually look at how many of these teams played the VERY BEST IN NCAA BB during the season(top 5)…what a concept.

    Why does any team’s record against the top-5, top-25, or top-50 have any meaning at all? Since the ultimate goal of a college BB team is success in the NCAA tourney, I was looking for correlations between stats available before the tourney started and tourney success.

    When looking at the Final Four teams, I found a common thread that covered most of the Final Four teams over the last seven years…….they consistently had a high RPI ranking and a winning record against teams ranked in the RPI Top-50. Both of these stats also passed the common sense test that “good/great” teams and coaches will beat other good teams and coaches. Thus I concluded that both stats (RPI ranking and record vs Top-50) are useful for further analysis.

    When comparing NC State’s RPI rankings and record vs the top-50, you are left with a feel for how far State is from being a Final Four team. (Assuming of course that you didn’t already figure that out from watching a grand total of 4 NCAA tourney wins in 4 trips.) Now these two stats are not necessarily all that is needed to be a FF team, but they are certainly a start.

    Records vs the top-5 and top-10 do not pass the common sense test of a useful stat. Going just by gut feel, I suspect that most teams would have such a poor record against top-5 or 10 teams that there is no predictive or ranking value in either category.

  4. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 8:54 AM #

    While some people on this site like to make our basketball program seem like bottom feeders,

    For those that are not familar with debating and associated terminology, this “fine” post is an example of something known as a straw-man argument. This term is used to identify a debater that can not address the actual arguments being made, so he/she will create a “straw-man” that is weak enough for his feeble skills to defeat. The best way to handle this type of attack is to point out how ridiculous the debater is being and move on to your next point.

  5. Rick 12/14/2005 at 9:18 AM #

    While some people on this site like to make our basketball program seem like bottom feeders, others look at reality and see we are actually a national contender in the best conference in America.

    Va,
    The poster then goes on to make a completely open ended statement. Unless he defines a “national contender” as a team that consistently chokes away leads and is unable to beat top teams then he is way off base.
    We are a good mid level ACC team. For the most part we beat the bad teams and lose to the good. That is a far cry from being a national contender.

  6. Rick 12/14/2005 at 9:22 AM #

    Something no one has addressed is the simple point that you have to beat top teams (sometimes even top 5 teams [shudder]) in order to advance in the NCAA tournament. If we cannot beat these teams how can we be expected to be succesful in the tournament? Heck we are probably going to have to beat a top 5 team to win the ACC tournament every year.
    You can try to minimize our inability to win these games by saying they are harder but that does not change the fact that we have to win these games to be a “national contender” but we seem to be unable to.

  7. Cardiac95 12/14/2005 at 10:44 AM #

    This much I know…..every other coach at NC State NOT named Les Robinson won multiple ACC Titles & finished 1st or tied for 1st in the Regular Season on multiple occasions (disclaimer….Maravich coached less than 2 seasons with 1 ACC Title).

    Case – 11 full seasons – 4 ACC Titles – 3 First Place Finishes
    Sloan – 14 seasons – 3 ACC Titles – 2 First Place Finishes
    Valvano – 10 seasons – 2 ACC Titles – 2 First Place Finishes

    That’s an average of one ACC Title every 3.5 yrs & an average of one 1st Place Finish every 5 years.

    Smack it, flip it, & rub it down any way you want to……but if Herb was anywhere close to measuring up with those guys…..after 9 years, he’d have a trophy on the mantel by now. Hell, even in the 4 years that Lee Fowler will admit exist….he should have a trophy on the mantel by now.

    ACC Titles & Regular Seasons are the one constant that span NC States entire modern era. NCAA results are much harder to draw comparisons from mainly because the format & conditions for qualifying have changed dramatically over time.

    This much I do know….Every year the V was allowed to qualify for a 64 Team NCAA Field……he did. Which tells me that NC State’s program should be a perennial NCAA Team & as such….gaining a bid in & of itself is no great accomplishment.

  8. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 10:52 AM #

    NC State’s program should be a perennial NCAA Team & as such….gaining a bid in & of itself is no great accomplishment.

    Except when the list of accomplishments is so short that you have to find something else to list.

