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Hokepoints: Bracketology Because It's Bracketology Week 2013
Site Notice: This Thursday we're planning a basketballgasm liveblog, culminating in the Michigan-South Dakota State game. Probably getting started with the afternoon games, so you've got from now until then to get your brackets filled out and get your work done before productivity goes to Bolivia. Viva March!
My new tradition. I'm not really the basketball guy around here, however I do seem to perform really well when it comes to March Madness brackets, getting back more than my pay-in every year since 2000 (won twice). The first six years of that was luck—since then I've just been working really hard at it so I don't lose the streak.
For those filling out their brackets today here's some helpful stuff. My favorite tool for clearing the biases is the Wall Street Journal's blind comparison. Also never miss the annual GARGANTUBRACKET by Czabe.com, the blog Bracket Science and the gloriously cheap calculator at Poologic, which lets you program how many upsets you want and find inefficiencies to exploit. Use SCIENCE! to take money from your friends and co-workers!
The last tool is my own (<<<<<grab it here>>>>>). It turns KenPom's ratings into a confidence %, and then automatically pulls up which venue the game will be at and whether there's any injuries you need to know about for either team. Who likes drop-down menus?
What I do is normalize the closest 16-1 matchup (Kansas vs. WKU at 22.6% difference in KenPom's "Pyth") as 100% for the 1 seed to win, and use the KenPom ratings to percentile everyone else's games into a confidence number. Then I roll through anything under 70% and decide if my knowledge of those teams might justify taking the under.
Here's the first round, where "Confidence" is a measure of how likely the top seed might be to win. The venue is listed so you can identify things like don't take Boise over K-State in KC, or how 12-seed Cal (a team worse than Virginia, Iowa, Denver, Baylor, Kentucky, Stanford, UConn, Maryland, and Sothern Miss according to Kenpom) is basically playing at home in San Jose.
[UPDATE: I had some errors in the below chart. Now fixed. The tool was fine but I've added an option to set your own chaos factor.]
| High Seed | Low Seed | Difference | Confidence | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indianapolis Regional | ||||
| 1 Louisville | 16 North Carolina A&T | +62.6% | 100.0% | Lexington, Ky. |
| --or-- | 16 Liberty | +68.8% | 100.0% | Lexington, Ky. |
| 8 Colorado St. | 9 Missouri | -1.2% | 48.8% | Lexington, Ky. |
| 5 Oklahoma St. | 12 Oregon | +5.4% | 55.6% | San Jose, Calif. |
| 4 St. Louis | 13 New Mexico St. | +17.9% | 68.6% | San Jose, Calif. |
| 6 Memphis | 11 St. Mary's | -3.2% | 46.7% | Auburn Hills, Mich. |
| --or-- | 11 MTSU | -1.2% | 48.8% | Auburn Hills, Mich. |
| 3 Michigan St. | 14 Valparaiso | +15.6% | 66.3% | Auburn Hills, Mich. |
| 7 Creighton | 10 Cincinnati | -6.0% | 56.2% | Philadelphia, Pa. |
| 2 Duke | 15 Albany | +40.2% | 91.8% | Philadelphia, Pa. |
| Los Angeles Regional | ||||
| 1 Gonzaga | 16 Southern | +48.1% | 100.0% | Salt Lake City, Utah |
| 8 Pittsburgh | 9 Wichita St. | +8.1% | 58.4% | Salt Lake City, Utah |
| 5 Wisconsin | 12 Ole Miss | +7.7% | 58.0% | Kansas City, Mo. |
| 4 Kansas St. | 13 La Salle | +3.9% | 54.0% | Kansas City, Mo. |
| --or-- | 13 Boise St. | +6.1% | 56.3% | Kansas City, Mo. |
