arbitragegls
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- Aug 26, 2011
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...Jay Bilas has combined some of the very best metrics with his eye test and finds 'Cuse #1...here is paragraph on new system plus 'Cuse comment. Obviously Bilas really does like the 'Cuse...
Go to link below to see the rest of the best 68 teams:
Orange lead Top 68 Rankings
Forget the polls. It's easy to comb through them and spot teams whose public perception simply doesn't match the reality of their talent level. One loss doesn't make a good team bad, and one upset doesn't make a bad team good. There are far better ways of evaluating teams than just basing it on their recent record. So I'm constructing my rankings a little differently.
For starters, I'm including a metric perspective. To inform these rankings, I'm using data from Ken Pomeroy, Jeff Sagarin and Synergy Sports Technology. All are great ways to evaluate teams through a statistical lens, so I'm embracing that data and marrying it to what my eyes are telling me when I'm watching these teams in action night after night. By blending the perspectives, I believe you get a better representation of where teams really stand in relation to one another.
The idea was to have a considered judgment throughout the year that could be reliable in March without having to do a load of analysis at the end. With these rankings, we're doing that analysis on the front end.
With that in mind, the teams below are the best 68 in the country right now. It's bound to change more than a little before March, so we'll revisit it on a regular basis. But for now, dive in and see how the top teams stack up.
1. Syracuse Orange
The Orange are great in transition, and Jim Boeheim has options at multiple positions.
Here is link...paste in browser if doesnt work
(it is ESPN insider so not sure you will get access)
http://insider.espn.go.com/ncb/stor...ge-hoops-top-68-rankings-syracuse-stands-no-1
Go to link below to see the rest of the best 68 teams:
Orange lead Top 68 Rankings
Forget the polls. It's easy to comb through them and spot teams whose public perception simply doesn't match the reality of their talent level. One loss doesn't make a good team bad, and one upset doesn't make a bad team good. There are far better ways of evaluating teams than just basing it on their recent record. So I'm constructing my rankings a little differently.
For starters, I'm including a metric perspective. To inform these rankings, I'm using data from Ken Pomeroy, Jeff Sagarin and Synergy Sports Technology. All are great ways to evaluate teams through a statistical lens, so I'm embracing that data and marrying it to what my eyes are telling me when I'm watching these teams in action night after night. By blending the perspectives, I believe you get a better representation of where teams really stand in relation to one another.
The idea was to have a considered judgment throughout the year that could be reliable in March without having to do a load of analysis at the end. With these rankings, we're doing that analysis on the front end.
With that in mind, the teams below are the best 68 in the country right now. It's bound to change more than a little before March, so we'll revisit it on a regular basis. But for now, dive in and see how the top teams stack up.
1. Syracuse Orange
The Orange are great in transition, and Jim Boeheim has options at multiple positions.
Here is link...paste in browser if doesnt work
(it is ESPN insider so not sure you will get access)
http://insider.espn.go.com/ncb/stor...ge-hoops-top-68-rankings-syracuse-stands-no-1