  9. choppack 12/14/2005 at 10:58 AM #

    [i]“I’m not sure why you want my opinion, but yes any of those things would be a major accomplishment. But it is important to remember that no one accomplishment is going to win any coach a lifetime contract. I was a student at State when Norm Sloan left. At first everyone was shocked and worried, but then the general consensus was that he hadn’t done anything in about five years….maybe it was time for some new blood. Rumors were that the AD (Willis Casey) didn’t think Sloan was worth the money he was asking for. If true, one can only assume that the AD reached the same conclusion.”[/i]

    Now, who is moving the bar? If Herb did something great, I’m certainly not saying give him a lifetime contract. You’re talking to a Cowboys fan here who was thrilled when they fired Laundry and hired Jimmy Johnson. If Herb did something great this year or next, wouldn’t the immediate situation be much more different than Sloan’s? It’s not like we’re talking about a coach here who kicked butt his first few years then tailed off. Completely different scenario.

    [i]As I mentioned earlier in this thread, the statistical analysis started with Sendek fans dreaming up new definitions of success…..then I (and alot of other people) started looking at the real data to come up with rebuttals to happy stats such as beating x national champions over the last four years. If Sendek starts to achieve some real milestones, then I am sure that all of the statistical analysis will drift away.[/i]
    Let’s hope so. Of course, are you saying that 2004’s 11-5 record didn’t represent progess, and the Sweet 16 doesn’t represent progress? Are you saying that we haven’t made any progress since he came on board?

    I really don’t know what you’re trying to prove here. I think most reasonable Wolfpack fans have Herb on a fairly tight leash. We want to see him succeed and support our team, but we have lingering doubts about his ability to create the dynasty type programs that are present 20 miles or so west of Raleigh. While the results I have seen the last 2 years don’t assuage those doubts, they have given me a glimmer of hope that he’s inching closer to what we want.

  10. DRO 12/14/2005 at 11:19 AM #

    Boy, the discussion is heated in here. As some have stated previously, facts are facts. They are not open to emotion, but they can be interpreted. The FACTS are that in Herb’s last 4 seasons:

    – 84-48 overall
    – 7-4 in the ACC tourney
    – 4-4 in the NCAA’s
    – No titles of any kind
    – Avg. RPI = 43
    – Avg. OOC SOS = 196

    Granted the last 4 years are nothing to be ashamed of, but the results are mediocre. I guess that’s OK if that’s what you’re after.

    Most of the Top 5 games that have been so often referred to in this post were against conference opponents (namely Duke). Everyone (mostly) in the conference has to play these same teams, so comparing State’s schedule to conference members is moot point. What we need to focus on here is the OOC schedule, which is very poor (avg. SOS = 196). Add to that the lack of titles (ever) in Herb’s career, and the case can definitely be made that Wolfpack bball is not where it should be.

    Some folks on this post whine and moan and compare State to this team or that team, but the way to determine success (and achieve it) is to compare State to highly successful programs that they compete with regularly (like Duke and more recently UNC) and strive to emulate their success. Nobody says that you need to beat these guys all the time, but you should at least strive to be in their league (no pun intended). The postseason success of several ACC schools has outpaced the Pack during this decade, and that is a shame. If State were a school without a large fan base or state of the art facilities, and obviously didn’t care about real success in basketball (like Duke in football), then win/loss records and tournament success wouldn’t matter. But State is not one of those schools, and success does matter. The shame is that people are willing to accept (and often laud) mediocre results.

    Another point to keep in mind here, which has been alluded to in other posts, is how State is viewed within the ACC and around the nation. It cannot be denied how much public perception means to a sports program. Recruiting, televised games, media coverage, OOC scheduling, and ticket/memorabilia sales are all directly influenced by public perception. I know this is not fair, but that’s life. Post season success and wins against big-time opponents are crucial in helping form this perception. I think that it is safe to say that the perception of State basketball is one of mediocrity and nostalgia of past success. All you need to do is look at the posts on this website and you can see the divergence of opinions about the program, and nowhere is anyone sincerely talking about a national CONTENDER. If things are that bad from WITHIN the Pack Nation, then imagine what outsiders are saying. The future of Wolfpack bball depends on this perception, and on how Lee Fowler handles the situation should State continue in mediocrity.

  11. Class of '74 12/14/2005 at 12:03 PM #

    ^Right on! Perception is reality and the perception is exactly as you said. Facts are stubborn things and as we see in these postings so too are emotions.

  12. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 1:08 PM #

    Now, who is moving the bar?….If Herb did something great this year or next, wouldn’t the immediate situation be much more different than Sloan’s? It’s not like we’re talking about a coach here who kicked butt his first few years then tailed off. Completely different scenario.

    This just proves my motto: “It’s better to be blunt than misunderstood”. I have so little practice at being politically correct that I’m not any good at it.

