What about the major teams that laid eggs (Wake)? A mid major could have taken their place and performed with some heart.
In which case, I'd be interested to see if you agree with the posters logic.
I think he's just crapping his pants because his precious LSU didn't make it to the Sweet Sixteen...
They don't count. That's a different ball game
Bring in the mid-majors! I wouldn't mind seeing a general limit of 5 teams per conference. This could be an option as a general rule of thumb, not as a hard and fast rule.
Seriously, who needs to get in if you're 7th in your conference?
What if your conference is really, really good? I would hate to see the limit. There were really only 3 mid-majors that had a beef that was legit to me this year, Creighton (who never wins in the tourney) St. Marys, and SDSU. Considering all the 12 seeds won except UNI they did a great job getting everybody in.
Wake did lay an egg, but to say they didn't deserve to be in is ridiculous. Just as I still don't think AZ should have been in, even though they have played well.
They don't count. That's a different ball game
Bring in the mid-majors! I wouldn't mind seeing a general limit of 5 teams per conference. This could be an option as a general rule of thumb, not as a hard and fast rule.
Seriously, who needs to get in if you're 7th in your conference?
As I read the last paragraph of the original post, the poster's logic appears to be suggesting that since most of the top seeds advanced, the committee must have done a good job seeding the top teams, and because the committee did a good job seeding the top teams, the committee must have also done a good job of selecting bubble teams. I do not agree with this logic.
I like the limit per conference idea like they do with the BCS in football.
Like it's been mentioned many times before, it has a lot to do with ticket sales and money. It also has to do with the fact that it's conceivable that the 7th best team in a major conference might still be better than the 2nd best team from a mid-major conference.
Given results from this year, you could say that the selection committee did a pretty good job using the original poster's criteria. Some years it will go that way and others it will not. At the end of the day it's about a committee trying to select the top 34 at-large bids. There are going to be people pissed off one way or the other.
They don't count. That's a different ball game
Bring in the mid-majors! I wouldn't mind seeing a general limit of 5 teams per conference. This could be an option as a general rule of thumb, not as a hard and fast rule.
Seriously, who needs to get in if you're 7th in your conference?
I'd be in favor of giving a regular season conference champion who didn't win their conference tourney an edge over a middle of the pack BCS conference team.
Just curious...would you not agree that the posters logic would likely be used to prove the opposite point had teams like Maryland, Arizona, and Wisconsin gone out early?
LSU lost to the soon-to-be National Champions but they did barely beat a mid major darling in Butler to get the chance to play UNC.
Fixed it.
LSU lost to the soon-to-be National Champions but they did beat a mid major darling in Butler to get the chance to play UNC.
A. I wouldn't put money on UNC winning the national championship - they look EXTREMELY VULNERABLE.
B. What was the final score of that game? LSU 75, Butler 71 - seems to me Butler belonged in the tournament as an at-large Mid-Major even though they lost, despite your assertion to the otherwise...
Figures that a GM apologist would do something like this! I know you chalked up a bunch of "moral victories" to GM this year...but I am from the camp that a loss is a loss and a win is a win.