Ohio St. wins 27, 20, -20, 24. It just goes to show those of us who were trying to plot out the season eight games ahead that in the Big Ten, anything can -- and probably will -- happen.
In fact, as a result of the Badger loss, that shakes things up a bit, and Wisconsin slides down to #5 in RPI Rank with Stanford moving to #4 and Pitt to #3. If Pitt had lost that close one to Georgia Tech, they would have slid down (perhaps to below Minnesota).
As I write this on late Saturday afternoon (before the Gopher WBB Sunday game but after the great Football win (go undefeated Gopher Football!)), the NCAA has not yet updated their RPI table. But I found an NCAA Women’s Volleyball table that is updated at
http://ncaastats.figstats.net/volleyball-rpi.cgi
It shows that the Gophers are now #8 in RPI Rank (but still 6th in last AVCA Poll). See below ...
Team RPIRank RPIPct W-L SoSRank SoSPct
Baylor 1 0.7422 20-1 6 0.6543
Texas 2 0.7247 17-2 5 0.6569
Pitt 3 0.6982 24-1 42 0.5945
Stanford 4 0.6931 17-4 14 0.6311
Wisconsin 5 0.6893 16-5 4 0.6629
Nebraska 6 0.6872 19-3 29 0.6106
Florida 7 0.6810 18-3 20 0.6175
Minnesota 8 0.6805 18-3 43 0.5928
Texas A&M 9 0.6787 17-5 7 0.6531
Washington 10 0.6779 18-5 26 0.6141
Penn State 16 0.6534 18-4 48 0.5852
Purdue 20 0.6439 16-6 21 0.6173
Michigan 36 0.6161 16-7 50 0.5838
Illinois 40 0.6117 12-10 12 0.6351
Ohio State 47 0.5973 13-12 10 0.6380
Michigan State 84 0.5567 13-10 105 0.5332
Iowa 88 0.5534 9-15 15 0.6258
Northwestern 96 0.5481 10-15 25 0.6149
Indiana 98 0.5464 12-14 63 .5654
Rutgers 103 0.5420 8-16 9 0.6417
Maryland 110 0.5388 12-13 69 0.5577
Minnesota was 7th in RPI for an hour or two, then a Florida game result came in and put them back at #8. There is very little difference in actual RPIPct between Pitt (0.6982), Stanford (0.6931), Wisconsin (0.6893), Nebraska (0.6872), Florida (0.6872) and Minnesota (0.6805). People mistakenly think that Minnesota is way behind Pitt because they are 8th ranked in RPI whereas Pitt is 3rd ranked in RPI. But the actual RPIPct scores on which they are sorted, are so bunched up in that range, that it’s not far from the truth to say that they’re all tied for 3rd place.
On the other hand, there’s a pretty good bump between Pitt and Texas, and another good bump between Texas and Baylor.
You can also see “how” the teams got the RPIPct that they did. Pitt got it from a great W-L record in spite of a 42nd ranked SoS. Baylor has a similarly good W-L record, but its 6th ranked SoS gives it the best RPI. Texas has the 5th ranked SoS but lost one more match than Baylor, netting it #2 in RPI Rank. At the moment, the Gophers have a SoS about as bad as Pitt; but they’re about to play some strong schools and that will make their SoS better. Enough better to catch Pitt? Probably not by means of improved SoS alone. That’s why we most likely need Pitt to lose one while we win-out the rest of our Big Ten season (in order to possibly host a Sweet Sixteen).