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It’s All About The Matchup. Huh?

As I’ve blogged a few times, I am unable to make sense of college hoops.  Hoopserving the tournament recently, I’ve heard multiple people say that the upsets can be explained by the “matchup”  — the higher seeded teams lost because they had “bad matchups.”

Pardon me if I’m the only idiot who hears this talk and has no idea what the hell it means, but, um, I hear this talk and have no idea what the hell it means.

If you’re predicting a game, how do you know which team has the “better matchup”?  If one team has experience and the other has talent, who should win?  If one team is strong on the perimeter and the other is strong in the post, who should win?  If one team is athletic and the other team is disciplined, who should win?  What about if one team is good in transition and the other is good in a half-court game?

Maybe I’m missing something, but, in the abstract, it’s impossible to answer any of these questions.   Yet, once the game is over, if the lower-seeded team has won, we say that the “matchup” favored the lower-seeded team.  But, if the higher-seeded team has won, we just say that the team was BETTER.  Huh?

To make it a bit clearer, consider Northern Iowa and Kansas.  Northern Iowa won, and people are saying they were a “tough matchup” for Kansas.  Really?  A tough matchup?  Why don’t we just say they played better?  What made them a “tough matchup” other than the fact that they played their tails off?

So I’m not exposing myself to too much ridicule from whoever is reading this, let me be clear… I’m well aware that every team is vulnerable to certain types of opponents more than others.  But in the grand scheme of things, the better team generally finds a way to impose its style on the weaker team.  Millions of people picked Kansas to win the tournament not because they expected Kansas to play the same type of team for 6 straight games, but because they thought Kansas was the best team, and, therefore, was the team most capable of making whatever adjustments were needed to beat whoever wound up in its path.  If Kansas beat Northern Iowa, we wouldn’t be talking about how it was a “good matchup” for Kansas, we’d just be saying that Kansas is damn good.

When the weaker team wins, it could have something to do with the “matchup,” but, so far as I can tell, it generally has much more to do with the fact that, in a single elimination tournament, made up of teams with primarily 18 and 19 year-olds, playing a sport in which a team can hit a few 3’s and neutralize a talent disadvantage, it is more often than not those things – rather than the “matchup” – that explain the upsets.

And when the better team wins… well, that’s because it’s the better team.

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Tournament Thoughts

A great couple of days of hoops.  Unfortunately I didn’t get to watch nearly as much as I would have liked.  Some thoughts:

  1. Has anyone ever seen Cole Aldrich and Eric Montross in the same room?  Just curious.
  2. With all due respect to Northern Iowa, I can’t think of a single reason why a recruit would choose Northern Iowa over UNLV. (Let me remind you: the “LV” in UNLV stands for Las Vegas.  Yes.  Las-friggin’-Vegas.  And the “Northern Iowa” in Northern Iowa stands for, yes, NORTHERN-FRIGGIN’-IOWA.)  I have no idea why anyone would choose to go to school in Northern Iowa who could go to school in Las-friggin’-Vegas.  Yet, Northern Iowa beat UNLV.  College hoops is a grazy game.
  3. College hoops is a crazy game.  Have I mentioned that already?  On January 18, the Texas Longhorns – then 17-0 and ranked #1 in the country – lost to Kansas State.  Exactly two months later, on March 18, the Texas Longhorns – then 23-8 and seeded #8 in their region – had their season ended by a lousy Wake Forest team.  If anyone has a sensible explanation for what happened to Texas, I’m interested to hear it.
  4. Even as crazy as college hoops is, one would think that someone who pays for the domain name hoopservations.com, just so he can blog about basketball for the entertainment of all 4 of his friends that read the blog, would be able to make some sensible predictions about what would happen in the tournament.  One would think that if his kept his predictions conservative and predicted, for example, simply that Big East teams would do well in the tournament, he would walk away from the endeavor with some dignity intact.  Well, you’d be wrong.  Thursday was just a disaster for the Big East, with Georgetown, Notre Dame, and Marquette all losing to lower-seeded teams, and Villanova nearly losing to Robert Morris.  (I don’t know who Robert Morris is, but I think he used to go to my camp.  He had two brothers, and a wicked temper, if I recall.  I didn’t realize he started a university.)  Syracuse, West Virginia, and Pittsburgh helped turn things around on Friday, but it’s still shaping up to be a bad year for the Big East.
  5. At one point during yesterday’s Oklahoma State – Georgia Tech game, the announcers referred to “Oliver” and “Miller” from Oklahoma State within a few moments of each other, and, from that point forward, every time I heard one of their names, I remembered this dude.
  6. Interesting article here.
  7. Before this tournament started, there was already writing on the wall telling us that the end of the college basketball world as we know it is here.  North Carolina, UCLA, Indiana, Arizona, and UCONN are all not in it.
  8. At this time every year, I get nostalgic for Harold “The Show” Arceneaux.  If you’re wondering where he’s been since he set the tournament on fire, wikipedia has it covered (of course).  Whenever I think of Harold “The Show” Arceneaux, it reminds me that I know nothing about how NBA GM’s scout talent; Darko Milicic is still in the league, and so is Kwame Brown, but Harold “The Show” Arceneaux never got a real shot.
  9. Whenever I think of Harold “The Show” Arceneaux, it also reminds me that I know almost nothing about the way this country’s system of higher education is set up.   I know that some states have state schools in multiple places.  Usually, those schools are identified by where they are.  For example, in New York, SUNY Binghamton is in Binghamton, SUNY Albany is in Albany, etc.  In California, UCLA is in LA, UC Santa Barbara is in Santa Barbara, etc.  Ok.  So far, so good.  Then, though, I think of Weber State.  I know that there is no “state” named “Weber,” and nothing about the name “Weber State” tells me which “state” it refers to.  I looked it up, and learned that Weber State is in a city (city?  town?  village?) named Ogden, in Utah.  If anyone can explain how a school in Ogden, Utah winds up with the name Weber State, I’m interested in hearing from you.
  10. At this time of year, I feel like we should have a national holiday so people can stop what they’re doing and watch hoops.  If I had a vote, I’d vote to call it Harold “The Show” Arceneaux Day.

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