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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 ...
Maryland is the top vote-getter among unranked AP teams, but checked in at seventh for the NET as well as 11th for both Bart Torvik and KenPom. Other AP unranked teams appearing in the top 15 of other rankings include St. John's (12th in KenPom), Texas Tech (12th in Bart Torvik, 13th in KenPom) and Pittsburgh (11th in NET). Watch list
NBA Today is an American television sports talk program on ESPN (or on rare occasions ESPN2, however ESPN2 will rebroadcast the program daily after ESPN airs it as long as it doesn't air the program live), hosted by Malika Andrews, featuring Kendrick Perkins, Chiney Ogwumike and Richard Jefferson as panelists.
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.
Although teams get dinged by KenPom, BPI and the NET because of outcomes like those, some believe the NCAA tournament selection committee’s bottom line is more about wins and losses.
Oct. 21—Soon, we'll actually get to see them play. For now, it's all the usual preseason chatter — largely insignificant, but always consumed reports of closed scrimmages, practice reports ...
It's the same South Carolina State team that is ranked 347 of 362 teams in the KenPom rankings. This should have been a breeze for a Missouri team that is just more talented. It wasn't.