Originally Posted by
GoneGolfin
Shocked? Nothing much shocks me anymore. Surprised? Yes. The trend in the last four years says otherwise
a team from a non-elite conference (Conference RPI Top 4) with an RPI outside of the Top 8 earning a national seed. Consider the following teams that were not awarded national seeds
2013
Indiana (RPI #12), 1st place Big Ten (Conference RPI rank of 6)
2012
Purdue (RPI #8), 1st place Big Ten (Conference RPI rank of 10)
Arizona (RPI #14), Pac-12 tied for 1st (Conference RPI rank of 3) ** National Champions **
2011
Georgia Tech (RPI #8), ACC tied for 1st (Conference RPI rank of 2)
Arizona State (RPI #9), Pac-10 2nd place (Conference RPI rank of 4)
Texas A&M (RPI #10), Big XII tied for 1st (Conference RPI rank of 3)
Cal State-Fullerton (RPI #13), 1st place Big West (Conference RPI rank of 10)
2010
Cal State-Fullerton (RPI #11), 1st place Big West (Conference RPI rank of 8)
The teams that have been awarded national seeds outside of the Top 8 RPI in the last four years were not far outside of the Top 8 (9, 11, 11, 12, 10) and all came from the ACC (1), SEC (1), Pac-12 (1), Big XII (1)
with the lone exception being Rice in 2011 (RPI #11) from CUSA (Conference RPI 5).
In order for the Cajuns to earn a national seed with an RPI ranking of say 9->12 (and maybe even 7 or 8), other things will need to fall into their favor.
1) I have oft mentioned Alabama winning the SEC regular season (as the Tide would earn a national seed). I think this would give the Cajuns the most slack. This would be a strong resume bullet for the Cajuns.
2) It is unlikely that the Cajuns will log any more than four games vs. the RPI Top 25. Alabama and LSU must remain in the RPI Top 25 (giving the Cajuns a 3-1 record vs. the RPI Top 25)
else they will get slammed for their non-national seed worthy schedule (this will be an argument as it is). Also, the more Cajun opponents in the RPI Top 50
the better. Southern Mississippi is important
Western Kentucky is nice
they definitely need someone other than Alabama and LSU. Maybe Arkansas State can get there
even with three losses to the Cajuns.
3) Maintain that lofty road record (currently 14-0). The selection committee will take notice of this
especially when comparing the road records of the other contenders. This is related to Road RPI, which will be important. Though this is not as strong, being undefeated will still afford the Cajuns a solid Road RPI. Non-Conference RPI (currently not as strong as their Overall RPI
the RPI value as well as the ranking
but solid with a #14 ranking) will also be a factor.
4) The right teams need to be ahead of the Cajuns in the RPI. I cannot emphasize this enough. By right teams, I am referring to the teams from the elite conferences that have lofty RPIs because of where they play, but are not the first or second place teams in their respective conferences. This is why watching the conference regular season finish and conference tournaments is important. Some examples
NC State in 2013 (RPI #7, ACC 4th), Clemson in 2011 (RPI #7, ACC 6th), Miami in 2010 (RPI #8, ACC 3rd)
even Georgia Tech in 2011, whom tied for 1st in the ACC (#2 Conference RPI) and had an overall RPI ranking of 8 (three ACC schools were already national seeds and the lower conference finishers were picked ahead of GT due to RPI ranking). None of the above were awarded national seeds.
5) Finishing strong
winning the Conference Tournament. While winning the conference tournament is not an absolute requirement, the Cajuns may need to do so to have their RPI where it needs to be. Remember that although the tournament is in Mobile, these games will not be considered road games for RPI purposes. They will be considered neutral games
even for the home team. I also remember the Cajuns landing undefeated in the Sun Belt Tournament Championship game of 2007 vs. New Orleans in Mobile. I think that loss was the difference between a #2 seed in College Station and hosting a regional (quite possibly Texas A&M being the #2 seed in Lafayette
or Wichita State not being granted their gift). Also, Conference regular season titles as well as Conference tournament championships are important to the selection committee.
6) And as my lead post illustrates
help from the teams in the RPI around the Cajuns (especially the RPI Top 8). Help as in more losses
offsetting the non-optimal remaining schedule for the Cajuns.
There are so many variables here (many outside the control of the Cajuns)
which is why it is foolish to unequivocally say that the Cajuns will be a national seed if they only lose X games
or will not be a national seed if they lose X games. You cannot even project an RPI finish (due to many other factors outside the control of the Cajuns), let alone whether or not they will receive a national seed. But the above points are significant factors that provide the Cajuns a better chance to be there at the end.
Brian