Hoop, Line And Sinker

A weekly column on men's college basketball.

Saturday, March 29, 2014

14 Mar24 - The Ultimate Question

Volume XVIII, No. 21 - 14 Mar24

The Ultimate Question

An overachieving bunch of journeymen playing together efficiently as a team vs an undisciplined group of all-stars used to getting by on their individual talent -- it's the ultimate matchup and the age-old question: "Which team would win?" You can go back to the recently proclaimed "Game That Made March Madness" -- 1989's [1]/[16] clash between a Georgetown team led by SuperFrosh cAlonzo Mourning vs a "Million-to-1" IVY champ Princeton team. The Tigers nearly shocked the world, but fell just short when game-winning free throws and a gave-saving block by cMourning saved the day for the Hoyas' 50-49 escape. Fast forward to 2013, and we've got the ultimate version of the ultimate matchup. The latest "Greatest Recruiting Class Ever" at Kentucky boldly proclaimed its intent to go 40-0 at the start of the season (only finish six games out of first place in the SEC, including being swept 0-3 by league champion Florida). Meanwhile, Mid-Major Wichita State, coming off its surprise trip to the Final Four, actually did go undefeated through the regular season and conference tournament in the MISSOURI VALLEY (which turned out to be only an Anti-Spoiler 1BC after all). How much of the 'Shockers' gaudy record was due to the weakness of the league Creighton left behind and a schedule that saw them face only one ranked team? How would WichSt handle the Big Blue Nation travelling fan base that turns every "neutral" venue into a Wildcat home game? In (by far) the best game of the tournament (and one of the best games ever, frankly), neither team disappointed as [M8]Kentucky closed the game 13-7 in the final segment to beat [M1]Wichita State, @78-76, in an all-time classic. bCleanthony Earl's 31p7r and bRon Baker's 20p5r came up just short as twins gAndrew Harrison(20p) and gAnthony Harrison(19p) as well as cJulius Randle(13p10r6a) rose to the occasion as Kentucky displayed a level of team play not seen all season. Big plays on offense and defense, clutch free throws -- this game had everything you'd want from both teams. Was Wichita State really good enough to win it all? No doubt. This game was worthy of being the National Championship. This level from Kentucky will rout the rest of the field if the Wildcats can repeat it four more times (but the challenge of being run over en route to someone else's 40-0 season may have drawn an effort they can't reproduce). No matter. Just marvel and be grateful for the gift these teams gave us. It gets no better than that game.

    
[S9]Pittsburgh dominated [S8]Colorado (77-48) but top-seeded [S1]@Florida shut the Panthers down (@61-45) in Orlando. [W8]Gonzaga handled [W9]Oklahoma State (85-77 despite 23p7a13r6s6to from xMarcus Smart), but [W1]Arizona had no trouble with its familiar tournament foe (84-61). [E8]Memphis edged [E9]George Washington (71-66), but [E1]Virginia cruised by the Tigers (78-60).

    
[E7]Connecticut broke through to the Sweet 16, edging [E10]St. Joseph's (89-81[OT]) and then dumping [S2]Villanova (75-66) as bShabazz Napier starred (averaging 25p3a7r in two games). Resurgent [W6]@Baylor (fresh off a solid run in the BIG 12 tournament) crushed fan-favorite [W3]Creighton (@85-55) on sheer physical superiority (as Doug McDermott[15p] bowed out as the No. 5 all-time leading scorer in Division I). [M4]Louisville handled [M5]St. Louis (66-51). [E3]Iowa State (which lost tGeorges Niang to a broken foot in its first game) edged [E6]North Carolina (85-83) on xDeAndre Kane(24p7a10r7to)'s game-winner. [W2]@Wisconsin handled [W7]Oregon (@85-77) in Milwaukee. After [M7]Texas edged [M10]Arizona State (87-85; despite 25p7r from 7-2 cJordan Bachynski), [M2]Michigan took out the Longhorns (79-65).

