Thursday, December 1, 2022

Dec. 1 NIT Bracketology

I've never projected automatic bids, but now I sort of wish I did. The bottom of this bracket is... uninspiring. Also, right now the NIT projects as the West Coast invitational, with the Pac-12 and Mountain West sending just an absolute bevy of teams, all of which project into middle seeds in the bracket. I hope some of those teams separate themselves as non-conference (and conference) play continues.

Since the NCAA is doing its fun "unseeded" trick with the first round road teams I could've really shaken up the seeding here to get better geographical matchups (and probably will in the future), but at this stage I thought it'd be better to show true seeding.

The next bracket will probably be January 1, 2023. Enjoy December!

Last 8 NCAA Teams: Rutgers, Arizona St., N.C. State, Utah St., Penn St., Texas A&M, Wisconsin, Mississippi

NIT Bracket (bubble teams in italics):

1. Florida
U. BYU
4. Colorado
U. Clemson
3. Boise St.
U. UCF
2. Utah
U. VCU

1. LSU
U. Southern Illinois
4. UNLV
U. Washington
3. Florida Atlantic
U. USC
2. Wake Forest
U. North Texas

1. Seton Hall
U. Pittsburgh
4. Colorado St.
U. Stanford
3. Oregon
U. Providence
2. Michigan
U. College of Charleston

1. St. John's
U. Toledo
4. Notre Dame
U. Nevada
3. Washington St.
U. Villanova
2. TCU
U. New Mexico

Others Considered: Wyoming, Wichita St., Cincinnati, Syracuse, Tulane, Richmond, Duquesne, St. Bonaventure, San Francisco, Santa Clara, Dayton

Not .500 Per KenPom: Northwestern, Vanderbilt, Georgia, Butler, Boston College, Georgia Tech, Temple

Friday, October 21, 2022

Preseason NIT Bracketology

KenPom rankings are out! Conference polls are being released! Secret scrimmages are starting! It's almost time for college basketball season. The new KenPom rankings give me an excuse to update my NIT bracketology. Here's the latest as we head towards the kickoff of the new season. The next one of these will come after teams play some games.

The number of teams based in the western third of the country in the middle of this bracket made putting it together an absolute nightmare. Though with the new bracket principles, where teams below four seeds are just unseeded, you'd never know that I bumped Fresno St. up two seed lines to make the bracket work, except for the fact that they're in italics.

Last NCAA Teams: St. John's, Xavier, USC, Memphis, Texas A&M, Stanford, Saint Louis, Mississippi

NIT Bracket:

U - Unseeded teams. Italics - Bubble Team

1. Wisconsin
U. Southern Illinois
4. Utah 
U. Fresno St.
3. Wyoming
U. Boston College
2. Arizona St.
U. VCU

1. Maryland
U. George Mason
4. Florida Atlantic
U. Mississippi St.
3. Loyola Chicago
U. Marquette
2. Providence
U. Temple

1. Clemson
U. Colorado St.
4. North Texas
U. Penn St.
3. Utah St.
U. Washington St.
2. Tulane
U. Vanderbilt

1. Seton Hall
U. Middle Tennessee
4. BYU
U. Colorado
3. Saint Mary's
U. Florida St.
2. Cincinnati
U. Boise St.

Also Considered: UCF, Davidson, San Francisco, Abilene Christian, UNCG, Akron, IPFW, Northwestern, Pittsburgh, Wichita St., St. Bonaventure, Richmond, Santa Clara, Western Kentucky

KenPom Doesn't Think You'll Finish .500: Iowa St., West Virginia, Kansas St., South Carolina, Georgia, Minnesota, Wake Forest, N.C. State, Louisville, Georgia Tech, DePaul, Georgetown, Washington, SMU

Thursday, September 1, 2022

The Long Story About College Basketball Rotations

While Kansas marched towards a title last season, Bill Self subtly adjusted his rotation. The Jayhawks head coach liberally doled out minutes as they rolled past Texas Southern, but just six players played all but 12 of the available minutes in their epic, title-clinching comeback against North Carolina.

