About Collegiate Basketball News and the RPI
Collegiate Basketball News Company was established in 1991 by
Jim Sukup to bring Big Ten college basketball fans a Big Ten basketball newsletter called Collegiate Basketball News. The newsletter carried the latest in what was happening around the Big Ten along with a generous helping of statistics. The statistics included full box scores for all Big Ten games played, expanded Big Ten standings, full player-by-player team statistics, conference team and conference individual statistics, and an abbreviated version of the Rating Percentage Index (RPI). The RPI portion of the newsletter was an immediate hit, and the first issue of The RPI Report was dated January 6, 1992. Collegiate Basketball News continued through the 1992-93 season, when efforts were put into producing an expanded version of The RPI Report.
Prior to the publication of the men's RPI in Collegiate Basketball News and The RPI Report during the 1991-92 season, the term Rating Percentage Index and acronym RPI were largely unknown to the general public and to many administrators at NCAA Division I schools because the RPI ratings were not distributed to NCAA member institutions. In fact, the NCAA did not even submit the RPI ratings to Division I conferences or independent institutions until 1992 (with a notable exception in 1986). The NCAA now distributes men's RPI data to the conferences which is limited to information for members of only that conference and to independent schools after the completion of the full college basketball season. Distribution was limited because the NCAA keeps the RPI data confidential within the committees that use the RPI for help with NCAA tournament selection and seeding purposes.
Publication of the RPI by CBN in 1992 created a cult following among college basketball fans throughout the land, and it is now the most widely followed college basketball computer rating system in the country. The RPI is also used by the NCAA tournament selection committees for baseball (first used in 1988), women's volleyball (1992), softball (1996), men's and women's soccer (1997), and field hockey (1998).
Our rpiratings.com web site was established by
CBN in 1997 to bring college basketball fans and our subscribers the most up-to-date RPI information available anywhere and to pass along additional information about Division I college basketball information that is unavailable elsewhere. The RPI is the best, most informative and most widely followed college basketball computer rating system in the country, and
CBN is pleased to bring this information to both our loyal The RPI Report and The Women's RPI Report subscribers and to visitors to our free content areas.
The 2005-2006 college basketball season is the 12th consecutive year that
CBN made the men's RPI ratings available to the Associated Press for nationwide distribution on the AP wire.
CBN will distribute the women's RPI for the 9th consecutive year to the AP during the 2005-2006 season. The RPI is available to virtually every newspaper in the country that is an AP subscriber. If your newspaper does not carry the RPI ratings on a regular basis, contact your local sports editor to request that they include the RPI in their sports agate page.
Followers of college hoops have long known that there was no consistent and reliable source to turn to for access to the complete men's and women's Division I conference standings. Thankfully, this is no longer a problem.
CBN provides complete men's and women's conference standings that are updated daily starting in late November. You will no longer need to hunt down the complete standings from many different sources that contain outdated or incorrect information. There is no need to surf through 32 different pages to get the complete conference standings. The
CBN men's and women's standings are listed alphabetically by conference. Do you believe that you have spotted an error in the
CBN men's or women's standings? If CBN verifies an error, we'll send you a complimentary issue of
either the Men's or Women's Report!
The National Invitation Tournament (NIT) used the resources of
CBN's RPI for the 13 years prior to its takeover
in 2005-06 by the NCAA to help NIT committee members select teams for the nation's oldest men's Division I post-season tournament. The NIT also used the men's schedules compiled by
CBN to help in their evaluation of prospective tournament teams. Also, the Women's National Invitation Tournament (WNIT) has used The Women's RPI Report since the 1998-99 season to help select teams for the post-season WNIT.