    
B-Major teams claimed 15 of the Sweet 16 spots. Mid-Major [S11]Dayton looked like a Top 25 squad in the preseason in MAUI but was buried inside the competitive ATLANTIC 10; tournament play befits the Flyers as they edged state-rival [S6]Ohio State (60-59 on gVee Sanford's game-winning drive, ending the career of bAaron Craft[16p4a5r5to]) and then edged [S3]@Syracuse 55-@53 in Buffalo. Late-bloomer [M11a]Tennessee rallied to knock off [M11b]Iowa (78-65[OT]) in the FIRST FOUR and then routed [M6]Massachusetts (86-67 behind 26p14r from cJarnell Stokes) and upstart [M14]Mercer 83-63 (on cStokes' 17p18r5a performance). Surprising [S10]Stanford edged its way into the Sweet 16 (58-53 over [S7]New Mexico [who tanked right away for the second-straight year]) and 60-57 over [S2]Kansas (as SuperFrosh Andrew Wiggins[4p4r] couldn't step up and the absence of 7-0 cJoel Embiid in the paint was apparent).

    
The 1BCs did manage 5 (counting WichSt) 32-Splash wins -- (up from 2 last year) -- but no Sweet 16s. Not even its customary cushy North Carolina Pod placement -- (Raleigh, this time) -- could save [M3]@Duke as [M14]Mercer hung around until the Blue Devils got tight, pulling off the 78-@71 upset (as SuperFrosh fJabari Parker only managed 14p7r). [E12]Harvard made its second-straight Round of 32, edging [E5]Cincinnati 61-57 (ending things for SeanKilpatrick[18p5to]); but [M4]Michigan State put an end to the run next round (80-73 as fBranden Dawson had 26p9r). [S12]Stephen F. Austin proved its gaudy record was for real, edging tourney-darling [S5]VCU (77-75[OT]); but [S4]@UCLA took out the Lumberjacks next round, rolling @77-60 in San Diego. [W12]North Dakota State edged young [W5]Oklahoma (80-75[OT] as tLawrence Alexander had 28p8r despite 25p6r from bCameron Clark); but [S4]San Diego State ended the dream run (63-44 as pXavier Thames[30p6a] starred).

Most of the individual headliners failed to make it through the first week of the tourney (excepting bNapier[Mich], bDeAndre Kane[IowaSt] and gXavier Thames[SDgoSt] who have had big games as well as pScottie Wilbekin[Fla], tNik Stauskas[Mich], cFrank Kaminski[Wisc], gRuss Smith[Lville], gXavier Thames[SDgoSt] and tKyle Anderson[UCLA]). The SuperFrosh didn't fared well, either -- tWiggins[Kans] and tParker[Duke] disappointed; gTyler Ennis[Cuse] made poor decisions at crunch time -- but fAaron Gordon[AZ] and cRandle[UK] are still around.

    
Much maligned during the regular season, the SEC was the star of stars among conferences in the postseason's first week, going 12-2 overall (including 7-0 in the NCAA with 3 spots in the Sweet 16). The BIG 10 was 10-4 overall (also with 3 Sweet 16s). The 8-5 PAC 12 placed 3 in the Sweet 16 as well. 7 BIG 12 entrants only went 6-5 (2) in the NCAAs. The 6-2 AMERICAN had two Sweet 16s. The 9-5 ACC only placed 1 of 6 teams.

    
The Millers (Sean[AZ] and Archie[Dayt]) made history as the first pair of coaching brothers to make the same Sweet 16.

In the NIT, B-Major teams went 11-3 in first-round games (including 4 wins by SEC teams -- witness [w5]LSU's 71-@63 road win at [w4]San Francisco); 1BC teams were only 4-12 (highlighted by [e8]Robert Morris' 89-@78 win at [e1]St. John's and [e5]Belmont's 80-@65 road rout of [e5]Green Bay). In the second round: [m3]Southern Mississippi won 71-@63 at [m2]Missouri and [s3]Louisiana Tech won 79-@71 at [w2]Georgia to go 4-0 for CONFERENCE USA, and [e5]Belmont beat [e8]Robert Morris @82-71.

    
The 5 B-Major teams slumming in the CBI only went 3-2 in the first round; 3 three road teams were able to come through: Radford (96-@92 at Oregon State), Fresno State (61-@59 at UTEP) and Princeton (56-@55 at Tulane).

