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Ken Pomeroy is the creator of the college basketball website and statistical archive KenPom. His website includes his College Basketball Ratings, statistics for every NCAA men's Division I basketball team, with archives dating back to the 2002 season, as well as a blog about current college basketball.
The logo of kenpom.com, the website that hosts the ratings. The Pomeroy College Basketball Ratings are a series of predictive ratings of men's college basketball teams published free-of-charge online by Ken Pomeroy. They were first published in 2003. [1] The sports rating system is based on the Pythagorean expectation, though it has some ...
KenPom’s game-by-game projections have the Cats losing four of their remaining five Quad 1 games: the home matchup with Tennessee, and the road games at Arkansas, Florida and Mississippi State.
Highest-ranked KenPom teams left out. 33. Duke 35. Penn State 38. Memphis 43. Arizona 46. Indiana — Tom Fornelli (@TomFornelli) March 14, 2021
The Tigers remain in the top 15 of the latest KenPom rankings ahead of Friday's game at Neville Arena.
Ryen Russillo: 2007–2017 (The Baseball Show, ESPN Radio College GameDay and The Scott Van Pelt Show) Sean Salisbury: 2003–2008 (The Huddle) Mike Schopp: 2002–2006 (ESPN Radio College GameDay) Jon Sciambi: 2010–2020 (MLB on ESPN Radio) John Seibel: 2000–2009 (GameNight, The NFL on ESPN Radio and The Baseball Show)
Sports ratings systems have been around for almost 80 years, when ratings were calculated on paper rather than by computer, as most are today. Some older computer systems still in use today include: Jeff Sagarin's systems, the New York Times system, and the Dunkel Index , which dates back to 1929.
The computers love the Spartans, and so do their opponents: Michigan State was No. 17 nationally at KenPom.com as of Feb. 8, but at 14-9 it had at least two more losses than all but one other team ...