I found it --
Not following your math, though... BC is 1st in both polls and behind only Dartmouth in the PWR/RPI?
Even if you're including Rutter, that still wouldn't be enough to get Minnesota ahead of BC (1-2-3 for BC, 2-3-1 for Minnesota).
I see what happened -- KRACH is still up from last year; it doesn't have this year's rankings up yet.since two of the polls are essentially the same, I average them and end up with 1 poll
I use KRACH and Rutter as well, so there are 4 polls
but USA Today comes out late, so sometimes I don't use it
so:
KRACH
Rutter
coaches poll (average the 2)
RPI type polls(average the 2)
so I am using 4 polling types to come up with a number that simply is the sum of the places in the 4 polls
and it's always possible I miscalculated, I 'll recalculate later today.
Keeping it the same after Sun-Tues scores
I see what happened -- KRACH is still up from last year; it doesn't have this year's rankings up yet.
So does anyone know how the RPI 'adjustment to remove negative effect from defeating weak opponent' works?
If a win would lower a team's RPI it is deleted from their record and not included in the calculation.
No. If the game would lower the RPI, then it is dropped entirely, like it never existed. During Minnesota's perfect season, the RPI at selection time was based on five wins over North Dakota, and everything else was dropped because everything else would lower the RPI because all of the other teams were weaker opponents. Yet another thing that RPI is not capable of deciphering.AFAICT the way it would affect the RPI is through the opponents' win %, yes? So if the win % of defeated opponent A is less than the average win % of all your opponents, it gets dropped. But the win still counts towards your own win %. Is that right?
AFAICT the way it would affect the RPI is through the opponents' win %, yes? So if the win % of defeated opponent A is less than the average win % of all your opponents, it gets dropped. But the win still counts towards your own win %. Is that right?
No, it's dropped completely. To expand on what Arlan said, if including the game would drop your opponents' winning percentage times that factor's coefficient by more than it increases your winning own percentage times its coefficient, then the game is dropped. (Technically we also have to look at its effect on opponents' opponents' winning percentage but that probably isn't meaningful in most cases.
I can give you guys an example.
Picture each game as having a "Game RPI" -- 1.000 times .3 for a win, .000 times .3 for a loss, then opponents winning percentage time .24 and oppoppwin% times .46.
Say this team has played 10 games. If that "Game RPI" is lower than their season RPI (and it was a win), you subtract that game RPI from the sum of all of the game RPIs, and divide by 9 (total number of games minus that game).
Maybe that explanation made things worse haha but that's another way of looking at it. It's how I thought through making my spreadsheet's calculation.
you guys are nuts
BC - Power house....anyone who says otherwise is fooling themselves
Minn - still ranking high based on history but not looking as good as Minni used to be
Obviously pretty key to see how they respond on the road this weekend. Be nice to see a few more get started on a more productive mode in the first half here.Anybody who saw Minnesota dominate an undefeated UW team at home would think otherwise. And I'm still waiting for BC to play more than one TUC.