Showing posts with label playoffs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label playoffs. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 16 (Part 1)

When I started this project months ago, 88 teams entered between all the NBA champions since 1952, all the ABA champions, and some conference champions to fill out the field. We're now down to just 16 teams left.

All of our ABA champions are out, but three conference champions from the past 30 years are still alive. Meanwhile, half of our field left is champions from about the past 15 years, while we still have a little representation from the 1970s and 1980s still alive.

Seeding-wise, we had a lot less chalk in the Round of 32 than we did in the Round of 64. Just four of eight group winners remain (incidentally all in the top half of the bracket), while six of eight #2 seeds are still competing. The upset-minded teams at this point are one #3 seed, three #4 seeds, a #5 seed, and a #6 seed. At this point, anything can truly happen.

Maybe most incredibly as I started simulating series, I realized that the top four teams from Group A had all advanced to this stage. Group H was close behind with three teams in, but that includes one that finished in fifth place

As I did in each of the first couple rounds, this round will be broken up into a couple posts. Series being covered in Part 1 will be picked totally at random (with the caveat that I'm going down the selected list to not reveal any quarterfinal matchups at this point).

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 32 (Part 2)

The Round of 32 is underway in the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions, and already we've seen a little upheaval.

Our two most recent NBA champions held serve in their series, showing continued dominance for the modern era of the NBA. But we also saw that the gap between teams is closer than it might appear, as we lost both a 2 seed and a 1 seed in the first set of games.

In the Round of 64 the way I'd shuffled series it was set up so that no matchups for the next round would be determined in the first half. The shuffle didn't work out that way this time, but that's okay as if this were happening in reality games would be going on at the same time and we may have some matchups determined sooner than others.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Monday, October 20, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 32 (Part 1)

We started with a playoff field of 64, and now that has been cut in half as the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions rolls on.

Chalk largely ruled in the Round of 64, as we only had five upsets: three five seeds and two six seeds were able to advance to the Round of 32, otherwise all the teams that finished in the top four of their respective groups held serve. Meanwhile from a historical perspective, the two teams that have won previous Tournaments of Champions are still alive, as are two of the three runners-up, and all of our previous semifinalists. By era, only two teams from before 1980 remain alive, and all but two champions from 2009-onward are still in contention.

Now the road gets a little bit harder as we move to the Round of 32. Since every group's top two finishers remain alive, those teams will continue to carry home court advantage into this round of play. As we did in the Round of 64 (though I don't think I ever specifically mentioned it), all series are best of sevens played in a 2-2-1-1-1 format.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Friday, October 10, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 8)

Just four series remain as we finish out the Round of 64 of the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions!

12 of the 16 matchups for the next round are now set in stone. We had a couple more first round upsets in the last set of games, including a series that went the distance and a game that was easily the highest scoring of the tournament.

As we finish this round out, three of our four one seeds will finally get their series covered, as well the two-time Champion of Champions. Hopefully this round will be able to finish with some dramatic finishes as well.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 7)

We're coming up to the end of the Round of 64 of the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions, and in the last set of games, chalk went back to prevailing.

I'm not super surprised that most of the series we've done in this round so far have largely adhered to chalk. Just one five seed and two six seeds have advanced to the Round of 32 to this point. In terms of competitiveness, just three series so far have gone the full seven games and only six others have gone as many as six games.

Eight matchups for the next round of games are determined, and we'll set up four more in today's post.


Friday, October 3, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 6)

Four second round matchups are determined, and today we set four more as we continue with the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions!

After the first half of the round saw only one lower seed advance, in the last batch we did we had two, including the defending Champion of Champions in the 1985 Lakers. So far two of the three upsets have been by six seeds, with the other being a five seed.

The current second round matchups that are set in stone look to be pretty good, and hopefully we'll have four more that look to be just as compelling once these games are completed.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Thursday, October 2, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 5)

Half of the Round of 64 is done. Let's get moving on the second half of this round of the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions!

