NCAA Seed Stats | Syracusefan.com

NCAA Seed Stats

SWC75

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Well, folks, the time has come to fill out your NCAA bracket sheets, If you are like me, you have come to realize that there is no relationship to the amount of time you spend on your sheet and the quality of the results. One year, a friend of mine at work put a sheet on the floor and placed his baby on it. Wherever the kid drooled, that was the pick. I spent three days reading all I could about all the teams before doing my sheet. The kid and I were neck and neck until I passed him in the final four. Now he’s probably all grown up and is as dumb as I am. Another year, I was delighted to go 14-2 the first night. I came to work and found some secretary had gone 16-0. The next day, I went 15-1. I backslid on Saturday at 5-3 but had a 7-1 Sunday for an incredible record of 41-7 after the first weekend, with only 15 games to go. You see ads in the sports magazines for guys bragging about their 70% prediction rate. I was at .854. How could anyone match that? The secretary was at 44-4, (.917). I asked her for her secret. She said she didn't know anything about basketball. She just picked schools based on who she knew who went there, which schools wore her favorite color, etc. Any illusion that I or anyone else knew anything about college basketball disappeared completely.

But it can be liberating to lose your illusions. I was born in the same hospital as Tom Cruise and grew up a couple miles from where he spent the first two years of his life but that's not him in the mirror, so why worry about it? The real challenge is to get a sheet done before the tournament begins. For that you need some kind of a system. Not a fool proof system. Not something that would make you the King of Vegas. Just a system that allows you to get a sheet together on time and still have a life. One way is to look at the percentages.

The NCAA tournament field went to 64 teams in 1985, (the year Villanova won). Since then these are the records of the seeds in the first rounds:

(updated through 2019- there was no 2020 tournament so ‘Last Year’ means 2019)

1 vs 16 139-1 99.3% Last year #1’s were 4-0 by a combined +91 points. The closest was 15 points.

2 vs 15 132-8 94.3% Last year #2’s were 4-0 by a combined +72 points The closest was 7 points.
.
3 vs 14 119-21 85.0% Last year #3’s were 4-0 by a combined +62 points. The closest was 5 points.

4 vs 13 110-30 78.6% Last year #4s were 3-1 by a combined +49 points. The loss was by 6 points.

5 vs 12 90-50 64.3% Last year #5’s were 1-3 by a combined -40 points. The losses were by 4, 19 and 18 points.

6 vs 11 88-52 62.9% Last year #6’s were 3-1 by a combined +20 points. The loss was by 3 points.

7 vs 10 85-55 60.7% Last year #7’s were 1-3 by a combined -10 points. The losses were by 10, 9 and 7 points.

8 vs 9 69-71 49.3% Last year the #8’s were 0-4 by a combined -64 points. The losses were by 9, 15, 17 and 23 points.


If you divide the latter, (upset), column by 35, you should pick one 14, one 13, one 12 and one or two 11 seeds, (52/35 = 1.4857), to win and two 10s and 9s. That's 8-9 upsets in the first round. The average over the years is 8 but last year there were 12. You can't always go with the averages, however. In 2016 there were 13 upsets, tied for the highest ever with 2001. The previous year, 2000, there was the lowest ever, only 3. The year we won the title, (2003) there were 8 first round upsets, exactly the historical average. The next year there were half that many. Overall, the seedings hold up pretty well. In 35 years, there have been between 7 and 9 upsets 19 times. Don’t just go “chalk” but don’t depart much from it, either.

If you score well in the first round, you will usually contend the rest of the way because you will have the most teams still alive. Then the question becomes: Who's most likely to make the Final Four? According to the seeds, there have been:

56 #1 seeds, (including all four in 2008, the only time it’s happened)

30 #2 seeds

17 #3 seeds

13 #4 seeds

7 #5 seeds

3 #6 seeds

3 #7 seeds

5 #8 seeds

1 #9 seed

1 #10 seeds (Dat’s us!)

4 #11 seeds

0 #12, 13, 14, 15 or 16 seeds.

The chances of a team seeded less than #4 making the final four, (based on a percentage of who made it) are 17%, (only 24 of 140). SU’s Final Four teams were seeded #2, (1987), #4, (1996), #3, (2003), #4, (2013) and #10 (2016). There were no seedings in 1975 but we wouldn’t have been seeded very high. Each regional was 8 teams and we probably would have been 6th or 7th.


The national champions have included:

22 #1 seeds

5 #2 seeds

4 #3 seeds

1 #4 seed (Arizona in ’97)

0 #5 seeds

1 #6 seed (Kansas '88)

1 #7 seeds (Connecticut ’14)

1 #8 seed (Villanova '85)

0 below that. (I don't think the play-in games are a real big deal).

There had never been a Final Four with all #1 seeds until 2008: Somebody is likely going down. But, if you are picking less than a #3 seed to go all the way, you are going out on a limb. But you might just be right- about once a decade, Still, if you want to play it safe, chose a #1 seed.

First Round Upsets

How often do they lead to second round victories? Last year just 1 of the 12 teams that pulled off first round upsets won in the second round. Oregon, a 12 seed, looked good beat 5-seed Wisconsin 72 to 54 and faced the lone 13 seed winner, Cal-Irvine, in the round of 32 and beat them by almost the same score, 73-54. Then they gave eventual national champion Virginia a good tussle before loosing 49-53.

