RamblinCharger
Helluva Engineer
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I've never thought that RPI was determinative in getting into the tournament. A minimum number of wins has seemed to be a bigger factor for major conference teams. In years gone by, it seems like its 19 wins some years, 2o in others.
20 win majors with lower RPIs have gotten in with 18 win majors having higher RPIs left out. I believe the higher win numbers--posted with the selections on CBS--look good and subject the committee to less criticism. CBS doesn't post RPIs.
I believe that RPIs do matter with seeding. But you have to get in for the RPI to matter.
I just hope we can find the 3 or 4 more wins I think it will take to get into the NIT.
I agree with your thinking, but I'm not sure that it is always the case. I think the committee really breaks it down team by team using their scoring sheets or whatever. I have a team in mind to play deviled advocate. Let's say that Auburn finishes 20-10 and GT finishes 18-12. Let's say both teams win 1 conference tournament game. In this scenario both teams can't make it in, do they let GT in or Auburn? I think Tech would get in for playing in a tougher conference and for having better wins. And I think we would finish with a higher RPI as well, which would matter. Right now Auburn is around 58. JMO
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