This performance is a microcosm of how talented basketball teams manage their rotations throughout the season. My analysis of rotations shows that coaches play larger rotations in games against weaker opponents. In addition, they play looser rotations during non-conference and in the earlier rounds of the NCAA Tournament.

To be sure, coaching styles also play a big role, as does personnel.

Rotations can be hard to quantify. Every coach has a different definition of what the word means in their program. Colloquially though it appears to mean the number of players that are given a significant opportunity on the court. The statistics to quantify this are also limited. Ken Pomeroy, for instance, lists “Bench Minutes” on his team pages (Kansas ranked near the bottom at 301st last season), but that statistic ignores certain players entirely.

I analyzed two slight variations in hopes of finding additional insight into how coaches are managing playing time. One was the number of players that played at least 20% of the minutes available at a position in a game, or eight minutes in a regulation game. The second is the percentage of minutes played by the top five players during each game. Both provide a window into how coaches manage playing time.

It’s worth noting that neither of the metrics include anything about which players started the game. This is for two reasons, one practical and one analytical. The practical reason is that most stat platforms don’t capture the starters. The second is that starters can create false impressions. Just because a player is on the court for the tip-off doesn’t necessarily mean they’ll play a significant role—though it does have some signal. Looking at total minutes played and the players who played the most minutes avoid the complications caused by both of these issues. [A big thank you to Bart Torvik, whose invaluable college basketball site provided all of the data used for these analyses.]

Rotation Sizes

How big is a rotation? The most common number of players playing at least 20% of minutes is eight, which occurred in 37% of the games. The next most common are (not surprisingly) seven and nine, each with just under a quarter of all games.

The top five players get a median of 74% of a team’s minutes during the game, but that can vary widely, from as low as 41% to as high as 100%.

Rotation sizes have stayed incredibly consistent over the past six seasons. Coaches have played an average of 8.1 players 20% of team minutes each of the past five seasons. (It was 8.2 during the 2017 season.) Coaches also play their top five guys right around 74% on an incredibly consistent basis.

Outliers

An analysis of six seasons worth of player minutes data found a number of interesting outliers. There have been five games in the past six seasons where a team played 14 players for at least eight minutes. They are:

Date

Team

Opponent

Final Score

Dec. 22, 2020

Northwestern St.

Gonzaga

Loss, 95-78

Feb. 2, 2019

New Mexico St.

Chicago St.

Win, 83-39

Dec. 19, 2018

New Mexico St.

Cal St. Northridge

Win, 92-57

March 3, 2017

Wichita St.

Bradley

Win, 82-56

Dec. 7, 2016

West Virginia

Western Carolina

Win, 90-37


All of these games had large final margins. The 2018-19 New Mexico St. team rolled through the WAC, finishing with a 15-1 conference record. Northwestern St. played 14 players in a loss because it was the second night of a back-to-back against Gonzaga. Wichita St. extended its bench in 2017 because the comfortable victory occurred during the first night of Arch Madness, where preserving key players is of the utmost importance.

On the other hand, 134 times over the past six seasons coaches have played only five players at least 20% of available minutes. Not surprisingly, the two schools that have done it the most are St. Bonaventure (nine times) and Syracuse (eight times). Six of those nine instances for the Bonnies occurred during the 2022 season, as Mark Schmidt rode an experienced starting five to the semifinals of the NIT.

The biggest rotations over the course of a season include the 2019 New Mexico St. and 2021 Northwestern St. teams that appear above. It also includes 2020 Saint Peter’s, 2022 Cornell, and 2021 Winthrop. The smallest rotations over the course of a season include 2022 Saint Bonaventure, Western Kentucky, Oakland, and Tarleton State, along with 2018 Syracuse.

