Interesting article from the St. Louis paper about the A-10's challenging one-bid season, including comments from McGlade, the SLU AD, and Mooney. Highlights the poor OOC performance, both in terms of record and SOS, as one of the key issues (duh).
Scheduling will be discussed at the conference meetings next month and the article talks a bit about current expectations. McGlade says it's "possible" the A-10 may be able to set up a conference challenge like the MWC one that never got off the ground after COVID disruptions.
Scheduling will be discussed at the conference meetings next month and the article talks a bit about current expectations. McGlade says it's "possible" the A-10 may be able to set up a conference challenge like the MWC one that never got off the ground after COVID disruptions.
By posting a 1-19 record in Quadrant 1 nonconference games and 8-16 mark in Quadrant 2, the A-10 created a difficult path for any team to garner an at-large berth.
That will be a discussion at our May meetings because clearly it’s a challenge,” SLU athletics director Chris May said. “That’s a big concern. We’ll have to look at everything from scheduling to minimum requirements. We’ve been in the league with a lot of bids, but it’s not there right now.” [...]
The league has guidelines for nonconference scheduling but nothing that is mandatory. Last season, league members played 50% of nonconference games against Quadrant 4 opponents. All but four teams suffered at least one Quad 4 loss.
The league’s scheduling policy includes a goal of winning at least 70% of games before the start of A-10 play. This season the cumulative winning percentage in nonconference was .583.
So, there is a scheduling puzzle between incorporating upper echelon opponents — if you can’t get them to play — and building a good record.
“The (NCAA selection) committee looks at what you have control over in scheduling, and you have control in nonconference,” McGlade said. “If you’re going to schedule a team 250 or higher in the NET, you’d better win that game. It not only hurts your team but has a ripple effect for the rest of the league. We look at wanting to schedule teams that are 175 to 200 or better. That’s easier said than done.”
A-10 basketball battling downward trend of teams in NCAA Tournament
The conference had a streak of 16 straight years with multiple teams end after poor nonconference showing
www.stltoday.com