Of the 16 rounds that we've simulated so far, 15 of them have been won by the higher seed, most of them well short of the full seven. The biggest surprise to date was the 1995 Rockets falling in five; they were the highest seeded 3rd place team and won the consolation bracket in the 2016 tournament, and after a 15-5 group play resume, they fall almost immediately.

Initially by happenstance, then in the last part by design, I haven't simulated series yet such that we know what any of the Round of 32 matchups are yet. We'll know what four of the 16 will be following the conclusion of these series.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Wednesday, October 1, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 4)

We return for more of the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions as the Elimination Stage rolls on!

Through the 12 rounds that have been simulated so far, chalk has ruled. Our highest seeds that have their series in the books have largely dominated, and even among the closer series we've only had three go the full seven. Though we did already have a blown 3-1 series lead (and I'm most upset it happened to the Bulls).

I didn't intend it this way, but the way our first 12 simulated series have gone, we don't have a set in stone matchup for the Round of 32 yet, and since it's happened to work out that way so far I'm going to keep it that way for this batch of games. The four series we're covering in this part will establish one team for all series in the round of 32, and the second half of this round will fill out those matchups.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Friday, September 26, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 3)

We continue postseason play in the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions as the clock has struck midnight for more than one Cinderella.

The series covered so far have all gone chalk, with many of them only lasting four or five games. The last batch though saw a lot of the top seeds play, and we have several more even matchups based on seeding yet to go.

As we've done in the first couple parts of this round, I'm grabbing four series chosen completely at random and simulating through the full series, making sure to save box scores and make note of some of the key players from each game.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 2)

So far chalk has prevailed. Let's see if that trend continues.

We're partway through the Round of 64 in the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions. This round will cut the field down to 32 and get us closer to finding the greatest NBA/ABA team of all time.

Our first set of series mostly ended fairly quickly, with the higher seeds needing just five games to win in three of the four series covered. The other was a full seven game donnybrook that went down to the wire in the winner-take-all contest. Hopefully this round will contain more of the latter than the former.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Round of 64 (Part 1)

Let's get postseason play started.

We have 880 games in the books and another several more yet to get to. The 88 teams we started with have been narrowed down to 64, with half of those to be eliminated in this next round.

For the purposes of these first few rounds, I'm going to randomly pick some matchups and simulate the full series. I'll go into a little bit of detail about each game and provide some of the key stat lines from players and teams. This will be a little more in-depth than Group Play since each post will have fewer games to cover.

The up to date bracket, scores, and results from Group Play can be found here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Friday, September 19, 2025

2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions: Elimination Stage Introduction

880 games are in the books. 88 teams entered. We've now cut that number to 64 as we're ready to move to the Elimination Stage of the NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions!

This stage is heavily expanded since the last time I did this tournament; we're back to the size of the field from the original NBA Tournament of Champions. These teams are all now 24 wins away from ultimate glory.

Let's take a brief look at some of the numbers around the teams that have made it to this point.

