Kendall Rogers said this morning that if both of those teams don't win anymore games, Ole Miss still has a shot.
I don't see it though. We'd be the highest RPI team to ever have a national seed. Although, at least in baseball, in recent years, the committee has shyed away from weighing the RPI as heavily as the have in the past based on feedback from coaches. Coaches were tired of seeing third place teams in certain conferences (SEC, ACC, and Big 12) get national seeds while the conference champ only got a first round host spot. That logic is the only thing that gives us a shot. Rice and Florida didn't win their conference and we did. The team that won C-USA over Rice (East Carolina) probably isn't even going to host. Logically you would think that if Rice can't win a conference won by a non-host team, they should not deserve a national seed, despite what their RPI is.
I agree with you, I think Florida gets it. </p>
I don't see it though. We'd be the highest RPI team to ever have a national seed. Although, at least in baseball, in recent years, the committee has shyed away from weighing the RPI as heavily as the have in the past based on feedback from coaches. Coaches were tired of seeing third place teams in certain conferences (SEC, ACC, and Big 12) get national seeds while the conference champ only got a first round host spot. That logic is the only thing that gives us a shot. Rice and Florida didn't win their conference and we did. The team that won C-USA over Rice (East Carolina) probably isn't even going to host. Logically you would think that if Rice can't win a conference won by a non-host team, they should not deserve a national seed, despite what their RPI is.
I agree with you, I think Florida gets it. </p>