Rotations by Game Prediction

Coaches are often more willing to play larger rotations when their teams are projected to win comfortably. The graph below shows the relationship between T-Rank’s projection for a team and the average size of the rotation.


This is also influenced by the results. Teams average between 7.9 and 8 players in the rotation in all games with an ultimate margin between one and 11 points. But the rotation sizes start to steadily climb as the margin balloons.


The expected outcome of the game does seem to have some influence on the rotation size even after accounting for margin. Rotations are tighter during games that are potential toss-ups where both teams have about a 50% chance of winning when compared to games where the outcome is less in doubt.

 
Rotations by Part of Season

The relationship between score expectations and rotations carries over into the different phases of the college basketball season. Coaches play larger rotations during the non-conference then whittle them down in conference play. Rotations shrink even further come conference and NCAA Tournament time when the stakes are the highest.

Game Type

Avg. Rotation Size

Avg. Pct. Top 5

Non-Conference

8.4

72%

Conference

8.0

75%

Conference Tournament

7.7

77%

Postseason

7.7

77%


The most extreme example of the shrinking rotation from non-conference to conference play was the 2020 Georgetown Hoyas. Patrick Ewing played an almost nine man rotation during a pretty easy non-conference schedule where the Hoyas went 10-3, but once they entered Big East play he tightened the rotation down to just 6.5 players. It didn’t help. Georgetown went just 5-13 in conference play that season.

Rotations continue to tighten as teams advance further in the NCAA Tournament with the exception of the First Four, which makes sense given that the opening round should pit teams of (seemingly) equal quality.

Tourney Round

Avg. Rotation Size

First Four

7.48

First Round

7.71

Second Round

7.68

Sweet 16

7.55

Elite Eight

7.25

Final Four

7.15

Championship

7.00


Because of this phenomenon, teams that advance further end up playing smaller rotations overall.


Tempo and Rotations

There is a slight relationship between the tempo a coach has his team play at and their rotation size. Every 10 possessions adds about one-third of a player to the rotation.


As you can see in the scatter plot above though there are definitely teams that defy the trend. One particularly interesting team is the 2021 Coppin State. The Eagles were the fastest team in the country at 76.8 possessions per game adjusted tempo, but their average rotation size was just 7.3 players. 

On the other side is the 2017 Virginia team. Tony Bennett always has one of the slowest teams in the country and this often lets him play a shortened rotation, but he changed it up during the 2016-17 season. The only player who played significant minutes was senior point guard London Perrantes. Otherwise Bennett played nearly nine players eight minutes per game. Those Cavaliers were 46th in KenPom bench minutes percentage when Bennett’s teams consistently rank near the bottom of the country in most seasons. Since that season, which ended in a second round NCAA Tournament loss, Bennett has tightened his rotations up significantly.

Coaches and Rotations

Team quality and coaching changes are the reasons rotations sizes change the most dramatically. For instance, Arkansas underwent a dramatic transformation in rotation size when the Razorbacks changed head coaches from Mike Anderson to Eric Musselman. During the 2017-19 seasons Anderson played 8.9 players per game. Musselman took over after that and has shrunk rotations dramatically, despite continuing to play an up-tempo style of basketball. His rotations at Arkansas have included an average of just 7.3 players per game.

It turns out though that this is completely in character for both coaches. Musselman played the shortest average rotations of any coach in the past six seasons while he was at Nevada from 2017-19. He’s ranked seventh while at Arkansas. Anderson, on the other hand, played the 16th largest rotations during that time while at Arkansas. Since moving to St. John’s he’s lowered his average rotation a bit, but to 8.6.

The team that Musselman left, Nevada, has also increased its rotation size under new head coach Steve Alford. Alford plays about 8.2 players per game. Alford played a slightly smaller rotation, 7.6 players, during his previous stint at UCLA. 

Here are the coaches who have played the largest rotations during the past six seasons (minimum three seasons at a school):

Coach

School

Seasons

Avg. Rotation Size

Lew Hill

UT Rio Grande Valley

5

9.59

Mike McConathy

Northwestern St.

