News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Tuesday, Mar 5th

CLICK HERE for our latest Hoops HD Report and Championship Week Video Notebooks

-If you fell asleep last night and missed everything, you pretty much missed nothing.  None of the meaningful games were all that exciting with Texas Tech, Virginia, and K State all winning easily.  The four quarterfinal games in the A-Sun were also duds for the most part.  Anyway, on to Day 2 of Championship Week!

-XAVIER AT BUTLER (Big East).  Neither team is inside the bubble.  The only reason we highlight this is because Xavier has been on a rampage, and if they keep it up they could very likely end up crashing the dance.  A win today would be their 6th straight.

-WAKE FOREST AT DUKE (ACC).  This is such a mismatch that it will likely resemble a buy game.  Duke is a likely #1 seed and Wake Forest is not a top 100 team.

-NEBRASKA AT MICHIGAN STATE (Big Ten).  Nebraska is in a total tailspin and now seems like they’re just going through the motions until the season ends.  Michigan State is coming off a somewhat surprising loss to Indiana, which snapped a five game losing streak, and is looking to bounce back from that.

-VIRGINIA TECH AT FLORIDA STATE (ACC).  Both teams are in the rankings, both teams are virtual locks, and both are pretty much just playing for seeding at this point.  Both still have a path to a protected seed and this would be a big step forward for whoever wins this.

-BUFFALO AT OHIO (MAC).  Buffalo is cruising toward getting in on the first ballot, and should get there easily if they win out through the regular season, which they are certainly good enough to do.

-VCU AT GEORGE MASON (Atlantic Ten).  George Mason has been hot and cold this year, so VCU does not want to overlook them, but they’re certainly capable of winning the game and if they win out through the regular season they should be safely in.

-NORTH CAROLINA AT BOSTON COLLEGE (ACC).  UNC is now ranked #3 in the nation, and wth a regular season game against Duke and then the ACC Tournament remaining, they’ll have the chances to get up to the #1 line.  That is much easier said than done, though.

-PURDUE AT MINNESOTA (Big Ten).  Purdue is looking more and more like a solid protected seed, and may lock that up with just a few more wins.  They face a Minnesota team that’s inside the bubble, but not so far inside that they can just coast through to the end.  A win tonight would do wonders for the Gophers.

-MISSISSIPPI STATE AT TENNESSEE (SEC).  Tennessee has a path to a #1 seed and I don’t see them doing any worse than a #2.  Mississippi State can pretty much cement themselves into the top half of the bracket if they were somehow able to pull off the upset tonight.  Both teams are really just playing for seeding at this point.

-KANSAS AT OKLAHOMA (Big 12).  I have beaten up Kansas all year for not winning on the road.  They’re coming off of a road win, and if they can pick up another one today I’ll relent and admit that they are not just a protected seed, but a solid protected seed.  Oklahoma has been hot and cold this year and while I think they’re in, they’re just 6-10 in league play and could really use a win like this. A loss by Kansas officially ends The Streak as well.

-AUBURN AT ALABAMA (SEC).  This is a high stakes games for so many reasons.  Auburn is lacking wins of this quality.  Alabama is squarely on the bubble and could use a big win to help nudge them to the right side of the fence.  And on top of everything else, it’s a rivalry game.  This has an EXTREMELY pivotal feel to it.

-UTAH STATE AT COLORADO STATE (Mountain West).  Utah State is coming off a huge win against Nevada, which should land them on the right side of the bubble so long as they’er able to hold serve the rest of the way in games like this.

-NEVADA AT AIR FORCE (Mountain West).  Nevada is still safely in the field and is simply looking to maintain a healthy seed.  They should be just fine so long as they don’t trip up in games like this.

