All-Access at the ACC Tournament: HoopsHD interviews Notre Dame basketball father Mike Zona about his son Matt

Conference tournaments are about basketball but also so much more: the fans, parents, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The ACC Tournament tips off this week in Washington, DC, and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD will be covering all the angles so you can look forward to an abundance of articles in the week ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage with an interview of Notre Dame basketball father Mike Zona about his son Matt.

In the 1984 NCAA tourney as a player at Iona you had a 1-PT loss to Virginia after your team made 9-17 FTs, and in the 1985 NCAA tourney you had a 1-PT loss to Loyola Chicago after your team made 12-22 FTs: how crucial is FT shooting to pulling off an upset in March? It is huge and is something that I stressed with my son from the time he began playing basketball. Had we not missed the back end of some 1-and-1s…

In 2020 your son Matt was named North Jersey Basketball POY after leading Bergen Catholic to a 22-7 record and averaging a double-double: what did it mean to you to see him receive such an outstanding honor? After all his hard work and all the hours in the driveway trying to get better it was the proper payoff.

What made him choose Notre Dame? He fell in love with it instantly: it was a place he wanted to go and had hoped to get an offer from. Not only would they offer him an amazing education but a tremendous campus life as well, so he felt he would get the full college experience.

What is your favorite memory of the Irish’s NCAA tourney run during his sophomore year (2-PT 2-OT win over Rutgers, upset of Alabama, then a 6-PT loss to Texas Tech)? I remember the Alabama game: it seemed like everything they put up went in that day! Coming off the barnburner with Rutgers and the hectic travel to get from Dayton to San Diego, it was nice to see things break their way.

After spending his 1st 3 years with Mike Brey he got a new coach this year in Micah Shrewsberry: was it a big adjustment to play for a new guy who was brought in from another program to replace a legend? It was an adjustment…but a good adjustment. He realized his position within the team and what he needed to do as a senior to accommodate not just the new players but also the coaches.

Notre Dame has played a tough schedule this year including Auburn/South Carolina/Marquette as well as several ACC schools who will make the NCAA tourney: which opponent impressed you the most? Probably Marquette: they were a very scary version of a team. Now North Carolina is that scary team. Despite coming out on the short end those are games that these kids will benefit from: when you take a licking you need to learn/mature from it.

He got his Bachelor of Business Administration in Management Consulting last year and will be getting his Master’s in Nonprofit Administration this spring: what is his post-graduation plan? We have not had any conversations yet: I just want him to get through the season and then we will address the next step.

He had a birthday last month: what did you get him for the big day? They were up in Syracuse, so we drove up there and had some cupcakes with the team in the lobby of the hotel. He did not really want anything fancy: he is easy!

You played both baseball/basketball in college: who is the best athlete in the family? Probably my daughter Emily: she plays soccer/lacrosse at Salisbury University in Maryland.

Matt scored 7 PTS in 7 minutes in the 4-PT win over Georgia Tech yesterday: do you think the Irish can keep it rolling today? It was a fantastic win for a young team: to beat any team 3 times in 1 year is an accomplishment. They have already beaten Wake Forest in their only matchup of the season 2 weeks ago so if they stick to the plan then they might just beat them again!

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Bracketology 2024: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.3)

We are only 4 days away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked 67 of the 68 teams that made the 2023 tourney with 65 of his 67 within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 53 right on the money. He will spend the upcoming days predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 17th. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today and if you agree or disagree then feel free to tweet us. To see how he stacks up with other websites (ranked 11th out of 174 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Purdue (Big 10)
1: Connecticut (Big East)
1: Houston (Big 12)
1: Tennessee (SEC)

2: North Carolina (ACC)
2: Arizona (Pac-12)
2: Marquette (Big East)
2: Iowa State (Big 12)

3: Creighton (Big East)
3: Baylor (Big 12)
3: Duke (ACC)
3: Kansas (Big 12)

4: Kentucky (SEC)
4: Illinois (Big 10)
4: Alabama (SEC)
4: Auburn (SEC)

