Sunday, December 30, 2007

New Stuff

I added a couple of features to RPIForecast.com:
  1. Conference Pages: Each conference now has a page so that you can see how each team in the conference stacks up. Items on the pages include things like current and forecasted records for both conference and non conference games along with the usual RPI forecasts. To give you an example, here is the ACC's page.
  2. As mentioned in #1, I have added summaries of conference W-L record forecasts and current conferce records to the main page and the individual team and conference pages. Additionally, on the team pages, you will also find the current OOC W-L record (along with the forecast). Ideally, I would include everything on the main page, but there just isn't room.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

An Undefeated Conference Season?

Well, since I made the last post, Pittsburgh beat Duke, Memphis beat Georgetown, Mississippi beat Clemson, and Michigan St. beat Texas, so that now only 9 undefeated teams remain. Of course, 3 of those games were between unbeaten teams, so it was bound to happen.

An event that is not quite as rare is an undefeated conference regular season. With the exception of 2001 and 2002, at least two teams have gone undefeated in conference play in each of the last 10 years:

2007 - Memphis (CUSA) and Winthrop (Big South)
2006 - Bucknell (Patriot), George Washington (A10) and Gonzaga (WCC)
2005 - Davidson (Southern) and Pacific (WAC)
2004 - Austin Peay (OVC), Gonzaga (WCC) and St. Joseph's (A10)
2003 - Kentucky (SEC), Penn (Ivy), and Weber St. (Big Sky)
2002 - Kansas (Big 12)
2001 - none
2000 - Cincinnati (CUSA), Penn (Ivy), and Utah St. (Big West)
1999 - College of Charleston (Southern), Duke (ACC), and Utah (WAC)
1998 - Princeton (Ivy) and TCU (WAC)

Which teams are most likely to do so this coming year? Using Jeff Sagarin's PREDICTOR as of today, the 20 most likely candidates are listed below:

Rank Team Conf Prob. conf games
1 Winthrop, BSth 13.2% 14
2 Morgan St., MEAC 11.5% 17
3 Gonzaga, WCC 8.9% 14
4 Holy Cross, Pat 6.7% 14
5 Memphis, CUSA 6.3% 16
6 Butler, Horz 5.7% 18
7 Kansas, B12 5.5% 16
8 West Virginia, BE 5.5% 18
9 Duke, ACC 4.7% 16
10 Hampton, MEAC 3.6% 18
11 St. Mary's, WCC 3.4% 14
12 Davidson, SC 3.0% 20
13 Texas Arlington, Slnd 2.9% 16
14 Xavier, A10 2.7% 16
15 Brown, Ivy 2.0% 14
16 MD Baltimore County, AE 1.9% 16
17 Rhode Island, A10 1.5% 16
18 Alabama St., SWAC 1.4% 18
19 North Carolina, ACC 1.4% 16
20 South Alabama, SB 1.2% 18

Here are the conference-by-conference leaders:

A10 - Xavier 2.73%
ACC - Duke 4.73%
AE - MD Baltimore County 1.92%
ASun - East Tennessee St. 0.47%
B10 - Wisconsin 0.51%
B12 - Kansas 5.47%
BE - West Virginia 5.45%
BSky - Portland St. 0.12%
BSth - Winthrop 13.20%
BW - UC Santa Barbara 0.66%
CAA - Virginia Commonwealth 0.26%
CUSA - Memphis 6.34%
Horz - Butler 5.69%
Ivy - Brown 2.03%
MAAC - Siena 0.44%
MAC - Miami OH 0.70%
MEAC - Morgan St. 11.50%
MVC - Drake 0.82%
MWC - New Mexico 0.43%
NEC - Robert Morris 0.08%
OVC - Austin Peay 0.14%
P10 - UCLA 0.06%
Pat - Holy Cross 6.71%
SB - South Alabama 1.24%
SC - Davidson 2.99%
SEC - Tennessee 0.80%
SWAC - Alabama St. 1.44%
Slnd - Texas Arlington 2.85%
Sum - IUPUI 0.76%
WAC - Nevada 0.53%
WCC - Gonzaga 8.89%


