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Research Vault Blog Displaying items by tag: NCAA Tournament
Wednesday, 14 March 2012 15:55

Our 2012 Picks

These are our predictions based on what the models are telling us.  In some place the models have conflicting rules, so we are attempting to resolve those conflicts with our ‘eyeball test’.

Published in Blog
Strategies for your NCAA Tournament Survivor Pool

A new popular pool format is a spin-off of the NFL survivor pool. Pick a team to win. You get points based on seed and round, you can’t pick that team again in a future round. Person with the most points wins.

The key is to pick the right seed at the right time. This article is designed to help you determine that.

We have looked at (1) The performance of each seed in each round, (2) adjusted the points based on that performance, and (3) provided you with the safety factor based on how many seeds have multiple winners in any given round. Finally, we give you a road map to the Final 4 so you have the best chance to win. Of course, you will need to subscribe to www.bracketanalytics.com to see who we recommend to pick specifically.

Once you get to the Final 4, you will be constrained on who you can pick, and we will blog about it during the tournament. Just remember that the champion has been a one seed, 16 out of 26 years. Two seeds have won four times and three seeds have won three times.

Round 1:
image002


In the first round, the 12 seed provides the best risk-reward profile, but take caution this year. The 68 team format could adversely impact selecting a winner. The fact that a 13 seed has such a high probability of winning, it’s hard to ignore that, especially since 13 seeds perform so poorly going forward.

If you submit multiple entries, you may want to consider getting a 13, a 12, and possibly another 12.

Round 2:
image004


In round 2, you should be eyeing a 12 seed, especially if two of them won. The next best return on investment is the 10 seed, and given that 42% of the time 2 or more 6 seeds advance to the Sweet 16, it is hard to ignore that safety factor.

Recommendation: Go with a 12 seed if you can, but have a 10 seed and 6 seed ready to go.

Round 3:
image006


After the first weekend, you should have a good idea where you stand in the rankings and who your competition is or isn’t eligible to pick. The 10 seed and 6 seed remain viable options, with the 3 seed standing out as a good alternative.

Round 4:
image008




If a four seed has upset a one seed to get to the Elite 8, this may be a good opportunity to select them, especially if they have some intangibles going for them (playing in their home state, etc.). With that in mind, this is a good time to pick a two seed as well. You probably don’t want to dip your toe into the one seeds yet as you will likely need them for insurance in the Final 4.

Making your picks in a survival pool face several constraints. You have to be just as concerned about when your team will lose the further you get through the journey. The second round pick, when so many double digit seeds are still alive is probably the most important pick in the tournament. One thing to keep in mind as well is that the more upsets there are in the first round, the fewer there are in the second round. Also, be cautious of any team that is too dependent on the three point shot, as they tend to exit sooner. Lastly, make sure your first round pick was in the tournament last year as the winning percentage for these teams is significantly higher.

We will be monitoring all of this at www.bracketanalytics.com so join today so that you have all the tools at your disposal to make your best possible pick.
Published in Blog
Monday, 21 February 2011 15:47

Final 4 Short List as of February 20th

Final 4 Short List as of February 20th

Tags: North Carolina, Duke, Kentucky, Kansas, Final 4, NCAA Tournament, Bracketology, Bracket Analysis

Here is a look at our current Final 4 short list. I have expanded the list slightly and will explain more below.

Team

Rankings

Productivity

Historical Precedent

Recent Performance

Point Distribution

Ohio State

1

1

x

x

x

Texas

1

1

x

x

x

Kansas

1

1

x

x

x

Georgetown

1

1

x

x

x

Syracuse

1

1

x

x

x

Kentucky

1

1

x

x

x

Pitt

1

1

 

x

x

Duke

1

1

x

x

 

BYU

1

1

 

x

x

Purdue

1

1

 

x

x

Wisconsin

1

1

x

x

 

North Carolina

1

1

x

 

x

San Diego State

1

1

 

x

x

Villanova

2

2

x

x

x

George Mason

2

2

x

 

x

West Virginia

2

2

x

x

x

Louisville

2

2

x

x

 

Notre Dame

2

2

 

x

x

Villanova has fallen dramatically, but when you lose to Rutgers and play DePaul, that stuff will happen. Their last four games should allow them to get back near the top of the list.

Six teams have all the attributes for a likely Final 4 appearance. Ohio State, Texas, Kansas, Georgetown, Syracuse, and Kentucky all show they have what it takes. We are slightly worried about Kentucky as they really rely heavily on the three and they get so many points from there playing at home, it really makes you wonder. The other teams have had some hiccups, but that will happen during the season.

Duke’s point distribution is improving and they could be on the Green List by next week. Wisconsin is the only other team that can move from yellow to green at this point.

The orange list was created because I am getting several inquiries about “What about ______?”. If you are not on the orange list, you have absolutely no shot. The orange list provides a margin of error that casts the widest net of outcomes. If a team makes the Final 4 and isn’t on this list it will be unprecedented based on our filters.

Just to give you an idea of what this list looked like last year, I have reproduced our list going into Selection Sunday.

2212011blog

Two points of interest: (1) Only one team on this list lost in the first round, and (2) only 5 of these teams lost to a team not listed here.

Published in Blog
Thursday, 17 February 2011 21:48

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