Ravaging Beast wrote:This is the old argument about whether to schedule a lot of tough games and face some possible losses (Utah) or schedule and easy season and win them all (Northeastern). The question is which is better? .
I don't believe that scheduling should be all 1 way or another (SOS of 1 or SOS of 101). I believe that each program has the responsibility to schedule games that will give pollsters an opportunity to rank them. They especially want to schedule games against opponents that they will be competing with for a spot in the national tournament. I know it is hard to predict sometimes, but there seems to be the same teams competing for the last few spots.
Thus a bubble team last year would have wanted to schedule something that resembles the following:
1. 1 Top 20-25
2. 2 Top 15-20
3. 2 Top 15-10
4. 1 Top 10
6 games against ranked opponents (room for error if a team drops off), leaving 6 more for early prep games and mandatory conference games.
If they are worthy of a spot they will win both 1 and 2, split 3, and stay competitive but lose 4. Now if a team plays in a league where their conference schedule gives them 3 or 4 top 10 games, they should not forgo 1 and 2, because what if they lose to all top 10 teams? Then they have to rely on the pollsters to see through the loss and compare scores/dates/weather/how many hot women were on the sidelines. This isn't the pollsters responsibility. Nor should a team with a weaker conference schedule only schedule top 10 OOC games and hope for the best.
Pollsters should look at the body of work
Programs have the responsibility to set up a body of work that is interpretable