    
This year's CIT was almost exclusively 1BC (30/32 teams) -- WEST COAST/San Diego and Pacific both went 2-0 (as did IVY/Yale and Columbia) -- but @UOP-SDiego and @Colum-Yale must face each other in the quarters. Road teams won half (8/16) of the first-round games; Yale (71-@66 at Holy Cross), San Diego (77-@72 at Sam Houston State) and Towson (83-@77 at East Tennessee State) won second-round road games.

- -

[S1]Florida looks to have the easiest path to the Final Four. [W1]Arizona will likely face a stiff challenge from [W2]Wisconsin; [E1]Virginia will have its hands full with underseeded [E4]Michigan State (not to mention surging [E7]Connecticut); blossoming [M8]Kentucky must get past hated in-state rival/underseeded [M4]Louisville (with [M2]Michigan likely waiting in the wings).

    
1BC's [s3]Louisiana Tech, [m3]Southern Mississippi (at [m1]Minnesota) and [e5]Belmont (@ [e3]Clemson) all face tough games before they can make the semifinals in New York. [m1]Minnesota's path to the title looks the easiest. Fresno State (vs Princeton) and Old Dominion (vs Radford) have the easiest paths to the semis in CBI. Expect a WCC-IVY final in CIT.

-- Ron

Key games this week:

NCAA

Thursday, Saturday:
    NCAA SOUTH REGIONAL Semis @MemphisTN
  • [S1]Florida v [S4]UCLA
  • [S10]Stanford v [S11]Dayton
    NCAA WEST REGIONAL Semis @AnaheimCA
  • [W1]Arizona v [W4]@San Diego St
  • [W2]Wisconsin v [W6]Baylor
Friday, Sunday:
    NCAA EAST REGIONAL Semis @NewYorkNY/MSG/
  • [E1]Virginia v [E4]Michigan St
  • [E3]Iowa St v [E7]Connecticut
    NCAA MIDWEST REGIONAL Semis @IndianapolisIN
  • [M2]Michigan v [M11a]Tennessee
  • [M4]Louisville v [M8]@Kentucky (KY)
Sat 5 Apr, Mon 7 Apr:
    NCAA FINAL FOUR,NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP @ArlingtonTX/COWBOYS/
  • {[1/SOUTH]} v {[4/EAST]}
  • {[2/WEST]} v {[3/MIDWEST]}

NIT

Monday:
    16s on-campus
  • @ [w1]SMU v [w5]LSU
  • @ [s1]Florida St v [s4]Georgetown
  • @ [w2]California v [w3]Arkansas
Tuesday:
    Qtrs on-campus
  • @ [m1]Minnesota v [m3]So Mississippi
  • @ [e3]Clemson v [e5]Belmont
Wednesday:
    Qtrs on-campus
  • [s3]Louisiana Tech v {@[s1]Florida St/[s4]Georgetown}
  • {@[w1]SMU/[w5]LSU} v {[w2]California/[w3]Arkansas}
Tuesday week, Thursday week:
    Semis, Finals @NewYorkNY/MSG/
  • {[w]/SMU} v {[e]/Clemson}
  • {[m]/Minnesota} v {[s]/Florida St}

CBI

Monday:
    Qtrs on-campus
  • (e): @ Siena v Penn St
  • (m): @ Illinois St v Texas A&M
  • (s): @ Fresno St v Princeton
  • (w): @ Old Dominion v Radford
Wednesday:
    Semis on-campus (re-seeded)
Monday week, Wednesday week, (if necessary: Friday week):
    Finals on-campus (Best of 3)

CIT

Monday:
    16s on-campus
  • @ Murray St v {Omaha}
Wednesday:
    Qtrs on-campus)
  • @ Pacific v San Diego
  • @ Ohio U v VMI
  • @ Columbia v Yale
Thursday:
    Qtrs on-campus
  • @ {MurraySt/Omaha} v Towson
Monday week:
    Semis on-campus (re-seeded)
Wednesday week:
    Final on-campus

Monday, March 24, 2014

14 Mar17 - Gator Done (PRECONTEST)

Volume XVIII, No. 20 - 14 Mar17: PRECONTEST - [] FINAL TOP 25 BALLOT

Gator Done

[3b]Connecticut blew out host [3c]Memphis (72-@53) and hung on to edge co-champ [1a]Cincinnati 58-56; but it was co-champ [1b]Louisville who handled the Huskies in the final (71-61) to claim the inaugural AMERICAN crown TiTo.

