Folks concerned about improving the level of competition in the schedules of mid-majors may be discouraged to see that even making the Final Four doesn't help much - it may even be detrimental, according to a story on Loyola in CBS sports with the lede below:
"Loyola is going to follow up a fantasy Final Four run with less fanfare because the game is still rigged against mid-majors"
https://www.cbssports.com/college-baske ... -ramblers/
Furman is mentioned peripherally in the story as excerpted below:
"[Loyola head coach] Moser found himself stuck in the worst possible place: having a talented mid-major team, but not established enough over the long-term to get good programs to schedule you. That meant Loyola had to look across the landscape and try to find a team to schedule that hopefully wouldn't torpedo its team rating.
"We, like everybody else, have a chance to buy games," Moser said. "Instead of buying a 300-350 team, we were trying to buy the best possible team we could buy.
"So that's Furman, which won 23 games a year ago but, like Loyola, loses three key players."
> > >
The article concludes
"For Loyola and so many mid-majors like them, the scheduling game feels as rigged as ever."
"Loyola is going to follow up a fantasy Final Four run with less fanfare because the game is still rigged against mid-majors"
https://www.cbssports.com/college-baske ... -ramblers/
Furman is mentioned peripherally in the story as excerpted below:
"[Loyola head coach] Moser found himself stuck in the worst possible place: having a talented mid-major team, but not established enough over the long-term to get good programs to schedule you. That meant Loyola had to look across the landscape and try to find a team to schedule that hopefully wouldn't torpedo its team rating.
"We, like everybody else, have a chance to buy games," Moser said. "Instead of buying a 300-350 team, we were trying to buy the best possible team we could buy.
"So that's Furman, which won 23 games a year ago but, like Loyola, loses three key players."
> > >
The article concludes
"For Loyola and so many mid-majors like them, the scheduling game feels as rigged as ever."