In the 35 years since the field reached 64 teams, there have been the following number of first round upsets, with the following results in later rounds:

16 seeds have now won 1 game, by 20 no less and lost by 7 in the next round to a 9 seed.

15 seeds have won 8 times. All lost by double figures in the next round except Florida Gulf Coast in 2013, who won in the round of 32 and lost by double figures in the Sweet 16.

14 seeds have won 21 first round games and 2 second round games and none in the Sweet 16.

13 seeds have won 30 first round games, 6 second round games and none in the Sweet 16.

12 seeds have won 50 first round games and 22 second round games. They have won 2 Sweet 16 games.

11 seeds have won 52 first round games and 23 second round games. They have won 7 Sweet 16 games. They made it to the final four 4 times. (LSU in 1986, George Mason in 2006, VCU in 2011 and Loyola in 2018.)

10 seeds have won 55 first round games and 21 in the second round. They have won 6 Sweet 16 games. We were the first ever 10 seed in the Final Four.

9 seeds have won 71 first round games. All it has gotten them is 70 dates with #1 seeds. They have won exactly 6 of those, (one vs. a 16 seed) and 4 games in the sweet 16. Wichita State in 2013 became the first #9 seed to win in the Elite 8 and get to the Final Four where they gave Louisville fits before losing 68-72.

People love those first round upsets but 206 of 288 of the teams that pulled them have gone from windshield to bug in the next game. That’s 72%. Then they are 20-60, (25%) in the Sweet 16 They are 6-14 (30%) in regional finals. None made it to the title game.

If you go with percentages, pick 2 nine seeds to upset eight seeds but that's as far as they go. Also pick two 10 seeds to win in the first round. Give one of the winners a trip to the sweet 16 but that’s it. Pick one each of the 11, 12, 13 and 14 seeds to win. They will stop there. In the Final Four you could go with two 1 seeds, a 2 seed and a 3 or 4 seed. Or you might want to pick a lower seed just for fun, But nothing below an 11th seed unless you want to make history. You now have the freedom to pick a 16 seed to win in the first round after what happened last year, but keep in mind it took 34 years for that to happen. Do you really want to predict it’s going to happen again now?



Oh, you want to know WHICH upsets will take place? Beats me! That's the problem, and the delight. Some observations that might help- or might not:

- I tend to steer away from "hot" teams to win it all because they will have to maintain their level of play for three weeks against increasingly tough competition. The championship team is usually a team that gets hot in the tournament, not one that was already hot when it started. Sometimes, they are just "survive and advancers", who don't blow anyone away but have bottomed out at the right time and get better as the opposition gets better. (Of course “bottoming out” teams are more vulnerable in the early rounds than the hot teams, so watch out!)

- Don't base decisions on coach's reputations. Bobby Knight won three national titles and went out in the first game 9 times. Lute Olson won a national title and was one and done 10 times. Tom Izzo has been to 7 Final Fours, (he’s good at getting there but less good at winning: only one). But he’s gone out in the first round 4 times. Jim Boeheim is 5 and 6. Jimmy Valvano and Rollie Massimino had one good run a piece and became “legends” for a moment. The players play the game, not the coaches.

- I think match-ups are critical. Not just individual match-ups but team match-ups. We all know what physical teams can do to finesse teams. I like zone teams or teams with great shot-blockers vs. teams with no outside game. I like teams that press or use man-to-man vs. a team with a shaky point guard. I like teams with two good big men over a team with one. Look at guard play first, the front line second. But if guard play is similar, go with the taller team. Upsets are more likely to occur between teams with different styles. When teams mirror each other, pick the higher seeded one – they are doing it with better athletes. A "mid major", (are there "low majors" anymore?), will be more likely to pull off an upset if they've been strong all year than if they got hot in their conference tournament. Actually, you should avoid Cinderella conference tournament winners: they've likely shot their bolt.

- The numbers suggest that the most efficient offensive teams go the farthest and you’ve got to score. But defense still wins championships. Avoid teams that are just trying to out-score their opposition. They might pull off an upset but not they aren’t winning 6 in a row.

- You may hate the "power conferences" but when the Final Four comes, that's where the teams have traditionally come from, although that shows signs of changing with George Mason, VCU, Butler, Wichita State, etc. Last year, (2019) we Had Loyola of Chicago and Villanova, (is the Big East still a ‘power’ conference?). Under-performing but talented teams from power conferences might be a better bet. If you are going to pick a Cinderella, make sure you don’t wind up with an Ugly Step Sister instead.

Beginning in 2018, I took a different tactic. Instead of researching all the teams and applying my dubious theories, I just used to the points accumulated by each team in my “Against Ranked Teams” study, (which I will be updating shortly), to pick the most likely upsets, then the most likely final Four teams and the probable winners there and in the other games in between. It enabled me to rip through the selection process and, even though my predicted national champion went down in the first round, I wound up doing better than I have in years overall. Documented achievements proved more reliable than theories and opinions, so I’ll be using the same method this year. You might want to peruse that or Sagarin or KenPom or somebody else and let them guide you more than your own instincts or guesses.


Or you can just drool. That might work...

Bon appetit.
 

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