| 6 Arizona | 11 Belmont | +6.2% | 56.4% | Salt Lake City, Utah |
| 3 New Mexico | 14 Harvard | +25.3% | 76.3% | Salt Lake City, Utah |
| 7 Notre Dame | 10 Iowa St. | +1.1% | 51.1% | Dayton, Ohio |
| 2 Ohio St. | 15 Iona | +27.5% | 78.6% | Dayton, Ohio |
| Arlington Regional | ||||
| 1 Kansas | 16 Western Kentucky | +48.6% | 100.00% | Kansas City, Mo. |
| 8 North Carolina | 9 Villanova | +4.0% | 54.1% | Kansas City, Mo. |
| 5 VCU | 12 Akron | +8.1% | 58.4% | Auburn Hills, Mich. |
| 4 Michigan | 13 South Dakota St. | +26.1% | 77.1% | Auburn Hills, Mich. |
| 6 UCLA | 11 Minnesota | -5.0% | 44.8% | Austin, Texas |
| 3 Florida | 14 Northwestern St. | +40.0% | 91.6% | Austin, Texas |
| 7 San Diego St. | 10 Oklahoma | +5.7% | 55.9% | Philadelphia, Pa. |
| 2 Georgetown | 15 Florida Gulf Coast | +33.3% | 84.6% | Philadelphia, Pa. |
| Washington D.C. Regional | ||||
| 1 Indiana | 16 Long Island | +50.5% | 100.00% | Dayton, Ohio |
| --or-- | 16 James Madison | +51.3% | 100.00% | Dayton, Ohio |
| 8 NC State | 9 Temple | +9.0% | 59.3% | Dayton, Ohio |
| 5 UNLV | 12 California | 6.6% | 56.9% | San Jose, Calif. |
| 4 Syracuse | 13 Montana | +37.4% | 88.9% | San Jose, Calif. |
| 6 Butler | 11 Bucknell | +2.7% | 52.8% | Lexington, Ky. |
| 3 Marquette | 14 Davidson | +8.8% | 59.1% | Lexington, Ky. |
| 7 Illinois | 10 Colorado | +1.3% | 51.4% | Austin, Texas |
| 2 Miami FL | 15 Pacific | +30.6% | 81.8% | Austin, Texas |
General tips:
If you're in a big pool, run multiple brackets, each with carefully selected upsets. There's no such thing as an NCAA tournament without lots of big upsets and at least one surprising run. The 1 seeds all made it to the Final Four just once. If you submit one milksop bracket you're up against every other milksop bracket and will get beat by the one crazy guy who had LSU going to the Elite 8 or something. Hitting on a carefully selected upset that rearranges a bracket and lets you ride a different high seed to the Final Four is the most typical route to a win.
If you're in a small pool, play conservative. One or two points won't usually make a difference in a small pool, but the likelihood of something crazy like that one guy's wife who picks based on the cuteness factor of mascots winning is cut down so you don't need to take risks to get ahead.
Pick the upsets the most carefully. I love picking 6-11 upsets because if you get it wrong they're bound to get wiped out by the 3 anyway. If you roll the dice on a 3-seed or lower losing early though, you'll feel like an idiot as the rest of your pool collects the easy points. A tournament without upsets never happens, but neither does a tournament with all the upsets. You can totally undo a great pick with a terrible one elsewhere.
Get value for your upsets. Know who's in your pool and the inefficiencies. Fans will generally take their favorite team to go two rounds later than they really belong and conference teams to go a round further. This is an inefficiency.
Be really really lucky. This is really the only rule.
Unverified Voracity Is Wide Open
Chaos in the old barn. Minnesota beat Indiana last night, turning the Big Ten title race from Definitely Indiana into a free-for-all between IU, MSU, Michigan, and—ugh—Wisconsin*. If you're betting that Trevor Mbakwe beasting on Cody Zeller was the key, yup: Krang had 12 rebounds, 6 offensive, and went 8/10 from the floor en route to 21 points. Zeller was 2/9.