    
[1]Florida escaped [4]Tennessee's slowdown game (56-49) and escaped vs energized [2a]@Kentucky (and its intimidating crowd support; 61-@60) to complete the TiTo SEC crown.

    
[5]Pittsburgh knocked off [3b]@North Carolina (80-@75); [7a]@N.C. State tripped [2]Syracuse (@66-63); but it was [1]Virginia who edged [5]Pitt (51-48) and beat [3a]@Duke (72-@63) to claim the ACC crown TiTo.

    
[1]Gonzaga had no trouble doubling inside the WEST COAST, beating [2a]BYU (75-64).

[6b]Baylor upended [2]Oklahoma (78-73) and blew out [3a]Texas (86-69); but it was [3b]Iowa State who outlasted [5]@Kansas State (91-@85), outran undermanned [1]@Kansas (94-@83) and then handled [6b]Baylor (74-65) to claim the BIG 12 crown.

    
[1]Michigan edged [5]Ohio State (72-69), but it was [2b]Michigan State who showed how good it is when fully healthy that bested [2a]Wisconsin (83-75) and then handled [1]Michigan (69-55) to run through the BIG 10 draw.

    
In the PAC-12 tourney, [3c]Colorado edged [3b]California (59-56); [3d]Stanford crushed [3c]Arizona State (79-58); [1]Arizona rolled [3c]Colorado (63-43) and [8a]Utah (71-39); but it was [2]UCLA who won the weekend, pounding [3e]Oregon (82-63) and [3d]Stanford (84-59) before outbattling [1]Arizona (75-71) to take the crown.

    
In the MOUNTAIN WEST rubber match, [2]New Mexico outbattled [1]San Diego State, 64-58, to claim the crown.

Both the BIG EAST and ATLANTIC 10 provided Party-Crasher champs. With [1]Villanova bombing out right away (63-64 on a buzzer-beater to [8]Seton Hall), [2]Creighton was able to stave off [3]Xavier (86-78) but couldn't fulfill its Anti-Spoiler duties, allowing [3b]Providence to take the final (65-58) (and steal an NCAA at-large bid).

    
[1]St. Louis was bounced immediately by [9]@St. Bonaventure (68-@71); [3a]George Washington handled [5b]Massachusetts (85-77); then [2]VCU rolled [3a]George Washington (74-55); but it was [3b]St. Joseph's who spoiled the show, edging [5a]Dayton (70-67) and then [2]VCU (65-61) in the final (sending yet another Bubble team to the NIT pool).

In 1BC-land, some TiTo champs proved their worth. Undef/4-GAP-champ [1]Stephen F. Austin cruised to the SOUTHLAND double (@68-@49) over [3]@Sam Houston State in the final. Gap-champ [1]North Dakota State edged [2a]IPFW (60-57) in the SUMMIT final. Gap-champ [1]Weber State rolled at home (@88-67) past [2a]North Dakota in the BIG SKY. Gap-champ [1]North Carolina Central handled its business (71-62) over [3a]Morgan State in the MEAC.

    
MAC co-champ [1a/W1a]Western Michigan routed co-champ [1b/W1b]Toledo (98-@77) in the decisive MID-AMERICAN final. After [1d]Southern Mississippi handled host [5]UTEP (64-@56), and [1a]Louisiana Tech routed [1d]Southern Mississippi (88-70), it was [1d]Tulsa who settled the four-way tie in CONFERENCE USA, handling [1c]Middle Tennessee (76-69) and then [1a]Louisiana Tech (69-60) in the final. [1]Delaware had a scare, but hung on to double in the COLONIAL (75-74) past [3]William & Mary.

    
When [1]Utah Valley went down (69-74) to [5b]Idaho; [2]New Mexico State stepped in to fill the void with an easy 77-55 win past [5b]Idaho to claim the WAC crown -- a fair swap.