6

9.57

Russ Turner

UC Irvine

6

9.41

Leonard Hamilton

Florida St.

6

9.27

Mike Rhoades

VCU

5

9.16

 
Some other interesting names near the top include: King Rice at Monmouth (6th), Bob Huggins at West Virginia (12th) and Shaheen Holloway at Saint Peter’s (14th).

And here are the coaches who have played the shortest rotations during the past six seasons (minimum three seasons at a school):

Coach

School

Seasons

Avg. Rotation Size

Eric Musselman

Nevada

3

6.92

Jim Boeheim

Syracuse

6

6.96

Mark Schmidt

St. Bonaventure

6

6.99

Richie Riley

South Alabama

4

7.04

Jim Hayford

Seattle

4

7.19


Some other interesting names near the top for the shortest rotations include: Jay Wright at Villanova (6th), Musselman at Arkansas (7th), John Gallagher at Hartford (8th), Jamion Christian at George Washington (9th), Joe Mihalich at Hofstra (10th), Josh Pastner at Georgia Tech (13th), Rick Stansbury at Western Kentucky (14th) and Mike Brey at Notre Dame (15th).

Below is a Google sheet with the 488 coach-school combinations with at least two seasons at a school (I expanded the universe to allow you to have more to dig into).


Thursday, August 25, 2022

Way Too Early NIT Bracketology

The 2022-23 season is still months away, heck nearly half of Division I teams haven't even released their non-conference schedules yet. Still, it's fun to start thinking about what the upcoming season could look like.

One way to do that? Way too early predictions! I've spent a bunch of time thinking about the upcoming season for the Blue Ribbon preview (I wrote mostly about America East, but also Stony Brook, Monmouth, Marist and Rider). In order to create this bracket I looked at Joe Lunardi's NCAA predictions, Bart Torvik's 2023 projections, and a bunch of the Way Too Early conference projections on sites like Heat Check CBB. None of them completely agree with the other, so there is definitely some ambiguity.

A few teams in particular that I think could be worth watching this season: Providence (the people love them, the metrics don't), Ohio State, Florida State (a good team with a lot of injuries, or a program on the down slope?), and a number of programs with new coaches (Maryland, Seton Hall, etc.).

This bracket only gives seeds to the top four lines (i.e. the Rd. 1 home teams). In its release announcing that the 2023 NIT Final Four will be played in Las Vegas, the NCAA confirmed that they will once again use that seeding process. I will therefore be using it in my projections this season as well. (Though I'll still denote bubble teams with italics.) Think this bracket is insane? Hit me up on Twitter.

Last NCAA Teams: Alabama, USC, Saint Louis, Tulane, Mississippi, Wyoming, Stanford, Providence

U - Unseeded teams. Italics - Bubble Team

1. Arizona St.
U. BYU
4. LSU 
U. Florida Atlantic
3. Saint Mary's
U. Kansas St.
2. Utah St.
U. Washington

1. Ohio St.
U. VCU
4. St. John's
U. Florida St.
3. Clemson
U. Louisiana Tech
2. Seton Hall
U. Penn St.

1. Cincinnati
U. Boston College
4. Maryland
U. Temple
3. North Texas
U. Fresno St.
2. Missouri
U. Colorado

1. Loyola Chicago
U. Southern Illinois
4. Iowa St.
U. Wisconsin
3. Rutgers
U. Marquette
2. Washington St.
U. New Mexico

Friday, August 12, 2022

The NIT Is Going On The Road

The semifinals and finals of the NIT are heading to Las Vegas and Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis for the next two seasons, according to a release today from the NCAA.

The NCAA put the semifinals and finals, which have been traditionally played at Madison Square Garden, up for bid earlier this year. The winners of that process are Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, hosted by UNLV, and Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, hosted by Butler.

