GoRedmen in 3,2,1....
My point always has been and remains that the weakness of the OOC will hurt us pretty much regardless of how we do in the conference. Seeing how we're 14-1 and essentially 15-0 and not-ranked or barely ranked shows that the overwhelming consensus is that our OOC was too weak and produced zero good wins. Generally, a 14-1 or 15-0 BE team would be ranked in the top 10 at worst if their OOC was anything other than completely awful.
If you want to say that playing a weak schedule was to our benefit, that's fine. I disagree with that but at least that stance is speculative and not ignoring facts and data. I don't think that we couldn't beat Kentucky at MSG while Seton Hall could and that we couldn't beat other decent teams.
From Carmine's questions:
1) Did the early season schedule adequately prepare us for conference play?
Maybe it did, maybe it didn't. Perhaps if we had played better teams earlier on we wouldn't have blown a double digit lead to get put in the position to let a ref steal a game from us. Maybe we would be 1-2 instead. Who knows.
2) Will the perceived weakness of the out of conference schedule result in poor seeding in the Ncaa tournament or keep us out of the dance altogether?
I don't think it will keep us out by any stretch, but it will drop us a couple seed lines from where we should end up. Again, this is evidenced by the fact that we are barely ranked in top 25s despite being 14-1*.
So while I don't agree with Carmine's position here I don't take too much of an issue with it because he's not trying to claim that the schedule wasn't weak as you have done several times. Although I sense that you yourself know the schedule was weak and you have been trying to convince yourself otherwise ever since.