Big Ten Tournament Seeding Scenarios
Since Indiana just lost to OSU tonight, I was wondering what the Big Ten Tournament seedings could be. This is the schedule for the remaining Big Ten conference games and the winners of each game in my completely subjective opinion:
Wednesday 3/6
Michigan @ Purdue
Minnesota @ Nebraska
Thursday 3/7
Wisconsin @ Michigan State
Penn State @ Northwestern
Saturday 3/9
Minnesota @ Purdue
Nebraska @ Iowa
Sunday 3/10
Indiana @ Michigan
Northwestern @ Michigan State
Illinois @ Ohio State
Wisconsin @ Penn State
This would result in a 4-way tie atop the conference between Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, and Ohio State. According to the tiebreaking procedures from last year's tournament, the seeding would work out as follows:
1. Indiana | 7. Iowa |
2. OSU | 8. Illinois |
3. Michigan | 9. Purdue |
4. MSU | 10. Northwestern |
5. Wisconsin | 11. Nebraska |
6. Minnesota | 12. Penn State |
Here is the 2013 Big Ten Tournament bracket. In the scenario I described, Michigan would be playing the winner of Minnesota vs Nebraska. If I made a mistake, please correct me.
EDIT: Fixed. I think UM would be the 3 seed by virtue of losing the comparison to OSU against Wisconsin.
Michigan players, please do me a favor...don't lose another game for the rest of this season and postseason. I'll figure it out in the end.
Thanks boys. Go Blue!
Unfortunately, I drank too much coffee late in the afternoon and I just had to find out what the seedings could be.
This upcoming stretch is going to be brutal... As long as we win the regular season, I'm fine with losing in the conference tourney.
Can anyone here imagine an NCAA Tournament stretch that will be tougher than what we would face making a run at the BTT title?
I want Michigan to be at least a 2 seed. I think they're nearly assured of that if they just make it to the BTT final on Sunday. Otherwise, depending on other conference tournaments, I would start to worry about dropping to the 3 seed line for the NCAA tournament.
3 or 4 days off isn't enough rest for high level athletes who are at the peak of their youth? (assuming Michigan played Sunday in the BIG tournament championship and then played the following Thursday/Friday in Auburn Hills)
Plus, if the four-way log jam for the title happens, it's likely the conference tournament winner is going to pick up a 1 seed (unless it's wisconsin and they'd even have a case). That would give us a virtual gimme in our opening round game (potentially against a team that had played 2 days earlier)
With a really high seed, they will get a very bad team: probably a winner of a low-minor conference with nobody who could start on mid-to-upper Big Ten team.
The reason why first round upsets usually start with the 5-12 games is that the 13-16 seeds are all teams that really have no business being in the tournament, and would be better served with their own, small conference version of the NCAA tournament. 12 and up are mid-major to major teams.
Incidentally, a team seeded lower than 11 has never made it to the Final Four. In the last ten years, three 14's have beaten 3's, while no 15 or 16 has won a game. I don't think an extra game or two on the weekend will hurt Michigan. If anything, it will make the first game more of a laugher if they can rally and get a #1 seed, or at least a #2.
Uh, no. Two 15s won last year, taking out Duke and Missouri (who I had stupidly picked to win it all).
I agree that in general the 15s and 16s are teams that M should beat, regardless of how hard the BTT is on them.
One of the other kids at my internship two summers ago went to lehigh so i picked them over duke. probably the best decision i ever made even though my bracket ended up terrible, its the little victories
OSU would be ahead of Michigan.
IU gets the 1 seed by virtue of being 2-0 over MSU.
MSU gets relegated to the 4 seed by virtue of being 0-2 vs IU.
Michigan and OSU are 1-1 with MSU, so it goes to the next highest which would be Wisconsin. OSU would be 1-1 with Wisconsin, while Michigan is 0-1 vs Wisconsin.
This is the correct outcome, but just a small correction in the logic...
The tiebreaker is still against all the teams with the same record, not only against teams that have been removed from the tiebreaker. IU would have a 4-2 record, OSU and Michigan would have a 3-3 record, and MSU would have a 2-4 record. IU gets the #1, MSU gets the #4, and OSU and Michigan move on to the next tiebreaker, which is record against Wisconsin. It seems like you realized this, but what you said wasn't quite accurate, so I wanted to make it clear to everyone else.
I rushed through the comparing-each-team-down-through-the-standings step. Thanks for pointing that out.
Use this handy gif to look up any permutation:
http://cdn2.sbnation.com/imported_assets/1482237/tiebreakers.png
And obviously discard the lower half where Indiana wins tonight. I think the main thing is just to think that we need to win out and not be the #5. Aside from the more important fact that that gives us a share of the conference championship and a banner to hang.
