Showing posts with label Sweet Sixteen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sweet Sixteen. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Sweet 16 Preview: Part Two

Once again, I have separated the remaining teams into regions (which is pretty innovative), and started the discussion of each region with a table of their various Final Four odds. The first numerical column is the odds Pomeroy's log5 analysis implies each team has of reaching San Antonio. The second column shows their odds at Pinnacle and Sportsbook (same as yesterday) with the house advantage removed. The final column is the best odds I have found on each team, and where those odds are located.

An interesting arbitrage situation has been presented here. As you can see above, Sportsbook has UNC at -150 to win the East. BetUS has the odds on the Heels not winning the region at +175. By wagering $66 on them winning the region at Sportsbook, and $40 on them not reaching San Antonio at BetUS, one could lock in a $4 (or 3.8%) profit, regardless of the outcome.

I believe the inefficiency here is the BetUS line. Pinnacle has the same prop, but it's +121, much lower than BetUS' +175. The line Pomeroy's numbers would put on this (-192) is unrealistic, since it does not take into account the time Lawson missed, or the location of the games (Charlotte), but I think +175 is off as well.

There is probably some value in Louisville +350 here, especially since they are now favored by by 3 in Thursday's game, but nothing major. Same goes for Wazzu, although that one is losing value, as BetUS opened it at +1000, and the line on their game has been increasing.

Washington St.'s defensive performance against Notre Dame in the second round really was remarkable. The Fighting Irish had not been held under an offensive efficiency of 103 since their January 19th loss to Georgetown. Against the Cougars, that number was 69, the first time they've been held under 85 all season.

Even with only two games remaining, the longshots' odds are quite poor here. If you think either Davidson or Villanova are going to reach the Final Four, you'd be much better served betting on the money line and rolling it over into their Elite 8 game.

Seven of the country's nine best defenses are still alive, while for offenses that number is only four of nine. The potential Kansas-Wisconsin matchup this weekend would pit the Badgers' #1 defense against Kansas' #4 D. The big difference between these teams comes on the other side of the ball, where KU is #1, and Wisky is just 26th.

The numbers indicate- and I tend to agree with this- that Memphis has become undervalued. It is true that they cannot shoot free throws, but don't listen when CBS shoves the gloomy stats regarding this down your throat- as Pomeroy explains, these numbers are a matter of circumstance, rather than cause and effect. The reason not many poor free throw shooting teams have won it all is that there haven't been many teams this incompetent from the line that were this good overall- Memphis is a fairly unique situation, and should be treated as such. People always need something to talk about, and considering the Tigers have lost only once all year, it's not surprising that their weakness has gotten so blown out of proportion.

The rest of the odds in this region are pretty boring. I do find it interesting that Sportsbook clearly had the best Final Four odds prior to the tournament, but that title has now been handed over to BetUS.

The guys from Storming the Floor wrote the following regarding UCLA in today's Deadspin West Regional Preview:
"Nothing short of a Final Four will meet expectations, and a championship is almost necessary for a group that could be remembered for coming up short on the biggest of stages without it."
I completely agree with this, but also find it to be somewhat insane.

UCLA's record in the NCAA tournament over the last three years currently stands at 11-2. That is pretty damn impressive. They've won 85% of the games that have really counted- the ones where a loss ends your season. The fact that they lost to to one of the best teams in recent memory the past two years can't really be held against them- you may have noticed that everybody else lost to the Gators as well. It's very true that these teams will be remembered for falling just short if they don't win the title this year, but I think that's really a shame. Howland has put together a great program, and regardless of what happens over the next two weeks they should be remembered as the best team of the past three years, rather than some sort of failure.

Monday, March 24, 2008

Sweet 16 Preview: Vegas Percentages

This is the first part of my Sweet 16 preview. I do not know what the second part will be, but I'll have something. The percentage for each team is their chance of reaching the Final Four, derived from their odds at Pinnacle and Sportsbook. I took out the house advantage, so the percentages in each region add up to 100%.

I was rooting against upsets in the East, and this is why. There's little doubt that the highest level of basketball played this weekend will be in Charlotte. This table also shows why I thought it was somewhat insane to have UNC going all the way in a bracket. They took care of business in the first two rounds, and they're barely above a 50% chance to even reach the Final Four.

Louisville is favored by 2.5 against the Vols on Thursday. This shows just how much the perception of both these teams has changed. The Cardinals dismantled Oklahoma yesterday, while Tennessee barely got by Butler, but these two teams have been heading in different directions for awhile now.

The UNC-Wazzu game will be quite a contrast in styles, as it matches the fastest paced team remaining (Carolina, 8th in the country) against the slowest (the Cougars, 335th). People seem to be assuming the Tar Heels will advance, but they're going to have to step up defensively for that to happen. They certainly won't have an offensive efficiency of over 150 against this Wazzu team.

A Louisville-North Carolina regional final would be possibly the best game of the tournament, but the pace of a UNC-Tennessee matchup would be quite something as well.


This KU-Villanova game is somewhat uninteresting. Villanova can't really be looked at as a great Cinderella story because a) they play in the Big East, and b) the Clemson win was nice, but I don't think they shocked too many people by knocking off Siena. Now they face a Kansas team that's been winning comfortably, if not in the spectacular fashion of Louisville and UNC. It'll be a tall task for the Wildcats to buck that trend on Friday. I think the country is still sleeping on the Jayhawks, although a certain blogger seems to disagree.

The other game is this region is fascinating. Everybody knows all about Stephen Curry, but did you know Wisconsin has the best defense in the country? Sure, Georgetown is in the Top 10 as well, and we all saw what happened there, but Curry didn't really get it going against them until the last five minutes. If he waits that long again on Friday, it will likely be too late.

The South is completely wide open- Memphis and their 47% performance from the line clearly didn't impress anyone yesterday. But even before that game, people were down on them, and have been since they lost to Tennessee at home. And I think that's fair- they really should have gone on the road in non-conference- their only away games were against Middle Tennessee and Cincinnati. Although I suppose they got a 1 seed, so you can't criticize that strategy too much.

Regardless, they easily have the lowest percentage of any of the top seeds. The Longhorns may set a record for fewest turnovers in their game against Stanford; they turn the ball over less than any team in the country, while the Trees are 320th in forcing turnovers. It should be a very competitive weekend of games in Houston.

I was thinking today about how much of an idiot I am for picking Duke to come out of this region. But, looking at it now, there wasn't a clearly better option. UCLA almost lost yesterday. West Virginia has won two tough games, but they're still only halfway there. Xavier needed a comeback against UGA and a tough win over Purdue just to get this far. And Western Kentucky needed a miracle shot to beat Drake, and still is only 1 in 20 to reach San Antonio. Any Final Four pick in this region could be second guessed, mine just happened to lose on the first weekend.

Alright, enough justifying my stupidity. UCLA was lucky to escape against Texas A&M, but now face an overmatched Western Kentucky team. It's strange how that worked out- they were a couple minutes away from being the victim of the biggest upset of the tournament, and now they're the biggest favorite to reach the Final Four. They have AJ Price's knee to thank for that, really.

Related
: A compliation of second chance contests [Roxiticus Desperate Housewives]