Hovell Index

The Hovell Index was created by John Hovell in 2005. It is an approach to predicting the winner of the NCAA College Basketball Tournament. The index includes 15 fields that are converted into a numeric value. The 15 numeric values are tallied into a "Total Index Value". The Total Index Values are then used to pick the winner of each matchup in the bracket.

Fields in the Hovell Index

Translation of Fields into Values

This translation is the "magic" of the Hovell Index. Each raw statistic is converted from a pure stat to a "Hovell Index" value. All of these values are calculated through a conversion table. The conversion table values have been pre-determined and slightly modified over the years as the Hovell Index matures and improves.

The Hovell Index prioritizes each of the fields in this order - experience, rpi, # ranked teams beat, # Naismith potentials, # of wins in last 10 games, height factor, field goal %, points against - rank, points for - rank, free throw %, # turnovers, rebounding rank, depth, three pointer rank, seed. Due to that prioritization, each conversion table offers more or less points depending on the priority of the field. For example, an above average team will earn 101 points for experience, 75 points for RPI and 70 points for the number of ranked teams they beat (notice the declining points even though the team performed well in all of those fields).

There is an Excel spreadsheet (attached here) that automatically calculates the Hovell Index after all of the raw data is entered.

Here is exactly how each conversion is calculated (for each team):

Experience:

RPI:

Number of Ranked Teams Beat:

Number of Potential Naismith Award winners:

Number of wins in last 10 games:

Height Factor:

Field Goal Percentage:

Points Against - Ranking:

Points For - Ranking:

Free Throw Percentage:

Turnovers:

Rebound - Team Ranking:

Depth:

Three Pointer - Team Ranking:

Seed:

Results

The Hovell Index has correctly predicted the winner of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament since 2005.

Room for Improvement

These fields might aid in the accuracy of the Hovell Index.

References

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