Archived 'NCAA' posts

A plea for the D-III athlete

Friday, May 4th, 2007

The NCAA announced that they have corrected an error in the allocation of the bids in the 2007 Division III Baseball Handbook. D3baseball.com broke the story earlier today. My role in this story was to review the much-anticipated 2007 Handbook upon its release on April 20. (After carefully following Division III sports for the past seven years, I have learned that there is much to learn about the process in the Handbook for the respective sports.)

NCAA newsThe errors in the 2007 Handbook seemed especially egregious in the original download. The list of teams seemed to be lifted from the 2005 Handbook in “cut and paste” fashion as the top line of page 32 states. Hartwick was still playing baseball. Mt. St. Vincent and Rockford were listed in two places and New Jersey City University was still an independent in the New York Region. The lists of schools did not match the tabulations. It just looked sloppy. I pointed these out to Pat Coleman and Jim Dixon. Cooler heads prevailed. The most knowledgeable D-III authority in the country and the D3baseball.com guru were able to get the information where it needed to go.

This might not be much of a story were the context of this next error not understood in the recent history of NCAA’s administering the Division III playoffs. We learned of a change in the Pool B allocations in men’s basketball in the last week of the 2006-07 regular season. When the 2007 men’s basketball brackets were released, the NCAA did not even know that Mary Hardin-Baylor and Mississippi College were in the same conference, the American Southwest Conference.

The NCAA announced that the official standard for the 2006-07 season for distance would be msn.mappoint.com “shortest distance”. There was even an administrative ruling placed in a special bulletin to university officials that “in-region” games that were contracted and scheduled under the previous standard would be honored as in-region. The new “msn.mappoint” standard allowed the ferry ride across Lake Michigan to qualify as the “shortest distance” for the men’s basketball game between Hope and Carthage to be a “200-mile” radius “in-region” game!

When the 2007 men’s basketball brackets were released, the NCAA did not even know that Mary Hardin-Baylor and Mississippi College were in the same conference, the American Southwest Conference.

However, the biggest impact of the mileage standard switch occurred in the seedings of the football playoffs. Pat Coleman noticed that the change in the official distance standard made it possible for South Region No. 7 Millsaps to be bused to No. 2 UMHB, keeping the seedings intact. Several other fans tried that same software and got the same answer. You could bus Millsaps to UMHB and send No. 5 Washington and Jefferson 20 miles into Pittsburgh to play No. 4 Carnegie Mellon in a first round game. Wow! What a bracket! The change in the standard was not considered by the football selection committee.

As a result, South Region ranked No. 3 Hardin-Simmons did not get the anticipated first round playoff game, but instead was sent to its conference rival for a first-round game. One could write a Master’s thesis on the impact of such scheduling permutations; the ASC has seen many of them.

The nature of this “rant” has changed to a sincere plea for Indianapolis to improve the quality of the support that we Division III fans get. To the NCAA: You hail “best practices” for your member institutions, yet you cannot administer a playoffs without glaring deficiencies in the processes you use. Your Handbooks have numerous mathematical and tabulation errors. You don’t even use the same format for all of the Handbooks. The 2007 Men’s Basketball Handbook 2/22/2007 revision is quite explicit in the calculation of the bids. That clarity was not present in the 2007 Baseball Handbook. The 2007 Women’s Basketball Handbook presents the conferences alphabetically, so you have to search for the other conferences in the region. In fact, the 2006 Men’s Soccer Handbook seems to be the most complete and most informative.

In the “real” world, there are major consequences for that failure to execute, yet we continually see these errors in Division III.

Your errors in Pool B for baseball were because someone responsible for the Championship in that sport did not verify the minute details. In the “real” world, there are major consequences for that failure to execute, yet we continually see these errors in Division III.

I hope that the next “self-study” that the NCAA implements will consider the poor quality of support that we are getting in Division III. I do not expect the Committee Chairs of the various committees from our respective universities to double-check these processes in the administration of the championships. You, the NCAA, have numerous customers: your member institutions, their governing boards, your student-athletes, the parents who have decided that the NCAA Division III model of “pure” amateur collegiate athletics is the correct one for the sons and daughters, and the very loyal D3 fans who contribute the campus environment. We need the NCAA to give us a better value for the services that we seek.

Why don’t you “open-source” your public data, such as the game scores, schedules, opponents’ opponents’ records, etc, to permit registered users and fans to proofread and update your data?

We sometimes wonder if the quality of support that we Division III fans receive is part of the diversity of the NCAA, i.e., all of the quality goes to Division I and Division III gets what is left. Supposedly, you “pursue excellence” and ostensibly a job with the NCAA is supposedly prestigious opportunity to work in this field.