  • By League
    • 5 ABA Champions
    • 4 NBA Conference Champions (did not win their season's NBA championship)
    • 55 NBA Champions
  • By Decade
    • 1950's: 0
    • 1960's: 4
    • 1970's: 12
    • 1980's: 10
    • 1990's: 11
    • 2000's: 10
    • 2010's: 10
    • 2020's: 7
  • By Previous Tournament Result (Quarterfinals or later)
    • 2013, 2015 Champion ('96 Bulls)
    • 2016 Champion ('85 Lakers)
    • 2013 Runner Up ('05 Spurs)
    • 2015 Runner Up ('91 Bulls)
    • 2016 Runner Up ('97 Bulls)
    • 2013 Semifinalists ('12, '13 Heat)
    • 2015 Semifinalists ('86 Celtics)
    • 2015, 2016 Semifinalists ('15 Warriors)
    • 2016 Semifinalists ('02 Lakers)
    • Previous Quarterfinalists ('71 Bucks, '72, '87, '88 Lakers, '92 Bulls)
  • By Franchise
    • Los Angeles Lakers: 12
    • Boston Celtics: 10
    • Chicago Bulls: 6
    • Golden State Warriors: 4
    • San Antonio Spurs: 4
    • Detroit Pistons: 3
    • Indiana Pacers: 3 (2 ABA Champions, 1 NBA Conference Champion)
    • Miami Heat: 3
    • Milwaukee Bucks: 2
    • New York Nets: 2
    • Philadelphia 76ers: 2
    • Seattle SuperSonics/Oklahoma City Thunder: 2 (1 with Seattle, 1 with Oklahoma City)
    • Cleveland Cavaliers: 1
    • Dallas Mavericks: 1
    • Denver Nuggets: 1
    • Houston Rockets: 1
    • New York Knicks: 1
    • Portland Trail Blazers: 1
    • Toronto Raptors: 1
    • Utah Stars: 1 (ABA)
    • Orlando Magic: 1 (Conference Champion)
    • Phoenix Suns: 1 (Conference Champion)
    • Utah Jazz: 1 (Conference Champion)
Obviously with this expanded field, we get a much larger sample of teams than we have in years past. In prior tournaments, 15 different NBA Champions made at least one run to the quarterfinals or deeper; all 15 advanced this year. We had nine new NBA Champions since the last time I ran this tournament; all nine advanced. To fill the field, I added five other conference champions who don't have an NBA title to their name; four of them advanced.

Meanwhile, there's a lot in the way of records from group play I want to get out of the way before we get into the seeding and bracketing.
  • The worst possible record to get in Group Play and still make the Elimination Stage was 7-13.
    • Four teams finished with that record; two of them made it in.
  • The best possible record to finish with but still miss the Elimination Stage was 8-12.
    • Seven teams finished with that record; five of them made it in.
  • Any team that finished 9-11 or better made the Elimination Stage.
Unfortunately for the 1975 Kentucky Colonels and 1994 Houston Rockets, they went 8-12 in the wrong groups. The threshold for getting in ended up being about what I thought it was going to be going in.

From here, we move onto the seeding criteria for the Elimination Stage. I debated for a while about how to handle this, even contemplating a round robin before settling on a somewhat modified format based on finish in group play. Teams were sorted into one of the following tiers of seeds:
  • Seeds 1-8: Group winners. These teams are, to borrow a term from Division III football, "top eight protected," meaning they are guaranteed to not have to face each other until at least the quarterfinals. By virtue of winning their groups, they are also guaranteed home court advantage up through the quarterfinals.
  • Seeds 9-16: Group runners-up. Finishing second in their respective groups guarantees these teams home court advantage for the first two rounds of the Elimination Stage.
  • Seeds 17-32: Group third and fourth place finishers. This was where I decided to change some things up. Finishing in the top four guaranteed you home court advantage in the Round of 64. However, finishing third in your group would not guarantee what was effectively a 3 seed in an eight-team bracket. Better finishes, following the tiebreaker rules used for group play, means that some teams that finished fourth in their group may be seeded ahead of third place teams from other groups.
  • Seeds 33-64: All remaining qualifiers. Similar to the above tier, teams here were also seeded using the tiebreaker rules for group play, so teams that finished lower in one group may be seeded higher than teams from another group.
  • Tiebreaker procedures among each tier, in order:
    • Group Play Record
    • Head to Head (for group standings only)
    • Point Differential in Group Play
    • Points Scored in Group Play
    • Rematches from Group Play are allowed
And so without further ado, here is the bracket for the 2025 NBA/ABA Tournament of Champions Elimination Stage.

Thursday, January 6, 2022

2021 Death to the BCS Playoffs: Semifinals

And then there were four.

We had a pretty thrilling second round that got unveiled yesterday and we have a pair of intriguing matchups on the docket today.