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Sowing the seeds we love: HoopsHD interviews Selection Committee member and Toledo Vice-President/Director of Athletics Mike O’Brien

We are less than 2 weeks until Selection Sunday, which means that the 10-member NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee is working hard to place 68 of the best teams in the nation into a tidy little bracket. The Committee revealed its top-16 teams in a sneak preview last month: while it was just a snapshot, 3 of the #1 seeds from last year’s preview DID end up becoming #1 seeds last Selection Sunday (Villanova/Virginia/Xavier). It served as a peek behind the curtain to see what the Committee was thinking and what criteria they value during their analysis of every team’s body of work. Earlier today HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Selection Committee member Mike O’Brien about the new NCAA Evaluation Tool (NET) and the importance of scheduling.

How many hours/day will you be working on selection stuff next week? The committee will convene in New York City on Tuesday. There is no specific # of hours involved but the selection process will take up the entire week.  I will tell you that the Committee and NCAA staff truly work together throughout the many months leading up to the tournament. It is an incredibly committed group.

Which primary conferences are you assigned to this year, and how much weight do you give to input from the representatives of those conferences? My primary conferences are the Ivy League/Mountain West/Patriot League. I count on the reps from those conferences to provide us with any data that we might not ordinarily see (injuries/suspensions/etc.). The conferences have really done a nice job going above and beyond to assist us.

I know that you are not allowed to vote for teams from your own conference, but as someone whose school has faced Buffalo twice since New Year’s Day, what makes the Bulls such a great team? They are very experienced, having been in the NCAA tourney last year. They are athletic and are great in transition. They play nice half-court defense and are having a terrific season. Additionally, being in the top-25 for several weeks has been a positive for the MAC: our league is as good as it has ever been (#8 out of 32 in the nation) and having a top-25 team has given us our league some well-deserved publicity.

Your Rockets are wrapping up their 8th straight season with a winning record: how proud are you of everything that Coach Tod Kowalczyk has accomplished? I am really proud of what Tod has done in creating a program: not only the competition piece but academically as well. We have 66 MAC wins in the past 5 years, which is #2 in the league. When you look at what he inherited, Tod has done some wonderful things both for the basketball program as well as the university.

What are the major categories that have the biggest impact on a team’s seed (big road win, bad home loss, other), and why are they more important than other categories? You look at all of it. Scheduling is a part of the process: road wins are hard to get (especially in your league) and on the flip side if you have a bad home loss that gets taken into account as well. You cannot pinpoint 1 specific category because there are so many different data points involved.

If a team wants to make the NCAA tourney, are they better off scheduling decent teams who they think they can beat, or great teams who they can only hope to upset, or a nice mix of both, or other? We talk about the “intent to schedule”: you might schedule a team that you expect to have a nice year but it does not always turn out that way. We look at who you played in terms of wins/losses, but also your attempt to schedule good opponents.

Last season the Committee implemented a 4-tier system that emphasizes the location of wins/losses: is there a specific quadrant that you are drawn to the most (lots of Quad 1 wins, an absence of Quad 4 losses, other)? We have a lot of data so we look at all of the quadrants and the various details on the team(s) that are being looked at.

Committee members are able to see many other rankings on the official team sheets (such as BPI/KPI/KenPom) in addition to the traditional ones: how have you made use of these advanced metrics, and do you have a favorite 1? I cannot say that I have a favorite 1. I look at all of them on occasion to see how they compare to 1 another as well as how they compare to the NET. It is interesting to see where specific teams are located within different metrics.

Last August the NCAA announced that the RPI’s role in the selection process would be replaced by the NCAA Evaluation Tool (NET), which includes metrics such as scoring margin (capped at 10 PPG) and net offensive/defensive efficiency: why should a team like Gonzaga not be rewarded for outscoring its opponents by 25+ PPG? We look at wins/losses and where the games are played. The NET has been a tool that has really assisted our process and the consensus is that it has proven to be better than what we have used in the past.

What role do injuries (such as Justin Robinson)/suspensions (such as Chris Clarke) have on the seeding of a team like Virginia Tech (if any)? We certainly look at those types of things: we want to see if a team was playing at full-strength during their wins/losses.