5: BYU (Big 12)
5: South Carolina (SEC)
5: Clemson (ACC)
5: San Diego State (MWC)

6: Utah State (MWC)
6: Wisconsin (Big 10)
6: Texas Tech (Big 12)
6: Washington State (Pac-12)

7: Nevada (MWC)
7: Dayton (A-10)
7: St. Mary’s (WCC): AUTO-BID
7: Florida (SEC)

8: Gonzaga (WCC)
8: Boise State (MWC)
8: Texas (Big 12)
8: Northwestern (Big 10)

9: Colorado State (MWC)
9: Nebraska (Big 10)
9: Oklahoma (Big 12)
9: FAU (AAC)

10: TCU (Big 12)
10: Michigan State (Big 10)
10: Seton Hall (Big East)
10: Mississippi State (SEC)

11: Colorado (Pac-12)
11: Virginia (ACC)
11: St. John’s (Big East)
11: Drake (MVC): AUTO-BID
11: Indiana State (MVC)
11: Princeton (Ivy)

12: Richmond (A-10)
12: James Madison (Sun Belt): AUTO-BID
12: Grand Canyon (WAC)
12: South Florida (AAC)

13: McNeese (Southland)
13: Samford (SoCon): AUTO-BID
13: UC-Irvine (Big West)
13: Vermont (America East)

14: Charleston (CAA): AUTO-BID
14: Toledo (MAC)
14: Morehead State (OVC): AUTO-BID
14: Oakland (Horizon): AUTO-BID

15: Colgate (Patriot)
15: Sam Houston (C-USA)
15: Montana (Big Sky)
15: South Dakota State (Summit): AUTO-BID

16: Quinnipiac (MAAC)
16: Longwood (Big South): AUTO-BID
16: Stetson (Atlantic Sun): AUTO-BID
16: Norfolk State (MEAC)
16: Grambling (SWAC)
16: Wagner (NEC): AUTO-BID

1ST 4 OUT

Iowa (Big 10)
New Mexico (MWC)
Providence (Big East)
Villanova (Big East)

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Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 9

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!! We hope you all got to the hotel safely!!

Check out the HOOPS HD SURVIVAL BOARD, which shows who is a lock, who is on the bubble, and who needs the auto-bid

Also, don’t miss our CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT PAGE, which has brackets, times, and viewing information for all 32 conference tourney

Check out our new HOOPS HD TEAM SHEETS AND DEFCON RATINGS for all 362 D1 teams

Finally, be sure to keep an eye on our most recent BRACKET PROJECTIONS

Five more automatic bids were given out tonight as Saint Mary’s beat their rivals Gonzaga in a thrilling WCC championship game, Oakland is back in the NCAAs after winning the Horizon League, South Dakota State locked up the Summit League, Wagner beat the top 3 seeds all on the road to win the NEC, and Charleston repeated as CAA Champs. We discuss all of that, as well as all of the other conference tournament action…

Audio Only:

SOUTHLAND CHAMPIONSHIP:

BIG SKY CHAMPIONSHIP:

PATRIOT LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP:

CONFERENCE USA QUARTERFINALS:

METRO ATLANTIC QUARTERFINALS:

MEAC QUARTERFINALS:

SWAC QUARTERFINALS:

BIG 12 2ND ROUND:

ACC 2ND ROUND:

ATLANTIC TEN 2ND ROUND:

PAC 12 OPENING ROUND:

BIG EAST OPENING ROUND:

MOUNTAIN WEST OPENING ROUND:

BIG WEST OPENING ROUND:

WAC OPENING ROUND:

BIG TEN 1ST ROUND:

SEC 1ST ROUND:

AMERICAN 1ST ROUND:

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All-Access at the ACC AND CAA Tournaments: Tuesday’s Gone with the Wins

Conference tournaments are about basketball but also so much more: the fans, parents, bands, cheerleaders, etc. The CAA Tournament is taking place this weekend in Washington, DC, and we could not be more excited to be there in person! HoopsHD will be covering all the angles so you can look forward to an abundance of articles in the days ahead. Jon Teitel continues our coverage with a recap of the ACC 1st round tripleheader AND CAA title game on Tuesday.