The home page says — “The “national office” — Approximately 350 paid professionals that implement the rules and programs established by the membership. The national office staff is located primarily at the headquarters office in Indianapolis, Indiana.”

From the examples that we have seen this year, a bunch of “amateurs” have beaten the “pros.”

Second NCAA regional rankings

Thursday, May 3rd, 2007

The NCAA Division III baseball committee released its second regional rankings of the 2007 season Thursday afternoon.

The number of teams ranked is relative to the number of teams in each region. These rankings take into account the same criteria the NCAA will use to select and seed at-large teams for the playoffs.

The first record listed is the overall record, followed by record in regional games, through May 1.

Central
1. Luther 20-4 23-6
2. Wartburg 21-5 24-8
3. Illinois Wesleyan 22-5 25-9
4. Washington U. 27-7 28-9
5. Augustana 21-9 26-10
6. Edgewood 18-8 22-9

Mid-Atlantic
1. Kean 26-4 30-6
2. New Jersey 23-5 28-8
3. Johns Hopkins 25-7 29-7
4. Arcadia 22-8 24-11
5. Ramapo 24-8 28-11
6. Alvernia 25-11 26-11
7. Gettysburg 23-9 24-10
8. Franklin & Marshall 16-7 21-12

Mideast
1. Wooster 26-2 33-2
2. Otterbein 21-6 24-9
3. Washington and Jefferson 22-6 26-7
4. Transylvania 21-9 24-10
5. Thomas More 21-6 23-7
6. Marietta 20-7 24-11
7. Ohio Wesleyan 16-6 20-11

Midwest
1. St. Olaf 20-4 25-4
2. UW-Oshkosh 26-8 26-8
3. Ripon 14-2 17-10
4. St. Thomas 18-8 24-9
5. UW-Stevens Point 18-9 21-14
6. St. Scholastica 14-3 25-5

New England
1. Eastern Connecticut State 23-4 27-8
2. Western New England 22-4 25-8
3. Keene State 21-7 25-9
4. Wheaton (Mass.) 26-9 27-10
5. Williams 13-6 16-7
6. Trinity (Conn.) 22-6 26-6
7. Curry 17-5 23-7
8. Southern Maine 18-9 22-10
9. St. Joseph’s (Maine) 24-7 26-7

New York
1. Cortland State 25-4 32-4
2. Ithaca 15-5 20-9
3. RPI 20-8 23-8
4. Brockport State 20-8 23-12
5. Oneonta State 21-8 23-9
6. St. John Fisher 14-6 14-6

South
1. Emory 32-6 35-7
2. Salisbury 23-6 30-7
3. York (Pa.) 23-9 28-9
4. Methodist 23-10 28-11
5. Rhodes 27-10 36-10
6. Mary Washington 20-10-1 24-11-1

West
1. Chapman 25-2 32-5
2. Pacific Lutheran 28-6 32-7
3. George Fox 25-6 30-6
4. Texas-Dallas 28-7 31-9
5. Texas Lutheran 24-8 32-8-1
6. Pomona-Pitzer 23-8 29-11

D-III bracketology

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2007

Lets hear your comments on who is going to be in and who is out.

rkwachholz39 starts us off with this post:

Okay everyone, I hope you are ready for some good water cooler talk. I am going to play D3 Bracketologist for the upcoming NCAA Tournament. All records and information is updated as of April 30, 2007 regarding records and conference standings. Also, any teams that have not completed 30 games to this point have been left off any potential Independent or At-Large Qualifiers. First, I will rundown the list of qualifiers. Then, I will give you my thoughts on placement and seeding. Here we go!

Automatic Qualifiers-I hope I have the right conferences (Pool A)
CCIW = Illinois Wesleyan (25-9)
IIAC = Wartburg (24-8)
SLIAC = Webster (25-10)
Centennial = Johns Hopkins (29-7)
MA Commonwealth = Lebanon Valley (20-16)
MA Freedom = King’s (26-9)
NJAC = Kean (30-6)
PennAC = Arcadia (24-9)
Heartland = Mt. St. Joseph (28-7)
MIAC = Hope (25-10)
North Coast = Wooster (35-3)
Ohio = Otterbein (24-7)
President’s = Washington & Jefferson (26-7)^
Midwest = St. Norbert’s (21-7)^
Minnesota = St. Olaf (25-4)
Wisconsin = UW-Oshkosh (26-8)
*NEWMAC = Wheaton (27-10)
*GNAC = Western New England (25-8)
Commonwealth Coast = Curry (23-7)
Little East = Eastern Connecticut (26-8)
NESCAC = Tufts (22-9)
MaSCAC = Westfield State (16-13)
City UNYAC = Mitchell College (15-7)^
State UNYAC = SUNY-Cortland (32-4)
Liberty = Rensselaer (23-8)
Skyline = Manhattanville (20-15)
Allegheny Mountain = La Roche (23-15)
*Old Dominion = Bridgewater (17-20)
* SCAC = Austin College (22-23)
*USA South = Ferrum (23-16)
American Southwest = TX Lutheran (32-8-1)
*Northwest = Pacific Lutheran (32-7)
*SCalIAC = Pomona Pitzer (26-10)