    My standard has never changed. My standard is James T. Valvano. He had substantial accomplishments that spanned nearly the entire decade of the 1980’s. (There will be many that will want to forward Norm Sloan, but there are just too many parallels to Dave Odom/Tim Duncan.) This is the mark of a great coach….one that can win in different circumstances with different teams.

    No one year will make me feel good about Sendek. There have been too many disappointments for one good year to convince me that he is the right coach at NC State. Even with the horrible chokes to end the 2004 season, I was beginning to hope that Sendek could move to the next level. However, a 3-9 stretch during Jan/Feb 2005 showed that the program is still stuck in the world of marginal accomplishments. A last-second shot against UConn eases but doesn’t erase the disappointment of six-weeks of miserable BB.

    Are you saying that we haven’t made any progress since he came on board?

    Give me a break! I’ve been very clear that there is no substantial improvement (IMO) over the last four years…..not over his entire tenure. You seem to constantly combine the best parts of two different seasons to show progress. It doesn’t work that way for me.

  13. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 1:21 PM #

    OK…I took some time to prove my point.

    I can’t help but get the feeling that your point was to find a statistical category that Herb doesn’t look bad in. If that was your point, then you succeeded.

    If your point was to try and say that Herb and NC State’s BB program have done better than Duke, UNC (with Roy), Wake Forest, or Maryland, then you haven’t succeeded…..and that was my main point.

  14. Rick 12/14/2005 at 2:19 PM #

    Hey Va, if you add in another season we can tack on a second place ACc tournament finish.
    So if we took the pinnacle of three different seasons you would get a 2nd place regular season, 2nd place ACC and s16.
    If that does not scream middle of the pack, I am not sure what does.
    Yes we are hardly a “national contender”.

  15. choppack 12/14/2005 at 5:42 PM #

    “My standard has never changed. My standard is James T. Valvano. He had substantial accomplishments that spanned nearly the entire decade of the 1980’s. (There will be many that will want to forward Norm Sloan, but there are just too many parallels to Dave Odom/Tim Duncan.) This is the mark of a great coach….one that can win in different circumstances with different teams. ”

    First off – I think James Valvano was a great coach – best bench coach in basketball – fantastic feel for the game. However, when it comes to the Odom/Sloan comparision – don’t minimize Norm Sloan’s acheivements. He went undefeated one year, and knocked off an absolute giant in UCLA the next year. He assembled a team that is considered by some to be one of the greatest ever. He even worked one Jim Valvano in the NCAA tourney when he would have appeared to be way past his prime.

    “No one year will make me feel good about Sendek. There have been too many disappointments for one good year to convince me that he is the right coach at NC State. ”

    At last, we’re at the heart of the matter – this year can only prove two things to you – we’re stuck in nuetral or we’re going backwards. Any positive results are thrown out the window. Surely, you see how this flies squarely in the face of your own logic.

    “Even with the horrible chokes to end the 2004 season, I was beginning to hope that Sendek could move to the next level. However, a 3-9 stretch during Jan/Feb 2005 showed that the program is still stuck in the world of marginal accomplishments. A last-second shot against UConn eases but doesn’t erase the disappointment of six-weeks of miserable BB.”

    There’s some irony here – for one, you seem to minimize the flukes where Sendek won, and harp on the “flukes” that he lost. Me, I really don’t care – in the big picture, he’ll be judged pass/fail. I figure the lucky breaks/chokes even themselves. I wouldn’t keep Herb on if he was competent,but unlucky, and I wouldn’t fire him if he seemed to be an idiot, but always seemed to catch the breaks.

    “You seem to constantly combine the best parts of two different seasons to show progress. It doesn’t work that way for me.”

    You are correct – because you can. Like I said, there are 3 parts of our season for which I judge a college b’ball coach – regular season, ACC tourney, and NCAA tourney. I can deal w/ success in one area even if the other 2 aren’t what I would expect- probably because I’m an optimist. It’s also much easier to deal with successes in these areas if they represent a “high-water” mark – which the last 2 seasons did in one of these categories.

    I’d also venture to add, that your gold standard – rarely put it together in all 3 of these elements. But, I don’t hold that against him – I still think he’s a great coach and I rue the day he was fired. (I don’t think he reached his potential, but that’s another thread all together.) Aside from the V comparison- do you use RPI as an ultimate indicator?

  16. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 7:02 PM #

    He assembled a team that is considered by some to be one of the greatest ever.