In February the Committee unveiled its top-16 seeds: what was the reaction like to this year’s unveiling, and what was the most interesting part of this year’s snapshot? I think that it was positive. It reminds people that March Madness is right around the corner and lends some more excitement. The seeding can change so quickly (and always does) but the process was good for the Committee and very detailed.

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The Hoops HD Report: March 4th AND Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 1

We are entering the final week of the regular season for the multi-bid leagues and we run through all of the leagues as we cover last week’s action, and look ahead to the final few games prior to the conference tournaments.  The SEC and Big 12 have several teams on the bubble, the Pac Twelve is on the verge of just being a one bid league after Washington’s disastrous loss to Cal, the Big East has a chance (albeit a small one, as Ben Stein would say) of only getting 2 NCAA Tournament bids, the ACC might put as many as three teams on the #1 line, and we also look at Wofford and Buffalo and feel they are in the NCAA tournament no matter what.

From there, we close with our Championship Week Video Notebook as we review the four Atlantic Sun games, and take a look at the opening round games in the Patriot League, Big South, and Horizon League.

And for all you radio lovers, below is an audio only version of the show…

CLICK HERE to view the Survival Board

HORIZON LEAGUE QUARTERFINALS

BIG SOUTH OPENING ROUND

PATRIOT LEAGUE OPENING ROUND

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Handing out the Hardware: All-conference awards of the year (Part 1 of 2)

The end of the regular season means that it is time to recognize the best players/coaches in college basketball this year. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel has reviewed all of the numbers and is ready to announce his picks for the 5 best players from each conference based on their all-around stats in non-conference play. Players are listed in a traditional 5-position lineup (G-G-F-F-C) whenever possible with several exceptions, plus special awards for each conference’s Player of the Year (POY), Rookie of the Year (ROY), Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY), 6th Man of the Year (6TH), and Coach of the Year (COY). If you think he has overlooked anyone then feel free to tweet us your comments, and check back next week for the remaining conferences in Part 2.

America East
G: Sam Sessoms (Binghamton)
G: JR Lynch (Hartford)
G: Christian Lutete (UMass-Lowell)
F: Akwasi Yeboah (Stony Brook)
F: Anthony Lamb (Vermont)
POY: Anthony Lamb (Vermont)
ROY: Sam Sessoms (Binghamton)
DPOY: Jeff Otchere (Stony Brook)
6TH: Andrew Garcia (Stony Brook)
COY: Jeff Boals (Stony Brook)

Atlantic Sun
G: Garrison Mathews (Lipscomb)
G: Tyler Hooker (Kennesaw State)
G: JD Notae (Jacksonville)
F: Noah Horchler (North Florida)
C: Rob Marberry (Lipscomb)
POY: Garrison Mathews (Lipscomb)
ROY: Jamari Blackmon (North Alabama)
DPOY: Wajid Aminu (North Florida)
6TH: Ahsan Asadullah (Lipscomb)
COY: Ritchie McKay (Liberty)

Big South
G: Christian Keeling (Charleston Southern)
G: Jermaine Marrow (Hampton)
G: Chris Clemons (Campbell)
F: Jose Perez (Gardner-Webb)
F: Malik Moore (South Carolina Upstate)
POY: Chris Clemons (Campbell)
ROY: Devon Baker (UNC Asheville)
DPOY: Ed Polite Jr. (Radford)
6TH: JC Younger (Presbyterian)
COY: Tim Craft (Gardner-Webb)

CAA
G: Grant Riller (Charleston)
G: Vasa Pusica (Northeastern)
G: Justin Wright-Foreman (Hofstra)
F: Jarrell Brantley (Charleston)
F: Nathan Knight (William & Mary)
POY: Justin Wright-Foreman (Hofstra)
ROY: Camren Wynter (Drexel)
DPOY: Desure Buie (Hofstra)
6TH: LJ Owens (William & Mary)
COY: Joe Mihalich (Hofstra)