On one side of the bracket we have a preview of the upcoming College Football Playoff title game, and a game that I think everyone who saw this bracket had circled as the likely matchup for this round. And then on the other side, we saw chaos play out and we'll have a first time participant in the Death to the BCS title game no matter what.

So as we get ready to go with this, as a refresher, I'm trying to go by active depth charts based on what I can dig up about injuries and what have you. Weather conditions from the game sites is being taken into account in an attempt to make this as realistic as possible.

All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's play some football!

Wednesday, January 5, 2022

2021 Death to the BCS Playoffs: Quarterfinals

Eight games are down, seven to go as we advance to the second round of the Death to the BCS Playoffs!

The first round was largely chalk-based as we only had one road team advance from the first batch of games. But the matchups get tougher the further along we get, especially on one side of the bracket as we have a pair of regular season rematches forthcoming in this round. The other side of the bracket seems to be setting a collision course for what would be a rematch as well as a pseudo-preview of the upcoming College Football Playoff title game.

Like with the first round, I'm trying to update depth charts to make sure no one who's hurt gets in (though one guy with a torn ACL somehow recorded one catch last week; I did all I could). Weather conditions from the host sites are taken into account.

All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's play some football!

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

2021 Death to the BCS Playoffs: First Round

We're not too terribly far behind, but with the College Football Playoff championship coming up, I need to catch up.

A few weeks ago, I unveiled the 2021 Death to the BCS Playoff bracket. Unfortunately, when the time for the first round rolled around, my usual simulator wasn't available quite yet. Now that we've rolled around into the new year, it is. I'm going to try and do a post a day for each of the first three rounds, bearing in mind of course that our national title matchup in the College Football Playoff would be a semifinal matchup in this tournament.

I'm going to try and look back through box scores to make sure that depth charts for teams are as close to real as possible. Weather conditions from the host cities will be taken into account, also in an attempt to make this as realistic as possible.

All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's get to it!

Monday, December 6, 2021

2021 Death to the BCS Playoffs: Official Bracket

And now for one of the most fun features I do on a yearly basis.

The FBS regular season is officially complete, the College Football Playoff has its bracket, which also means it's time to unveil this year's Death to the BCS Playoff bracket!

I spent some time Sunday afternoon finalizing metrics, then spent a bunch of time looking over data points to pick the at large teams, and then seed the field. I'm pretty sure I mentioned this in my season opener, but let's go over the primary criteria one more time.

  • Record. This is a given. An undefeated team is getting in. A one loss team is all but a lock to get in. Two losses puts you in decent shape, but you need help. You get the idea.
  • Playoff Points. This comes in three types.
    • First Degree Playoff Points (PP1). A team receives one point for the number of wins of each opponent they defeat. For example, a two win team that beat a six win team and a one win team would have seven points.
    • Second Degree Playoff Points (PP2). This is the average number of First Degree Playoff Points by each opponent they defeat. Back to that two win team example, the six win team had 20 PP1, and the one win team had zero, resulting in a PP2 for our example team of 10.00.
    • Adjusted Playoff Points (aPP). The same as First Degree Playoff Points, except the number of losses by each opponent that defeated a team is subtracted from the score. As an example, an 11-1 team whose only loss was to an undefeated team would have an identical aPP to their PP1, but an 11-1 team whose lone loss came to a 6-6 team would have six points deducted from their PP1 to calculate their aPP.
  • Computer rankings. Formulas created by Jeff Sagarin (SAG), the late David Rothman (ROTH), and the website All My Sports Teams Suck (AMSTS) are synthesized into an average score, but are also looked at individually.
  • Record versus Playoff Opponents. As opposed to "wins versus playoff opponents;" if you lose to a playoff team that's not necessarily a bad thing. Wins versus playoff teams, obviously, are a better thing, but an 0-1 record against playoff teams is arguably better than a 0-0 mark, all other things being equal. Obviously, this means head to head results come directly into play.
    • IMPORTANT NOTE: This gets recalculated multiple times throughout the process. We start with just the automatic bid teams as being considered, then as each at large team is selected, the numbers get rerun.
Additionally, I do my best to avoid first round rematches unless seedings more or less force my hand (if, say, the 1-16 game would be a rematch but I feel like I can't avoid it without screwing over the #1 seed). Higher seeds host through the first three rounds, before the title game gets played at the Rose Bowl the same night as the national title game. I also want to note from the outset (and if you read the preview for this past week, you'd have seen this), but Baylor is banned from the Death to the BCS Playoffs because they should have gotten the death penalty for covering up sexual assault. Call it the Joe Paterno Rule, as Penn State got banned first.