    On this point, we have no argument. Sloan won 3 ACCT, 2 Regular Season titles, and one NC. However, all but one ACCT occurred when he had both Burleson and Thompson. The year before Thompson arrived and the year after Burleson left were good, but not great years. Sloan never repeated the recruiting coup that put together that great team. The follow-on stars…Kenny Carr, Hawkeye Whitney, Clyde Austin and the follow on big men..Glenn Sudhop, Craig Watts, and Chuck Nevitt never meshed into another great team……thus the Odom comparison.

    Any positive results are thrown out the window.

    I never said anything close to this. I said that one great season would not turn me into a huge Herb fan. A single, great year might be a fluke or might signal the first step to the next level. The following years would tell which it was. For example, was GT’s run to the Final Four a fluke or can Hewitt move GT forward? Only time will tell.

    Just for clarification, I never throw data away. Go back and read my entry on Data Analysis Mistakes. When you get data you don’t understand, just wait. It may make sense once future data is available.

    There’s some irony here – for one, you seem to minimize the flukes where Sendek won, and harp on the “flukesâ€? that he lost.

    I never labled either a fluke. Jan/Feb 2005 contained some of the worst BB you will ever see a NCAAT team play. That was no fluke. The shot against UConn was no fluke either. Herb deserves alot of credit for making the S-16 and he deserves alot of blame for a 3-9 stretch of BB.

    I’d also venture to add, that your gold standard – rarely put it together in all 3 of these elements.

    True, but then when most of your best moments occur in the NCAA tournament, they get noticed more, and the shortcomings are forgotten. Conversely, when a coach is not achieving in the NCAAT, he will never be considered a great coach.

    Aside from the V comparison- do you use RPI as an ultimate indicator?

    Not really, but once again I don’t throw data away. For example, Skippy hasn’t exactly made a name for himself in either the ACC or NCAA tournament. Should Wake fans be looking for a new coach? Here is an instance where the RPI would show that Skippy has put together some good teams with some impressive wins….just not when they count the most. Thus, there is some basis to expect that Skippy can improve on WF’s tournament performances. If not, he will join Herb in the comparisons to Gene Keady.

  17. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 7:15 PM #

    Here’s a bizarre thought…How good would Wake be if Skippy had hired Herb as a Defensive Coordinator four years ago?

  18. PACDADDY 12/14/2005 at 8:36 PM #

    I went back 4 season and found the info(it took me 2.5 hours). I find it telling that Jeff couldn’t find it in himself to respond to my post. Ignore it and the truth will go away?

    Jeff even goes so far to complement lonchaney on a post that for the most part was inaccurate and insulting to most any knowledgable Wolfpack fan. According to Lonchaney…Hodge is the only player responsible for any success Herb has had…well that’s BS, but even if it weren’t I could have said the same thing about Joe Smith/Tim Duncan/Johnny Dawkins…anybody care to look at GW record verse K during his first 8-9 years?..what a joke. I don’t like getting into a position where I have to compare V and his outstanding OOC success to defend Herb…FWI…it wasn’t all that great either.

    15 of NCSU’s 60 Top 50 games were TOP 5 teams. How is it accurate to look strictly at Top 50 when 25% of your opponents were Top 5? How is it concievable that anyone(especially a State fan) could complain about the strength of our schedule when we played 4 more top 5 teams than Fla and Arizona combined over a 4 year period?

    I read your post and understand the point you’re trying to make, and as I said before, I agree with the premise(although I still contend at least 1 team a year gets hot at right time), but Jeff then broke down the win/loss record as he always does, and paints the picture as Herb’s awful record. I pointed out that by using his same rationale, but with a different angle, it isn’t as bad as it seems when compared to other programs of “Higher stature” in his and most anti-Herb fans eyes. I picked Texas as an example without having any idea how they would compare.

    NCSU was 13-27 against TOP 25, they played 15 TOP 5 teams out of those 40, they beat 3 top 5 teams during that time…also swept a GT team that was 6th.

    TEXAS went 16-22 against top 25 teams and played 12 Top 5 teams during that time and beat 0 teams in top 5

    ARIZONA went 17-14 against Top 25 teams and played only 7 Top 5 teams…they won 2

    FLA went 10-18 against Top 25 teams and played only 4 freakin Top 5 Teams…won 1

    NOW…I included all post season games because it’s relavant to my point. They all count as wins and losses and these games have more meaning…they’re also on neutral courts. Plus..the site included them and I didn’t want to take the time and back them out.