Independent Qualifiers (Pool B)
Univ of Washington (28-9)
St. Scholastica (29-5)
Salisbury (30-7)
Emory (35-7)
Chapman (32-5)

At-Large Qualifiers (Pool C)
Luther (24-7)
Edgewood (23-9)
College of New Jersey (28-8)
Gwynedd-Mercy (24-9)
Thomas More (23-7)
Univ of St. Thomas (24-9)
Salve Regina (23-9)
Keene State College (25-9)
Trinity (26-6)
York (28-9)
Rhodes College (36-10)
Millsaps (35-11)
Averett (31-12)
TX-Dallas (31-9)
George Fox (29-6)

*Conference Season Completed, team has secured automatic qualifier
^Tie in conference, best overall record taken

Groupings and Rankings for Tournament
Central
(1) Wartburg
(2) IL Wesleyan
(3) Rhodes
(4) Millsaps
(5) Luther
(6) U of Washington
(7) Webster

Mid-Atlantic
(1) Kean
(2) Johns Hopkins
(3) College of NJ
(4) Kings
(5) Arcadia
(6) Gwynedd-Mercy
(7) Lebanon Valley

Mideast
(1) Wooster
(2) Mt. St. Joseph
(3) Otterbein
(4) Washington & Jefferson
(5) Thomas More
(6) Hope

Midwest
(1) St. Olaf
(2) UW-Oshkosh
(3) St. Thomas
(4) St. Scholastica
(5) Edgewood
(6) St. Norbert

New England
(1) Eastern Connecticut
(2) Western New England
(3) Curry
(4) Trinity
(5) Wheaton
(6) Tufts
(7) Westfield State

New York
(1) Cortland State
(2) Rensselaer
(3) Keene State
(4) Salve Regina
(5) LaRoche College
(6) Manhattanville
(7) Mitchell College

South
(1) Emory
(2) Salisbury
(3) York
(4) Averett
(5) Ferrum
(6) Bridgewater

West
(1) Chapman
(2) TX Lutheran
(3) George Fox
(4) Pacific Lutheran
(5) TX Dallas
(6) Pomona Pitzer
(7) Austin College

Last Four In
Salve Regina
Edgewood College
Averett
Gwynedd Mercy

Last Five Out
SUNY Oneonta
Methodist
Ramapo
Augustana
Penn State Behrend

NOTES
I am an assistant coach in the Midwest, so much of the selections were based on winning percentages than looking at each schedule. I know the ratings index will factor in a lot. Only teams with winning percentages above .700 were considered for Independent and At-Large Qualifiers. I left out Keystone because I am not sure if they are still provisional. Williams College, St. Joseph’s (ME) could move in once they have played enough games. Austin College winning the SCAC created the opportunity for 3 SCAC teams to get in. Loses by Illinois Wesleyan, Johns Hopkins, Kean, Mt. St. Joseph, Wooster, St. Olaf, UW-Oshkosh, and SUNY Cortland would bump some of the last four in from the tournament. I will be back next Tuesday with the updated projection. Have fun with this!

Clearing the Bases

Friday, April 27th, 2007

It is playoff time. This weekend there are six automatic bids (Pool A) up for grabs as teams look to join Ferrum in the 2007 Regional Playoffs. I have looked at the conferences with no tournament and those tournaments that are ongoing and ending this weekend.

The Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association, Northwest Conference, and Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference are the only conferences with an automatic bid with no end of the season tournament and the regular season champion gets the automatic bid.

This is the final weekend for the SCIAC where Pomona-Pitzer is tied with La Verne at 13-5. Pomona-Pitzer plays Cal Tech (0-18) three times and La Verne has three games against Whittier (10-8). If La Verne wins out, they hold the tiebreaker (2-3 against Pomona-Pitzer) and get the automatic bid. Cal Lutheran (12-6 ) has an outside chance if Cal tech and Whittier can kock off the top teams in the conference. Pomona-Pitzer has an outside chance at a pool C bid but it looks like only one team in the SCIAC will get a playoff bid.