I'm going to go over the rationale for everything after the jump. In the interest of drama... let's go to the podcast for the bracket reveal.

Thursday, December 2, 2021

2021 Death to the BCS Playoffs: Auto Bid Games and At Large Picture

This is a more recent feature as part of the Death to the BCS Playoff series. Especially since I haven't been doing mock brackets this year, this means this post becomes all the more important.

Championship Weekend is all but upon us. That means ten games to determine ten conference champions, all of whom will get an automatic bid into the Death to the BCS Playoffs. For some, their playoff bid may be a formality, others may need to win that game to ensure they're already in. For still others, this is a game merely for seeding purposes. So many motivations all in play here.

There is one additional game being played this weekend: the makeup of Cal-USC that was postponed due to COVID a few weeks ago. Neither team is in the running for a playoff spot, but that game will have some ancillary effects on playoff contenders (possible additional playoff points).

I'll go into the full playoff criteria when I reveal the playoff field, but to give a general idea of what's going to happen with at large selection, I'm borrowing a process from Division III of the NCAA. They split the country into geographic regions, rank teams in each region, then for at large (what D-III calls "Pool C"), they take the top ranked team from each region that didn't earn an automatic bid and put them "at the table" for selection. They'll pick the best team based on criteria from that group, then the next team up from that region comes to the table. We'll do this for the Death to the BCS Playoffs, except by conference instead of region.

So with that in mind, let's look at the conference title games and what each conference's at large chances are.

Friday, August 20, 2021

A Return to Normalcy and the Death to the BCS Playoffs

For several months I've lain dormant. Yes, sports have come back, I've gone to a couple baseball games this summer, including getting to the new park in Arlington. A new NBA champion was crowned, and will be a great addition to a returning feature coming next summer that I kind of can't wait for. 

But now that we're well into August and football is on the horizon, I've got a couple usual features that will be returning. The first is the annual Pigskin Pick 'Em contest that will feature most of the usual faces, and possibly a new one or two. But the second, and thus the topic of this post, is the return of the Death to the BCS Playoffs.

With the chaos of last year and most conferences playing internally, I cancelled the 2020 Death to the BCS Playoffs. I didn't feel that only playing within conferences would have given a fair playoff picture. Now that schedules are more or less what we normally see, we can get back to the usual features.

So for those of you unfamiliar with this, about a decade ago I really enjoyed reading the book you see at the header of this post. Wetzel, Peter, and Passan really tore into the old powers that be in college football and, while the current system is better than the corrupt BCS, that's an awfully low bar. I'm more into a model similar to what Division III uses: access to championships across all conferences, and that's exactly the model the authors proposed in their book. A 16 team tournament with automatic bids going to conference champions, and filled out with at large teams works. What makes this model even better is that instead of half-full bowl games with schools getting fleeced, they get to make more money by playing the first three rounds of the tournament on campus, with the title game at the Grandaddy of them All.

