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    Finding elite CBB contenders

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    At this time last year, it was fairly obvious that Gonzaga and Baylor were head and shoulders above the rest of the field in college basketball. I wrote on several occasions how I thought those teams looked unbeatable, and I wasn’t alone. Of course, the Zags and the Bears were the last two standing in the NCAA tournament, with Baylor winning its first title.

    I’m not trying to toot my own horn, but when I compared their stats and other shared characteristics with other recent champions, the Zags and Bears checked almost every box. No other team was close.

    With that in mind, let’s look at those championship characteristics at this point in the 2021-22 season and see if we can find the true title contenders. My natural inclination is that we won’t find anything resembling last year in terms of obvious favorites. However, that doesn’t mean we won’t find some value for national championship futures.

    This exercise will seek to find the shared statistical characteristics from this season’s pool with the last nine NCAA champions (2012-21), using the six most impactful strength indicators. Here they are:

    — Steve Makinen’s Power Rating

    — Makinen’s Effective Strength Indicator

    — Makinen’s Bettors’ Rating

    — Makinen’s Momentum Rating

    — Effective Offensive Points per Possession

    — Effective Defensive Points per Possession

    I look at 10 other areas before the tournament each March, but most of the qualifiers only require a team to be in the top 50 or so. The list above is clearly more exclusive. Let’s go to the numbers:

    MAKINEN’S POWER RATING

    The trend: Eight of the last nine champions entered the tournament with a Power Rating of 89 or higher.

    2021-22: As of Monday, eight teams had a Power Rating of 89 or higher:

    Gonzaga: 93
    Purdue: 92
    %%offer%%Arizona: 91.5
    Baylor: 91.5
    Kansas: 91
    Duke: 90
    Houston: 90
    LSU: 89.5

    MAKINEN’S EFFECTIVE STRENGTH INDICATOR

    The trend: Eight of the last nine champions had an Effective Strength Indicator of at least %plussign% 18.5 and ranked in the top six nationally.

    2021-22: Ten teams have an Effective Strength Indicator %plussign% 18.5 or higher: 

    Arizona: 27.8
    Purdue: 24.7
    LSU: 23.9
    Houston: 23.7
    Baylor: 23.4
    Gonzaga: 22.5
    Duke: 21.1
    Kansas: 21.1
    Illinois: 19.5
    Tennessee: 19.4

    MAKINEN’S BETTORS’ RATING

    The trend: Eight of the last nine champions had a Bettors’ Rating of at least -15.5 and ranked in the top five nationally.

    2021-22: Fifteen teams have a Bettors’ Rating of -15.5 or better:

    Gonzaga: -25.2
    Purdue: -21.1
    Arizona: -20
    Baylor: -19.2
    Kansas: -19
    Duke: -18.3
    Houston: -17.3
    LSU: -17.3
    Tennessee: -16.8
    UCLA: -16.6
    Auburn: -16.5
    Illinois: -16.1
    Kentucky: -16.1
    Alabama: -15.9
    Iowa: -15.8

    MAKINEN’S MOMENTUM RATING

    The trend: Eight of the last nine champions had a Momentum Rating ranked in the top eight nationally.

    2021-22: The top eight teams in Makinen’s Momentum Rating:

    Illinois: 27.8
    Tennessee: 25.9
    Houston: 25.3
    Baylor: 24.6
    Arizona: 24.3
    Xavier: 23
    Kansas: 22.7
    Auburn: 21.1

    EFFECTIVE OFFENSIVE POINTS PER POSSESSION

    The trend: Eight of the last nine champions scored at least 1.185 Effective Points per Possession and ranked in the top 18 nationally.

    2021-22: Teams scoring at least 1.185 Effective Points per Possession as of Monday: 

    Purdue: 1.304
    Kansas: 1.286
    Iowa: 1.266
    Arizona: 1.247
    Houston: 1.233
    Illinois: 1.233
    Duke: 1.231
    Gonzaga: 1.223
    Loyola (Ill.): 1.215
    UCLA: 1.213
    Colorado State: 1.213
    Alabama: 1.211
    Villanova: 1.21
    Ohio State: 1.21
    Baylor: 1.204
    Kentucky: 1.199
    Auburn: 1.189
    Tennessee-Chattanooga: 1.185

    EFFECTIVE DEFENSIVE POINTS PER POSSESSION

    The trend: Eight of the last nine champions allowed fewer than 0.955 Effective Points per Possession and ranked in the top 15 nationally.