Horizon
G: Sandy Cohen (Green Bay)
G: Antoine Davis (Detroit Mercy)
F: Xavier Hill-Mais (Oakland)
F: Drew McDonald (Northern Kentucky)
C: Loudon Love (Wright State)
POY: Antoine Davis (Detroit Mercy)
ROY: Antoine Davis (Detroit Mercy)
DPOY: Sandy Cohen (Green Bay)
6TH: Vance Johnson (Milwaukee)
COY: Linc Darner (Green Bay)

MAAC
G: Cameron Young (Quinnipiac)
G: Rickey McGill (Iona)
G: Jalen Pickett (Siena)
F: Marvin Prochet (Niagara)
F: EJ Crawford (Iona)
POY: Cameron Young (Quinnipiac)
ROY: Jalen Pickett (Siena)
DPOY: Jalen Pickett (Siena)
6TH: Ryan Funk (Marist)
COY: Baker Dunleavy (Quinnipiac)

MVC
G: Marques Townes (Loyola-Chicago)
G: Jordan Barnes (Indiana State)
F: Nick McGlynn (Drake)
F: Milik Yarbrough (Illinois State)
C: Cameron Krutwig (Loyola-Chicago)
POY: Milik Yarbrough (Illinois State)
ROY: AJ Green (Northern Iowa)
DPOY: Kavion Pippen (Southern Illinois)
6TH: Kabir Mohammed (Missouri State)
COY: Darian DeVries (Drake)

NEC
G: Romone Saunders (Wagner)
G: Sean Hoehn (Sacred Heart)
G: Keith Braxton (St. Francis PA)
F: Tyler Kohl (Central Connecticut State)
F: Raiquan Clark (Long Island)
POY: Raiquan Clark (Long Island)
ROY: Vado Morse (Mount St. Mary’s)
DPOY: Jare’l Spellman (Sacred Heart)
6TH: Malik Petteway (Robert Morris)
COY: Anthony Latina (Sacred Heart)

OVC
G: Dylan Windler (Belmont)
G: Ja Morant (Murray State)
F: Terry Taylor (Austin Peay)
F: Nick Mayo (Eastern Kentucky)
C: Nick Muszynski (Belmont)
POY: Ja Morant (Murray State)
ROY: Nick Muszynski (Belmont)
DPOY: Nick Mayo (Eastern Kentucky)
6TH: Jabari McGhee (Austin Peay)
COY: Rick Byrd (Belmont)

Patriot
G: Sa’eed Nelson (American)
G: Andrew Kostecka (Loyola MD)
F: Max Mahoney (Boston University)
F: Rapolas Ivanauskas (Colgate)
C: Nate Sestina (Bucknell)
POY: Andrew Kostecka (Loyola MD)
ROY: Tucker Richardson (Colgate)
DPOY: Andrew Kostecka (Loyola MD)
6TH: Paulius Zalys (Lafayette)
COY: Mike Brennan (American)

SoCon
G: Lew Stallworth (Citadel)
G: Bubba Parham (Virginia Military Institute)
F: Cameron Jackson (Wofford)
F: Matt Rafferty (Furman)
C: Ruben Guerrero (Samford)
POY: Matt Rafferty (Furman)
ROY: Kevin Easley (Chattanooga)
DPOY: Matt Rafferty (Furman)
6TH: Tray Boyd III (East Tennessee State)
COY: Mike Young (Wofford)

Summit
G: John Konchar (IPFW)
G: Kobe Webster (Western Illinois)
G: Stanley Umude (South Dakota)
F: Emmanuel Nzekwesi (Oral Roberts)
F: Mike Daum (South Dakota State)
POY: Mike Daum (South Dakota State)
ROY: Kevin Obanor (Oral Roberts)
DPOY: Brandon Gilbeck (Western Illinois)
6TH: Deng Geu (North Dakota State)
COY: Derrin Hansen (Omaha)