    I agree that having a solid w/l record is important to get a higher seeding in the NCAA and that usually translates into more success in tourney, but I also content that simply looking at top 50 w/l records without actually looking at how high the opponents were ranked is incredibly incomplete data.

    According the Greenfield, NCSU has beaten the same amount of top 5 teams the last 4 seasons than UF, Arizona and Texas combined.

    I encourage anyone to double check what I found but I went through it twice.

  19. lonchaney87 12/14/2005 at 9:53 PM #

    PacDaddy says “I couldn?t resist to comment on this great dose of wisdom.
    I said??Our talent base has improved greatly.?
    lonchaney said..? And this is based on and proven by what? Our ONE AND ONLY NBA player has graduated and based on the current regime, the next one is not due in Raleigh for another 5-6 years.?
    You?re not a Pack fan?if your are, my 10 year old know more about basketball than you.
    GW verse Herb?I wouldn?t trade them and I?m sure anyone who gives a rats a$$ about players actually graduating wouldn?t either. ”

    My response PD:

    Likewise PD, I couldn’t resist commenting on your far greater dose of ignorance. How does your “response” to my comment substantiate this greatly elevated talent you refer to? I’m not seeing anything on the floor right now that looks like NBA-level talent (and even if it ever does it will be either scrubbed away by Herb’s “offense” or it will sit on the pine too long to get noticed). How am I not a Pack fan? Is it my 17+ years in the WPC? My 1987 degree from State? Or the fact that I disagree with your rambling blast of sunshine seen through red tinted shades and don’t like the status quo as spun by you, LF and an embarrassing number of others? How do I not know about basketball? The fact that I can actually count on just one finger the number of Herb-recruited (and unfortunately “coached”) players who have been drafted by the NBA? The vast underrepresentation in the Herb era of first/second team all-ACC players? And yes, I’d gladly trade HS for GW. In a national championship heartbeat. As for Herb’s players graduating, that’s a tough call since so many of them end up transferring. You know, the “unexpected attrition” you referred to (and I thought Herb was all about “relationships?”). You surely have seen the academic progress report for the ACC in which beloved, academics-oriented Herb and Lee have us DEAD LAST. Check with your 10 year old son on that one

  20. VaWolf82 12/14/2005 at 10:05 PM #

    I’ve argued enough with PACDADDY to know that you wouldn’t intentionally post something that was a blantant lie….so let’s assume that all of your numbers are completely correct. So why should I care about comparing NC State to Texas, UF, and Arizona? Shouldn’t we care more about comparisons to Duke, UNC, Wake, and Maryland?

    In the 2005 season, the ACC had three teams in the RPI Top 10. So if we assume that you have a point about State’s record against the Top 50 being skewed, then what’s your excuse for the 2002, 2003, and 2004 seasons? State’s record versus the top-50 wasn’t skewed then and Herb has still never had a winning season against the RPI top-50 (.500 record in 2004).

    In the end, there is no such thing as winning a trophy for RPI ranking. It is just another way to show where Herb and NC State rank among the ACC. As I showed in an earlier entry, there is a strong correlation between Final Four teams and the RPI ranking. Wake Forest is a perfect example that the converse is not true….ie a high RPI ranking doesn’t necessarily guarantee a Final Four, because there are 24 other teams with
    “high” rankings as well and only four will qualify.

    You once claimed that Herb would have great record against teams with RPI ratings from 11-50. By my count, State has a 3-3 record in the NCAA tourney against teams in the RPI 11-50. Do you consider this great?

    Using only Herb’s best four years, I concluded that he still ranked behind K, Roy, Gary, and Skippy. Do you agree or disagree with this assessment? If you agree, do you consider that acceptable? If you don’t agree, which of those four coaches do you rank below Herb and why?

  21. lonchaney87 12/14/2005 at 10:06 PM #

    Pac Daddy labors on “Jeff even goes so far to complement lonchaney on a post that for the most part was inaccurate and insulting to most any knowledgable Wolfpack fan. According to Lonchaney…Hodge is the only player responsible for any success Herb has had…well that’s BS, but even if it weren’t I could have said the same thing about Joe Smith/Tim Duncan/Johnny Dawkins…anybody care to look at GW record verse K during his first 8-9 years?.”………”According the Greenfield, NCSU has beaten the same amount of top 5 teams the last 4 seasons than UF, Arizona and Texas combined.”