Though if I had my choice I would love to play those fuckers from Wisconsin again.
Those are each possibilities, but not the only possibilities, due to the possible results of other games.
Win out, share the BTT and either a 2, 3, or 4 seed.
Lose one of the remaining, and get a 3, 4, or 5 seed.
Lose both, get a 5 seed.
I know that, but I was assuming the outcomes of these three games:
Wisconsin over Penn St
Michigan State over Northwestern
Ohio State over Illinois (in Columbus)
If those three games happen like that, Michigan will be a 3 seed with two wins and a 5 seed with 1 or 2 loses.
Surely we can all still root for the miracle upsets of Northwestern over MSU and Illinois over Ohio, right?
Yes, but don't call me Shirley.
That would mean another matchup with Penn State. Even in our win against them it didn't look so good.
Or the 1-seed (which we are mathematically eliminated from getting) might not play Penn State and get a bye instead.
Yeah, Penn State could only play the 1 seed in the semis after beating the 5 and the 4.
1-4 get a first round bye. The 5-seed will play Penn State. If Penn State were to beat them, then Penn State then plays the 4-seed. If, by some miracle, Penn State beats both of those teams, then, yes, the 1-seed will have to play Penn State.
Yeah, depending on how it shakes out, I'd want to stay out of Indiana's hair until the very end, if we even get that far, meaning I'd like to not be in their half(the top half of 1, 4, 5 and the bottom half 2 or 3)
Honestly, no matter what way I look at it, I just want a shot at Wisconsin again. I still have PTSD after that game. Hell bring back Penn State too. Ugh.
I found this interesting - TeamRankings ran their simulated seasons algorithm after the Indiana-Ohio State game last night, it would seem:
Seed
|
Team | Quarter | Semi | Champ | Win |
1.3 | Indiana | 100.00% | 86.83% | 62.66% | 45.33% |
2.8 | Ohio State | 99.63% | 68.03% | 36.01% | 15.21% |
3.3 | Michigan St. | 98.21% | 58.00% | 26.38% | 9.88% |
3.4 | Wisconsin | 98.39% | 59.49% | 25.95% | 11.39% |
4.2 | Michigan | 96.19% | 54.15% | 21.56% | 9.98% |
So, compared to yesterday's results on the same site, Indiana doesn't lose too much ground (average seeding of 1.1 yesterday), and Ohio State obvious gains (average seeding of 4.3 yesterday). Wisconsin, Michigan and Michigan State all slide slightly, in their estimation, but we remain essentially a 4-seed in this scenario, so after tracking this for a few days, the highest probability by their model seems to be a 3-4 seed for us. Once again, I would love to see their algorithm's assumptions, just out of curiosity.
EDIT: As clarification, this is their projection for the BTT. Apologies for not mentioning it earlier.
Michigan can be a 2, 3, 4, or 5 seed depending on how we do (and how other games fall). This runs permutations of each scenario, and in this case Michigan spends more time around a 4 seed than we do a 5 seed, which sounds about right.
It'd be interesting to look at a distribution of the seeds.
That's not necessarily true. If they found that Michigan had a 50% chance at a 5-seed, a 25% chance ata 4-seed, 20% chance at a 3-seed, and a 5% chance at a 2-seed, that would give Michigan an average of 4.2. In fact, it's very hard (not imposible) to get a scenario where the 5-seed isn't the most likely outcome for us. That's just because they think we will lose to Indiana.
You're right.
I suppose what I meant is that there are more likely scenarios where Michigan is a 4 seed than a 5 seed. For example, Michigan being bumped down to a 5 seed most likely depends on losses by Wisconsin to Penn State, MSU to Northwestern, Ohio State to Illinois, or a combination of them. None of them are particularly likely, IMO.
I think this is seeding for the BTT. Out of all scenarios, Michigan ends up with the lowest average seed. We're the only one that seems to have a better chance at a 5-seed than a 3-seed or higher. I think that is because they expect Michigan to lose to Indiana, which would basically guarantee us the 5-seed. If they expected Michigan to win that game, Michigan State would likely be predicted as the 5-seed with Wisconsin a close second. Indiana would still be on top with OSU and Michigan right behind them.
