Moderator: Tournament Directors
flexmaster33 wrote:That Ivy League is going to pack the bracket I'm guessing...man, what a tough group.
william tennant wrote:In an epic battle in the very tough Ivy League, with the nation's eyes on the two teams, #2 Columbia narrowly defeated #9 YALE. Columbia's coach basically conceded the entire match after the very opening minute of the game, and ridiculously predicted a heavy loss for his own team, but then turned around and won the game. Very annoying, and distracting from the enjoyment of the hard fought match. It lead to some tension on the floor between the two coaches, but I guess that is to be expected in a major in-conference rivalry between two highly ranked teams. It shows the quality of the rivalry. Princeton wishes Columbia well, and hopes for revenge in the post-season.
flexmaster33 wrote:This tournament is full, but accepting reserves, and with a tourney of this size it is likely you will get called into play, so join the list if it sounds fun
in please
Reserves list
1. whoajr
2. Fear the Tree
3. ckyrias
4. arno30
5. crbluth
6. JCKING
Team-by-team season link
https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key ... y=CPvm4ogG
Coaches list and home-court settings
https://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key ... y=CJSw4sUD
STANDINGS
GAME 22 RESULTS
GAME 21 RESULTS (link)
http://i222.photobucket.com/albums/dd27 ... 10Gm21.png
RPI rankings
*The RPI formula, which includes three factors...the full RPI can be found by downloading the Schedule link at the top of this page.
1) Winning percentage — your W-L record
2) Strength of schedule — A mix of opponent records and your conference's overall rank.
3) Quality wins — your W-L vs. teams ranked in the top-40
* Winning margin also is weight slightly into the formula
The RPI is just one measure that will be used to decide at-large bids for the March Madness tournament, and is in no way a final measure of which teams will get in and which will be left out.
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