The Mid-Major versus Major Debate – March Owes Memories To Mid-Majors

March 10, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Bleacher Fan and Babe Ruthless.

I think the best debates are the ones that elicit the most passion out of those arguing each side. Kudos to both Bleacher Fan and Babe Ruthless for conveying deep passion for this topic – especially considering both attended “mid-major” schools. But, passion alone does not directly sway my verdict.

My analysis kicked off with Babe Ruthless boldly declaring that the truth behind the quality of a team lies in the caliber of its opponent, not in how many wins it earns. I fundamentally disagree with that assessment on the grounds it is a substantial oversimplification. Championship teams all have something in common – they know how to win. Losing to good teams just proves a team is not good.

While Babe Ruthless was already filling up the “con” side of my judgment sheet on this debate (yea, I have one… it’s that whole geek thing kicking in…), Bleacher Fan balanced things out. Bleacher Fan presents an interesting scenario while relaying the double standard college basketball places on mid-major teams. Major teams dominate the landscape, but a loss by a very good mid-major squad in the conference tournament – even in the championship game – relegates the team to the NIT (stands for “Not In Tournament”) or worse, as Bleacher Fan points out with the example of Akron in 2007.

Bleacher Fan is also spot on in claiming that too much emphasis is often placed on which team gets into the NCAA Tournament based on a three day event at a neutral site (read: conference tournament). The conference tournament is unduly weighted in a way that places far too much emphasis on a single game in a tournament. In fact, the de-emphasis on the regular season is EXACTLY why BCS advocates favor the BCS. The same principles are in play here in college basketball. Winning the regular season should be considered more impressive than a three game winning streak at season’s end in a tournament. The selection committee seems to understand that principle for major conference teams, but memory lapses for mid-majors, despite the fact that the exact same circumstances are at work.

If a team’s potential is any part of the selection criteria, a mid-major has more unknowns – and more to prove – in THE tournament than does a major conference team that has done nothing but lose to tournament-quality teams it plays against. That is a known commodity. The tournament thrives on the unknown. Putting in a mediocre major team, according to the criteria put forth by Babe Ruthless, is nothing more than bracket fodder and a waste of everyone’s time. There is nothing interesting about watching a Connecticut team that struggled all season struggle again in the tournament when an upstart Akron team might pull a big, headline-grabbing upset. THAT, is appointment TV.

And since the topic of Akron has come up again, it makes sense to point out that there is little doubt that Georgia Tech’s presence in the Atlanta media market influenced their selection in 2007 over the Zips. Akron certainly does not have the same draw that Georgia Tech does because the market sizes are vastly different. If you are reading and dismissing this assertion as a conspiracy theory, you are flat wrong. The tournament needs balance, sure. But it is also a TV show skewed toward attracting eyeballs, and the most eyeballs belong in the biggest markets.

Even if, as Babe Ruthless states, a mid-major pulling an upset is a bit of an anomaly, isn’t that a more compelling viewing experience for fans? While it remains crucial for tournament organizers to attract big market eyeballs, it is also responsible for creating as many memorable tournament moments as possible, and mid-majors having a presence in the tournament makes that happen. Otherwise One Shining Moment at the end of the tourney is full of an overrated Connecticut team missing a bunch of threes. That sounds fun to watch.

Babe Ruthless’ example of regular season conference champs Coastal Carolina being shut out of the tournament because Winthrop won the conference tournament is interesting. Does Winthrop deserve a bid? Yes. But, did Coastal Carolina prove anything by winning the conference in the regular season? Absolutely. In fact, it is perfectly reasonable to argue that winning the regular season is a more difficult and grueling accomplishment than winning three games in three days in a neutral tournament setting. Both teams should have received a tournament nod.

Opponent quality and RPI is meaningful. But, in the scenario of one tournament spot open, and a duel between a good mid-major school and a lesser-accomplished major conference school, the better television and more compelling viewer experience happens when the mid-major team gets the spot. More, the mid-major team is always poised to surprise. And, in March, who doesn’t like surprises? Bleacher Fan does, and the debate victory is earned by him.

The battle between quality TV and rewarding big media market schools is waging. Fans of basketball should, in this case, advocate for quality TV – and the mid-major teams.

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The Mid-Major versus Major Debate – Is The Mid-Major Just a Mirage?

March 9, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Bleacher Fan and Babe Ruthless.

You know a term is beginning to hit rarified air in the social Web-stratosphere when it gets its own Wikipedia page. Such is the case with “mid-major.” These supposed less-than-stellar conferences often boast some of the best teams and most exciting, memorable moments of the NCAA tournament.