    
Full-on Jack Dawson champs either replaced gap-champs or (worse) were bottom-feeder substitutes. [2]American drubbed gap-champ [1]Boston University (55-@36) to claim the PATRIOT. [5a]Milwaukee won at gap-champ [1]Green Bay (73-@66) and at [3]Wright State (69-@63) in the HORIZON final. [6b]@Cal Poly-SLO edged [1]@UC-Irvine (@61-@58), dumped [2]@UC-Santa Barbara (@69-@38) and then hung on (@61-@59) over [5]@Cal State-Northridge to claim the BIG WEST crown. 5-GAP-champ [1]Georgia State had the game in hand, but choked it away as [3]@Louisiana rallied to take the SUN BELT crown (@82-81[OT]). Host [4]Albany knocked out gap-champ [1]Vermont (@67-58), then won at [2]Stony Brook (69-@60) to take AMERICA EAST. [2]Manhattan won the rubber match with gap-champ [1]Iona (71-68) to claim the METRO ATLANTIC. In the NORTHEAST, [4a]Mount St. Mary's rolled gap-champ host [1]Robert Morris (88-@71). Ineligible anway, 3-gap-champ [1]Southern fell right away to [8]@Prairie View A&M (46-@64), so [2a]@Texas Southern stepped in to take the SWAC crown (@78-@73) past [8]@Prairie View.

The Bubble teams didn't exactly fight their way into the tournament. Yes, [E10]St. Joseph's and [E11]Providence took the decision out of the NCAA Seeding Committee's hands by claiming Party-Crashing tournament crowns; but [M6]Massachusetts, [W10]BYU, [S11]Dayton (despite losing to St. Joseph's), [W11]Nebraska, [M11a]Tennessee and [M12a]Xavier all made it in without any bonus wins in their conference tournaments -- only [M12b]N.C. State was able to sneak in thanks to its upset of Syracuse in the ACC tourney.

    
Utah (routed by Arizona), SMU (edged by Houston) and California (edged by Colorado) turned out not to be locks after all. Illinois' win over Indiana in the BIG 10 tourney wasn't enough to get in.

Here's the list of Tito champions vs. the bid-stealing spoilers and Jack Dawsons who are attending The Dance under false pretenses:

TiTo Spoiler Jack Dawson

AMER: [1b]+3 Louisville

ACC: [1]+2 Virginia

SEC: [1]u+6 Florida

MVC: [1]u+6 Wichita State

WCC: [1]+2 Gonzaga

MAC: [1a/W1a] Western Michigan

SUMMIT: [1]+2 North Dakota State

C-USA: [1d] Tulsa

COLON: [1] Delaware

SLAND: [1]u+4 Stephen F. Austin

SKY: [1]+2 Weber State

A-SUN: [1b]+3 Mercer

MEAC: [1]+2 North Carolina Central


BIG E: [3b] Providence

A-10: [3b] St. Joseph's


PAT: "[1]+2 Boston University" (2-[2]American)

HORIZ: "[1]+2 Green Bay" (2-[5a]Milwaukee)

BIG W: "[1]UC-Irvine" ([6b]Cal Poly-SLO)

SUN B: "[1]+5 Georgia State" ([3]Louisiana)

OVC: "[1] Belmont" (2-[3]Eastern Kentucky)

AMER E: "[1]+2 Vermont" ([4]Albany)

NEC: "[1]+2 Robert Morris" ([4a]Mount St. Mary's)

MAAC: "[1]+2 Iona" (2-[2]Manhattan)

SOCON: "[1]+3 Davidson" ([3a]Wofford)

SWAC: "[1]+3 Southern" (3-[2]Texas Southern)

That's 13 thoroughbreds against 12(10) impostors -- much weaker than last year (15 up, 7(6) down). N.C. State's bid is questionable, but at least it's based on a big win; don't get inviting Xavier over Utah; maybe would have taken SMU or Arkansas rather than Nebraska or BYU. Minnesota, Clemson, Florida State, LSU, Missouri and St. John's were all just below the cutoff for me as well. San Diego State's #4-seed earned B-Major status for the MOUNTAIN WEST, but (despite 6 bids), the ATLANTIC 10 is just a giant Mid-Major. Some dominant TiTo 1BCs (North Dakota State/SUMMIT, Stephen F. Austin/SOUTHLAND, Weber State/BIG SKY, Mercer/ATLANTIC SUN, North Carolina Central/MEAC) might be strong enough to pull off an upset, but some Jack Dawsons especially robbed the field of potential breakthroughs (Green Bay/HORIZON, Georgia State/SUN BELT, Vermont/AMERICA EAST).

