Cleveland Buck;700837 wrote:South Florida and DePaul are so much worse than any Big Ten team, and they add 2-4 wins to each Big East team's record. Then you have your bad teams like Rutgers, Seton Hall, and Providence that are comparable to Indiana and Iowa. That is a lot of games to inflate teams records and make it look like the Big East is some monster conference. The Big East has a lot of very good teams, but they have also have a lot of bad teams which means you will have a lot of teams with a lot of wins. Hell, Minnesota and Northwestern would be NCAA tournament teams if they got to play 6-8 games against the likes of DePaul, South Florida, Providence, etc.
RPI's of the 11 Big 10 teams and the 11 Big East teams(Excluded were the former C-USA members...Louisville-w/RPI of 20 ,Cincy-33,Marquette-66, USF-160 and DePaul-229)
Big Ten-Avg of 66.1
Ohio State 2
Purdue 8
Wisconsin 13
Illinois 41
Michigan St. 48
Michigan 53
Penn St. 61
Minnesota 62
Northwestern 91
Iowa 168
Indiana 180
Big East Teams-Avg. of 45.3
Notre Dame 6
Pitt 9
Georgetown 11
WVA 15
Syracuse 18
St. John's 22
Uconn 24
Villanova 30
Seton Hall 92
Rutgers 125
Providence 146
To go along with your 6-8 extra wins against DePaul, USF, Providence, Rutgers, Seton Hall...
Each Big East team played every team once and three (3) teams twice. Here is who each of the 5 bottom teams played twice.
DePaul-USF, Cincy, WVA
USF-DePaul, Providence, Pitt
Providence-USF, Louisville, Rutgers....wins against Louisville and Villanova
Rutgers-Providence, Villanova, Seton Hall...win against Villanova
Seton Hall-Rutgers, Marquette, Syracuse...wins against St.John's, Syracuse and Marquette
West Virginia, Cincinnati and Pitt are the only teams of the top 11 to benefit from playing on of the bottom 5 teams a second time. All of the top 11 were able to play the bottom 5 at least once and while it gave them a sure fire win(in all but 6 games), it had to bring their RPI down at the same time.