WCC
G: Colbey Ross (Pepperdine)
G: Jordan Ford (Saint Mary’s)
F: Isaiah Pineiro (San Diego)
F: Yoeli Childs (BYU)
F: Rui Hachimura (Gonzaga)
POY: Rui Hachimura (Gonzaga)
ROY: Trey Wertz (Santa Clara)
DPOY: Brandon Clarke (Gonzaga)
6TH: Matt McCarthy (San Francisco)
COY: Mark Few (Gonzaga)

Posted in CBB | Comments Off on Handing out the Hardware: All-conference awards of the year (Part 1 of 2)

Appearance on Ryan Hyatt’s Raiderland

Check out Chad Sherwood’s conversation with Ryan Hyatt from Raiderland, recorded earlier today!

 

https://theraiderland.com/hoopshd-com-chad-sherwood-texas-tech-basketball-the-ncaa-tournament-seed-projections-must-listen-to-radio-from-talk-1340-ryan-hyatts-raiderland/

 

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Conference tourney previews (Part 1 of 2)

CLICK HERE for all the News, Notes, and Links you could possibly want as Championship Week gets underway!! 

HoopsHD is getting prepared for the greatest month of the year with a 2-part preview of every single conference tourney in the nation. Jon Teitel kicks it off today with his predictions for the 13 conference tourneys getting underway this week, and you can check back next week for his picks concerning the 19 other conference tourneys.

You can also check out all the brackets right here.

America East tourney predicted champ: Vermont (#1 seed)
Dates: March 9-16
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: UMBC (#2 seed)
Fun fact: 4 different champs in past 4 years
Seeding: each of past 4 champs were top-2 seed

Rest easy, Virginia: I do not think that UMBC will win this tourney 2 years in a row. Vermont did get swept by the Retrievers this year but as the #1 seed they might be able to avoid them completely because UMBC might meet Stony Brook in the semifinals (who they lost to at home by 15 PTS last week). The Catamounts swept Stony Brook this year so they will have no fear of the Seawolves themselves. They have only lost 3 games since late-November which means they have plenty of practice at winning several games in a row. JR F Anthony Lamb was conference tourney MVP as a freshman in 2017 but missed ½ of 2018 due to a left foot fracture. All he is doing in 2019 is leading the conference in PPG/RPG and is #2 in BPG so he appears fully capable of putting the entire team on his back. Since the higher-seeded school gets to host each tourney game in which they play, Vermont cannot wait to welcome teams to Patrick Gymnasium where they have lost exactly 2 home games this season. Coach John Becker knows how to win games in March, as he has made a postseason tourney during each of his 1st 7 years as the head man in Burlington and is well-positioned to make it 8-for-8.

Atlantic Sun tourney predicted champ: Lipscomb (#1 seed)
Dates: March 4-10
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Lipscomb (#2 seed)
Fun fact: Florida Gulf Coast has appeared in the title game 6 times in the past 7 years
Seeding: 7 of past 8 champs were top-2 seed

In the past you could bank on FGCU making this title game. However, now that Liberty has joined the Atlantic Sun, Dunk City has a new obstacle in its path. Defending champ Lipscomb got a taste of the Madness last March in an NCAA tourney loss to North Carolina, then got a taste of regular season success by winning at TCU last November. They did lose at home to the Flames in February but after beating them by 20 PTS in January they should have plenty of confidence if they meet again in the rubber game. As the #1 seed then they will get all of their remaining games at home, where they have lost exactly twice by a total of 12 PTS this season. Coach Casey Alexander has a starting lineup consisting entirely of juniors/seniors including the conference’s top scorer in Garrison Mathews (who was conference tourney MVP in 2018), and when combined with defending their title that makes for a winning recipe.