As for that suddenly open Big Ten race, here are the contenders' closing stretches:
- INDIANA: Iowa, OSU, @ Michigan
- MICHIGAN STATE: @ Michigan, Wisconsin, Northwestern
- MICHIGAN: @ Penn State, MSU, @ Purdue, Indiana
- WISCONSIN: Purdue, @ Michigan State, @ Penn State
Michigan controls their own fate for a share; Indiana has the toughest schedule but also a one-game lead. The MSU game this weekend is probably an eliminator. Go Iowa Awesome.
Meanwhile, the Gophers also secured their place in the tournament with that win, not that many people had them anywhere near the bubble. With a closing stretch of Penn State, @ Nebraska, @ Purdue they should reach 9-9 easily, and with wins over Indiana, Wisconsin, and Michigan State they'll probably be in that 6-7 range.
*[Ryan Evans is now shooting jump shots from the line:
This is why the Big Ten sucks at football?]
Turns out they SEC, too. Elsewhere in good news that went down last night, Florida got beat by Tennessee and will be off the one line everywhere once people get around to updating their brackets. Michigan will move back up to a #1 at Lunardi's bracket the next time he updates it, and the Gators are only a hair in front of Indiana on Kenpom now. This would be very good if Michigan could keep that spot.
Not that I put much credence in Lunardi's brackets. He's finally managed to keep Michigan away from teams they've already played in the first two rounds, but right now Michigan is slotted with Duke and #3 Louisville. Since Michigan is presumably #5, that's only S-curve order in his deranged brain. He's got Gonzaga with one of the top two seeds, which… I mean. Come on. Gonzaga does not have the schedule strength to be a one seed. They're 10th in RPI despite their record because their SOS is 66th—84th on Kenpom, but that's not what the committee will look at—and some school in a major conference is going to get hot and swoop past them.
LOLRUS. Michigan State went the somewhat shady route with their disposal of Dan Roushar, waiting until after Signing Day to deport the guy to the NFL position job that is apparently the birthright of any crappy college-level coordinator. (At least he's not assistant to the offensive line coach.) They are about to reap a whirlwind of karma, though:
Former Ohio State offensive coordinator Jim Bollman will be taking the same position with Michigan State, according to Football Scoop. Bollman worked as offensive line coach and run game coordinator at Boston College in 2012 after spending 11 seasons with the Buckeyes and was hired by Purdue as O-line coach for 2013.
And everyone who ever heard of Ramzy Nasrallah thought "I wonder what his twitter feed looked like in the immediate aftermath of this?"
Jfiekslemddkskwmemmfrmdkkwkdkdmdmdkoeoedmdmle RT @footballscoop: Sources tell us Jim Bollman is expected to accept the Michigan State OC job
— Ramzy Nasrallah (@ramzy) February 27, 2013
Bollman's not even a retread—he was OSU's OL coach until Tressel got canned and had one year as the head guy. He thought Joe Bauserman was basically on the same level as Braxton Miller. And OSU fans had been bitching about him for years for various OL issues from recruiting to performance. The only way in which this makes sense is if this was designed as a social media stunt.
If it's that, great job Mark Hollis. If it is Mark Dantonio's inner Oscar the Grouch overwhelming all reason, great job Mark Dantonio. Either way the forecast for Michigan State football in the near future is lots more years like this one, except with more mustache.
BONUS: Ohio State bros yukking it up about the Borges/Bollman matchup betray their Michigan obsession by not immediately going to Bollman/Greg Davis. Borges may have tried to use Denard Robinson as a dump truck, but one of the main complaints so far in his tenure is that everything is a deep ball. These guys aren't on the same plane.
BONUS II: Big Ten football programs have hired John Shoop, Jim Bollman, and Greg Davis over the last two years. To coordinate offenses, not pick out bagel toppings. I will not be breaking new rhetorical ground here by asserting this is why the Big Ten sucks. Northwestern is good at offense every year despite having no recruiting base. Take that, add draftable athletes on defense, and then find out what happens. In the worst case it looks like your offense is coordinated by… Greg Davis.
BONUS III: from an Eleven Warriors reader:
Very Big Ten move. I mean seriously SI, what?
