CIF Southern Section high school boys basketball playoff computer rankings (1/6/2025)

The updated edition of the high school basketball computer rankings that determine the playoffs for the CIF Southern Section as of January 6, 2025.
Brandon Benjamin of Anaheim Canyon with the ball.
Brandon Benjamin of Anaheim Canyon with the ball. / Heston Quan

The latest high school basketball playoff computer rankings in the CIF Southern Section have been revealed on January 6.

The first edition of the computer rankings was released on December 30.

In the latest edition of the computer rankings, the most notable moves include ... Roosevelt moving into the No. 1 spot after beating St. John Bosco in a recent head-to-head game in the Classic at Damien final ... Redondo Union, Brentwood and Sierra Canyon have moved up.

Redondo Union, St. John Bosco and Harvard-Westlake all went unbeaten in Arizona. La Mirada, Santa Margarita and Notre Dame all went 2-1 in out-of-state events. Sierra Canyon went 2-0 at the Memphis Hoopfest.

IMPORTANT: The CIF Southern Section is urging basketball coaches and administrators to be sure to double check your schedules & make sure that all scores are updated. The information used to create the computer rankings uses the data input directly from CIFSSHome and your entered schedule as of Sunday, Jan. 5. No other outside source can or will be used to collect the information. All matches/results, both team & individual scores, should be entered in CIFSSHome.


COMPUTER RANKINGS SYSTEM

The CIF Southern Section has switched its playoff model for boys and girls basketball starting this 2024-25 season — that model is called ‘competitive equity’.

It’s not new to football. The Southern Section has used Calpreps.com’s computer rankings to decide the postseason divisions for the last few years. The computer takes a team’s results from the current season and places teams in playoffs divisions based on their computer rating with the goal to create competitive playoff competition.

That same approach is now being carried out for basketball, instead of taking the previous two seasons and predetermining a team’s division before the season — which was the previous playoff model.

Heading into the 2025 postseason, high school basketball coaches, players, fans and school administrators have been asking fair questions like …

What computer system is being used to create the playoffs divisions? … Will the divisions be different, or the same? … How many teams will be taken in the Open Division? …

Here are the answers to those questions ...

WHAT COMPUTER SYSTEM IS BEING USED?

The computer rankings will be provided by SBLive’s Colley Method, according to the CIF Southern Section basketball season preview. The first edition of the computer rankings are LIVE as of December 30 after adequate data has been provided to create such rankings. The computer rankings are updated once a week.

DIVISION FORMAT THE SAME?

The division format will be the same as past years, according to a CIF Southern Section spokesperson.

The top division will be the Open Division followed by Division 1, Division 2AA, Division 2A … etc.

HOW MANY TEAMS WILL BE IN OPEN?

The Open Division field, which has previously been handpicked by a committte to create the toughest playoff bracket in the Southern Section, will enter a committee-less era in the new competitive equity format.

From 2014-2017, the Open Division field was 16 teams. Since 2018, the field has been eight teams.

Starting in 2025, the Open field will be determined by the computer rankings, just like Calpreps does for football. Also similar to football, the number of teams that create the Open Division field can change pending on how many teams the Southern Section sees fit to compete in the marquee division.

The proverbial line that is created to cut the Open Division will influence the subsequent divisions below … Division 1, 2AA, 2A … 5AA, 5A.


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Published |Modified
Tarek Fattal, SBLive Sports
TAREK FATTAL

Tarek Fattal has been covering high school sports since 2015 in Southern California and primarily in Los Angeles, covering notable athletes such as Bronny James, Kayvon Thibodeaux and Alyssa Thompson. He was with the LA Daily News for eight years, which included being the beat reporter for the UCLA men's basketball team. Tarek can be seen on TV regularly on CBS/KCAL as a sports analyst with Jim Hill.