Big South tourney predicted champ: Radford (#2 seed)
Dates: March 5-10
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Radford (#2 seed)
Fun fact: only 5 champs in past 21 years are Coastal Carolina/Liberty/Radford/UNC Asheville/Winthrop
Seeding: 3 of past 6 champs were not top-2 seed

Since Coastal Carolina/Liberty are no longer in this league and UNC Asheville has beaten exactly ONE D-1 program all year (via single-digit sweeps of USC Upstate) it looks like the best options are Radford/Winthrop. I want to pick the Eagles but after getting swept by Radford in February I think that we will have to go with the defending conference champs. I REALLY want to pick Campbell, who swept Radford and has 1 of the best scorers in the history of the sport in Chris Clemons, but since the Camels have never won this tourney before I think they might not be ready for prime time. The Highlanders have raised a red flag by losing 3 of their final 5 games but these losses are a bit deceptive because they were by a combined 6 PTS, which means that this team is only a few possessions away from being undefeated in 2019. 2018 conference COY Mike Jones has learned from some of the best: he made the 2011 Final 4 as an assistant to Shaka Smart at VCU and worked for John Beilein at both Richmond/West Virginia. What will get REALLY interesting is if Radford makes it back to the NCAA tourney for the 2nd straight year and ends up in the 1st 4 against a Bucknell team that includes Coach Jones’ son Nate!

CAA tourney predicted champ: Hofstra (#1 seed)
Dates: March 9-12
Location: North Charleston, SC
Last year’s tourney champ: Charleston (#1 seed)
Fun fact: 7 different champs in past 8 years
Seeding: each of past 18 champs were top-3 seed

This is a 3-team race among Charleston/Hofstra/Northeastern. Everyone was proud of the Pride during their 16-game winning streak from late-November through late-January, but 3 February losses have caused some concern. The Cougars will have a mostly-home-court advantage at the North Charleston Coliseum but were swept by Hofstra and needed an OT win at home to avoid being swept by Northeastern. The sentimental pick (as always) is William & Mary because they are 1 of only 4 original D-1 schools (along with Army/Citadel/St. Francis NY) to have never made the NCAA tourney. The last time Hofstra made the NCAA tourney was 2001, when they lost to a UCLA team led by the legendary Dan Gadzuric (14 PTS/13 REB). They might have the best player in school history sitting on their sideline (assistant coach Craig “Speedy” Claxton) and SR G Justin Wright-Foreman might match a feat that his assistant coach once achieved by winning his 2nd conference POY award.

Horizon tourney predicted champ: Northern Kentucky (#2 seed)
Dates: March 5-12
Location: Detroit, MI
Last year’s tourney champ: Wright State (#2 seed)
Fun fact: 7 different champs in past 8 years
Seeding: 6 of past 8 champs were not #1 seed

I like to pick a lot of #1 seeds but not in this conference where the only “chalk” you will see is the piece that was left in ruins next to the blackboard in the locker room of the regular season champ. Wright State was 8-10 overall in mid-January but has turned into a completely different team with only 2 road losses since then. The Norse struggled mightily down the stretch with 4 February losses after winning 10 of their previous 11 in December and January, but since they split the season series with the Raiders I think they have as good a chance as anyone. There are few players in the conference who can handle 280-pound Wright State big man Loudon Love but 1 who can certainly pose a challenge is 250-pound Northern Kentucky big man Drew McDonald (who is almost averaging a double-double this year after having 19 PTS/13 REB in an NIT loss to Louisville last March). Each of NKU’s last 6 losses were by single-digits so even if they are not great at closing out games you can never truly count them out.