![BECyHRmCYAAywi7[1] BECyHRmCYAAywi7[1]](http://mgoblog.com/sites/mgoblog.com/files/images/UnverifiedVoracity_995B/BECyHRmCYAAywi71.jpg)
Spring football '13 is the Jim Bollman OC of SI covers.
Etc.: Columbus wins "team I'd least like to go to" and "worst road trip" in Grant Wahl's survey of MLS players. Michigan won't wear the short-sleeved basketball jerseys the only incompetent Germans dreamed up. I've heard they will be wearing something. Here's this guy. Bacon on hockey's history. You like basketball graphs, right? Michigan has an abnormally low transition rate off of makes for how frequently they go on rebounds.
Unverified Voracity Likes The Great Eye
Volleyball final four tonight. 7 PM, ESPN 2.
Probably not important but for God's sake we have to at least try. Go here and vote for anything but "Existing Divisions plus one." I like what I'll be calling the Eye Of Sauron Configuration:
Ace with the quick photoshop for the win:
You have the two triangles of hate plus Nebraska's desire to make one of them a parallelogram of hate plus everyone else in the other division. The balance is as fair as possible: M-OSU versus everybody. The straight East-West split is a lot less drivable and places the three teams with the most recruiting muscle in the same division.
They will release results for this on Monday at 6:30, FWIW, and then ignore everything so they can create the JUSTICE and BEATIFIC TOLERANCE divisions while introducing the league's new logo, which is a stained glass window of Jim Delany with a halo.
BONUS: "*Actual Division Names TBD"
Line of the week. From the MZone:
Thankfully, our pal Surrounded in Columbus is always good for a nugget or four from deep behind enemy lines. Today he sent the picture below with the following email:
Most people would be disappointed to be 12-0 & staying home. They're not most people.
No word yet on when Tressel Boned Us But We Still Hoisted Him on Our Shoulders Like Morons Lane is going up.
Ohio State hosts a "celebration of perfection against reason" Tuesday during which Galileo will be burned at the stake and the sun declared to revolve around the earth.
Tell me something I don't know. Maurice Clarett:
He was a hard worker in practice and in games. But off the field, he was living a completely different life. "I took golf, fishing, and softball as classes," Clarett says. "Away from class, anything you can think of I did in my 13 months at Ohio State." Drugs and women were two of the things. Cars were another—he owned three of them at a time, including a brand-new Cadillac and Lexus. "I was living the NFL life in college," he says. "I got paid more in college than I do now in the UFL.
Hey, guys who were interested in Marawatch: now is a high-leverage time for some private investigations of OSU.
Scorched-earth bombing of the week. From Patrick Hruby on the insane levels of subsidy thrown out to nonprofit entities like… the NFL.
In the eyes of the IRS, the National Football League is considered a nonprofit outfit. Just like the United Way. Read that again. The NFL -- a league that makes roughly $9 billion in revenue per season and will collected a guaranteed $27 billion in television money over the next decade -- enjoys the same tax breaks as, say, your local chamber of commerce, because both are classified as 501(c)6 organizations. Under federal law, 501(c)6 organizations -- essentially, business leagues -- are defined as associations of persons having some common business interest, the purpose of which is to promote such common interest and not to engage in a regular business of a kind ordinarily carried on for profit. Does that sound like the NFL to you?
It's been said before but the contrast between socialist NFL and the largely capitalist, competition-driven way European leagues are set up is kind of amazing. I envy soccer fans their league structure in which teams at the bottom are punished, not rewarded, and poor performers drop out of existence. Imagine a world in which the Lions are a fourth-division team and some other Michigan outfit is competing in the NFL. Mmmm. Justice.
Instead, William Clay Ford has been allowed to ruin pro football in Detroit for 50 years. Down with antitrust exemptions for sports.
