dlh331’s mention of how good 2010 UK was got me thinking about how great 2010 KU was. And, like it or not, 2010 Duke was statistically great too.
That 2010 KU loss to Northern Iowa STILL haunts KU fans. Always will. KU was SO deep & talented — second-highest-rated (KenPom) KU team since 2002. Champ Duke’s rating was even higher, though. I wish KU, Duke and Kentucky coulda all played each other that season, to see how they stacked up. KU was 33-3, with eight wins over ranked teams. Eight of KU’s 2010 players ultimately at least sniffed an NBA roster, plus, there was one OTHER 5-star player who DIDN’T, plus, an additional two who ended up becoming future KU starters.
In that 2010 tournament, we ran into a Northern Iowa buzzsaw (your typical, poised & extremely well-coach Missouri Valley team) — a team who did JUST enough to take advantage of our 15 turnovers and 0-for-11 three-pt shooting from two of our starters. We lost by 2. Our defeat was sealed with 37 seconds left to play, with one of THE dumbest/most exciting shots in tourney history (imo). Up only one, with the clock winding down, UNI went on a fast break, BUT suddenly pulled-up for a 3-point attempt …instead of a layup. Swish. Game. Sad Jayhawks:
20-sec. youtube clip: The UNI 3 vs KU: “You can’t be SERIOUS with that shot!!!”
Years later, the guy who hit that gutsy UNI shot, Ali Farokhmanesh — just for fun — went to a KU game to interview & good-naturedly troll KU fans. It’s a funny video/interview clip:
Here’s Ali
Farokhmanesh hiding, then revealing, his identity to KU fans. There’s a skipable, 20 second intro, then boring conversation for 40 more seconds, so…if I were you, I’d just skip right ahead to exactly the one-minute-mark, and play it. It’s pretty funny when each KU fan finds out that HE’S the player (who made that shot and dashed their dreams).
Below:
(The small number in parentheses = the # of victories over ranked teams that season)
(The three *** marks were used just to visually separate UK from KU info)
KenPom team scores, ranking all Kentucky and Kansas teams, 2002-2023:
***36.91 2015 uk.(8) Coach CAL
35.21 2008 ku (5) KU CHAMPS
***32.59 2012 uk. (10) CAL CHAMPS
31.85 2010 ku (8)
30.23 2020 ku (4, short season)
29.67 2016 ku (12)(Ulis was far better and more in control than future NPOY Frank Mason in AllenFH that game)(And I’m not sure why UK players suddenly & mysteriously began fouling KU players too much toward the end
Sorry
***29.18 2003 uk (12) TUBBY
28.99 2002 ku. (9) ROY Williams
28.62 2003 ku. (7) ROY Williams
28.38 2011 ku (5)
27.81 2007 ku (5)
***27.72 2017 uk (6) CAL
***27.57 2019 uk (7) CAL
27.49 2022 ku. (8) CHAMPS
27.45 2017 ku. (6)
26.91 2012 ku (7)
***26.54 2010 uk (7) CAL
***25.82 2011 uk (8) CAL
***25.72 2022 uk. (3) CAL
25.23 2013 ku (5)
***25.14 2016 uk. (3) CAL
24.60 2014 ku (7)
***24.10 2005 uk (4) TUBBY
23.83 2009 ku (3)
23.49 2018 ku (8)
***23.35 2004 uk (6) TUBBY
23.22 2006 ku (3)
23.08 2005 ku (4)
22.85 2023 ku (7)
22.72 2015 ku (10)
***22.55 2014 uk (5) CAL
***22.21 2002 uk (2) TUBBY
***21.73 2007 uk (0, but nation’s hardest schedule) TUBBY
21.57 2019 ku (8, mostly early, then ku lost 2 starters)
20.89 2004 ku (2, but made E8)
***20.44 2018 uk. (2) CAL
19.98 2021 ku (8)(That same ‘21 roster came back and won the title the next season, so ‘21 KU was good, but got humiliated by the gigantic & quick ‘21 usc team)
***17.60 2020 uk(4) CAL (short season)
***17.40 2023 uk. (2) CAL
***17.13 2006 uk (4) TUBBY
***14.97 2021 uk. (1) CAL
***14.62 2009 uk (1) BCG
***13.25 2013 uk. (2) CAL
***10.01 2008 uk (2) BCG
Following are KenPom’s statistically best team scores (any top team, 2002-23)(combined offense&defense scores), which are greatly affected by strength-of-schedule, and which are combined from a whole season’s worth of data, so being bad early in the season could be something really hard for a team to overcome (statistically), even for a team who’s improved greatly and is fantastic by season’s end…so take these numbers & rankings with a grain of salt, and let’s not pretend KenPom’s methodology is perfect. His methodology is a fancy-guesswork conversation starter.