We all remember in 2006 when George Mason made a deep run into the NCAA tournament – even beating some tournament favorites along the way, like the team’s first surprising upset over a talented and tough Michigan State squad. It is fair to write that the excellent mid-major teams are the exception, not the rule, since they have never won a NCAA tournament championship. But – when will a mid-major rewrite the rule?

There are some excellent mid-major conferences this season featuring better than average teams. The Atlantic-10 alone features five 20-win teams, at least three of which belong in the NCAA tournament: Temple, Richmond, and Xavier. The Mid-American Conference has a pair of 20 wins teams, too, in rivals Akron and Kent State. In short, the crop of mid-major teams looks as strong this season as it ever has. And, it appears as though the team that wins the conference tournament may not necessarily be the best team in conference (THAT, folks, is an entirely different debate between the value of the regular season champion versus the tournament champion).

The fact is, though, the George Mason example is an easy one to give. But, that team did not win in the Final Four, and no mid-major team has ever made the final game or won an NCAA tournament championship. Therefore, the question begs – Does an excellent mid-major team deserve to get in to the NCAA tournament over a mediocre major conference team?

Bleacher Fan will argue that mid-major teams, though they may not be from the most glamorous of conferences, deserve to get in to the NCAA tournament over a mediocre team from a major conference. Babe Ruthless will argue that major conference schools have major conference players… those teams are all excellent and deserve the shot at the extra spot in the tournament.

For the purposes of this debate we shall run the following scenario: The last spot in the NCAA tournament comes down to a second-place mid-major team and an eighth place major conference team. Who should get it?

My preconceived notions are low, but my expectations are high. Use plenty of examples and make the case. Are the underdogs really wolves in sheep clothing? Are mediocre teams from dominant conferences really just a mirage? Let’s tip off the debate.

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The Mid-Major versus Major Debate – Even Rodney Dangerfield Got More Respect

March 9, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Babe Ruthless.

Why is it that a conference tournament loss is absolutely meaningless to the so-called best teams in the country (who are SUPPOSED to win), while the same, lone conference tournament loss is a death sentence to mid-major teams, even those that are perceived as the best in conference?

The makeup of THE national basketball tournament is intended to provide the top 65 teams in the nation with an opportunity to compete for the national crown. Built into that is the “automatic bid” process which is designed to guarantee that the best representatives from EVERY conference, not just the “majors,” are given an opportunity to participate.

But what happens if the best team from a mid-major conference does not win their conference tournament?

Before you thoughtlessly give the canned response of “They must NOT have been the best team,” I want to point a very important truth out to you: Any team in college basketball can lose on any given night.

That is not a truth specific only to mid-majors. In the 2009 ACC Tournament, North Carolina (the top-ranked team in the entire nation) lost to Florida State during the semifinal game. Does that mean that Florida State was a better team that North Carolina? Perhaps for that night they were the better team, but the selection committee still saw fit to award North Carolina as a #1 seed in the national tournament.

The selection committee got it right. One game does not determine the worth of a basketball team. They KNEW that the best team in the ACC (and the nation) was not Florida State, or even the eventual ACC champion Duke Blue Devils (who would go on to still be seeded lower than a team within the very conference whose championship they had won). Instead, they recognized that the team which had proven better over the length of an ENTIRE SEASON was actually North Carolina. They accepted the fact that any team in college basketball can lose on any given night, and did not penalize the Tar Heels for a single loss during their conference tournament. At the end of the day, they acknowledged that North Carolina was STILL the best team in the ACC.

That same logic applies to EVERY conference in the NCAA.

If the selection committee is left to naming team number 65 in the tournament, and it is a toss-up between the 19-11 NINTH place team in the Big East, or the 23-8 FIRST place team in the MAC – a team that just so happens to lose the conference tournament championship to an underdog – it should be the FIRST place team in the MAC that receives the final at-large invitation. Failure to do so diminishes the value of the season that was played, and instead places far too much credibility in a single game.

The 2007 Akron Zips serve as the PERFECT example of this type of flawed logic, where too much credit is given to one single incident. During the 2006-2007 season the Zips played to a very impressive 26-6 record as they entered their conference championship game. They had already soundly defeated the only other 20-game winner in their conference that year (Kent State) in an impressive 61-54 performance during the MAC semifinal, and were slotted to face the fourth-seeded Miami Redhawks in the championship matchup.

The Zips carried a two-point lead into the final 10 seconds of the game, but then Miami’s Doug Penno hit a desperation three-pointer to steal the game away from the Zips.

Should the Redhawks have been punished for beating Akron? Absolutely not! They had earned the automatic bid for their conference, and deserved the reward of being invited to the March Madness tournament. However, Akron should also not have been punished because of one buzzer-beater three that cost them its conference championship. Throughout the entire season, they had established themselves as the best team in the MAC, and only lost the tournament because of a desperation shot as the clock ticked to 00:00.