    So a coach should get 8-9 years to see what they can do against K? Coach K didn’t get it done until…yada, yada, yada. For every coach you hang on to for 6 years of middling results who turns it around and becomes K, you have lots of others who continue to middle and never become K but become….Herb. With the notable exception that most of them are shown the door long before year 10. I wish I hadn’t had to show my stuff at work for 8-9 years. And as for Greenfield, could you spin that any harder? Do you SERIOUSLY think we’re in the same discussion nationally as UF, AZ and Texas, teams with recent Final 4s, top ranking and conference and national titles? We’re viewed outside our own misinformed clan as nothing much more than a Bowling Green, Vandy, etc. Nice squad but no threat to do jack squat. I’m actually more interested in BEING top 5 than trotting out some stat that says we’re “as good as” some of the top teams. When you have to try to prove you belong at the top with stats, you’ve already lost your cause. I’m easily convinced – prove it on the floor. “We’ve beaten the last 7 national champs (in their down years)!!” “We have beaten Duke every time we’ve played them on a Saturday where Jupiter aligned with Mars and the barometric pressure was a prime number!!!”

  22. PACDADDY 12/14/2005 at 10:26 PM #

    lonchaney…that’s just another typical rant from a 17 year WPC member that has no clue. If you don’t think the talent base has greatly improved, I rather argue with my 10 year old about taking a shower or going to bed…at least I know my 10 year old can follow what I’m saying and “get it”…evenually

    Our bench of players that may not see any PT this season, is far more talented than any players we’ve had on the bench(and actually played), and I’ll go out on a limb and suggest they’re better than most any players we’ve had in last 15 years.

    Ced is better than any bigman(of course, Herb can’t sign BMen so this must not be true) we’ve recruited that didn’t embarass me and any self-respecting Pack fan since Sloan was coach. Powell was probably the second best… Please don’t bring up Washburn and Shackleford.

    I don’t disagree the talent level has been incredibly low over the years, but that even more reason to admire the job Herb has done. I know you’ve got a sharp retort for that comment, but let’s face it man…Todd Fuller was all we could hang our hat on for the 15 years. We’ve come a long way with a young coach trying to fight the big boys.

    You know why our Grad rate is low…transfers…what’s GW’s excuse? For you to make blanket statements about this situation is dishonest and quite frankly…disturbing…

    There you go Jeff. You must really like this kind of stuff. Maybe you or Lonchaney can put together another long list of misleading stats to critize the program.

  23. PACDADDY 12/14/2005 at 10:58 PM #

    VAwolf…just so you know, I didn’t have a real problem with your initial blog, other than to make my simple point. When looking at any teams record against Top 50 teams, without considering the overall rankings of there opponents, it’s kind of pointless.

    WHEN 25% OF NCSU’s TOP 50 OPPONENTS WERE TOP 5…AND THE OTHER TEAM MAY PLAY 5-10%…HOW CAN YOU REALLY GET AN ACCURATE PICTURE?

    Why shouldn’t you compare Texas, Fla, and Arizona to what Herb has to contend with? You have to decide on your on if it’s a valid comparsion to get a true perspective on where our program stands with others that many fell are top dogs.

    If we hadn’t finished in the final top 25 poll 3 of last 4 season, had relative post season success…I wouldn’t be here wasting my time.

    I think the program has only began it’s rise. Now…will we be as consistant as Duke’s or UNC’s?…who knows…but we should be a top 15 program at least once every two years at the end of each season and an occational top 5. Something we haven’t seen since when? Sloan?

    That’s my expectation…with that type of consistency the banners (in some fashion) will come.

  24. blpack 12/14/2005 at 11:37 PM #

    Herb does just enough. We will get a good win here or there and have a bad loss, or two along the way. We will beat the bad teams and lose to the good ones… namely our NEIGHBORS. The stats should slap some folks in the face, but if not ask a UNC-CH fan or Dukie their thoughts on Herb. How about our offense? We are a joke plain and simple.

  25. Class of '74 12/15/2005 at 6:51 AM #

    I agree with VaWolf on comparing NCSU to ACC teams RPI’s, not selections from this, that or the other from all across the country. It just shows how emotionally tied to Herb you really are when you reach like that. Prove your point locally then confirm it regionally or nationally that would make more sense.
    If you want to believe in Herb that’s fine, but you ignore the preponderance of facts. That’s right, the records don’t lie in his corner if you care to look at ALL of the data. Personally I hope the man succeeds, it’s in our interest that he does but the rate of “improvement” is painfully s-l-o-w!!!

Leave a Reply