So here it is:
OVERALL, BEST KENPOM TEAMS (2002-23):
36.91 2015 Kentucky ***
36.48 2021 Gonzaga
35.21 2008 Kansas
34.22 2019 Virginia
34.19 2002 Duke
33.87 2021 Baylor (easily beat 2021 Gonzaga [above], and won the B12 by 5 gms)
33.76 2018 Nova (amazing offensive team)
33.72 2015 Wisconsin
33.47 2011 Ohio State
33.29 2010 Duke (‘10 KU+UK also gr8!)
32.92 2013 Louisville (ahead of ‘12 uk?)
32.85 2019 Gonzaga
32.77 2005 UNC
32.68 2005 Illinois
32.59 2012 Kentucky (which beat Bill Self’s 9th-best KenPom KU team, and it was the 11th-best KU team since the 2001-2002 season, however, low statistics or not, that KU team beat 7 ranked teams, was super outstanding defensively, and had an All-American…just very challenged offensively).
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NEW DATA EDIT:
How likely would it be for either UK or KU to become champs based solely on last season’s final kenpom ranking?
Last season’s final KenPom, UK finished 27th and KU 9th.
So there’s hope, for Kentucky this coming season, because, just two years-ago, 2022 KU went from ranked 27th (in 2021’s final kenpom) to winning it all in 2022.
But how common is that big of a kenpom jump?
Turns out (from info below), that only 20% (four) of the past-20 champions were worse than kenpom top-25 (his final ranking) the prior season.
Below: Biggest rises in kenpom, from previous season’s final kenpom ranking to a title the next season: (…measured by number of kenpom ranking spots jumped up ….from previous season to a title)
Of course, with the new transfer portal rules, lots of turnover is starting to happen, so huge kenpom jumps might become more frequent, not to mention those few teams, like UK, who can still get all the very top HS players, plus top transfers, all at once.
2023 champ uconn (1st in 2023 kenpom: 29.86pts, jumped up from 22nd in 2022’s final kenpom: 18.55pts)(jumped up 21 spots to win it all)
2022 ku (3rd: 27.49, jumped up from 27th in 2021: 19.98)(won it after being 27th the season before).
2021 bay (2nd: 33.87, up from 3rd in 2020: 25.49)
2020 - no champ
2019 uva (1st: 34.22, up from 2nd in 2018: 29.53)
2018 nova (1st: 33.76, up from 2nd in 2017: 29.88)
2017 unc (3rd: 28.22, down from 2nd in 2016: 29.82)
2016 nova (1st: 32.01, up from 5th in 2015: 30.65)
2015 duke (3rd: 32.48, up from 8th in 2014: 24.25)
2014 uconn (15th: 22.13, up from 49th in 2013: 14.05)(So here we see it’s at least possible to be ranked as low as kenpom 49th one year, then win it all the next…but that’s a rare, big jump)
2013 uL (1st: 32.92, up from 17th in 2012: 20.67)
2012 uk (1st: 32.59, up from 7th in 2011: 25.82)
2011 uconn (10th: 23.93, up from 51st in 2010: 15.19)(again, uconn, with the huge jump — this time from kenpom 51st to champ the next season)
2010 duke (1st: 33.29, up from 10th in 2009: 24.31)
2009 unc (1st: 31.14, up from 3rd in 2008: 30.22)
2008 ku (1st: 35.21, up from 5th in 2007: 27.81)
2007 fla (2nd: 30.81, down from 1st in 2006: 28.28)
2006 fla (1st: 28.28, up from 10th in 2005: 23.93)
2005 unc (1st: 32.77, up from 11th in 2004: 23.23)
2004 uconn (2nd: 28.30, up from 22nd in 2003: 19.54)
2003 cuse (8th: 23.28, up from 56th in 2002: 12.61)(biggest jump of past 20 tourneys = this: Syracuse’s jump from 56th in 2002 to champs in 2003)
So you can see: twelve of the past-20 champions (60%) finished in the top-eleven of final kenpom, during the previous season. 16 of 20 champs (80%) finished the prior season in the kenpom top 25. (Who didn’t? 2022 KU [ranked 27th], the 2011&14 Uconn teams [49th&51st], and 2003 syracuse [56th])(next lowest was 2004 uconn, 22nd) Six of 20 champs didn’t finish in the kenpom top 20. Three of 20 champs didn’t finish in the top 30 or top 40 (of kenpom).
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Now for the very different, but great, question as to the validity of the early NIT vs NCAA tournaments question (above)…yeah, it gets kinda murky/confusing trying to figure out the true strength and value of those early tournaments. (I guess there was a great UK team, or two, who didn’t compete in some NCAA or NIT tournaments. Same with KU.)
My whole thing is: if the number of tournament teams is too small — in a game where a large component is luck — how can truly great teams be left out, and a true champion be crowned?