It is not often that you get to attend 2 difference conference tourneys in the same city on the same day: challenge accepted! It has been a long day so let’s summarize.
Food: $30 food vouchers (plural) from the generous ACC bought me plenty of goodies: hot dog/cheese curds/cheeseburger/fries/pepperoni pizza/more calories than I care to count.

GAME #1: Notre Dame-Georgia Tech
Notre Dame FR PG Markus Burton might be the smallest player on the court at 5’11” but good luck stopping him as he made a trio of trifectas and scored a majority of his 21 PTS in the 1st half. Georgia Tech used the inside game of Baye Ndongo and the outside game of Naithan George to try to keep up but it was the Irish who took a 45-35 halftime lead. Ndongo/George kept scoring in the 2nd half (finishing with a combined 46 PTS/9 REB/9 AST), and they even fought all they way back to take a 78-77 lead with just over 4 minutes to play. However, Notre Dame coach Micah Shrewsberry’s son Braeden did his father proud with a team-high 23 PTS/5-8 3PM and the Irish eyes were smiling due to an 84-80 win over the Rambling Wreck and a date with Wake Forest on Wednesday afternoon.

I missed the postgame press conference due to multiple scheduled interviews.

GAME #2: NC State-Louisville
I am sure that it was a great game (not really, just a high-scoring affair), but I had to hop on the metro to get to the CAA tourney title game

GAME #3: Boston College-Miami
See above.

CAA TITLE GAME: Stony Brook-Charleston
Charleston coach Pat Kelsey was trying to win his 2nd tourney title in a row:

Unfortunately nobody told Stony Brook SR G Tyler Stephenson-Moore, who made 4 shots from behind the arc as part of a 17-PT 1st half that gave Stony Brook a surprising 40-35 halftime lead:

Stony Brook blew a 15-PT 1st half lead in a 6-PT home loss to Charleston back on January 6th so the Cougars were not afraid. Charleston missed a ton of layups all night long but shot a sizzling 7-10 from long-distance in the 2nd half including 3 from the Australian Sensation Reyne Smith:

It was such an exciting 2nd stanza that even Charleston’s mascot was trying to find a place to sit down and catch his breath:

The Seawolves refused to give in, as SR G Aaron Clarke (who went scoreless in the 1st half) knocked down some clutch threes and then drove in for a layup to tie it at 73-all with 2:12 left in regulation, and when neither team could score in the final 2 minutes we were heading for OT!

Both teams were running out of steam in the extra session but Smith outscored the entire Stony Brook team by himself (8-6) as the Cougars held on for dear life to win it 82-79 and clinch their 2nd straight tourney trophy:

That is a wrap for tonight, check back tomorrow for some great Charleston celebration photos and an ACC quadruple-header.

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Tourney Talk: HoopsHD interviews Drake SO G Conor Enright

On Sunday Drake beat Indiana State 84-80 in the MVC tourney title game to earn an automatic bid to next week’s NCAA tournament. The Bulldogs made the NCAA tourney last March as well but had a 7-PT loss to Miami. Earlier today HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with Drake SO G Conor Enright about what it feels like to make the NCAA tourney for the 2nd year in a row.

You were born/raised in Illinois: what made you choose Drake? It was relatively close to home and they were the 1st school to offer me when I was 15 years old. They stayed with me so I stayed with them.

You play for Coach Darian DeVries: what makes him such a great coach, and what is the most important thing that you have learned from him so far? He cares about us, not just as a coach but also as a role model/friend. He has built a great culture here and you see how much he cares about the game.

You have done some volunteering at schools and with a group called “Feed My Starving Children”: how much importance do you place on community service? A lot: my schedule is a little crazy now but I did more of it before the season. It is cool to give back to kids who look up to you and have that ability to spend time with them: hopefully they will pay it forward someday when the next generation is looking up to them.