MAAC tourney predicted champ: Quinnipiac (#3 seed)
Dates: March 7-11
Location: Albany, NY
Last year’s tourney champ: Iona (#4 seed)
Fun fact: Iona has been in title game each of past 6 years (4 wins and 2 losses to Manhattan)
Seeding: each of past 8 champs were 2-4 seed

You can go ahead and advance Iona to the title game, especially after finishing strong down the stretch with 7 straight wins…but as the #1 seed history is not on their side. Combined with a down year for Manhattan (who lost 20 games but finished on a high note by beating Quinnipiac on the road), the time is ripe for a brand new champ. Quinnipiac has not had a winning streak this year of longer than 3 games but they did split the season series with the Gaels. The Bobcats have lost 11 games since Thanksgiving but each of them were by 10 PTS or less. Coach Baker Dunleavy learned a lot about winning in March from his former boss Jay Wright, as Baker literally had a front-row view of Kris Jenkins making the most famous college buzzer-beater ever to win the 2016 NCAA title. He learned a lot about scoring from his brother Mike (11,000+ career NBA PTS) and learned a little more last month from the league’s leading scorer Cameron Young, who scored 55 PTS in a 3-OT win at Siena.

MVC tourney predicted champ: Southern Illinois (#3 seed)
Dates: March 7-10
Location: St. Louis, MO
Last year’s tourney champ: Loyola-Chicago (#1 seed)
Fun fact: only 3 champs from past 10 years who are still in this conference are Indiana State/Loyola-Chicago/Northern Iowa (Creighton/Wichita State both left after winning a pair of titles)
Seeding: each of past 17 champs were top-4 seed

If Nick Norton was healthy then Drake would have been a strong pick, but since he is out for the year with a torn ACL and the Bulldogs have a pair of double-digit losses to Loyola-Chicago this tourney is wide-open. Indiana State is wrapping up its 5th straight season with 15+ losses and Northern Iowa is the #6 seed, leaving Loyola-Chicago as the heavy favorite. The Ramblers will not be sneaking up on anybody this year after making the Final 4 last year but the hottest team entering Arch Madness just might be the Salukis, who have won 3 in a row (including a double-digit win over Loyola). SIU struggled early with SR G Armon Fletcher out for 9 games due to a bruised knee/suspension, but he has carried his team down the stretch with 18+ PTS in each of the past 6 games. This team has big brains (SR G Marcus Bartley was a 3rd-team Academic All-American in 2018), good genes (SR C Kavion Pippen’s uncle Scottie is a Hall of Famer), and if you need some barbecue sauce then Coach Barry Hinson is your man!

NEC predicted champ: Fairleigh Dickinson (#2 seed)
Dates: March 6-12
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: LIU (#4 seed)
Fun fact: only 4 champs in past 11 years are Fairleigh Dickinson/Long Island/Mount St. Mary’s/Robert Morris
Seeding: each of past 19 champs were top-4 seed

Based on the math you need to pick a top-4 seed who has been 1 of the only 4 champs during the past 11 years, which leaves us with FDU and RMU. It is hard for me to pick against my fellow Penn alum Andy Toole (who is finishing his 9th year as head coach of the Colonials), but since the Knights beat him in double-OT to begin February and have won 11 of their past 13 I think it is time for a title in Teaneck. They are unquestionably the leaders of the all-name team (featuring a pair of starters named Xzavier and Elyjah) and will have a distinct Edge over all of their opponents (SR G Darnell Edge). They have lived by the 3 all year (40 3P% is top-5 in the nation) and if they keep making long-distance shots then they have a Fairleigh good shot to emerge victorious.

OVC predicted champ: Jacksonville State (#3 seed)
Dates: March 6-9
Location: Evansville, IN
Last year’s tourney champ: Murray State (#1 seed)
Fun fact: 5 different champs in past 5 years
Seeding: only 1 of past 5 champs were top-2 seed

The fact that we have a quartet of 21+ win teams (Austin Peay/Belmont/Jacksonville State/Murray State) who are head and shoulders above the rest of the conference means that this should lead to 1 of the best semifinals of any conference tourney. The Racers have 1 of the best players in the nation in Ja Morant while the Bruins have 1 of the best 800-win coaches in Rick Byrd. Jacksonville State started the year 0-3 but regrouped in January thanks to a pair of double-digit wins over Belmont and a 20-PT win over Murray State to finish the month. They dropped 2 straight games to start February but got back on track with 7 straight wins to finish the regular season (including back-to-back double-OT wins!). Coach Ray Harper’s track record in the postseason is simply jaw-dropping: 6 consecutive appearances in the D-2 title game with Kentucky Wesleyan from 1998-2003, 3 consecutive appearances in the NAIA title game with Oklahoma City from 2006-2008, and is now only a few wins away from making his 4th NCAA tourney in the past 8 years. They made the CBI semifinals last March and appear ready to make the leap to the NCAA this month.

