Losing to them did matter. Mostly from the standpoint that our winning percentage (and thus WP) is very high and it was a home game. IOW, a win only marginally moves our WP higher (even moreso since a home win is 0.7 wins) … but a loss does much damage … especially a loss at home (counts as 1.3 losses). The converse case is true for a team with a low WP. Thus …
WP (without game vs. UNO) -> .8853
WP (with win vs. UNO) -> .8876 (only marginally higher)
WP (with loss vs. UNO) -> .8527
But there is no doubt that beating them would still have resulted in a non-trivial RPI hit. A win vs. UNO would have left UL with an RPI of .6114 (a loss vs. a win cost the Cajuns .0087 in RPI, per the above). A nice hit from where they would have been without playing them at all. But from an RPI rankings perspective (at this time), they would be at #5 with a win (despite the lower RPI) vs. #3 (pushing on Houston at #2) having not played them at all. This is because of what happened with the teams in the RPI Top 10 this week and how tightly they were clustered.
I have been saying this for years.
You are thinking too small. It is not just college baseball.
No. Their winning percentage (which is not the same as WP) … sans the games vs. UL … becomes a component of our OWP. Their opponents (their OWP) in aggregate become a component of our OOWP. OWP has twice the weight of OOWP.
No. Them beating us only improves their WP. Them playing us immensely helps their OWP (which is the dominant weight). The only help (and it is marginal) that we get from playing them is adding our own winning percentage (sans the game(s) vs. UNO) to their OWP, which becomes a small component of our OOWP.
And our RPI is never damaged by beating them. Because neither our OWP nor our OOWP is affected by the game result(s) vs. UNO. That is … our OWP contribution to UNO does not include our games vs. UNO. As such, their OOWP contribution to UL also does not include our games vs. UNO.
Brian