I can agree with that. I am attempting to promote improvement, not perfection as well. We can make an improvement by simply modifying the power point system. If Prep beats Omaha Central it should be worth more than if Prep beat Falls City Sacred Heart....right now our system says they are worth the same. We have teams that got into the state tournament through geography and teams that got in through sub-state serpentine play in. In both cases, there were teams that benefited tremendously from playing schools outside of their class. Platteview played a schedule of nearly 50% C1 teams. South Loup played a schedule of 66% class D teams. South Loup's class D1 win over level 2 Ansley-Litchfield is NOT the same as their class C2 win over level 2 Amherst. Until that gets fixed, the serpentine won't be close. Inflated power points wreck the serpentine. That's all I am saying.This is flawed logic. Platteview's best win is Crete (in your opinion). Platteview SHOULD beat Wahoo because they are a Class C-1 school. Bigger school enrollment alone constitutes what should be a win? Yet Wahoo beat Crete, Seward twice, and Bennington, all Class B schools, all Division 1 or 2 teams. Those 3 teams should have beat Wahoo because Wahoo is C-1 (your logic), yet it didn't happen.
Who do I take in Platteview vs Elkhorn South? Who cares? I am trying to make the point that the NSAA taking over the scheduling is not the solution. It has nothing to do with who I take in the head to head in any game.
We can make an improvement by simply going to a modified serpentine. We don't have to destroy and rebuild the entire scheduling system. I am attempting to promote improvement, not perfection.
Looking strictly at this year's state tournament there is only 1 class that pretty much stuck to playing schools in its own class, and that is class A. All 8 teams played almost entirely class A schedules....and the state tournament results show that the right 8 teams are in Lincoln. Every game but 1 has gone to OT or been a single digit game.