Notice that in some of the conferences (like the WCC, and MEAC) two teams have a nontrivial chance at going undefeated. With this in mind, here are the conferences ranked by the probability that any of the teams goes undefeated:

rank conf teams prob
1 MEAC 12 15.1%
2 BSth 8 13.2%
3 WCC 8 12.3%
4 Pat 8 6.7%
5 CUSA 12 6.4%
6 ACC 12 6.1%
7 BE 16 6.0%
8 Horz 10 5.9%
9 B12 12 5.6%
10 A10 14 5.1%
11 Slnd 12 3.3%
12 SC 11 3.1%
13 SB 13 2.3%
14 Ivy 8 2.1%
15 AE 9 2.0%
16 SWAC 10 1.4%
17 Sum 10 1.4%
18 SEC 12 1.1%
19 WAC 9 0.9%
20 MVC 10 0.9%
21 BW 9 0.8%
22 B10 11 0.8%
23 MAC 12 0.8%
24 MWC 9 0.7%
25 ASun 12 0.6%
26 MAAC 10 0.6%
27 CAA 12 0.5%
28 BSky 9 0.3%
29 OVC 11 0.3%
30 NEC 11 0.1%
31 P10 10 0.1%

From these probabilities, you can easily calculate the chance that at least one D1 team will go undefeated in conference play this season. In this case, the probability is 67.2%. This seems slightly low since 90% of the last 10 years it happened, but maybe we would have seen a similar number in 2001 or 2002.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

An Undefeated Regular Season?

As of yesterday, there were 13 unbeaten teams in Division 1. Which one of these teams is most likely to finish the regular season undefeated? Well, to get an idea, I used Jeff Sagarin's PREDICTOR (what I use in my simulations) and Ken Pomeroy's Ratings to calculate the probabilties that each of the 13 teams will finish the regular season undefeated. Here are the results:

Using Sagarin's PREDICTOR:
rank Team Probability
1 Duke - one in 23 ( 4.2729% )
2 Kansas - one in 57 ( 1.7672% )
3 North Carolina - one in 154 ( 0.6509% )
4 Memphis - one in 334 ( 0.2991% )
5 Mississippi - one in 616 ( 0.1624% )
6 Texas - one in 1,797 ( 0.0556% )
7 Sam Houston St. - one in 3,820 ( 0.0262% )
8 Georgetown - one in 11,074 ( 0.0090% )
9 Washington St. - one in 26,243 ( 0.0038% )
10 Miami FL - one in 33,082 ( 0.0030% )
11 Pittsburgh - one in 33,801 ( 0.0030% )
12 Vanderbilt - one in 80,256 ( 0.0012% )
13 Clemson - one in 156,704 ( 0.0006% )


Using Pomeroy's Ratings:
rank Team Probability
1 Duke - one in 9 ( 11.7184% )
2 Kansas - one in 17 ( 5.7862% )
3 Memphis - one in 105 ( 0.9502% )
4 Mississippi - one in 1,440 ( 0.0694% )
5 Sam Houston St. - one in 3,087 ( 0.0324% )
6 Texas - one in 3,551 ( 0.0282% )
7 Georgetown - one in 4,830 ( 0.0207% )
8 Washington St. - one in 5,219 ( 0.0192% )
9 North Carolina - one in 6,088 ( 0.0164% )
10 Pittsburgh - one in 12,586 ( 0.0079% )
11 Clemson - one in 14,976 ( 0.0067% )
12 Miami FL - one in 17,175 ( 0.0058% )
13 Vanderbilt - one in 1,112,128 ( 0.0001% )


With the exception of North Carolina, the orderings are very similar. If you believe Ken Pomeroy's numbers, there is a decent chance that a team will run the table during the regular season. It is quite a bit less likely according to Jef Sagarin's numbers.

