Here's this week's "if the season ended today", which has just been
uploaded to <http://www.slack.net/~whelan/tbrw.cgi?pairwise.current>.
I'm also posting it here because there is an ambiguity in the
selection of the at-large bids which succictly illustrates a point
which has been confusing me all season. The selection committee is
supposed to award at-large bids by examining pairwise comparisons
among teams "on the bubble". Removing regular season champions and
MAAC teams from the picture, there are five teams who are not
obviously in or out of the tournament: Michigan, Northern Michigan,
Princeton, Notre Dame and Niagara. Niagara only win comparisons with
two of the 14 other non-MAAC, non-auto-bid teams. However, those two
teams are Michigan and Notre Dame, included in anyone's definition of
"the bubble". So does Niagara, a team which loses comparisons to
teams above and below the bubble, but wins some bubble comparisons,
belong on the bubble themselves? If they are included, NMU and
Princeton get the last two at-large bids; if not, it's Michigan and
NMU.
If the season ended today, 1999 March 15
) 1999, Joe Schlobotnik (archives)
URL for this frameset:
http://www.slack.net/~whelan/tbrw.cgi?pairwise.990315.shtml
To see how the final pairwise numbers might look, try the conference
tournament bracket or non-tables "what if" interface to the
interactive "You Are The Committee" script.
In just six days, the NCAA selection committee will seed the men's
division I hockey tournament. With only 19 games left to be played,
let's see how the Tournament selection procedure plays itself out
pending those results. First of all, we know for certain four of the
teams who will be in the tournament: New Hampshire, Clarkson, Michigan
State and North Dakota each receive an automatic bid for winning the
regular season titles in their respective conferences. Up to four more
teams will receive automatic bids for winning their conference
tournaments, and the remaining four to eight at large bids will be
given out on the basis of pairwise comparisons among teams that finish
with Division I records at or above .500. As of now, those comparisons
look like this (with US College Hockey Online down at the moment, I
have supplemented their Division I Composite Schedule by adding this
past weekend's results by hand):
Pairwise Comparisons
1 North Dakota 21 .647 NHMeMSCCCkDUQnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
2 New Hampshire 20 .633 __ MeMSCCCkDUQnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
3 Maine 19 .616 ____ MSCCCkDUQnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
4 Mich State 18 .603 ______ CCCkDUQnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
5 CO College 17 .586 ________ CkDUQnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
6 Clarkson 16 .584 __________ DUQnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
7 Denver U 15 .558 ____________ QnBCSLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
8 Quinnipiac 13 .548 ______________ BC__OSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
9 Boston Coll 13 .581 ________________ SLOSMiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
10 St Lawrence 12 .555 ______________Qn__ OS__NMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
11 Ohio State 11 .534 ____________________ MiNMPnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
12 Michigan 9 .557 __________________SL__ NM__NtRPCgMkCt__PvHC
13 Northern Mich 9 .539 ________________________ PnNtRPCgMkCtNiPvHC
14 Princeton 8 .534 ______________________Mi__ __RPCgMkCtNiPvHC
15 Notre Dame 6 .537 __________________________Pn RPCgMkCt__Pv__
16 RPI 6 .533 ______________________________ CgMkCtNiPvHC
17 Colgate 5 .530 ________________________________ MkCtNiPvHC
18 MSU-Mankato 4 .528 __________________________________ CtNiPvHC
19 Connecticut 3 .527 ____________________________________ NiPvHC
20 Niagara 3 .480 ______________________Mi____Nt________ __HC
21 Providence 2 .513 ______________________________________Ni HC
22 Holy Cross 1 .493 ____________________________Nt____________
(In addition, Minnesota or St. Cloud State could also qualify for the
NCAAs by winning the WCHA Final Five.) Before charging ahead into the
awarding of at-large bids, we must note that the ratings percentage
index upon which the pairwise comparisons are largely based, has a
weakness which is very significant this year: it does not judge a
teams' strength of schedule accurately when that team's opponents have
themselves played weak schedules. Since the six division I members of
the new MAAC conference play 20 games each against each other, plus a
few non-conference games against Division I independents, a team like
Quinnipiac can rack up a high winning percentage against weak
competition without the weakness of their schedule being reflected in
the RPI. Anticipating this, the selection committee, as reported in
the NCAA News, "noted that it reserves the right to evaluate each team
based on the relative strength of their respective conference." The
best way to gauge that relative strength is via the conferences'
performance against the four Division I independents:
vs Indies vs Army vs Niagara vs AFA vs Mankato
Avg RPI PF-PA Pct PF-PA Pct PF-PA Pct PF-PA Pct PF-PA Pct
HE .525 14- 2 .875 12-0 1.000 0- 2 .000 2-0 1.000 0- 0 .---
WCHA .504 32-10 .762 0-0 .--- 0- 0 .--- 10-0 1.000 22-10 .688
CCHA .504 5- 5 .500 0-0 .--- 2- 4 .333 0-0 .--- 3- 1 .750
ECAC .496 28-10 .737 10-0 1.000 10-10 .500 2-0 1.000 6- 0 1.000
MAAC .453 8-22 .267 5-5 .500 0- 4 .000 3-5 .350 0- 8 .000
MSU-Mankato's surprise victory over North Dakota in game one of the
WCHA quintafinal series makes the Mavericks look a bit stronger, but
since no MAAC team actually beat them, it does little to change the
conclusion that the MAAC has not reached competitive equity and it is
reasonable to assume that the committee will exclude Quinnipiac, UConn
and Holy Cross from consideration for at-large bids.
