draft kings

As is tradition around here I like to put together a bracket widget and suggest some resources to use. This time someone stepped up to sponsor it. That would be Draftkings, who also offered their site for a place to enter your online brackets, given how much I complained about where we've been doing it. The link: https://www.draftkings.com/gateway?s=673740228 The 612x612 box with the the link:

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I presume you know how a bracket works. It locks out at tipoff on March 21st, so get on that. Also presume you know it's for 21+. Eligibility restrictions apply. See website for details.

As for how to fill it out, the internet has some resources, starting with…

1. Seth's Amazing Google Sheet 2000 of 2019!

I like just having all of a ton of information in comparable form when making my selections, so I make this little tool on Google Sheets that you can have too (clicking the link will give you your own copy so you don't mess up my master):

Most of the data are from Kenpom. Injuries start from DonBest's list, but I write the impact and do a search because he misses a lot. Distance factor was calculated by putting the schools' addresses into Google Maps (I have a tool).

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Favorite Online Tools

I don't recommend just my little comp tool. You should learn a thing or two about each team and think about their matchups. Take a team like Iowa: they play a lot of zone, their defense is bad because their center is atrocious at it, and they murder you with outside shooting. If they're playing a team that takes away the three and scores a ton in the post, you don't want Iowa.

1. KENPOM. The gold standard, somehow even more useful, but no longer a secret known only to bloggers and stat-heads. I don't know how this isn't a homepage on your phone already. Ken Pomeroy uses tempo-free stats to pare down to predictive efficiency metrics. It's great for sweeping generalities, but doesn't account for situations teams find themselves in, for example it doesn't know the difference between Duke with or without the #1 pick. For that you can turn to…

2. BART TORVIK. Let's peel off whatever we want to from the Kenpom stats and see how that changes things. Then let's make a graph out of it. Torvik's site is for the real nerds, but he's got loads of pages that simplify bracket questions like "What's this coach's recent tourney results versus expectations?" Another other extremely useful bracket tool on Torvik is "Similar Resumes." Last I like his Team Bubbles Chart, which I can play around. For example try just High Major teams versus Quad 1 opponents (wish the bubbles could represent # of games charted but Torvik Wish Lists are part of the Torvik experience. If all this sounds like too much math and you just want someone who can summarize this easily, try…

3. THE POWER RANK. You know Ed Feng from the MGoBlog Roundtable on WTKA. This stuff is wheelhouse; in fact he literally wrote the book on it. Non-members are restricted to his standard "TPR" (the power rank) metric, which is based on team rankings, margin of victory, and strength of schedule, and spits out a predicted margin of victory over an average (read: ~160th) opponent). His turbo stat is based on how teams performed based on their Vegas odds, which is great because those take into account EVERYTHING—like who was not full-go that night. To entice signups he often leaks some of the more interesting predictions this spits out so he's a good tourney time follow. If I was a better friend I'd be on his site more often, but honestly I spend a lot more time on…

4. HOOP-MATH. The owner is Jeff Haley, the Seth of Burnt Orange Nation (the Longhorns blog), and his stats are produced from play-by-play data. I know because he's slow to update the data so I usually have to update opponent pages myself to include the last game. Here's how he gets his stuff:

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Some find/replace and formulas converts that to a spreadsheet:

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This is how I get my "At the Rim" and "Percent of Points Assisted" stats that you see on my charts. Or at least, this is where I get the raw data to produce those. Brian is on Hoop-Math every preview so he can tell you things like "this team gets half their shots from transition and triples their eFG% so shutting that down is a priority."

It's a great site for finding hidden upsets, especially for subscribers, who can download the data and get access to additional boxes like late offense and individual shot blocking at the rim versus at large. Are they a transition-reliant team facing an opponent that doesn't turn it over? Are they a mid-major with a big taking a ton of unassisted shots at the rim facing an elite defensive center? How bad are they when their banged up SG gets in…waitaminute, now I'm getting them confused with the similar layout of:

5. HOOP-LENS. This is a paid (not expensive) service for breaking down individual players, and well worth your while for the fun to be had from turning your work's instant messaging channel into a wall of splits:

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There's no better way to quickly find who's a defensive presence, though you have to look at the 3FG% for a non-3PA defender to make sure you're not just looking at a small sample size that happened to catch a hot shooting streak on one side. His PAM (points above median) page is my first stop to see who's a Guy or a Dude, and also to quickly visualize who's doing what for a team's shooting efficiency:

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Again, however, you need to contextualize this with usage data and assist data. For that you can go back to Kenpom, or try…

6. SPORTS-REFERENCE.COM, whose Usage metric is almost the same as Pomeroy's (the biggest difference is they rate a free throw as 43.5% of a possession vs. Kenpom's 47.5%), and far more accessible for spreadsheeting purposes. Best known for baseball-reference, these statistical aggregators used the same scripts to build a database for college basketball and all the other major sports.

Because it's so automated there are mistakes that pop up, so don't use them for deep historical aggregates (e.g. Tom Izzo's career wins). Also their attempts at building their own statistics are almost always disasters—these are coders, not mathematicians, and their general understanding of the data they collect is about on par with that of your average basketball announcer (likewise their understanding of their own level of understanding). Exception: I like how they visualize a season that you can mouseover for context.

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But you don't care about that, because their usefulness for raw stats is up there with having your average basketball announcer on speed dial, i.e. unparalleled. Try to focus more on your vast appreciation for what they provide, and less on how funny it is that in 2019 you still have to scroll past per-game to get to the raw and tempo-free numbers.

