RPI

E414331

RPI is a statistical measure used primarily in U.S. college sports to rank teams based on their wins, losses, and strength of schedule.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
RPI canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf sports ranking system
statistical measure
assumes all wins and losses are equal regardless of margin
basedOn strength of schedule
team losses
team wins
calculatedBy National Collegiate Athletic Association
surface form: NCAA
category college basketball rankings
college sports rankings
sports analytics
sports statistics
comparedWith KenPom ratings
NET rankings
Sagarin ratings
component opponents’ opponents’ winning percentage
opponents’ winning percentage
team’s Division I winning percentage
criticizedFor not accounting for scoring margin
overemphasis on schedule strength
susceptibility to scheduling manipulation
dataSource game results
developedBy National Collegiate Athletic Association
fullName Ratings Percentage Index
ignores location of game in basic formula
margin of victory
influences perceived team quality
postseason opportunities
replacedBy NCAA Evaluation Tool (NET)
surface form: NCAA Evaluation Tool in Division I men’s basketball
replacedByYear 2018
scope Division I competition
stillUsedIn some NCAA sports other than men’s basketball
timePeriod late 20th century
usedBy NCAA Division I committees
surface form: NCAA selection committees
usedFor at-large bid selection
evaluating team résumés
seeding teams in NCAA tournaments
usedIn NCAA Division I Baseball
surface form: NCAA Division I baseball

NCAA Division I
surface form: NCAA Division I men’s basketball

NCAA Division I softball
NCAA Division I Women’s Basketball Tournament
surface form: NCAA Division I women’s basketball

NCAA soccer
college sports
usedInCountry United States of America
surface form: United States
weight 25% opponents’ opponents’ winning percentage
25% team’s winning percentage
50% opponents’ winning percentage

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.