A Few Additions

I added a couple of things to the conferences page:
  1. Current (day-to-day) RPI
  2. Current Non Conference Record

I also added the daily RPI to the conference graphs so you can see how the RPI forecast and the daily RPIs change by conference by clicking on the conference name.

In the future, I'll create individual conference pages with a list of the teams and their statistics...sort of like the individual team pages. That will have to wait though.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

Teams Now Connected

If you noticed a very slight jump in the ratings of your favorite team between yesterday and today, but your team didn't play, it could be because Jeff Sagarin's PREDICTOR is now based solely on games this season. Even if your team did play, you might have seen an unexpected change.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Is West Virginia the best team in the Big East?

Over at the Bracket Project's Bracket Matrix, the consensus seems to be that West Virginia is a number 9 seed and the 6th best team in the Big East. My projections have West Virginia winning the Big East, going about 26-4 overall and 15-3 in the Big East which would be enough to win the conference title. They are also projected to win the Big East tournament and get a number one seed. So, why is the consensus that they will be a nine seed? Well, alot of the projections are based on the teams performances to-date. Mine are based on their projected records and RPIs in March.

If you look at the polls (Coaches and Press) as of last Monday, West Viriginia was 33rd in one poll and not getting votes in the other. Why the lack of respect for the Mountaineers? They have one loss, which came to Tennessee on a neutral court by two points. Aside from that one game, they have absolutely demolished their competition by an average of 36 points. I supect that many of the experts projecting brackets are using the polls as one of their tools. Because I use Jeff Sagarin's PREDICTOR in my simulations to predict the future RPI and the DANCE CARD methodology along with the forecasted RPIs to predict the tournament field, I don't have to rely only on what has happened to-date, but what will likely happen by the end of the season. One of the main reasons my projections put West Virginia so high is that Sagarin's PREDICTOR ranks them #1. This is due to the fact that they have been utterly humiliating the competition (aside from the Vol's of course). Will this spell success in the BE regular season? That is what Sagarin's numbers seem to suggest. The seeds themselves are somewhat subjective, but unless West Virginia completely falls apart a 9 seed certainly seens too low.

Finally, if you compare today's RPIs to the projected rpi's for the Big East, you get the following:

Current RPIs:
Current RPI Team
12 Providence
13 Marquette
36 Syracuse
39 Louisville
41 West Virginia
45 Pittsburgh
46 Villanova
51 Seton Hall
61 St. John's
63 Connecticut
69 South Florida
71 Notre Dame
84 Georgetown
146 Rutgers
220 DePaul
286 Cincinnati

Projected end-of-regular-season RPIs

ERPI Team
7.2 West Virginia
16.3 Pittsburgh
18.5 Georgetown
20.2 Marquette
39 Louisville
40.1 Providence
44 Notre Dame
47.4 Villanova
56.2 Connecticut
63.1 Syracuse
103.3 Seton Hall
110.1 South Florida
114.6 DePaul
120.5 St. John's
183 Rutgers
204.8 Cincinnati

So, judging by the current day-to-day RPI, West Virginia is sort of a good to middle-of-the-pack Big East team. However, if you look at the projected end-of-regular-season RPI, West Virginia is right at the top. The day-do-day RPI means nothing as far as the selection committee is concerned. The RPI that matters is the one in March, which is the purpose of my projections.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

North Dakota St.

It was brought to my attention that North Dakota St. and South Dakota St. are both ineligible for post-season play this year. Not realizing this, I had projected North Dakota St. to get the automatic bid for the Summit League. I'll make the change for tomorrow's projections. At this point, Oral Roberts would likely get the automatic bid.

The following teams are ineligible for post-season play:

Cal St. Bakersfield
Central Arkansas
Kennesaw St.
NJ Inst of Technology
North Carolina Central
North Dakota St.
North Florida
Presbyterian
South Carolina Upstate
South Dakota St.
Winston Salem St.