My point is twofold:
- I'm trying to figure out if people care AT ALL about quality. Thus it is a hypothetical and I'm not overly concerned with the realism of it.
- As stated upthread, the committee has pretty clearly indicated that quality isn't very important and I'm concerned that this will encourage a lot more clubbing of a lot more baby seals.
I think you're jumping to conclusions. The committee wasn't faced with a MEAC level team doing this. In NET, Miami was not exactly good at 64, but it's not like it's some team sitting at 120.
You saying that the committee doesn't care about quality suggests that you think they have NO line. Perhaps this was "close enough" that it wasn't clear-cut, and if the resume had been even slightly worse they wouldn't have accepted them.
To me, without making this political, it's like looking at a very close 5-4 or 6-3 SCOTUS decision where it's a complicated decision that could have gone either way, without recognizing that many SCOTUS decisions come down 9-0. A
*lot* more of them, to be frank, than most people think. It's possible that for the committee, this was a 5-4 or 6-3 decision, and your hypothetical MEAC example would be 9-0.
They had three additional problems:
- Their loss was dreadful. From this thread I'm not sure that anyone besides me cares but their loss was to the #201 team and thus a Q4 loss. NONE of the legitimate bubble teams had Q4 loss.
- Their OOC was dreadful even by MAC standards and even excluding the issue raised about power conference teams not wanting to schedule them. I had earlier said two because I didn't look all that closely and missed one but they actually played three non-DI games. Thus their record per NET is "28-1" because the three non-DI games don't even count.
- Their league schedule was weak by MAC standards. The only other MAC team in the top 129 of the NET was Akron and Miami got them at home (3 point win).
Akron on the road would have been a Q1 game.
Yeah, and if you recall, when I was arguing against BAB, I was arguing that I didn't think the metrics support including Miami. That including them is a feel good story. And I specifically highlighted that their best win is a 3 point victory over Akron, and that they had 9 wins that were either decided in overtime (4) or were a single basket game in regulation (5).
But also, that I'm not exactly shedding a tear for an Auburn or some other team that scheduled tough, but didn't win their games, and would be on the 11 line. I don't think it's a travesty that Auburn isn't in the field. They were 4-13 in Q1 games, 3-2 in Q2 games. While that's arguably (and I'd argue on your side) a resume that suggests they're a stronger team than Miami, it's not exactly a resume that suggests they are championship material.
So either way, I don't care. I think if it were my choice, I'd probably not have included them. But I'm not going to act like anyone who disagrees with me lacks intelligence. They just are valuing something else--a feel good story of going 31-0 in the regular season, a rare feat--more highly than I do.