redmen9194 wrote:BillEsq wrote:Red, the SEC does not sponsor men's soccer. Might want to swing the A-10 in there to replace them for this sport.
Even though the SEC does not sponsor soccer, I will include games against them in this analysis since they would be major programs anyway.
redmen9194 wrote:BillEsq wrote:Red, the SEC does not sponsor men's soccer. Might want to swing the A-10 in there to replace them for this sport.
Even though the SEC does not sponsor soccer, I will include games against them in this analysis since they would be major programs anyway.
gmoser1210 wrote:The conference info google doc now has a men's soccer tab. If you click on "MSOC" at the top of the page, you will be taken to a master calendar of the conference's men's soccer teams. At the bottom of the sheet are the current standings, ordered by conference record, then season record, then alphabetical. Here's the link: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/pub?key=0ApY4M_YB3zBBdFk0Y3k1TkhqaGx4S0p2bkdMSXhNTVE&output=html
Bluejay wrote:redmen9194 wrote:BillEsq wrote:Red, the SEC does not sponsor men's soccer. Might want to swing the A-10 in there to replace them for this sport.
Even though the SEC does not sponsor soccer, I will include games against them in this analysis since they would be major programs anyway.
Because of the uniqueness of soccer (and perhaps some other non-revs), it may be worthwhile to add wins/losses against ranked teams in your charting. Unlike basketball and football, a national champ for a non power league in soccer is not beyond the norm. Plus, there are many non power conference members that are true soccer powers. For example, a win in soccer against powers like Akron, St Louis, SMU, Tulsa, etc. is a lot more impressive than a win against many, many power conference schools.
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