Speaking of, OH MY GOD. This is from Bylaw Blog proprietor John Infante is… bizarre. Probably unworkable. It has a zero point zero percent chance of actually happening. And it was posted in February, at which point I missed it. But it's kind of amazing to think about:
The College Basketball Champions League (CBBCL) would be the premier college basketball competition. It would consist of the following stages:
- A qualifying stage of up to three rounds;
- A group stage over six weeks;
- A knockout stage of four rounds.
The CBBCL as currently configured would consist of 56–58 teams. All bids to the CBBCL would be automatic bids based on winning or finishing high in your conference. A rating or coefficient system would be used on the conference level, and would be based solely on a conference’s performance in the CBBCL.
Basically, throw over the current model in favor of a Euro soccer model, cups and all. Again, never never happen but thinking about it is pretty cool. No more Binghamton games for top teams as they compete in their conference and the Champions League, just wall-to-wall killer games.
Again, never happen in a million years but it's always fun to think of ways to make revenue by increasing the excitement level of the sport instead of just making fans more and more resentful. One way to do that is to add more silverware. Right now most American sports are structured so that there is one thing to strive for and that thing is determined by fairly random playoff at the end of a regular season.
The February NBA game is the quintessential example of the disease this leads to, and while I find complaints that no one cares about college basketball until the tournament to be unconvincing, people are thinking about goosing the rest of the year:
“Once the reforms to the college football postseason are complete, we have a responsibility to think long and hard about how we can improve the basketball regular season,” said Larry Scott, the commissioner of the Pacific-12 Conference. “The game deserves it.”
Here's an idea: play every nonconference game at the same time on the same court. Yeah! /markhollis'd.
Here's a better idea: expand the preseason tourney exemption to move away from one-weekend events played on neutral courts to a mini-me version of a cup competition in which regular season champions from the previous year square off on randomly-drawn home courts until you get to a final four, which is at MSG or bid out. There are 33, so one play-in game, three weeks of Friday night games, and then a Final Four. Silverware that means something and packs out home floors. HOME FLOORS, people.
Consider your travel plans today. Not those travel plans. Joe Lunardi threw out an updated bracket because ten games into the season's as good a time as any. The bracket has Michigan a one seend(!), bringing forth a question and a statement.
The question: what does Joe Lunardi do nine months out of the year?
The statement: for the first time it looks like the NCAA tournament's decision to break everything into pods and try to get as many top seeds close to home will benefit Michigan, as they're slotted into Auburn Hills in this and any other bracket that bothers to list where people will be.
It will be hard for them to exit that territory since top four seeds usually get priority close to home and there aren't many teams projected to make the top four who would prefer to go to the Palace: MSU, obviously, and then Cincinnati, Notre Dame, and maybe Illinois. With Dayton as another outlet for any of those teams, three or four of them would have to pass Michigan to get that Palace spot. So, yeah.
If Michigan makes the Sweet 16, they'd probably get bumped out of Indianapolis unless they finish above the Hoosiers on the S-Curve. That might not be so bad since they're not playing the regional finals at the basketball arena, but rather the Colts' Stadium. While it will be funny to see Indiana basketball outdraw the Big Ten Championship game significantly, most of those seats are going to be terrible.
Aw man, the other travel plans make you feel baaaad. After hemming and hawing about going to the bowl game I finally did get a flight, and now I feel like a jerk for doing so:
8:54PM EST December 11. 2012 - No bowl game in college football pays more money to one person than the Outback Bowl in Tampa Bay.
His name is Jim McVay, the game's president and chief executive officer.
According to tax forms, the bowl paid McVay $753,946 in fiscal year 2010, $693,212 in 2009 and $808,032 in 2008. His pay has nearly doubled since 2002, when he earned $404,253. This year, his game matches Michigan (8-4) and South Carolina (10-2) on Jan. 1.
"He's done a fabulous job," says Mike Schulze, a spokesman for the game. "It's about being fairly compensated based on what the market dictates."