This seems great for the NIT. While Madison Square Garden is obviously a fantastic venue for college basketball due to its history and prominent location in the middle of New York City, this is a great way to spread the joy of the NIT to other parts of the country. (Though I'll personally miss being able to take the subway to semifinals and finals.)

The NIT tournament updated its logo and will be held in Las Vegas in 2023.
New (?) NIT logo courtesy NCAA

The NCAA's press release also includes some key information about the future format of the tournament. It appears that the 2023 version of the NIT will once again feature only 16 seeded teams with the other 16 teams unseeded and placed due to geographical constraints. This seemed to sort of work last season, though it created some confusion in later rounds. Knowing that's the case going in though should make it a little easier to predict the field.

The other fun news is that Rick Byrd, Bob McKillop and Gary Waters are joining the NIT committee. Byrd is obviously a legend due to his sweater vests (oh and his amazing run of coaching at Belmont), McKillop won more than 600 games at Kansas, and Waters actually coached in an NIT championship game at Rutgers. Those are three more distinguished members of the committee and also some mid-major legends who might push to have those types of teams included in the future. (Honestly, the NIT committee tilts towards coaches and administrators from smaller conferences.)

The season is coming up quickly. Selection Sunday is March 12, 2023. Vegas here we come on March 28 and 30, 2023!

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Offseason Data Questions: Oregon St.'s Dismal Elite 8 Follow Up

I asked readers for data questions I could interrogate during the college basketball offseason. I want to answer the first today. It comes from Bryan Beban.

The answer to Beban's original question is 54 teams that went to the Elite 8 since 1985 didn't make the NCAA Tournament the following season. That number is about a fifth of all of the 280 team-seasons (excluding 2022 and 2019) in the sample.

This question though is an interesting jumping off point, because Oregon State had a truly historically awful follow up season to its Elite 8 appearance. I looked at every Elite 8 team since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985 and none had a bigger drop in win percentage than Oregon State, which went 3-28 this past season (a 51 percentage point drop).

Most of the other teams in the top 20 in that metric were elite teams that dropped off to slightly below average. The number two team, for instance, is 2013-14 Florida. The Gators went 36-3 and made it to the Final Four before going 16-17 the next season.

One interesting historical comparison for Oregon St. though was the 1993-94 Boston College Eagles. That team also went to the Elite 8, but they then won just nine games during the following season. That program immediately bounced back and made the second round of the next two NCAA Tournaments before Jim O'Brien departed for Ohio State. So there might be hope for Oregon State yet.

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

NIT Semifinals Recap

Xavier and Texas A&M will play for the NIT title on Thursday at 7 pm. The Musketeers had to hold off St. Bonaventure 84-77, while the Aggies crushed Washington St. 72-56.

The win probability graphs suggest that Tuesday was not a particularly exciting night at Madison Square Garden.



Player of the Round: Dominick Welch of St. Bonaventure once again played all 40 minutes, as the SBU starting five tended to do this season, and scored 25 points, including 7-10 from three. He also added seven rebounds. A special shoutout goes out to Welch's teammate Kyle Lofton who had 15 points and 11 assists before fouling out.

Weird News of the Round: St. Bonaventure sent a bunch of busses to Madison Square Garden and they had a heck of a time getting there. One caught fire. Another was pulled over. A third lost a safety hatch. That meant that some of the students never made it to MSG. What a bummer!

What I'm looking for in the final: 
  • Can Buzz Williams finish off this run? It sure helps his case that Texas A&M was wrongly left out of the NCAA Tournament.
  • What does Jonas Hayes do next? Hayes has done an excellent job of getting Xavier ready to play in this tournament. He should have options for next season. He deserves them.

Prediction: KenPom has the Aggies as a 2-point favorite tomorrow night, 74-72.

NIT Bracket Reflections

My NIT bracket ended up being wildly off of what was eventually announced on Selection Sunday on X and Instagram and I think in the end what...