The Zips WERE punished, though, making them the only school in NCAA history with at least 26 wins to NOT be invited to postseason play. They did not receive an at-large invitation because the selection committee instead felt that teams such as the ACC’s seventh place Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets were more deserving. Never mind the fact that the Yellow Jackets finished the regular season with a record of only 20-10 (needing to win their final two regular season games just to finish at .500 within the conference), lost in their FIRST game of the ACC Conference Tournament, and finished behind SIX other teams within their own conference.

Because Georgia Tech played in a major conference, their resume was deemed as being better.

As an aside, both Miami AND Georgia Tech lost in their first round matchups of the tournament. Akron may not have done better, but they would not have done worse!

I can only hope that this year’s selection committee will take a more sensible approach that is less influenced by the hype and overrating of a major conference strength of schedule. When a team cannot even finish better than ninth in their own conference, they do not deserve consideration as one of the best teams in the country, especially if there is another conference LEADER still available.

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The Mid-Major versus Major Debate – Go Big Or Go Home

March 9, 2010

Read the opposing argument from Bleacher Fan.

Should a highly ranked mid-major team get a tournament bid over a lesser ranked major conference team? In a word… NO. The very term “mid-major” signifies a lesser status. Mid-major teams are designated as such because they have historically played in a less competitive conference against poorer quality opponents. I am sure that the Bleacher Fan will attempt to sensationalize and hype up Cinderella stories and tournament upsets, but as Sports Geek points out in his introduction these are exceptions rather than the rule. Yes, even a blind squirrel finds a nut once and a while. If the goal of distributing bids to the tournament is to load the brackets with potential upsets for the sake of drama, then by all means go slumming and add mid-major teams left and right. But, if the tournament’s true goal is to find the best men’s basketball team in the NCAA, then the Big Dance should be left to the big boys.

Mid-major teams play cream puffs in comparison to major conference teams. Sure there are plenty of 20-win teams in mid-major conferences this season. Big deal! That is only because they are playing other weak teams during conference play. The truth behind a team’s competitive ability is in the caliber of their opponents, not their record.

Sports Geek said he wanted examples, and that is exactly what I am going to give him. The Big South Conference is a mid-major conference. Since the late 1990s Winthrop University has established a reputation as this conference’s perennial powerhouse and risen to mid-major prominence (that is actually a heading on the school’s Wikipedia page). Counting this year’s invitation, the Winthrop Eagles have been to the NCAA tournament a conference record nine times. In 2007 the Eagles even advanced to the second round of the tournament after upsetting a six seeded Notre Dame. This reaffirms my earlier assertion that, yes it is possible for a mid-major school to advance, although it is somewhat of a statistical anomaly. Winthrop, however, was not the only team with an impressive record in the conference. Conference rival Coastal Carolina posted a 28-6 season which ranked them number one in the Big South, yet they probably will not see a tournament birth since Winthrop clinched the conference tournament’s automatic bid.

Using Bleacher Fan’s logic – that a good mid-major deserves a tournament spot over a lesser ranked major conference team – it would be reasonable to assume that Coastal Carolina would deserve a shot over a team like Georgia Tech. Georgia Tech finished seventh in the ACC with a 19-11 record. Allowing Coastal in over Georgia Tech is absurd thinking. Teams like Georgia Tech play a virtual Murder’s Row lineup of schools like Duke, Maryland, Virginia Tech, Florida State, and Clemson (all 20-win teams). Coastal Carolina on the other hand benefits from inflated numbers that give the perception, although significantly skewed, of competitiveness. Coastal Carolina’s wins are rice paper thin. They won 28 games because they played teams like Voorhees College, Bridgewater, and North Carolina Central. Excuse me if I do not get excited about their chances in the tournament, but I have never been a fan of lost causes.

If you think I am just making generalizations let’s look at the previous example from a different perspective. Instead let’s examine how both teams faired against a similar opponent – Duke University. Both teams played Duke University last season, but the results are very different. Coastal Carolina was blown out by the Blue Devils 74-49, but Georgia Tech was able to pull out a victory, winning 71-67. Duke is an elite caliber major conference team… the type that a twelfth seeded tourney team would more than likely be matched against. The record clearly shows that a mid-major team just cannot hang, while a significantly lower ranked major team seems ready to rumble against.

Mid-major teams are just that – “mid” major. They are subpar, less than. Yet for some reason there seems to be groups of masochists who want to offer them up as sacrificial lambs to the major conference teams all in the name of the Cinderella story. This weak-minded, wide-eyed optimism should be reserved for fair tales not sports.

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