Dammit. This is why I don't go to bowl games. McVay made more than the CEO of the American Red Cross, which has revenues of $3.5 billion. The Outback Bowl brought in 10 million, of which they are paying this joker 7.5%. Also:
The median salary for the 15 bosses at the non-profit bowls reviewed by USA TODAY Sports is about three times higher than the $132,739 median for a nonprofit chief executive, according to a study of 3,786 mid-to-large charities in 2010 by Charity Navigator, a charity watchdog.
I mean seriously I feel bad for supporting this in any way.
Q for a non-Rose Bowl rookie: should I just scalp in Tampa? I assume that face value is for suckers, right?
Rutgers lollercoaster. The Big Ten is going to threaten cable companies in the newly expanded Big Ten footprint unless they cut the league the same deal the Midwest does, except this time this is their leverage:
The fact that Maryland and Rutgers are joining the Big Ten Conference doesn’t guarantee that their games will be on the Big Ten Network. In fact, several of their games may not be available locally at all — TV or broadband — when they kick off their Big Ten seasons in 2014.
Maryland and Rutgers face the possibility of having at least two football games and at least 15 basketball games go untelevised locally when they join the conference in a year and a half.
That’s because the Big Ten Conference is looking into a strategy that could keep all Maryland and Rutgers games — encompassing all sports — off of the Big Ten Network unless local distributors place the channel on an expanded basic tier. The Big Ten used that strategy successfully in Nebraska last year when the Cornhuskers joined the conference, and the conference is expected to use it again in 2014 when Maryland and Rutgers join.
I think that'll probably work in DC thanks to Maryland's lacrosse and basketball outfits but if it doesn't it is going to be delightful to see Comcast get into a fight because of the team that plays in the Comcast Center. I cannot wait for that standoff to go down.
I find it difficult to believe many—if any—New York area cable companies are going to look at the threat of not getting two Rutgers football games a year and cave; not having Rutgers basketball is probably a selling point. Here's to a decades-long ban on Rutgers content on the BTN.
Etc.: Get out while you can, Catholic schools! form a sensible 10-12 conference from Milwaukee to DC and watch people like it! Maryland gets money up front to leave the ACC. Chesson and Darboh called out as impressive players early in bowl practice, which yes please. Burke declares M elite. Hardaway's recent shooting is the closest thing Michigan has to a concern right now. Surprise Michigan still doesn't run zone.
The Bracket: They Didn't Screw Us
Selection show starts off with UMD's OT winner last year and WMU's win yesterday. Good omen! They didn't screw us:
Green Bay
1. Michigan
4. Cornell
2. Ferris State
3. Denver
Michigan gets a technically tougher second round matchup against #6 Ferris State, but it's a team they swept earlier in the year and is not hypothetically Minnesota on its home ice. That guarantees nothing (I mean, obviously), but I'd rather play in an empty, lonely dungeon than against Minnesota at the X.
Bonus item: Michigan avoids red-hot BC and North Dakota until a hypothetical final and will probably get either Union or a CCHA team in a hypothetical national semi.
UPDATE: The other regionals:
Worchester
1. BC
4. Air Force
2. Minnesota-Duluth
3. Maine
Minneapolis
1. North Dakota
4. Western Michigan
2. Minnesota
3. BU
Somewhere Else In The East I Forget
1. Union
4. Michigan State
2. Miami
3. Mass-Lowell
If Michigan gets out of their regional they'll play the winner of the Union regional in the semi.
The One Useful Hockey Bracketology
…comes right at the end. The games are played and the PWR is set. Details are later. Now is now. This is what I think the committee will do:
Minneapolis
1. Michigan
4. Cornell
2. Minnesota
3. BU (or Maine)
Yes. I'm guessing they bone us. MFan In Ohio disagrees. QUIEN ES MAS MACHO?! We'll find out tomorrow. My logic after the dashy bits.