Maine, Colorado College, Denver, and Boston College all win
comparisons with all of the remaining teams, and are thus easy choices
for at-large bids. The awarding of the remaining bids is very tricky,
and could be done in different ways with at least two different
results. Here are the teams still in contention for those bids:
1 St Lawrence 9 .555 OS__NMPnNtRPCgMkNiPv
2 Ohio State 9 .534 __ MiNMPnNtRPCgMkNiPv
3 Michigan 7 .557 SL__ NM__NtRPCgMk__Pv
4 Northern Mich 7 .539 ______ PnNtRPCgMkNiPv
5 Princeton 6 .534 ____Mi__ __RPCgMkNiPv
6 Notre Dame 5 .537 ________Pn RPCgMk__Pv
7 RPI 4 .533 ____________ CgMkNiPv
8 Colgate 3 .530 ______________ MkNiPv
9 MSU-Mankato 2 .528 ________________ NiPv
10 Niagara 2 .480 ____Mi____Nt______ __
11 Providence 1 .513 __________________Ni
The committee is supposed to compare teams which are "on the bubble"
but the question is how to define that set of teams. However you slice
it, Princeton will be a bubble team, which means that SLU and OSU will
enter the tournament ahead of Michigan. Using the algorithm of the
"automatic" button on my "You Are The Committee" script, which removes
teams from the top and/or bottom of the table and then recalculates
the number of comparisons won, we would remove Providence, Mankato,
Colgate, and RPI from contention. At each turn, the bottom team has
won a comparison only with Niagara, while the Purple Eagles have won
comparisons with both Notre Dame and Michigan. This leaves us with
1 Northern Mich 3 .539 PnNi__Nt
2 Princeton 2 .534 __ NiMi__
3 Niagara 2 .480 ____ MiNt
4 Michigan 2 .557 NM____ Nt
5 Notre Dame 1 .537 __Pn____
Notre Dame is dropped off the bottom of this bubble, and NMU and
Princeton have won two comparisons (out of three) each with the
remaining teams.
If, on the other hand, the committee leaves out Niagara, who lose
comparisons to four teams directly below our ultimate bubble, we find
ourselves deciding among the following:
1 Michigan (C) 2 .557 NMNt__
2 Northern Mich (C) 2 .539 __ NtPn
3 Notre Dame (C) 1 .537 ____ Pn
4 Princeton (E) 1 .534 Mi____
which would put Michigan in the tournament instead of Princeton. We
can't tell for sure what the committee would actually do, but if I had
to guess I'd say that they would not think of Niagara, who win
comparisons only with two teams (albeit obvious bubble teams) as
themselves on the bubble. So let's proceed assuming that Michigan is
in the tournament. That leaves us with seven Western teams and only
five from the East, so we declare Northern Michigan, the lowest-rated
Western team, to be honorary Easterners:
West East
1 North Dakota 5 .647 MSCCDUOSMi | 1 New Hampshire (H) 5 .633 MeCkBCSLNM
2 Mich State 4 .603 CCDUOSMi | 2 Maine (H) 4 .616 CkBCSLNM
3 CO College 3 .586 __ DUOSMi | 3 Clarkson (E) 3 .584 __ BCSLNM
4 Denver U 2 .558 ____ OSMi | 4 Boston Coll (H) 2 .581 ____ SLNM
5 Ohio State 1 .534 ______ Mi | 5 St Lawrence (E) 1 .555 ______ NM
6 Michigan 0 .557 ________ | 6 Northern Mich (C) 0 .539 ________
Both regions are nicely ranked by the pairwise comparisons. North
Dakota and Michigan State are in line for the two Western byes, with
New Hampshire and Maine in the East, although if Clarkson wins the
ECAC tournament, they will receive an automatic bye. We need to swap
the bottom two teams from each region, but in each case three of the
top four teams come from the same conference, which leads to potential
intraconference matchups in the second round. With the East Regionals
being held in Worcester, Massachusetts, it seems pretty safe that
attendance considerations will lead the NCAA to keep BC there anyway,
and a possible intra-conference matchup in the West is inevitable with
seven Western teams in the tourney. Going strictly by the numbers, we
get the following teams in the regionals:
West East
1 North Dakota (W) 1 .647 MS | 1 New Hampshire (H) 1 .633 Me
2 Mich State (C) 0 .603 | 2 Maine (H) 0 .616
3 CO College (W) 3 .586 DUSLNM | 3 Clarkson (E) 3 .584 BCOSMi
4 Denver U (W) 2 .558 SLNM | 4 Boston Coll (H) 2 .581 OSMi
5 St Lawrence (E) 1 .555 __ NM | 5 Ohio State (C) 1 .534 __ Mi
6 Northern Mich (C) 0 .539 ____ | 6 Michigan (C) 0 .557 ____
The question here is whether attendance considerations would lead to
NMU or DU trading places with Michigan or OSU. DU is in the WCHA along
with host school Wisconsin, but NMU was recently in that league as
well, and of course the other two CCHA schools in question are in the
Big Ten. Very tentatively, though, let's leave the regions as they
are. There is one avoidable second-round CCHA matchup between MSU and
NMU, so we swap Northern Michigan and SLU, also swapping the two
Colorado teams to preserve first-round pairings, and obtain
5W Northern Mich (C) 6E Michigan (C)
4W CO College (W) 3E Clarkson (E)
1W North Dakota (W) --+--2E Maine (H)
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2W Mich State (C) --+--1E New Hampshire (H)
3W Denver U (W) 4E Boston Coll (H)
6W St Lawrence (E) 5E Ohio State (C)
The Gory Details
You can also see a detailed accounting of all the pairwise
comparisons.
_________________________________________________________________
Last Modified: 1999 March 15
Joe Schlobotnik / [log in to unmask]
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