I can't say I blame them, but I do have a problem with our "friend" Larry Eustachy and this gem from him:
Colorado State coach Larry Eustachy actually went all the way in on the Missouri Valley, vis a vis Creighton and Wichita State.
“In this polling,” Eustachy said, “and this has nothing to do with us, but in this polling, maybe you can explain this to me … How do you explain Wichita State’s amount of points in the media polling, and the coaches polling? And Creighton’s?”
“Do teams all of a sudden, once they’re in, they’re in?” Eustachy asked. “And everybody just kind of punches their ticket … or does what a team does week to week mean anything?”
Larry, why do WSU and CU get so many points in the polling? Because the are good and they beat people, that's why! Plus they are the class of the Valley while your teams are beating each other up. That said though, I can understand why he's a little miffed that more MWC teams aren't ranked. He has the right gripe, but the wrong argument.
Steve Alford on the other hand is completely correct with this statement:
“I’m amazed with the rankings,” Alford said. “Just looking at the rankings and we only have one team ranked. To be the third best league in the country (based on the latest RPI rankings) and only have one ranked team is bothersome, it really is.”
“Unfortunately when we do what other leagues are doing -- beat up on each other -- we seem to be penalized more,” Alford said, adding he thinks there are four teams in the MWC that are deserved of being ranked.
He is absolutely 100% right! Because we all know that the Big Ten will have more teams ranked in the top 25 at the end of the season than the MWC even after the Big Ten teams beat each other up as well. And one of the biggest reasons for that aside from the obligatory BCS bias is that the Big Ten teams (and most BCS teams for that matter) are given a head start in the rankings at the beginning of the year in terms of how high they are ranked versus most non-BCS teams. This is why I always have been for no polls of any kind until January at the earliest. This eliminates this bias that does skew public perception of how good these teams really are. And while I do agree with many of the national pundits that the polls are relatively meaningless to the selection committee in terms of which teams make the NCAA Tournament, I do believe that from a psychological standpoint, seedings are affected a lot more based on the polls than people are led to believe. That's why I think Alford has a legitimate gripe here.
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