Arizona had already done enough that the squeak loss in the PAC-12 final didn't warrant losing its #1-seed; no real issue with TiTo Virginia getting the fourth #1 spot. TiTo Louisville deserved no worse than a #2-seed, though. Michigan State's form is #1-calibre, but you can't give it on potential with so many losses when they weren't at full strength.

    
Worst overseeding decisions: [M6]Massachusetts, [E6]North Carolina, [M9]Kansas State, [M10]Arizona State, [W11]Nebraska, [E11]Providence, [M12a]Xavier, [M12b]N.C. State; worst underseeding decisions: [M4]Louisville, [M8]Kentucky, [E12]Harvard, [S12]Stephen F. Austin, [E14]North Carolina Central.

    
Not too many cushy preferential Pods -- [S1]Florida(Orlando), [W2]Wisconsin(Milwaukee), [S3]Syracuse(Buffalo), [M3]Duke(Raleigh), [S4]UCLA(San Diego), [W6]Baylor(San Antonio) were the worst of it. [E1]Virginia knocked [E6]North Carolina out of Raleigh, for once. [M5]St. Louis(St. Louis), [W8]Gonzaga(Spokane) weren't eligible for their own home floors.

Toughest first games: [E5]Cincinnati/[E12]Harvard, [W8]Gonzaga/[W9]Oklahoma State, [S5]VCU/[S12]Stephen F. Austin, [S8]Colorado/[S9]Pittsburgh. Best chances for 1BC upsets ([E12]Harvard, [S12]Stephen F. Austin, [W12]North Dakota State over [W5]Oklahoma).

    
I like Louisiana Tech, Utah over Southern Mississippi, SMU over Arkansas and Green Bay emerging as the NIT Final Four. The weak CBI field should get Penn State, Oregon State, Texas A&M and UTEP for its semifinalists. Missouri State, San Diego, Ohio University/Eastern Michigan and Yale/Brown are the most decent teams in CIT who start out at home.

Can an undefeated Mid-Major really go all the way or will a TiTo B-Major do the trick? I lean towards the latter, but wouldn't be shocked this year by the former.

-- Ron

P.S. If you're interested,
the 31st Annual Hoops Contest is now open for entry
(through 6:30PMet TUESDAY, 18 MARCH).

Key games this week:

NCAA

Tuesday:
    1stRd/128s FIRST FOUR @DaytonOH
  • [M12a]Xavier v [M12b]NC State
  • [S17a]Mt St Mary's v [S17b]Albany

Wednesday:
    1stRd/128s FIRST FOUR @DaytonOH
  • [M11a]Tennessee v [M11b]Iowa
  • [M17a]Cal Poly-SLO v [M17b]Texas So

Thursday, Saturday:
    2ndRd/64s POD @OrlandoFL
  • [S1]@Florida v {[S17a]MtStMarys/[S17b]Albany}
  • [S8]Colorado v [S9]Pittsburgh

  • [M4]Louisville v [M13]Manhattan
  • [M5]St Louis v {[M12a]Xavier/[M12b]NCState}

    2ndRd/64s POD @MilwaukeeWI
  • [W2]@Wisconsin v [W15]American
  • [W7]Oregon v [W10]BYU

  • [M2]Michigan v [M15]Wofford
  • [M7]Texas v [M10]Arizona St

    2ndRd/64s POD @BuffaloNY
  • [E2]Villanova v [S15]Milwaukee
  • [E7]Connecticut v [E10]St Joseph's

  • [S3]@Syracuse v [S14]We Michigan
  • [S6]Ohio St v [S11]Dayton (OH)

    2ndRd/64s POD @SpokaneWA
  • [E4]Michigan St v [E13]Delaware
  • [E5]Cincinnati v [E12]Harvard