After redshirting in 2022 you played in all 35 games last year and were named to the MVC All-Freshman Team: how did taking a redshirt year help you either on or off the court? It definitely helped. I came in a bit weak but gained 17 pounds, which was a big thing. Being around the team and practicing every day taught me the mental/physical side of college basketball. I had not played a lot of games in a while so it definitely paid off.

In the 2023 NCAA tourney you had 2 AST in a 7-PT loss to Miami: how close did you come to pulling off the upset, and what did you learn from that loss that you think will help you this time around? We played better than them for the 1st 35 minutes but they went to the Final 4 so it shows you how good we were. It gave us a taste of the tourney and definitely made us hungry to get back there: you have to be locked in for 40 minutes.

This year you were 1 of the best 3-PT shooters in the conference at 44.3 3P%: what is the secret to making shots from behind the arc?
Shot selection is important and you have to get into the gym a lot. I tweaked some stuff from last year and have gained a lot of confidence from my teammates.

Last Sunday you scored 9 PTS in a 4-PT win over Indiana State in the MVC tourney title game: what did it mean to you to win it again, and what was the reaction like when you got back to campus?
It was awesome to win it again and go back to March Madness. I am especially happy for all the guys who were not here last year. It was a 6-hour bus ride back to campus and there were not a lot of people around because it is our spring break but I got a lot of nice texts.

You are 1 of only 4 teams in the nation who has won 27+ games for each of the past 2 years (along with Houston/Purdue/UConn): do you think that your program deserve more respect for its remarkable run?
I think so. Coach has built something special over the past 6 years. Mid-majors get overlooked sometimes but it is hard to win that many games regardless of what conference you are in. It is good to be underrated a bit as it gives us something to push for.

You faced Indiana State 3 times in the past 9 weeks: do you think that they are 1 of the 68 best teams in the nation?
I definitely do. I have watched them all year: they have an amazing offense with a lot of firepower and a great coach. I cannot name 68 better than them.

What kind of seed do you think you deserve, and what kind of seed do you think you will get? I think something between 9 and 12 is our range, but realistically it looks like 10 is the highest and 12 is the lowest based on the projections that I have seen. I am super-excited and we wil be the underdog no matter what our seed is, which I love for us!

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March Madness – The Field of 80

IMPORTANT LINKS!!!

-For Jon Teitel’s Conference Tournament Previews – CLICK HERE

-For the latest Hoops HD Bracket Rundown Video Podcast, where the Hoops HD Staff builds a bracket on the air and reveals it line-by-line – CLICK HERE

-For Jon Teitel’s latest bracket where he guesses the actual Selection Committee, and is one of the best in the world at doing so – CLICK HERE

-For our most recent Championship Week Video Notebook – CLICK HERE

-For the Hoops HD NCAA Tournament Team Sheets Index – CLICK HERE

-For all the Conference Tournament Brackets and Schedules – CLICK HERE

-For the Hoops HD NCAA Tournament Survival Board – CLICK HERE

-And to see and hear the greatest call in sports history – CLICK HERE

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THE FIELD OF 80:

-Let me start with this, because I think it is perhaps the most important point. The NCAA Tournament, as an event, transcends the sport of college basketball more than any other event transcends any other sport other than perhaps the Olympics or the Kentucky Derby. People who don’t watch or know anything about track & field, or curling, or skiing, or swimming, still watch the Olympics and still get into the events. People who don’t know the first thing about horse racing still get excited for the Kentucky Derby. The NCAA Tournament is a very similar event. People who follow college basketball very passively, or even not at all and are not college basketball fans, still LOVE the NCAA Tournament! And, before anything is done to change the NCAA Tournament, I’m BEGGING you to stop for a second, and assess why that is. What is it that makes so many people love this event?? And, let’s make an effort to not change the things about it that so many people love, because if you do, then not as many of them will love it anymore. Not as many of them will watch it anymore. That would make it less of a showcase for the NCAA, and that will not be good for the NCAA.

