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NorCal Brackets

I’m not at all versed in the mystical arts of seeding teams, so perhaps someone can school me. What is the formula?
For example, in D2, Lincoln-Stockton loses by 17 in the second round in D1 and gets dropped and seeded 4 in D2, 5 spots above Christian Brothers which beat Lincoln by 16 in January. Lincoln also is three spots ahead of No. 7 Atwater which beat CB by 17 in the Section final, but lost to Lincoln by nearly 20 in December. Examples abound throughout all divisions. Please make it make sense.
 
NCS Question:

St. Mary's Berkeley won NCS D3 section tilte but does not advance to State? While Fortuna losses in Semi to St. Mary's made it to State?
Anyone with insight please share...
 
Head-to-head is very tricky.

For example, Acalanes beat SRV back in December, I think. But SRV was missing two starters.

So do we know the injury status and lineups for those head-to-head matchups? Is one night a better indication of a team's overall quality than a season's worth of results?
 
Head-to-head is very tricky.

For example, Acalanes beat SRV back in December, I think. But SRV was missing two starters.

So do we know the injury status and lineups for those head-to-head matchups? Is one night a better indication of a team's overall quality than a season's worth of results?
Agree that one night/game shouldn’t be the ultimate determinative of a team’s quality. Is the selection committee comprised of commissioners from the various sections? Are there any guiding principles (in writing) used by the committee during the process?
I see that Pleasant Valley, champs of the Northern Section for 5 straight years, was “promoted” to D1 but has to travel to SM-Stockton in the opening round. They can’t be happy.
 
It's a big committee, including the section commissioners, but the exact makeup is unknown. The same group does the boys and girls in one long day.
 
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I’m not at all versed in the mystical arts of seeding teams, so perhaps someone can school me. What is the formula?
For example, in D2, Lincoln-Stockton loses by 17 in the second round in D1 and gets dropped and seeded 4 in D2, 5 spots above Christian Brothers which beat Lincoln by 16 in January. Lincoln also is three spots ahead of No. 7 Atwater which beat CB by 17 in the Section final, but lost to Lincoln by nearly 20 in December. Examples abound throughout all divisions. Please make it make sense.
No one can. It's a mystery wrapped in a conundrum.
 
A team losing two straight in section playoffs as a 1 seed in a non open division bracket does not need to advance. What’s the point of that?
 
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