So how do we decide this field? Over the past few years I've developed and refined a few different metrics that will assist with data gathering and ultimately, field selection. You will be seeing the following:

  • Advance warning of November's "Nick Saban Is A Coward" Week
    Photo by Rogelio V. Solis (AP)

    Non-Conference Schedule Strength (NCSS)
    : On a weekly basis, I look at the schedule and assign teams a number for their game.
    • Point System
      • -1 point for hosting an FCS opponent
      • 0 points for a bye or playing a conference opponent
      • 1 point for playing a Group of Five team at home or a neutral site
      • 2 points for playing a Group of Five team on the road, or for playing a Power Five team at home or a neutral site
      • 3 points for playing a Group of Five team on the road
    • Obviously, higher numbers means a "tougher" schedule on paper. Usually the Group of Five teams will end up with significantly higher numbers here
    • This is more of a secondary metric; its primary purpose to confirm that no team plays multiple FCS schools in a single season. Playing more than one, except in circumstances of game cancellations forcing a last-minute add, will result in disqualification from the Death to the BCS Playoffs
  • Playoff Points: I borrowed and adjusted this metric from the Illinois High School Association's football playoff qualifying system. This metric comes in multiple forms
    • First Degree Playoff Points (PP1): Basically a "Who did you beat?" question. You receive points equal to the number of wins of each team you beat, and is cumulative for the whole year.
      • In 2019, the top team in this metric was Ohio State with 84 points, and the national average for the season was about 28 points, and among playoff teams the average was 58 points. Note that wins over FCS opponents award no points.
    • Second Degree Playoff Points (PP2): Expands on the first question by adding in context of "How good were the teams you beat, really?" Teams are awarded the number of First Degree Playoff Points the teams they beat have earned, and those totals are averaged per win (e.g. a 10-2 team gets PP1 from all ten teams they beat, and that sum is divided by 10; a 1-11 team's PP2 equals the PP1 of the team they beat.)
      • In 2019, Ohio State led this metric as well with over 32 PP2. The national average was just shy of 16, and among playoff teams the average was close to 24. Again, wins over FCS opponents award no points, which means a zero is included in the calculation of the average for those teams.
    • Adjusted Playoff Points (aPP): Exactly the same as PP1, but taking losses into account. A team that loses has the number of losses by the team that beat them subtracted from their score. Basically something of a "How bad was/were your loss(es)?" question. Obviously, undefeated teams lose no points, and as an added wrinkle, losses to FCS teams count as double (e.g. in 2019, Georgia Tech lost to The Citadel, who went 6-6; Georgia Tech lost 12 aPP from this game.)
      • In 2019, Ohio State obviously led this category as well with 84 points as an undefeated regular season team. To illustrate a better example, take a pair of 10-2 teams in Penn State and Notre Dame. Penn State had 55 PP1 and Notre Dame had 61. Penn State's two losses were to 10-2 Minnesota and 13-0 Ohio State, giving them 53 aPP. Notre Dame's two losses were to 11-2 Georgia and 9-3 Michigan, giving them 56 aPP.
  • Computer Rankings: This comes in later in the season when I start building out brackets. I use three formulas compiled online. These formulas all take margin of victory into account.
    • Jeff Sagarin (He had a formula that was used for the BCS back in the day, but his BCS formula didn't account for margin of victory. The one used for this ranking does.)
    • David Rothman (The late statistician also used to have his ranking incorporated into the BCS until they dumped the margin of victory component was to no longer be considered, and he dropped out of the BCS. His formula is open-source and calculations are compiled by a faculty/staff member at UCLA.)
    • All My Sports Teams Suck (I wanted an additional source and added this ranking later.)
  • Record vs Playoff Teams: This factor was a more recent addition, influenced by regional rankings used in Division III sports. This can be misleading; losses to playoff teams are not a dealbreaker and in fact will often be used to bolster a team's case. All other factors being relatively equal, a 10-2 team whose two losses came to playoff teams may get the edge over a team that went 0-1 or even 1-1 against playoff teams.
Over the next few months, I'm going to try to go back to old patterns of posting once or twice a week, looking over NCSS and Playoff Point scores, comparing by conference every week and linking to the sheet where I tally all of these. As we get closer to playoff time, I may even do some mock brackets again. But following conference championship weekend, I'll go into the lab, look over all this data, and build out the bracket. I may even do some guest assistance with this; we'll see.

