Since we are on the topic of scheduling, I wanted to throw out this idea I have had for scheduling that I wish college basketball would adopt.
This would probably be hard to pull off logistically, but I have had a couple conversations with a friend of mine who questioned why the SEC got so much love from the committee this year. My answer was simple, they had 4-5 of the best teams in the country, and as a conference they dominated everyone else in non conference. The committee can only really make judgements off of non conference play when weighing which conferences are better, because then all teams go to play within their own conference.
My friend's reply was that he finds this to be somewhat unfair because of the portal era, teams early in the year are just beginning to gel, chemistry is building, so using the non conference portion of the schedule to determine conference strength may be flawed.
While I don't think the system is perfect, it works well enough (I don't think anyone can disagree the SEC had a hell of a year and deserved a good amount of those bids) - but I would love to see some kind of system where during conference play - there are flexed marquee "Non conference" games that occur periodically throughout January/Feb/Early March.
My thought would be, you let teams play in conference, but have a designated Saturday about 1/3rd into conference play, where maybe the top half of Big East teams in the standings take on... say the top batch of teams in the Big Ten. And the top half teams in the SEC take on the top Big 12. And every few weeks, there are another one of these designated saturdays where the conferences rotate and play each other.
To me it would give the committee a more well rounded view of how to weigh these conferences against each other when selecting the teams for the dance. Probably would never happen, but thought I'd throw it out there