westcoastlax wrote:Out of all these teams FSU has played, LMU has been terrible until this year, and now they are just alright. Santa Clara has been cosistently terrible every year except this year they are a little bit better. BC has had a couple of alright years and Utah is so inconsistent that no one is sure what to think of them.
For Florida you brought up UCLA and USC, two teams that haven't beaten anyone ever.
So left over we have BYU, Sonoma, UCSB, Michigan, Chapman. Aside from beating UCSB this year you are bragging about a bunch of losses.
You have a valid arguement that beating SB should help your team in the polls. But teams like Sonoma and Oregon have not lost to anyone ranked below them, whereas the SELC teams have, so you cannot justify them being ranked higher.
I was only trying to illustrate that the Florida teams have played extensively OOC, not bragging about anything. I wasn't meaning to imply that all of those teams were noteworthy, that's my mistake for not being clear.
Sonoma got spanked by UCSB who lost to UF and FSU but yet both are ranked higher, why?
And what I said about Sonoma was
And Sonoma lives it up at #9 on the strength of a win over not as good as usual CSU on March 15 and a "good" loss to Simon Fraser (because we shouldn't talk about the thumping they took at the hands of UCSB - that team that didn't look so good in Florida).
I bet that there are at least four teams in the SELC (and BC) that would love to come to Nationals and prove to the doubters that the conference has improved and that wins over UCSB and Utah were no fluke. Unfortunately, with the way it looks right now the cycle of WCLL and RMLC teams starting in the Top 10 based on preseason polls, all beating up on each other (and maybe losing to a UF or FSU), and then claiming that they deserve their high rankings following losses because no one else plays Top 10 competition will continue.