  • [W4]San Diego St v [W13]New Mexico St
  • [W5]Oklahoma v [W12]ND State

Friday, Sunday:
    2ndRd/64s POD @SanDiegoCA
  • [W1]Arizona v [W16]Weber St
  • [W8]Gonzaga v [W9]Oklahoma St

  • [S4]@UCLA v [S13]Tulsa
  • [S5]VCU v [S12]Stephen F Austin

    2ndRd/64s POD @StLouisMO
  • [M1]Wichita St v {[M17a]CalPolySLO/[M17b]TexasSo}
  • [M8]Kentucky v [M9]Kansas St

  • [S2]Kansas v [S15]Ea Kentucky
  • [S7]New Mexico v [S10]Stanford

    2ndRd/64s POD @RaleighNC
  • [E1]Virginia v [E16]Co Carolina
  • [E8]Memphis v [E9]Geo Washington

  • [M3]@Duke v [M14]Mercer
  • [M6]Massachusetts v {[M11a]Iowa/[M11b]Tennessee}

    2ndRd/64s POD @SanAntonioTX
  • [E3]Iowa St v [E14]NC Central
  • [E6]N Carolina v [E11]Providence

  • [W3]Creighton v [W14]Louisiana
  • [W6]@Baylor v [W11]Nebraska

NIT

Tuesday:
    1stRd/32s on-campus
  • @ [m1]Minnesota v [m8]High Pt
  • @ [s1]Florida St v [s8]FL Gulf Coast (FL)
  • @ [e1]St John's v [w8]Robert Morris
  • @ [m2]Missouri v [m7]Davidson
  • @ [w3]Arkansas v [w6]Indiana St
  • @ [e3]Clemson v [e6]Georgia St
  • @ [m4]St Mary's v [m5]Utah
  • @ [s4]Georgetown v [s5]W Virginia
  • @ [e4]Green Bay v [e5]Belmont
Wednesday:
    1stRd/32s on-campus
  • @ [w1]SMU v [w8]UC-Irvine
  • @ [w2]California v [w7]UT-Valley
  • @ [s2]Georgia v [s7]Vermont
  • @ [e2]Illinois v [e7]Boston U
  • @ [s3]Louisiana Tech v [s6]Iona
  • @ [m3]So Mississippi v [m6]Toledo
  • @ [w4]San Francisco v [w5]LSU
Thursday-Monday week:
    16s on-campus
  • @{[w1]SMU/[w8]UCIrvine} v {[w4]SanFrancisco/[w5]LSU}
  • @{[w2]California/[w7]UTValley} v {[w3]Arkansas/[w6]IndianaSt}

  • @{[m1]Minnesota/[m8]HighPt} v {[m4]StMarys/[m5]Utah}
  • @{[m2]Missouri/[m7]Davidson} v {[m3]SoMississippi/[m6]Toledo}

  • @{[e1]StJohns/[w8]RobertMorris} v {[e4]GreenBay/[e5]Belmont}
  • @{[e2]Illinois/[e7]BostonU} v {{[e3]Clemson/[e6]GeorgiaSt}

  • @{[s1]FloridaSt/[s8]FLGulfCoast} v {[s4]Georgetown/[s5]WVirginia}
  • @{[s2]Georgia/[s7]Vermont} v {[s3]LouisianaTech/[s6]Iona}
Tuesday week-Wednesday week:
    Qtrs on-campus
Tue 1 Apr, Thu 3 Apr
    Semis,Final @ New York NY /MSG/
  • {w/SMU} v {e/StJohns}
  • {m/Minnesota} v {s/FloridaSt}

