We agree, polls are silly. This is good
I respect you a great deal, but please, I don't need to see really long lists that tell me playing in a Big Ten schedule means you play more high level games than a WCC schedule. I know that's the case. I will always know that's the case. It will be the case in March, May, September. That is the structure of the sport.
Now, you point out correctly, I said they would take on all comers. I suppose I didn't imagine a world where they just eschew home games altogether. I suppose they could've done that. They won't, in part because people alas respond to incentives, and particularly persnickety outlooks do not make incentives. The main way to do that would be to drop them seed lines, but we were talking about fairness, and that leads to some high-end unfairness. Also, in normal years, selling tickets has some value, and you can't just pay to chase the standards of someone who is likely to be unsatisfied barring a home game free slate.
Anyway, since we're talking impossible things like not playing home games, might as well have every Big Ten team schedule them. Helps Big Ten SOS. Helps Gonzaga SOS. Makes for good TV. Say seven home games, seven away. You wipe out a big chunk of of the Zags' bad non-conference opponents and get a good game on everyone's slate. I'm all for this.
I get where you are coming from but I think that Gonzaga has built up enough of a "brand" to be realistically able to avail themselves of H&H series with power conference opposition. Even if they haven't, they could easily AT LEAST get H&H series against other typical mid-major powerhouses. Four of their OOC games this year were against not only teams that were not that good, but against some of the absolute worst teams in the entire sport. Some of that may have been pandemic issues this year but I've noticed this about their schedule in other years as well.
I don't know about you, but as an Ohio State fan, I'd be disappointed if my team scheduled 300+ opponents OOC and my team (like yours) has the legitimate excuse that they get PLENTY of tests in conference so they don't need extra tests OOC beyond the Challenge and a few games here or there. Gonzaga doesn't have that excuse so, to me, scheduling the absolute dregs of the sport OOC is . . . inexcusable.
What to do about it? Well, if it were me, I would take it into serious consideration when seeding them in the tournament. Even if they finish undefeated, there will be a whole lot of major conference teams that are not undefeated but that have a LOT more quality wins than they do. I'm not saying I would seed teams exclusively by "number of wins against quality opponents" but I also wouldn't do it exclusively based on winning percentage against quality opponents. I'd balance the two and IMHO, the balance has leaned too heavily in Gonzaga's favor for quite some time.
I have the same issue looking at the B1G right now. Michigan is probably our best team and I'm not saying this to pick on them (even though I am an Ohio State guy) but at some point their lack of games and thus wins due to this interminable COVID pause has to be considered. Their winning percentage of 1.000 against the B1G's .500+ teams and their winning percentage of .857 against the B1G's best 12 (all but NU and UNL) are both best in the league but:
- Their two wins against .500+ B1G teams is tied for 5th/6th/7th/8th/9th/10th in the league with PU, IA, RU, IU, and PSU and trails tOSU (5), IL MN, and UMD (3 each).
- Their six wins against the top-12 is tied for 4th/5th/6th with UW and RU and trails IL and tOSU (8 each) and PU (7).
I'm not saying that Michigan isn't a great team, just that they are going to have to get back to actually playing games and proving it if they are going to maintain their assumed status as the B1G's #1 contender come Tournament time.