-----------------------
The bracket using pure 1 to 16 sets up poorly for Michigan. This is it:
Regional 1
- 1. BC
16. AFA - 8. Minnesota
9. BU
Regional 2
- 2. Michigan
15. MSU - 7. Duluth
10. Maine
Regional 3
- 3. Union
14. WMU - 6. Ferris State
11. DU
Regional 4
- 4. North Dakota
13. Cornell - 5. Miami
12. Lowell
- They have to fiddle with the fours so that the Michigan/MSU matchup does not happen. It doesn't really matter how they slide the teams around, Michigan gets Cornell.
- Then the committee has a problem: they are sending the overall #1 seed to Minneapolis to face a potential second-round matchup with Minnesota. That will not happen. They will protect the #1 overall and they don't want to murder attendance in the East dead. So how do they deal with this?
- Option A: Flip either the 8-9 matchups or just Minnesota and Duluth. Send either both Boston schools to Worchester or Maine and BC. Attendance: good. Regionals 3 and 4: unaffected, integrilicious.
- Option B: Go by the super-strict selection process that locks Michigan into Green Bay, the closest regional, and ends up putting the #8 team in with #4 North Dakota in Minneapolis, both eviscerating your bracket integrity and, more importantly, not screwing Michigan. This is hypothetically the way it should work, but more often than not the committee just does what it wants. It's their hot body.
- If the committee does take this route, Michigan ends up in Green Bay. They still get Cornell in round one; round two is the winner of Ferris State/Denver. This alternative is hypothetically better for attendance since the other East regional isn't three Western teams and Union, but since none of those teams is within 500 miles of Green Bay it just doesn't matter.
BONUS THIS-MIGHT-BE-A-YEAR-THE-COMMITTEE-LOSES-ITS-MIND ALTERNATIVE: There is the slight possibility that the committee flips Air Force into Michigan's bracket figuring that while a flight is a flight, a flight for Air Force is cheaper to Minneapolis and Cornell can probably drive to Worchester. I think they got over their cost-cutting insanity after that one year when they put all the West teams in the West and all the East teams in the East… but you never know.
I seriously doubt this is how it goes down, FWIW.
Bracketology Because It's Bracketology Week
If you are filling in your brackets today there are a few good sites out there to help get you un-stuck. WSJ's blind bracket separates you from your biases and just gives you a 5-point scale for hotness, experience, size, offense, defense, and 3-point shooting, plus seed range, RPI and conference profile (HT Skiptoomylou22). Also from the board, user "entirely reasonable" linked Steve Czaban's all-everything pdf bracket. Considering most of these games are 60-40 anyway, choosing teams with pretty looking colors is also a tried and true method of winning your bracket.
Just ask my friend's wife. #notbitter
My own device is an excel doc I have to rebuild every year that spits out a confidence % based on KenPom, next to supplementary information on injuries and site for that game. Here's that file if you want to use it. Put in the names of the teams to compare and which round (Round 1 is that which begins Thursday; we don't count play-ins) and it should spit out a confidence level and a site for that game. 100% is a 1-seed over a 16-seed, 50% is a pick-'em, and less than that means you're predicting an upset. You're responsible for adjusting your confidence based on injuries and site.
