Thanks Will, that was exactly my point. You can't fault a team for trying to schedule aggressively and their opponents having down years.
I see the point. I think you're right. You can't fault their intentions. I don't think it would be reasonable to dispute that.
I think that the intentions to schedule should be a nonfactor in the polls though. This is splitting hairs, but I think it's an important distinction.
Did Lindenwood try to set up a tougher schedule than it turned out to be? Clearly they did.
Here's the important part though- it turned out that the teams that they had scheduled were not as good as previously believed. Then, of the two teams that managed to stay in the top 25, granted who they both beat, are ranked 19 and 22, with the number 22 taking them to a one goal game at home, and an unranked team taking them to overtime at home.
There are three issues here:
-Who did they TRY to play? - not really important- may yield sympathy, which isn't entirely undeserved (but also should be given to every other team that scheduled the same teams as they did, by that standard). Who they intended to play yields no information in terms of how good of a team they are.
-Who DID they play? - This is the question that needs to be asked. It shouldn't matter for beans what a team was ranked preseason. It should matter what an opponent is ranked (currently). Once again seeming a small distinction, but nonetheless an important one.
-How did they PERFORM- they only have one convincing win over a ranked team- and that's over Miami-OH, who's on their way down.
Just consider- is it reasonable that a team garners a ranking of 15, when they were taken to overtime at home by an unranked?
Overrated. Not saying they should be out of the polls. Just out of #15 for sure.