If not, who? I know it's a tallest midget question, but I'm still curious. St. John's been on the local news a lot with Slice moving on. Got me thinking about it. Missouri is another program I'm thinking of. Illinois? Oklahoma? Texas?
Originally posted by sillygoose12:
1. Illinois
2. Purdue
3. Iowa
4. Notre Dame
5. Minnesota
6. St.John's
according to all time Sagarin ratings.
And I think this year was their first Elite 8 since 1978.Originally posted by AnarchoNeoLuddite:
ND success is funny, assload of wins only one FF to show for it
I've never liked having all time wins or all time winning percentage as part of the equation without a way to adjust for strength of schedule. The all time difference in strength of schedule between Illinois and Temple for example would be like the difference between UK and UNLV this season.Originally posted by Jon_D:
I'm going with:
Illinois: 14th all-time in wins (.648) with one runner-up, five Final Fours, nine Elite Eights, and 30 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 15th all-time).
Temple: 5th all-time in wins (.644) with two Final Fours, seven Elite Eights, and 31 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 12th all-time).
Texas: 17th all-time in wins (.628) with three Final Fours, seven Elite Eights, and 32 NCAA Tournament appearances (11th all-time).
Notre Dame: 9th all-time in wins (.649) with one Final Four, six Elite Eights, and 34 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 9th all-time, which makes them the school with the most NCAA Tournament appearances that's never won an NCAA Tournament).
And St. John's.
This post was edited on 4/15 1:18 PM by Jon_D
All time tourney win percentage is a good proxy for that. The competition, especially before the 13-16 seeds were introduced was always good.Originally posted by sillygoose12:
I've never liked having all time wins or all time winning percentage as part of the equation without a way to adjust for strength of schedule. The all time difference in strength of schedule between Illinois and Temple for example would be like the difference between UK and UNLV this season.Originally posted by Jon_D:
I'm going with:
Illinois: 14th all-time in wins (.648) with one runner-up, five Final Fours, nine Elite Eights, and 30 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 15th all-time).
Temple: 5th all-time in wins (.644) with two Final Fours, seven Elite Eights, and 31 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 12th all-time).
Texas: 17th all-time in wins (.628) with three Final Fours, seven Elite Eights, and 32 NCAA Tournament appearances (11th all-time).
Notre Dame: 9th all-time in wins (.649) with one Final Four, six Elite Eights, and 34 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 9th all-time, which makes them the school with the most NCAA Tournament appearances that's never won an NCAA Tournament).
And St. John's.
This post was edited on 4/15 1:18 PM by Jon_D
I think word got back to him that a lot of people at UK were very happy dealing with Tubby on a daily basis instead of him, and by God he was going to come to Louisville to stick it to those people. Sadly, that's the kind of thing that drives many of your best coaches and players such as Tiger Woods and Michael Jordan. Hell, one could argue that the main reason we have Cal is that he wanted to show Pitino he could beat him if the tables were turned from 96.Originally posted by WildcatfaninOhio:
I always thought that St. John's would have been a far better option for Piturncoat after his time in Boston. A New York catholic at a New York catholic school. He could have put them back on the map.
additionally, Temple has played for 9 more seasons than Illinois. If I'm looking the all-time win list correctly, Temple has played longer (since 1895) than any team in the top 50 of all-time wins. By contrast, UCLA, 7th in all-time wins has played since 1920Originally posted by sillygoose12:
I've never liked having all time wins or all time winning percentage as part of the equation without a way to adjust for strength of schedule. The all time difference in strength of schedule between Illinois and Temple for example would be like the difference between UK and UNLV this season.Originally posted by Jon_D:
I'm going with:
Illinois: 14th all-time in wins (.648) with one runner-up, five Final Fours, nine Elite Eights, and 30 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 15th all-time).
Temple: 5th all-time in wins (.644) with two Final Fours, seven Elite Eights, and 31 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 12th all-time).
Texas: 17th all-time in wins (.628) with three Final Fours, seven Elite Eights, and 32 NCAA Tournament appearances (11th all-time).
Notre Dame: 9th all-time in wins (.649) with one Final Four, six Elite Eights, and 34 NCAA Tournament appearances (tied for 9th all-time, which makes them the school with the most NCAA Tournament appearances that's never won an NCAA Tournament).
And St. John's.
This post was edited on 4/15 1:18 PM by Jon_D
Originally posted by WildcatfaninOhio:
I always thought that St. John's would have been a far better option for Piturncoat after his time in Boston. A New York catholic at a New York catholic school. He could have put them back on the map.