Procrastination occasionally has consequences. I had most of this prepared after Sunday’s games…but didn’t get it finished before Jeff’s piece yesterday. So there may be some unfortunate overlap with yesterday’s entry. Oh well, maybe someone else can learn from this lesson because all available evidence suggests that I won’t. 😉
I have grown to hate analyses that start with the line: â€If the season ended today….†; especially when discussing the ACC. As the first conference to decide its champion from a post-season tournament, making projections without including the ACCT seems almost sacrilegious. I prefer to look at where the teams are….and how much work that they have remaining. So with that little sermon out of the way, let’s take a look around the ACC:
|
Overall |
Conf |
|
|
OOC |
|
W-L |
W-L |
RPI |
SOS |
SOS |
|
18-7 |
9-3 |
26 |
16 |
65 |
|
22-4 |
8-3 |
3 |
6 |
14 |
Virginia |
17-7 |
8-3 |
22 |
15 |
110 |
|
16-7 |
8-3 |
38 |
37 |
179 |
Duke |
19-7 |
6-6 |
11 |
4 |
6 |
|
19-7 |
5-6 |
28 |
24 |
66 |
Clemson |
19-6 |
5-6 |
29 |
49 |
200 |
Georgia |
17-8 |
5-6 |
43 |
41 |
157 |
|
17-9 |
5-7 |
33 |
13 |
77 |
THE VIEW FROM THE TOP
(First Round Byes to the ACCT)
At this juncture, the leading candidates for COY should be Al Skinner, Dave Leiteo, and Seth Greenberg. Whoever finishes the highest in the conference would get my vote. In case of a tie, Al Skinner would lose all tie-breakers and Dave Leiteo would win all tie-breakers. (At least that’s my humble, but accurate, opinion).
The top four teams are in great shape and it would take a collapse of Sendekian proportions to move any of these four teams onto the NCAAT bubble. They have also opened up a little space from the next pack of teams.
Let me take a minute and poke at one of the favorite hornet’s nests around here…OOC SOS. Look at VT vs UVa….nearly identical won/loss records but VT ranks over a dozen spots higher in the RPI mainly due to the difference in OOC SOS.
UVa’s SOS will cost them when it comes time for NCAAT seeding….but it obviously didn’t hurt them when it came to preparing for the conference season. Now, how did that happen? 😉
Repeat after me: A tough schedule reveals good teams; it does not produce them.
– It is worth noting that both VT and FSU made substantial improvements in their OOC SOS when compared to last year. In recent years, both teams suffered the consequences of super-weak OOC schedules when an 8-8 (VT – 2005) and a 9-7 (FSU-2006) ACC record was not enough to get an NCAAT bid. What do you think…..coincidence or lesson learned?
MESS IN THE MIDDLE
I did an entry last season called “The Mess in the Middle†and that title applies once again. However, last year the teams in the middle were fighting to climb up the bubble. This year, the teams in the middle are in much better shape with respect to the NCAAT. Odds are that at least two or three of these teams will make the NCAAT.
Recent history shows that teams with final conference records of 7-9 thru 9-7 are not guaranteed anything…good or bad. The items discussed on “Clearing the Bubble†will come to play when deciding the fate of these teams. One thing that will play into everyone’s favor (except maybe Clemson) is that the OOC schedules are much stronger than recent near-misses from the ACC.
We could slice and dice the standings of these teams in the middle many different ways….but the situation will change twice per week for the remainder of the season. It will be interesting to watch for some of these teams to pick up the pace going down the home stretch. Depending on who falls, it may also be fun to watch some teams stumble into the NIT.
CONFERENCE SOS
I just wanted to point out some visible effects from playing unbalanced conference schedules:
– Maryland played a tougher OOC schedule than FSU, yet FSU has the higher ranked overall schedule.
– You can see the same sort of effect when comparing UVA and GT….with UVa having played the tougher conference schedule (at least to this point).
– VT has the 6th toughest OOC SOS, but has the fourth toughest overall schedule.
There are too many games left to play to start drawing big conclusions on conference SOS. I’m just pointing out something that is a little too complex for the average sports writer to even mention. Hopefully, I will be able to get out a summary of the conference SOS just before the ACCT like I did last year.
THE YEAR OF STREAKS
There seem to be a lot of streaks in conference play this year:
– UVa’s seven-game conference winning streak.
– Clemson falls from the ranks of the undefeated by losing six of the last eight.
– Duke’s four-game conference losing streak.
– GT falls nearly off of the bubble with a four-game losing streak and then recovers with a four-game winning streak.
– FSU starts conference play 0-3, then wins five of six, then drops three in a row.
HOW MANY BIDS?
Clearly, nine teams have a legitimate shot at making the tournament, though some still have some work to do. Six or seven bids would seem to be a near certainty at this point. I put the maximum number of bids at 8…I just can’t see the loser of the 8/9 game in the ACCT getting an at-large bid.