Based on the handy tiebreaker scenario image that was posted, the current possibilities are:
2 seed - 9.38% (6 of 64)
3 seed - 15.62% (10 of 64)
4 seed - 28.1% (18 of 64)
5 seed - 46.9% (30 of 64)
Beat Purdue:
2 seed - 18.75% (6 of 32)
3 seed - 25% (8 of 32)
4 seed - 31.25% (10 of 32)
5 seed - 25% (8 of 32)
Lose to Purdue:
2 seed - 0%
3 seed - 6.25% (2 of 32)
4 seed - 25% (8 of 32)
5 seed - 68.75% (22 of 32)
To have any shot at the #2 seed, we'll need to win out and have Illinois beat OSU.
2 or 3 seed doesn't matter. Those seeds get roughly equivalent likely quarterfinal games against unpredictable teams that can go off or lay an egg (Minnesota or Illinois).* There are 5 teams that have clearly separated themselves in the conference, therefore, the game to avoid is that 4-5 quarterfinal (and obviously you want to have the first round bye).
In short, we not only need to win out, but also root for State tonight.
*Arguably, if current seeds hold, the 1 seed would get a tougher game than either the 2 or 3, as they'd play an Iowa team potentially playing for a tourney birth, but I think Iowa is in that 'not quite good enough' place that Northwestern's occupied the past few years.
Incidentally, not a fan of this tiebreaker process. This is why you want to actually have a schedule where you play all of these other good teams at home instead of missing them as we did with WI and MN this year. Sure you might lose that home game but you'll probably win and that will help under this tiebreaker. Head to head is fine when teams play a full home and home but with the unbalanced schedule we wind up losing a lot of these tiebreakers because of the Wisconsin loss. This whole thing would shake out differently if Wisconsin had had to come to Ann Arbor. It seems to me that a better tiebreaker in cases where you play once would be using the combined conference records of the teams that you had to play on the road. That would reflect the advantage that IN gets by not having to play @WI and that WI gets by not having to play @MI as the cumulative winning % of the teams that they played on the road is less than than it is for us. Teams that played a harder schedule, and this applies to MSU as well, should receive a benefit rather than a penalty for that in seeding.
If we win out, we secure at least a 4-seed due to Wisc/MSU losing.
- 6 out of the 16 possible outcomes have us at the 2-seed. This happens if Illinois beats OSU and Wisconsin loses either of their games.
- 2 out of 16 possible outcomes have us at the 4-seed. This happens if Wisconsin wins out and OSU beats Illinois.
- The other 8 possible outcomes have us at the 3-seed.
If we beat Purdue, but lose to Indiana we will either be a 4-seed or a 5-seed.
- 8 out of the 16 possbile outcomes have us at the 4-seed. This happens if either Wisconsin or MSU lose both of their remaining games, i.e. the loser of this matchup also loses their last game. (Wisc@PSU, NW@MSU)
- The other 8 possible outcomes have us at the 5-seed. This happens if both MSU and Wisconsin win one of their games. Since they should both win their last game, this essentially cements Michigan as a 5-seed if they lose to Indiana.
If we lose to Purdue, but beat Indiana we will be at highest a 3-seed.
- 2 out of the 16 possible outcomes have us as the 3-seed. This happens if Wisconsin loses out and NW beats MSU.
- 8 out of the 16 possible outcomes have us as the 4-seed. This happens if MSU loses out, Wisconsin wins out, or MSU wins out AND Wisconsin loses out.
- The other 6 of the possible 16 outcomes have us as the 5-seed. This happens if Wisconsin goes 1-1 and MSU gets at least 1 win.
If we lose out, we are the 5-seed.
Overall breakdown:
- 30 out of 64 possible outcomes have us at the 5-seed.
- 18 out of 64 possible outcomes have us at the 4-seed.
- 10 out of 64 possible outcomes have us at the 3-seed.
- 6 out of 64 possible outcomes have us at the 2-seed.
Winning at least one game drops the 30 outcomes resulting in a 5-seed to 14, which would make the 4-seed the likeliest outcome.
Winning tonight brings the overall breakdown to this:
- 8 out of 32 possible outcomes would have us at the 5-seed.
- 10 out of 32 possible outcomes would have us at the 4-seed.
- 8 out of 32 possible outcomes would have us at the 3-seed.
- 6 out of 32 possible outcomes would have us at the 2-seed.
As you can see, winning tonight drastically shifts our chances from likely 4/5 seed to almost a 44% chance of a 2/3 seed. However, if you consider that it is extremely unlikely for MSU or Wisconsin to lose to NW and PSU, Indiana becomes a must-win game to stay out of the 5-seed.
If we lose tonight and you assume that MSU and Wisconsin won't lose their last games, Wisconsin beating MSU is the only way that we get the 4-seed instead of the 5-seed.
Basically, if we win tonight, MSU winning on Thursday gives us the best shot at higher seeds. If we lose tonight, Wisconsin gives us the best shot at higher seeds.