Of course if you're not into stats and scrolling, and just want to not be dumb about the plotlines you missed by not following college basketball beyond what Michigan did and the relentless proliferation of Zion Williamson news, catch up with…

7. ESPN's BASKETBALL STAFF. Somehow John Gasaway and Joe Lunardi (and TomVH) managed to survive The Worldwide Leader's recent staff slimdown to a bare handful of loud, vastly overpaid morons and SEC slappies. Even after the field is picked, Bubble Watch stories will familiarize you with the recent goings on for the hardest picks. Gasaway is the Dude in college basketball—all the context you're trying to parse out of stats and waterfall graphs above is already embedded in his brain, along with years of basketball watching to put that in context.

Just make sure you've got some strong anti-autoplay apps running on your browser. Or you could eschew the guys everybody reads for some familiar Twitter faces of…

8. BIG TEN GEEKS: A group of Big Ten fans who like to play with stats—@CT_In_TC is the Michigan fan there and also the keeper of the blog-beloved stat PORPAGATU, ie points over replacement per adjusted game at that usage. It's the closest thing to baseball's WAR in college basketball. Of course, if you've got $15 to spare and really want to geek out…

9. HOOP VISION'S 2019 TOURNAMENT BIBLE: This is Jordan Sperber and Rafi Goldman's scouting information on every team in the tournament and invaluable to our coverage. Jordan and Rafi were D-I video coordinators so this is exactly the kind of reports coaches get. In fact it's really made for the coaches. But you coach from the sideline, right?

[photo: Bryan Fuller]

So after a long time away, we can partner with DraftKings again. If you weren't here in the before-time, the deal is my friend works there, and from time to time he gets them to sponsor an evening post here. I pick a game for the MGoFaithful to play, you get to play for free, and if you actually know what you're doing, you win money.

We never got to do an Pro Football Team Pick 'Em before, and that's actually my favorite type of league to play in, so I'm stoked that they finally have that. The link:

Free $1,000,000 Pick’em Contest

To clarify, there is $1M in the whole pool—the top prize gets $100,000, and everyone who gets all their picks correct in the pool splits $300,000. Just pick the outright winner in each game and if you pick half right you win. The challenge won't lock until 1:00 PM EST on September 9.

Eligibility restrictions apply. See website for details

My Picks:

  • Indianapolis over Cincy—Always pick against Ohio.
  • Baltimore over Buffalo—Buffalo's starting Nathan Peterman. Why?
  • New Orleans over Tampa Bay—Brees is going to have a career year.
  • New England over Houston—As long as Tom Brady is breathing. You know, whatever he breathes.
  • San Francisco over Minneapolis—Riding Garoppolo until he loses.
  • Miami over Tennessee—Did you remember Tennessee made the playoffs last year? Neither did I.
  • Jacksonville over New York—Saquon is going to find his new line isn't any better than his old one
  • Pittsburgh over Cleveland—Always pick against Ohio, whatever that Spartan's whining about this week
  • Kansas City over San Diego—Bolts always start so crappy. My upset pick.
  • Denver over Seattle—Butt's healthy, Seahawks on their way down
  • Arizona beats Washington—Both are Wrong Answers. Taking the home team.
  • Green Bay over Chicago—It's been happening for 20 years.
  • Detroit WINS! A FOOTBALL GAME! THAT COUNTS!
  • LA beats Oakland—Wonder who's going to look worse when the weekend's over, Jon Gruden or Herm Edwards?

Legal Disclosure:

DraftKings is an MGoBlog sponsor, and I play on there as MGoSeth. My personal views of the games and strategies above do not necessarily reflect the view(s) of DraftKings, and when I play I may sometimes deploy different players and strategies than what I recommend above (like, I didn't this time, but I could still talk myself out the hometown pick). I am not an employee of DraftKings and do not have access to any non-public information.

The thing I like most about daily fantasy games is having a thing to do with all this football knowledge that "it's my job" is only so much an excuse to accumulate. My job doesn't need me to know ahead of time that so-and-so has an 8-foot manbeast at running back and that the direction state university they're playing this week really should have gone Division III a decade ago. I don't really remember how all this information was acquired. It kinda assembled in my brain and sits there.

I can only foist so much of it on phone calls with friends (I mean, eventually you do have to ask about the kids) and the mgoslackchat. So I play Draft Kings, whom you may have noticed have been one of our best supporters for a very long time now, and who you also many have noticed are all over the place lately.

But remember these games are about exploiting market inefficiency. That blitz is your friend; they're sucking in tons of new players who don't know exactly what I'm talking about. And Ohio State fans.

Unfortunately the secret's out about the beast, and Buckeyes Bucking against Indiana is a smart play. So I've got a new dude. He is playing a team that doesn't stop anything, and his team is just starting to block everything, and his game just got moved to the early slot so his competition is unbalanced, and half the people in the pool are all gonna have the same guys. Don't listen to the weatherman who says the weather's gonna be clearer than you thought. I say it's gonna pour.

Details:

  • $100,000 prize pool.
  • First place wins $10,000
  • FREE for new users or $3 to enter
  • Top 7,850 scores win money guaranteed
  • Starts on Saturday, October 3rd at 12:00 PM EST
  • Salary Cap Style Drafting. $50,000 to select 9 spots.
  • Roster Format: 1 QB, 2 RB, 3 WR, 1 TE, 2 Flex