HoopsHD continues its simulation of what would have happened in TTTW (The Tournament That Wasn’t). Up next it is time to award the second spot in the Final Four with the Midwest Regional Semifinals and Finals. The Midwest was the only region to see each of the top four teams advance to the Sweet 16, giving us a pair of very intriguing regional semifinal matchups. First up, top-seed Baylor battles the only remaining ACC team, Louisville. After that, Creighton takes on Michigan State. The winners will meet for a chance to join Kansas in the Final Four in Atlanta. Which of these four teams will survive? It is time to find out!
REGIONAL SEMIFINALS – MIDWEST REGION – INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
(1) Baylor vs (4) Louisville
Despite quite a few upsets in the other regions, the Midwest Region had seen form hold after the first two rounds and the top four teams had advanced to the Sweet 16. The Regional semifinals in Indianapolis would begin with a matchup between top-seed Baylor and the lone ACC team to make it past the first weekend, the Louisville Cardinals. Despite being a 4-seed, Louisville had been one of the hot preseason picks to win the national championship, so the Bears certainly knew they would have their work cut out for them in this round.
Baylor knew this game would be a tough one, and a tough thriller is exactly what the fans in Indy got. The first half saw several swings back and forth, and each team building a lead of 6 points during it only to see their opponent fight right back in. The shot of the half came at the buzzer when Louisville’s Jordan Nwora just barely got the ball away from beyond the arc as time expired to make the score 38-35 Baylor at the break. Baylor came out strong early in the second and built a lead of as much as 13 points, 53-40, only to see the Cardinals fight back again. A pair of Samuell Williamson free throws with three minutes left to play put the Cardinals back in front by a score of 79-78. Both teams spent the last three minutes exchanging punches back and forth, with the lead changing multiple times. Darius Perry sunk a jumped for Louisville with 1:15 left to play to give the Cards an 85-82 edge. MaCio Teague promptly answered with a shot from long distance to tie the game with 53 seconds left. Lamarr Kimble was fouled on the next Louisville possession but only made 1 of 2 free throws to put his team up by a single point. It was now Baylor’s turn, and Teague got himself open from just outside the paint with 22 seconds left to give Baylor an 87-86 advantage. The Cardinals were able to get Jordan Nwora open from 3 with 8 seconds left, but his shot missed – and the offensive rebound landed in the hands of teammate Dwayne Sutton. Sutton got the final shot of the game off at the buzzer, but it clanked off the rim as well and the Baylor Bears had survived and advanced to the Elite Eight behind 22 points from MaCio Teague and a double-double from Freddie Gillespie.
Final Score: (1) Baylor 87, (4) Louisville 86
(2) Creighton vs (3) Michigan State
The Big Ten had an amazing season in 2019-20, with ten teams having qualified for the Big Dance and as many as 12 teams having been in the hunt for a bid up until the last few weeks of the season. Therefore, when only two Big Ten teams made the Sweet 16, and Illinois having already fallen in their Regional Semifinal, it was a shock to see only one team from the conference left in action. That one team, however, was the preseason #1 team in the nation Michigan State Spartans, a team that had been playing as well as almost anyone in the nation in the final weeks leading up to Selection Sunday. Michigan State was technically the lower-seeded team, however, in their matchup with Big East co-regular season and tournament champion Creighton. The Bluejays were in their first ever Sweet 16 since the field expanded to at least 64 teams, but head coach Greg McDermott’s squad was not satisfied with just making it this far.
After the first game in Indianapolis having been such a thriller, it would be more likely that the second game of the evening would be a lot less exciting. That simply, much to the thrill of the fans in attendance, was not the case. The two teams played tight the entire first half with Creighton owning the largest lead at 7 before the Spartans came back to take the lead at 41-38. The Bluejays owned the final minute of the half, however, scoring 7 answered points to take a 45-41 halftime lead. Michigan State came back out strong in the second period and neither team was able to build a lead of more than 5 the rest of the way. With Creighton up 4 following a pair of Mitch Ballock free throws, Cassius Winston came down the court and nailed a jumper with 22 seconds to play to cut the lead to 97-95 in favor of the Bluejays. The Spartans quickly fouled Ty-Shon Alexander who made both free throws to extend the lead to 4, but Marcus Bingham found the bottom of the net from beyond the arc with 12 seconds left to make it a one point game, 99-98. Marcus Zegrowski was then sent to the free throw line where he only made one of two, giving the Spartans one final chance, with 8 seconds left, to tie or win. Xavier Tillman tried to play hero, putting up the shot to tie from the left wing as the horn sounded. When the ball bounced off the rim, the game was over, the last Big Ten team had fallen, and the Bluejays deepest Tournament run ever would continue into the Elite Eight where Baylor was waiting. Marcus Zergowski led the way in the win with 33 points and teammate Ty-Shon Alexander scored 27 for the victors.
Final Score: (2) Creighton 100, (3) Michigan State 98
REGIONAL FINAL – MIDWEST REGION – INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA
(1) Baylor vs (2) Creighton
The Creighton Bluejays had never made a Final Four, yet alone advanced to the Elite Eight, prior to this season. The Baylor Bears last played in the Final Four back in 1950, well before the tournament had expanded to its current format, though they had a pair of chances in the Elite Eight in both 2010 (losing to 1-seed Duke) and 2012 (losing to 1-seed Kentucky). This time around, it was Baylor that was the 1-seed, taking on 2-seed Creighton with a spot in Atlanta on the line. Baylor had advanced this far by taking care of Texas Southern, squeezing past Houston and then winning a thriller over Louisville. Creighton had escaped 15-seed Northern Kentucky by only a single point in the first round, then took care of Arizona State before winning their own regional semifinal thriller by 2 points over Michigan State. All signs pointed to another great game for the fans in Indianapolis and those watching around the country and around the world.
The fans wanted a great game, and for the third straight time in Indianapolis, that is exactly what they got. The Bears and Bluejays fought back-and-forth the entire first half with neither team being able to build a lead of greater than 5 points. A jumper from Creighton’s Mitch Ballock right before the end of the first half sent the teams to the break tied at 49 apiece. Baylor seemed ready to take control of the game 6 minutes into the second half when a 15-0 run turned a 57-54 deficit into a 69-57 lead. However, the Bluejays were not done yet, as they fought all the way back and saw a Damien Jefferson shot from just inside the 3-point line tie the game at 78 with just over 3 minutes left to play. Creighton then took a 3-point lead on a Ty-Shon Alexander shot from beyond the arc a minute later, only to see Matthew Mayer connect from long range on the feed from MaCio Teague to tie the game up again. Jared Butler got open from long-range on the next Baylor possession to put the Bears up by 3, and Creighton’s shots began to miss. Davion Mitchell sunk four free throws in the final minute to extend the Baylor lead to 5, and even though Jefferson sunk a 3-ball at the buzzer, Baylor had enough points to win, and advanced to the Final Four by a final score of 92-90. Six different Bears scored in double-figures in the game led by 18 points from Jared Butler. The Bears had won the Midwest Regional by a combined total of only 3 points in their two games, but no matter what the scores were, the title in Indianapolis belonged to the Bears as they joined conference-mate Kansas as the first two teams into the Final Four.
Final Score: (1) Baylor 92, (2) Creighton 90







