No good reason
Lights were left out
(Created:
Friday, March 14, 2008)
George
Ferguson From the fringe ...
When the 2008 NAIA men’s national basketball tournament brackets were released
on Tuesday night, a great injustice was done to the Montana State
University-Northern Lights. Actually, the Lights have been part of a great
injustice all season long as it relates to respect on the NAIA level. The NAIA
tournament, which begins on March 19 in Kansas
City, will feature just two teams from the Frontier
Conference. Lewis-Clark State earned the league’s automatic bid by beating
MSU-N 65-63 last Saturday in the championship game of the conference tournament
in Butte. And
the Carroll College Saints were the only other team in the league to receive an
at-large berth, and that’s where the controversy surrounding Northern begins.
The Lights, along with Carroll, LC State and Westminster College, all finished
with identical 10-4 records in conference play, and all four teams finished the
season with better than 20 wins. But no one played less total games this season
than the Lights, and yet MSU-N managed to keep pace and actually finish better
than several of those teams. And while LC State punched its ticket to the NAIA’s
big dance by earning the automatic bid, Northern did just as much and has as
big a case to be in the field of 32 as any of the other at-large teams. The
Lights had just one bad weekend in conference play, a tough road trip at
Carroll and at Rocky
Mountain College.
Of MSU-N’s four league losses, it didn’t lose to anyone outside the top five.
The Saints and Warriors can’t say the same. Northern also went undefeated on
its home court, and no one had more Top 25 wins than the Lights. In fact it
wasn’t even close. The Lights beat Carroll twice, and both times the Saints
were ranked in the NAIA poll. No r t h e r n a l s o swept Westminster and LC
State at home when both teams were ranked inside the top 15, a n d f o r g o o d measure, the Lights also beat RMC when the Bears were a
ranked team as wel l . Al l qual
i ty wins, and al l
seemingly forgotten by the powers that be that rank teams. Northern also
finished the season as strong as anybody, winning seven straight games before
the Lights lost to LC State on Saturday. And five of the last seven games the
Lights won were away from Havre. But none of that seemed to matter to the
Frontier Conference rater, or the rest of the nation for that matter. See, the
NAIA tournament is picked in a peculiar manner in which a teams
fate is in the hands, first of the conference’s designated voter, and then the
rest of the league's voters around the country. The NAIA tournament field
consists of 32 teams broken down by 16 automatic qualifiers, one independent
qualifier and 15 at-large bids. That’s not unlike the upcoming NCAA tournament,
except for how the at-large teams are chosen. There’s no committee that gets
together and compares one team to another, because i
f there was, Northern’s body of work would, at the
very least, compare very favorably with Carroll’s. There is also no RPI,
computer polls or strength of schedule to go on, and obviously, how a team plays in the conference tournament carries no weight
on the national tournament, because again, if it did, the Lights wouldn’t be
sitting at home next week. Instead, the last 15 teams are taken from where they
are ranked in the final NAIA Top 25, a poll that is released before the
conference tournament’s begin. And that poll, didn’t
feature the Lights in the Top 25, despite the fact that they just captured a
share of the league crown, were on a five-game winning streak, and recently
swept two of the so-called best teams in the nation. And all season long, the
NAIA poll was a detriment to Northern’s progress. The
Lights were ranked just once all season, and the week they beat LC State and
Westminster, they were still mired deep in the others receiving votes category.
No matter who Northern beat and how impressive the
Lights were playing, it never mattered to the Frontier’s rater, and in the
final week of the season, somehow Carroll moved ahead of MSU-N and into the
national tournament. And all the Lights did was go out and soundly defeat the
Saints days later in the conference semifinals. No, Northern’s
fate was only in its hands on Saturday night when the Lights came within two
points of earning the automatic bid. But just because the Lights didn’t quite
close that deal, they shouldn’t be left out of the tournament. In fact,
Northern did everything right this season, winning at home, winning on the
road, beating ranked opponents, winning close games, and staying in the
conference title hunt. But none of that mattered to the powers that be, and
because of that, and an obviously faulty system for selecting the national
tournament field, one of the 32 best teams in the country won’t get a chance to
play in Kansas City, and that means that the careers of great players like
Delvaughn Tinned and Drew Pettersen are now over. And it also means that the
hard work and dedication of a good basketball team has been shunned by people
who don’t seem to know any better. And if there’s a greater injustice in the
basketball world, I haven’t seen or heard of it.