    2021-22: Teams allowing fewer than 0.955 Effective Points per Possession as of Monday (this list will trim dramatically by March after teams have played a full conference slate): 

    LSU: 0.768
    VCU: 0.845
    Baylor: 0.853
    Arizona: 0.86
    Houston: 0.862
    Tennessee: 0.865
    Iowa State: 0.875
    Texas: 0.884
    Michigan State: 0.885
    Xavier: 0.891
    Gonzaga: 0.896
    Virginia Tech: 0.899
    Indiana: 0.902
    San Diego State: 0.903
    Seton Hall: 0.91
    North Texas: 0.912
    Texas Tech: 0.914
    Florida: 0.915
    Purdue: 0.917
    Saint Mary’s (Calif.): 0.919
    Auburn: 0.921
    Duke: 0.923
    Connecticut: 0.924
    Kansas State: 0.924
    USC: 0.925
    Oklahoma: 0.925
    Oklahoma State: 0.927
    Boise State: 0.927
    Jacksonville: 0.927
    Cincinnati: 0.929
    Wagner: 0.929
    Louisville: 0.93
    Florida State: 0.935
    UC Irvine: 0.935
    South Carolina: 0.935
    Washington State: 0.936
    BYU: 0.936
    Wisconsin: 0.936
    UCLA: 0.937
    Villanova: 0.938
    West Virginia: 0.94
    Kentucky: 0.942
    Michigan: 0.942
    San Francisco: 0.948
    Illinois: 0.95
    Oakland: 0.95
    Wichita State: 0.95
    Memphis: 0.952
    Navy: 0.952

    CHECKING THE BOXES

    Once again, only two teams check all six boxes, and they might surprise you. Neither is among the three favorites at this point. Those favorites check five of the six boxes, and I will include them.

    The two teams that check all six boxes (odds courtesy of DraftKings):

    Baylor (%plussign% 1200): Baylor is atop the AP poll with a 10-0 record entering the week, but the Bears aren’t getting much respect on the futures board with four teams in front of them. I would argue that while they might not be as talented or poised as their predecessors, the 2021-22 Bears are more athletic and more physically imposing than the championship team. They are 7-2-1 against the spread and allowing just over 55 points per game. Nothing comes easy against Baylor, as Oregon became the first team to shoot more than 46 percent from the floor against the Bears on Saturday. While Scott Drew’s squad lost four starters from the title team, the Bears are starting to put it together and can match up physically with anyone. They have enough experience and good scoring balance, too, as four players average in double digits.

    Houston (%plussign% 2200): Houston is the best non-power conference team to consider. Surely you are asking about Gonzaga, right? Well, Gonzaga hasn’t exactly played its best ball since clobbering UCLA a month ago. Houston is the one that is checking all the boxes right now. While it’s true that the Cougars have lost two games, to Wisconsin in Las Vegas and at Alabama, they are suffocating on defense, and that will always make them a threat. Plus, Kelvin Sampson’s team has a legit scorer and playmaker in Marcus Sasser. There is always a concern that an American Athletic Conference schedule won’t properly prepare Houston for March, but the Cougars’ losses are by a combined three points and they’ve proven themselves with blowouts of Oklahoma State, Oregon, Butler and Virginia. Don’t sleep on this team as they are at least a legit Final Four contender, and those odds are attractive at %plussign% 500.

    Six other teams check five of the six boxes, including the four current favorites. These are the only other teams I would consider in terms of championship or Final Four futures wagers.

    Gonzaga: %plussign% 500 to win the championship/%plussign% 100 to reach the Final Four

    Duke: %plussign% 800/%plussign% 180

    Purdue: %plussign% 800/%plussign% 180

    Kansas: %plussign% 1200/%plussign% 300

    Arizona: %plussign% 1600/%plussign% 350

    Illinois: %plussign% 2500/%plussign% 550

    Our numbers for the best teams don’t quite match up with those of Baylor or Gonzaga from December 2020, so there’s no way I would pound the table again. But with uncertainty comes value for bettors, and at this point, two teams stand taller than the rest, and six more make for what would be a very Elite Eight.

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    As one of the original founders of StatFox, Steve Makinen has been in the business of sports betting and data analysis for almost 25 years now. In his time in the industry, Steve has worked in a variety of capacities on both sides of the betting counter, from his early days of developing the StatFox business, to almost a decade of oddsmaking consulting for one of the world's leading sportsbooks, to his last seven years as Point Spread Weekly and Analytics Director with VSiN. Steve has always believed that number crunching and handicapping through foundational trends and systems is the secret to success and he shares this data with VSiN readers on a daily basis for all of the major sports.