{"id":25678,"date":"2003-03-24T18:20:10","date_gmt":"2003-03-25T00:20:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.uscho.com\/2003\/03\/24\/a-closer-look\/"},"modified":"2010-08-17T19:55:26","modified_gmt":"2010-08-18T00:55:26","slug":"a-closer-look","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/wwwproxy.uscho.com\/2003\/03\/24\/a-closer-look\/","title":{"rendered":"A Closer Look"},"content":{"rendered":"
When Ian McCaw says that the NCAA committee went 100 percent strictly by the numbers, he is being completely 100 percent genuine. And the evidence is right in front of our eyes.<\/p>\n
In fact, the committee went so strictly by the numbers, it’s scary. It was the complete pinnacle of the 100-percent objective system, and, oddly, a total “victory” for the Pairwise creators.<\/p>\n
In the past, the committee only used a grid, showing all of the comparisons<\/a> against “Teams Under Consideration.” The grid showed if a team won the comparison against another team. The committee did not, however, ever have a final listing that summarized the amount of total wins, i.e. Pairwise Rankings<\/a>, a term coined by USCHO’s originators.<\/p>\n USCHO was so successful in educating the public that PWR was a totalling of comparison wins — and therefore, a tidy summary of the committee’s process — that life is imitating art.<\/p>\n As a result, the committee chose the field and the seeds in a strict 1-16 PWR order.<\/p>\n The only way the committee deviated from the strict numbers was when it was forced to by two sacred mandates:<\/p>\n a) keep the host teams in their host region No other considerations but these were made<\/strong>. NONE. Not attendance considerations, not avoiding second-round matchups, not “protecting the top seed,” not keeping teams closest to home.<\/p>\n Absolutely none.<\/p>\n If you think that the reason why this team is playing that team is for any other reasons than “the numbers” and the two aforementioned mandates, you are completely incorrect.<\/p>\n Ian McCaw didn’t have the time nor the inclination to precisely explain this on Sunday’s ESPN selection show, and it caused a lot of people to question him. But if you follow along, it becomes absolutely clear as day what occured.<\/p>\n
\nb) avoid first-round intraconference matchups<\/p>\n