The MIAA has games as late as May 8th but the conference champions should be determined before that. Conference leaders Adrian (15-5) and Hope (15-5) have a three game advantage over the third place teams with four games left to play.

In the NWC, Pacific Lutheran (18-3) is in control and with one win at Puget Sound this weekend will get the automatic bid over George Fox who finished the season with a 19-5 conference record. Both Pacific Lutheran and George Fox are ranked near the top in the west region and it is expected that whoever finishes in second place to recieve a pool C bid.

Two conferences Championships have been held. Ferrum won the USA South Athletic Conference and Salisbury won the Capital Athletic Conference. Only the USA South has an automatic bid so Salisbury has to wait for the selection committee. It is expected that Salisbury will get a Pool B bid with the regular season conference champion York (Pa.) in the running for a pool C bid.

This weekend will see five conference tournaments. The Great Northeast Athletic Conference, New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference, Old Dominion Athletic Conference, Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference, and Great South Athletic Conference

The GNAC tournament has started with Western New England posting a win againd Rivier and Johnson & Wales upsetting Suffolk in the double elimination tournament. The double elimination NEWMAC championship begins on Saturday morning with top-seeded Wheaton squaring off with Babson in the first game and MIT and Coast Guard meeting in the second game. The ODAC tournament features the top six teams in the conference. Virginia Wesleyan, Hampden-Sydney and Bridgewater both started the tournament off with wins. The SCAC tournament started last weekend with Rhodes, Millsaps, Austin and Southwestern (Texas) all advancing to the second round. The GSAC tournament does not get an automatic bid but the four team conference starts today at Maryville College.

Of all the teams playing only Wheaton and maybe Rhodes is expected to get a Pool C bid if they do not win their conference tournament. I wish all teams luck as it is essential if one wants to move on to win this weekend.

The rest of the tournament to be played (grouped by ending date) are:

May 5, 2007: CCC, NEAC, MACC, ASC.

May 6, 2007: NAC, MASCAC, SUNTAC, SKY, MAFC, CC, PnAC.

May 7, 2007: NJAC.

May 11, 2007: NCAC.

May 12, 2007: LEC, CUNYAC, OAC, HCAC, PrAC, IIAC, CCIW, WIAC, SLIAC, MWC, UMAC.

May 13, 2007: AMCC, NorAC, MIAC, NESCAC.

First NCAA regional rankings

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

The NCAA Division III baseball committee released its first regional rankings of the 2007 season Thursday afternoon.

The number of teams ranked is relative to the number of teams in each region. These rankings take into account the same criteria the NCAA will use to select and seed at-large teams for the playoffs.

The first record listed is the overall record, followed by record in regional games, through April 24.

Central
1. Luther 18-3, 21-5
2. Wartburg 18-5, 21-8
3. Washington U. 24-6, 25-8
4. Illinois Wesleyan 19-4, 22-8
5. Edgewood 18-8, 22-9
6. Augustana 18-7, 23-8
6. Webster 17-6, 23-10

Mid-Atlantic
1. Kean 21-4, 25-6
2. New Jersey 18-5, 23-8
3. Johns Hopkins 22-6, 26-6
4. Ramapo 22-5, 26-8
5. Arcadia 19-7, 21-8
6. Alvernia 22-10, 23-10
7. Franklin and Marshall 14-5, 19-10
8. Gettysburg 17-4, 18-5

Mideast
1. Otterbein 19-4, 22-7
2. Wooster 26-1, 33-1
3. Marietta 14-4, 21-8
4. Thomas More 18-5, 20-6
5. Washington and Jefferson 17-6, 21-7
6. Ohio Wesleyan 10-4, 14-9
7. Transylvania 18-8, 21-9

Midwest
1. St. Olaf 20-2, 25-2
2. UW-Oshkosh 23-5, 23-5
3. Ripon 11-1, 14-9
4. St. Thomas 15-7, 21-8
5. St. Scholastica 13-3, 23-4
6. UW-Stevens Point 13-6, 16-11

New England
1. Eastern Connecticut State 17-3, 21-7
2. Western New England 19-4, 22-8
3. Wheaton (Mass.) 22-8, 23-9
4. St. Joseph’s (Maine) 21-5, 23-5
5. Southern Maine 15-6, 19-7
6. Keene State 16-7, 20-9
7. Williams 13-6, 16-7
8. Curry 14-4, 18-6
T9. Trinity (Conn.) 18-5, 22-5
T9. Tufts 11-5, 18-8

