Capital One Cup Standings: UM Men #5

Submitted by Geaux_Blue on

While currently only based upon results in CC and Soccer, the run that the men's soccer team made may have a significant effect on Michigan having a shot at winning the Capital One Cup with solid showings from the hockey team and a bowl win atop a basketball tournament appearance (we can dream!) and strong performances from wrestling, etc. Though it may be an award "in name only," it does come with a $200,000 scholarship for graduate studies and... well, whatever. We're ranked #5 currently. 

 

http://capitalonecup.com/standings.html

formerlyanonymous

December 18th, 2010 at 10:52 PM ^

We're currently #16 in the Directors Cup. That's as of the 14th. There will be another update on the 23rd that takes in volleyball. We should get a few points in that as well, but I'm not sure how much that will really move us up (or down). 

MaizeAndBlueWahoo

December 18th, 2010 at 11:58 PM ^

If U-M (or UVA) wins the Cap One Cup I'll acknowledge it as a real award.  Otherwise, I'm sticking with my guns that it's just a schlock facsimile of original (the Director's Cup), borne out of Capital One's obnoxious desire to plaster its name on everything college sports-related.

MGoBender

December 19th, 2010 at 10:14 AM ^

Doesn't the Capital One Cup weigh certain sports more heavily than others?  Like Football is worth 3 times as much as Wresting?  I'll ignore it on that principle alone.

Alton

December 19th, 2010 at 10:52 AM ^

Yes.  For the men, national champions in baseball, basketball and football get 60 points.  National champions in lacrosse, outdoor track, soccer and swimming get 40 points.  National champions in cross country, golf, indoor track, tennis, hockey and wrestling get 20 points.

The women's standings substitute softball for baseball, volleyball for football, field hockey for hockey and rowing for wrestling.  Other sports, including gymnastics and water polo, do not count at all (!).  A finish outside of the top 10 in any sport counts for nothing.

The Capital One Cup may be safely ignored, in favor of the NACDA Directors' Cup.

WolverineBlue

December 19th, 2010 at 1:27 PM ^

In part, the Capital One Cup scoring is designed to break the stranglehold that Stanford has had over the NACDA Director's cup. By separating men's and women's trophies, not counting anything outside a top ten finish and weighting the sports differently, it gives a better chance to schools that are prominent in the higher visibility sports.

Still, I agree that the formulas are messed up. Not including men's or women's gymnastics seems strange, when that is an Olympic sport and most top schools have programs. Whoever rated the various sports obviously had a strong lacrosse bias to include it as a second tier sport for both men and women. Most division I football schools (including Michigan) play lacrosse at the club and not varsity level. Ice Hockey (men's only) is relegated to tier 3. When was the last time 113,000 people showed up for a lacrosse match?