This is, however, also the part where I need to make a couple disclaimers. Ohio State was briefly serving an at large suspension due to actions by one of their assistant coaches; that suspension has been served and is thus lifted, so they are fully eligible for the playoffs. However, two schools are not, and if you've been a COAS reader from the beginning, you know who they are. Baylor, due to its coverup of sexual assault by players under Art Briles some time back, is permanently banned from the playoffs despite having made prior appearances. But the other, who has never appeared in the playoff, and never will, is the cult at Penn State. I've said it for years, and I'll say it again: Joe and the administration knew, and when you're a cult that prioritizes football over the well being of children, you don't deserve a football program. Penn State should have gotten the death penalty, and their football stadium and all football-related facilities should be burned to the ground and the earth salted where those places stood.

The season kicks off with a random Big Ten game in about a week for something of a Week Zero, then Week 1 kicks off in full next week. Next week is probably when I'll start with my first NCSS post, and we'll pick it up as the season goes along. Good luck to your teams this season, and I look forward to kicking the Death to the BCS Playoffs back off!

Friday, October 2, 2020

2019 Death to the BCS Playoffs: Fast Forward

We're starting to see something of a return to normalcy now. The Stanley Cup Final is complete, the NBA Finals are underway, the MLB Playoffs are about to begin... and football is more or less in full swing. The NFL has gone on with minimal hitches, and the FBS is starting to get back to normal as some conferences are already playing and others are coming back soon.

This would normally be where I'd be announcing the 2020 Death to the BCS Playoffs. Problem is, given the way the schedules are set up, with different conferences starting later, I don't think it's a fair year or a good year to do the Death to the BCS Playoffs. Fortunately, I still have the 2019 bracket to go through!

I built this bracket out way back in December, when the word "pandemic" wasn't on anyone's mind, North Central was coming off a huge upset of Mount Union en route to a national title, and I was in the midst of a long basketball layoff. Teams were not in on my simulator in time to do the playoff in real time like I had for the first few years, but now that they are, and we're in full swing of football, it's time to attack this again.

You can view the official bracket, which will include final scores when we're done, here. All simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. Let's play some football!

Monday, April 6, 2020

90's Youth Life Podcast Special: NBA 1990's Championship

With sports as we know them completely on pause, the state of Illinois under a shelter in place order, and my sanity starting to go, I need something to get me through The Quarantine of 2020. Fortunately, Geoffy is a lifesaver.

You may remember Geoffy from his occasional appearances on Confessions of a Sportscaster. You may remember him more as the host of 90's Youth Life, a podcast about all things 1990's. In particular, you may remember when these two worlds collided in the summer of 2018, when I ruined an average Major League shortstop for him forever as we simulated out the 1994 MLB postseason that never was.

So it was hard to say no when Geoffrey pitched another episode idea to me as we go back to our formative decade, this one arguably more up my alley, and definitely up his. We grew up in the era of the Jordan Bulls Dynasty, and Geoffrey had the idea of doing an all-90's postseason. I had originally wondered specifically about all the champions of that decade, but Geoffy thought bigger, and I ultimately have to say, better.

He pitched to me a standard playoff field of 16 teams (eight from each conference), limiting each conference to one representative from each franchise, which makes sense because otherwise the Bulls will cannibalize themselves. He constructed the bracket and went back to the old best-of-five first round model, with best-of-sevens the rest of the way, including the old 2-3-2 format of The Finals. And with his part done, I went into the lab, did the work, and found the All 90's Champion.

After the jump I will post all the box scores from every game along with some details. As always, all simulations are provided by WhatIfSports.com. And now, for your listening pleasure... my second 90's Youth Life appearance.