CBI

Tuesday:
    1stRd/16s on-campus
  • (eB): @ Siena v Stony Brook (NY)
Wednesday:
    1stRd/16s on-campus
  • (eA): @ Penn St v Hampton
  • (wA): @ Oregon St v Radford
  • (wB): @ Old Dominion v SD State
  • (mA): @ Texas A&M v Wyoming
  • (mB): @ Illinois St v Morehead St
  • (sA): @ UTEP v Fresno St
  • (sB): @ Tulane v Princeton
Monday week:
    Qtrs on-campus (by region)
  • (e): {PennSt/Hampton} v {Siena/StonyBrook}
  • (w): {OregonSt/Radford} v {OldDominion/SDState}
  • (m): {TexasA&M/Wyoming} v {IllinoisSt/MoreheadSt}
  • (s): {UTEP/FresnoSt} v {Tulane/Princeton}
Wednesday week:
    Semis on-campus (re-seeded)
Mon 31 Mar, Wed 2 Apr, (if necessary: Fri 4 Apr):
    Finals on-campus (Best of 3)

CIT

Monday:
    1stRd/32s on-campus
  • @ Brown v Holy Cross
Tuesday:
    1stRd/32s on-campus
  • @ San Diego v Portland St
  • @ Ea Michigan v Norfolk St
  • @ Valparaiso v Columbia
  • @ E Carolina v Wright St
  • @ Sam Houston St v Alabama St
  • @ Canisius v VMI
  • @ E Tennessee St v Chattanooga (TN)
Wednesday:
    1stRd/32s on-campus
  • @ Missouri St v Murray St
  • @ {Grand Canyon} v Pacific
  • @ IPFW v Akron (BG)
  • @ Ohio U v Cleveland St (OH)
  • @ Yale v Quinnipiac (CT) (CT 6)
  • @ {Omaha} v N Dakota
  • @ SC Upstate v Towson
  • @ No Colorado v Texas A&M-CC
Friday-Saturday:
    2ndRd/16s on-campus
Tuesday-Thursday week:
    Qtrs on-campus [re-seeded]
Tue 1 Apr:
    Semis on-campus [re-seeded]
Thu 3 Apr
    Final on-campus


FINAL TOP 25 - 14 Mar17: PRECONTEST - ] Column

  1. Florida (32-2) SECu+6 [@SECt] [rr4vGS-A.CH] (vBIG.12) (JIMMY.V)
  2. Wichita State (33-0) MVCu+6 [MVCt] [2v2:CBE]
  3. Arizona (30-4) PAC.12+3 [2v2:NIT.T-O]
  4. Virginia (28-6) ACC+2 [@ACCt] [2v2:CORPUS.X]
  5. Louisville (29-5) coAMER+3 [AMERt]
  6. Iowa State (26-7) [BIG.12t] [3:DIAMOND] (vSEC)
  7. Michigan State (26-8) [BIG.10t] [2v2:CVC] (@@CHAMPS)
  8. Wisconsin (26-7) [2v2:CANCUN] (@ACC)
  9. Kansas (24-9) BIG.12+2 (@@CHAMPS)
  10. Michigan (24-8) BIG.10+3
  11. UCLA (26-8) [PAC.12t] [.5vv2:LVI-T]
  12. New Mexico (26-6) [MWCt]
  13. Connecticut (26-8) [2v2:2KS]
  14. Duke (26-8) (vBIG.10) (vCQAP)
  15. San Diego State (27-4) MWC [3:WL/ANAHEIM]
  16. Cincinnati (26-6) coAMER+3 [rr4vGS-E.SH] (JIMMY.V)
  17. Syracuse (27-5) [3:MAUI] (vBIG.10)
  18. Villanova (28-4) BIG.E+2 BIG.5u [3:ATLANTIS]
  19. Oregon (23-9) [rr3vGS-C.H]
  20. St. Louis (25-6) A-10
  21. Baylor (23-11) (@@SEC)
  22. Gonzaga (27-6) WCC+2 [WCCt]
  23. Pittsburgh (25-9) [2v2:LEGENDS] (vBIG.10)
  24. Kentucky (23-10) [rr4vKEIGHTLY]
  25. Creighton (26-7)

Honorable Mention:

Oklahoma State (21-12) (vSEC) (LV-SH) ,

Ohio State (25-9) [3v:GOTHAM] (vACC) ,

VCU (26-8),

Harvard (25-4) [3:GREAT.AK] ,

Oklahoma (23-9) (@SEC) ,

Iowa (18-12) (vACC) (@@BIG.4) ,

Colorado (23-11) [rr4vGS-B.ME] ,

Texas (23-10) (vSEC) .