New York
1. Cortland State 21-3, 28-3
2. RPI 11-6, 13-6
3. Brockport State 18-6, 21-10
4. Ithaca 11-4, 16-8
5. St. John Fisher 14-6, 14-6
T6. Centenary 16-6, 21-9
T6. Rochester Tech 9-5, 13-7

South
1. Emory 31-6, 32-7
2. Salisbury 19-6, 26-7
3. York (Pa.) 20-8, 25-8
4. Methodist 23-10, 28-11
5. Rhodes 26-8, 35-8
6. Mary Washington 20-9-1, 24-10-1

West
1. Chapman 24-2, 30-5
2. George Fox 22-5, 27-5
3. Pacific Lutheran 25-6, 29-7
4. Texas Lutheran 22-7, 30-7-1
5. Texas-Dallas 26-7, 29-9
6. Pomona-Pitzer 20-7, 26-10

Who should get a pool B bid?

Friday, April 20th, 2007

uessing the at-large bids is one of the mental exercises that D3 fans can play entering the last month of the season. We usually have the official handbook available by now (The updates to the 2006 handbook have yet to be published) so as to know how many Pool B and Pool C bids will be awarded.

If we assume no change from the 2006 allocations (which may be inaccurate because of the conference shifts involving the Lake Michigan Conference, the North East Athletic Conference, and the North Atlantic Conference), we should have 7 Pool B bids and 14 Pool C bids.

In 2006, these seven Pool B bids were awarded to: Aurora, Cal State East Bay, Chapman, St Scholastica, Ithaca, Salisbury and St Joseph’s (Maine). Two more schools from “Pool B” earned an at large bid in Pool C, Emory and Washington (Mo.), both of the UAA. What a difference a year makes.

Aurora, competing in the new Northern Athletics Conference (NAthCon), is having trouble this year. Cal State East Bay is off. York (Pa.) and not Salisbury is the top seed in the Capital AC post-season tourney. St Joseph’s (Maine) is competing in the North Atlantic Conference, which is expected to earn a Pool A bid in 2007.

St Scholastica is ranked #5 in the Midwest Region. The Saints are 17-3 with half of their season remaining. They play in the Upper Midwest AC, a conference that is moving its membership through the provisional stages, so not every conference game will count in the eyes of the committee this year.

Dominican won the Lake Michigan Conference (LMC) tourney in 2006 to earn that conference’s Pool A bid. Aurora from the old Northern Illinois Iowa Conference (NIIC) got a Pool B bid. But, any Northern Athletics Conference team that has NCAA hopes must look to Pool B and C this year and next. Edgewood is ranked 8th in last week’s ABCA rankings at 17-8 overall/9-3 in conference. The NAthCon tourney will be held May 11-13, but no bid awaits the winner, only the chance to rack up wins that may look better to the Regional Evaluation Committee.

Out west, Chapman continues to lead the West Region and is probably secure in that ranking. Pencil in Chapman for a bid. The only curiosity around the Panther fandom is whether Chapman hosts the West Regionals again.

This is at least ten teams looking for possibly 7 spots. Things will change next Tuesday with new regional rankings. And, when the 2007 Handbook is released, we will know if the number of Pool B bids has increased, decreased or remained the same. Keep tuned.

Where’s the handbook?

Friday, April 13th, 2007

Just an FYI post, since I know more people besides me have been asking this question.

The NCAA’s baseball championships chair says they are working on finalizing the championships handbook and it should be released on Monday.

Since this handbook is the governing document for the Division III baseball championships, it’s a rather important piece of work. We’ll find out what is hopefully a final number for Pool B and Pool C bids, though men’s basketball this season changed said figures shortly before the playoffs.

We’ll have a story in greater detail about the handbook itself when it’s out there.

First head-coaching job

Thursday, February 15th, 2007

Josh Centor, a former baseball player at Brandeis, runs the NCAA’s blog, called the Double-A Zone. As such, he is one of the few college sports bloggers (D3sports.com company excluded) who pays any attention to Division III and does so with any expertise whatsoever.

A recent post focuses on a former D-III baseball player, minor leaguer and assistant coach getting his first head coaching job. It’s Cliff Smith, who left his assistant job at Bowdoin and took over at Elizabethtown this past offseason.

Organizing a Florida trip, ordering equipment, managing a fund-raising budget, and finding qualified assistant coaches were just a few things that had to be accomplished in just a short three-week span. Add those things to the fun stuff of organizing practices, getting to know 27 players, and preparing to play a competitive schedule and the task can feel a little daunting. Personally you also have to adjust to being outside of you support system, with a family and girlfriend that are now eight hours away.

Read the full blog post here.