One of the proposed formats is an 80 team field, and using this morning’s JNG RANKINGS for both selection and seeding, the bracket below is what the field would look like. Take a look, and see what you think…

So…do you like it??

My answer is…meh. While I don’t COMPLETELY hate it, I don’t like it either.

In this format, there would be a full slate of 16 games on Wednesday for the Round of 80, and the television would work just like the Round of 64 games on Thursday and Friday. Rather than go to Dayton, they would go straight to their sites. Half the teams would get Thursday off before having to play again on Friday, and the other half would not. Perhaps the teams that need to play on Thursday would all play in the afternoon to give them a little more rest.

Here is what I like about it the least….

I think it alters the feel of the regular season. People who don’t intently follow college basketball say the regular season means nothing. I could not disagree more. I think it is, from top to bottom, the most exciting and important regular season of any major sport. The NBA, MLB, and even NFL have blah games throughout the season. College football’s regular season may be getting better with a 12 team playoff, but while it was great for some of the teams in the P5 conference, it’s hard to argue that the regular season was important for all the college football teams when on a regular basis we saw a team go undefeated and not get to play for the national championship because everyone simply assumed they weren’t good enough. In college basketball, right out of the gate, the games feel important. We at Hoops HD love the Under the Radar teams (we hate the term “mid-major” around here!!) and do a weekly podcast throughout the season that starts in November. If you’re a fan of an Under the Radar team, you know that November is your shot. James Madison ended up winning the auto-bid, but if they hadn’t then the win against Michigan State on the first day of the season would have proven to be hugely important. Expanding the field to 80 changes that. While teams can go through slumps and still make the field with a 68 team format, the majority of the teams that land inside the bubble needed to be good all year long. Or, at the very least, not br any worse than decent.

It also means that there are about eight to ten conferences that will likely rarely ever see the Round of 64. One of the special things about the Round of 64 is that by it’s structure, at least 26 or 27 out of the 32 games feature a power program against a good Under the Radar Program. For the diehard fan, that’s great! For the casual viewer, that’s great! To expand the field, and make that setup for far fewer of the games makes it less great for a lot of the fans. I also think that it’s unfair to ask a team who either won a conference championship or who played their way inside of the bubble to have to win another game to make the Round of 64. People say this will be better for the non-power conferences. That is objectively wrong!! I mean…LOOK AT THE BRACKET!! Look at the number of non-power leagues that either won’t make the Round of 64 at all, or that will have to win yet another game just to get there!! HOW IS THAT GOOD FOR THEM!!??

Now, let me finish with the same point I started with, and that’s how the NCAA Tournament greatly transcends the sport of college basketball in much the same way the Olympics does (or, at least used to). I have no idea who the best gymnast in Lithuania is, or who the best pursuit cyclist in Belarus is, but I like the idea that whoever it is gets to take part in the Olympics. If I were to turn on the Olympics and learn that those countries were not allowed to participate, and the reason that they were no longer there was the “bigger” countries wanted more of their own participants, my reaction would be “Well, that’ sucks!!” And, it WOULD suck!! And, it DOES suck!! And it makes a lot of people who only watch these events during the Olympics far less interested in doing so!!

We all know who wants to expand the NCAA Tournament, and we all know why they want to do it! And, it ain’t to make the sport better, and it ain’t to help out the non-power leagues! So before anyone goes and does that, they need to ask themselves this. ARE they making it better?? (and, the answer is NO). But more than that, are they changing what it is that so many people love about it and perhaps chasing them off?? And if that happens, then is this still as great of an event as it is now??

You know what so many people say about March Madness?? They say there is nothing else like it! You know WHY they say that?? Because it’s true!! For many reasons, there is nothing else like it! Not everyone lives in an NFL or NBA city, but a lot of people either went to college or lived in communities where a college was a central point of it. It engages EVERYONE! But, if you expand this tournament or severely restructure it, not everyone is going to say that there is nothing else like it anymore. Do you know why they won’t say it anymore?? The answer is simple. Because it will no longer be true.

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