by Matt_Gardiner on Mon May 07, 2007 12:29 pm
From the discussions I have heard, I think everyone recognized that the CCLA-B was legitimate. If you get two teams in to Nationals, your league is seen as legitimate. Calvin got into the playoffs based off of their wins against other CCLA-B teams more than their OOC games. I think the CCLA got a good amount of respect, the problem is the 15-30 range of teams is not very clear. Compile that with 6 strong CCLA teams where 3-6 is also not very clear. I could not rank 3-6 with any level of certainty. The result is that the votes get watered down among those teams. I am a staunch supporter of the CCLA, but could not justify voting in 6 CCLA teams when there are so many other strong teams around the country as well. I was consistently voting for 4-5 CCLA teams and leaving out one or two teams that may have been better. Other voters were putting in 3-5 teams that were probably all different after the top two.
As far as Laxpower goes, it can be very deceiving especially with the B division. If you play a very weak team and win by 100 points, it will hurt your laxpower rating. At the same time, if a B team played BYU and lost by 100 it would almost certainly help their rating. Take a look at the goal differential that Laxpower came up with projected for all three of Dayton's CCLA-A games. It may help demonstrate some of the weird assumptions Laxpower will make. The CCLA being so strong and well rounded will artificially bump your ranking. I am not saying the teams are not good, I know they are good. I just think that really the top 6 teams should be spread out in the top 30 or 35, not the top 20.
I am getting long-winded, but I just wanted to make the point that the CCLA was not overlooked and the voters were aware of the leagues strength and depth. If the CCLA-B was not as strong as it was, Calvin would almost certainly be on the outside looking in. I think you may be overlooking the strength of Southern Oregon, SCAD, UNC-Charlotte, Southwestern, Creighton, Northern Arizona, Salem State, et al. The league is gaining depth at an accelerated rate. It takes more than just being a good team to get a good ranking. There are too many good teams out there. The CCLA has always had my respect, and it has its share of the voters respect.