Here's that formula with the first round:
| High Seed | Low Seed | Difference | Confidence | Site |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Atlanta Regional | ||||
| 1 Kentucky | 16 W. Kentucky | 0.55 | 100.00% | Louisville, Ky. |
| 2 Duke | 15 Lehigh | 0.18 | 83.50% | Greensboro, N.C. |
| 3 Baylor | 14 SD State | 0.13 | 73.43% | Albuquerque, N.M. |
| 4 Indiana | 13 New Mexico St | 0.15 | 78.06% | Portland, Ore. |
| 5 Wichita State | 12 VCU | 0.12 | 73.23% | Portland, Ore. |
| 6 UNLV | 11 Colorado | 0.10 | 69.40% | Albuquerque, N.M. |
| 7 Notre Dame | 10 Xavier | 0.04 | 56.93% | Greensboro, N.C. |
| 8 Iowa State | 9 Connecticut | 0.03 | 54.80% | Louisville, Ky. |
| Phoenix Regional | ||||
| 1 Michigan State | 16 Long Island | 0.47 | 100.00% | Columbus, Ohio |
| 2 Missouri | 15 Norfolk State | 0.56 | 100.00% | Omaha, Neb. |
| 3 Marquette | 14 Brigham Young | 0.10 | 67.76% | Louisville, Ky. |
| 4 Louisville | 13 Davidson | 0.13 | 73.34% | Portland, Ore. |
| 5 New Mexico | 12 Long Beach St | 0.08 | 64.92% | Portland, Ore. |
| 6 Murray State | 11 Colorado State | 0.07 | 62.43% | Louisville, Ky. |
| 7 Florida | 10 Virginia | 0.02 | 53.92% | Omaha, Neb. |
| 8 Memphis | 9 St. Louis | 0.03 | 54.74% | Columbus, Ohio |
| Boston Regional | ||||
| 1 Syracuse | 16 NC Asheville | 0.32 | 100.00% | Pittsburgh, Pa. |
| 2 Ohio State | 15 Loyola MD | 0.37 | 100.00% | Pittsburgh, Pa. |
| 3 Florida State | 14 St. Bonaventure | 0.09 | 66.49% | Nashville, Tenn. |
| 4 Wisconsin | 13 Montana | 0.24 | 94.96% | Albuquerque, N.M. |
| 5 Vanderbilt | 12 Harvard | 0.08 | 64.45% | Albuquerque, N.M. |
| 6 Cincinnati | 11 Texas | -0.01 | 47.63% | Nashville, Tenn. |
| 7 Gonzaga | 10 West Virginia | 0.04 | 56.68% | Pittsburgh, Pa. |
| 8 Kansas State | 9 Southern Miss | 0.14 | 75.82% | Pittsburgh, Pa. |
| St. Louis Regional | ||||
| 1 North Carolina | 16 Vermont | 0.32 | 100.00% | Greensboro, N.C. |
| --or-- | 16 Lamar | 0.27 | 100.00% | Greensboro, N.C. |
| 2 Kansas | 15 Detroit | 0.32 | 100.00% | Omaha, Neb. |
| 3 Georgetown | 14 Belmont | 0.04 | 56.67% | Columbus, Ohio |
| 4 Michigan | 13 Ohio | 0.13 | 73.54% | Nashville, Tenn. |
| 5 Temple | 12 South Florida | 0.07 | 62.70% | Nashville, Tenn. |
| --or-- | 12 California | -0.03 | 43.63% | Nashville, Tenn. |
| 6 San Diego St | 11 NC State | -0.02 | 45.54% | Columbus, Ohio |
| 7 St. Mary's | 10 Purdue | -0.06 | 38.80% | Omaha, Neb. |
| 8 Creighton | 9 Alabama | -0.02 | 45.74% | Greensboro, N.C. |
I am so happy Michigan missed a 3 seed and thus the most terrifying set of 14s since we put new tires on my grandpa's Cadillac: SD State, BYU, St Bon's, Belmont. Do not want. You've been warned previously of the weird KenPom-Wisconsin love affair; use with caution.
All it really does is convert KenPom differential into a prettier number and sticks that next to other useful info. I figure since a 16-seed has never beaten a 1-seed, I could create a constant from the difference between the worst 1 and the best 16 (so a hypothetical matchup of Syracuse and Lamar is 100%). Divide the KenPom difference in the game you're calculating by the constant, multiply that by .5, and add another .5.
The first time I used this thing I won a big pot of gold. Last year I finished behind two of my friends' wives. If you win something you can pledge to the Hail to the Victors Preview fund or something.
Pro Tips: If you're going against only a few people, play it safe; if you're in a large pool, I recommend filling out several brackets each with a major upset and a big run for a middling seed you like. This is because it's easier to win a big pool by getting big points from one team nobody else in the winners circle has than hoping a lot of good early picks can carry you through an end game with 20 other Kentucky-OSU people. Picking a lot of upsets is a bad gamble.