Patriot predicted champ: Colgate (#1 seed)
Dates: March 5-13
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Bucknell (#1 seed)
Fun fact: Bucknell has been in title game in 5 of past 8 years (4 wins and a 5-PT loss to Lehigh)
Seeding: 4 of past 7 champs were not #1 seed

Oh what a difference 2 weeks make: Bucknell was 11-2 in conference play and seemed to be cruising into yet another title game before stumbling in each of their final 3 road games (at Holy Cross/Colgate/Navy). Fortunately for the Bison, the higher seed will host each postseason game so they might be able to enjoy some home cooking in Lewisburg through at least the semifinals. Coach Nathan Davis swept Lehigh so I am sure he would prefer to focus on a possible semifinal rematch with the Explorers rather than having to head back to Colgate to face Penn alum/defending conference COY Matt Langel with a title on the line. Since the Raiders have won 7 in a row and everyone seems to love Hamilton these days (both the city AND the Broadway show), I will go with the hot hand and say that Colgate goes dancing for the 1st time since Adonal Foyle (21 PTS/14 REB/6 BLK) almost beat UConn by himself in 1996.

SoCon predicted champ: Wofford (#1 seed)
Dates: March 8-11
Location: Asheville, NC
Last year’s tourney champ: UNC Greensboro (#1 seed)
Fun fact: only 4 champs over past 18 years who are still in this conference are Chattanooga/East Tennessee State/UNC Greensboro/Wofford
Seeding: each of past 29 champs were top-3 seed

Despite the fact that Wofford might have to beat a PAIR of 24+ win teams just to win the title, which should make for 1 of the best tourney semifinal pairings in conference history, when you have not lost since Christmas then you have made me a believer. The irony is that even if they lose the title game they have a resume that can hold its own against any at-large team in the country: they could end up with a whopping 8 wins against top-100 teams even if they get upset in the title game! They live by the 3, and when you are #3 in the nation with 41.7 3P% you are living rather well. They also have great size for a mid-major with 6’8” Cameron Jackson and 6’9” Keve Aluma in the starting lineup. Duke’s Zion Williamson is certainly the biggest thing to come out of Spartanburg, SC this year…but the Terriers are not that far behind!

Summit predicted champ: South Dakota State (#1 seed)
Dates: March 9-12
Location: Sioux Falls, SD
Last year’s tourney champ: South Dakota State (#1 seed)
Fun fact: South Dakota State has been in title game in 6 of past 7 years (5 wins and a 1-PT loss to North Dakota State)
Seeding: 12 of past 13 champs were top-2 seed

How do you pick against the defending tourney champ/#1 seed who has lost exactly 1 game by a single point since early-January and features 1 of the 10 best scorers in the history of the sport (Mike Daum)? You do not. Omaha deserves some consideration for being the cause of that 1-PT loss but I do not expect the Jackrabbits to blow another 16-PT 2nd half lead on the road. Since his team’s 2nd scoring option is David Jenkins Jr. (who had 34 PTS/10-15 3PM in the loss to Omaha), Coach TJ Otzelberger has to be feeling pretty good about trying to win his 3rd straight conference tourney in 3 years as a head coach. The fans in Brookings only have to travel 1 hours south to watch the festivities in Sioux Falls and I expect them to have a Daum good time.

WCC predicted champ: Gonzaga (#1 seed)
Dates: March 7-12
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Last year’s tourney champ: Gonzaga (#1 seed)
Fun fact: Gonzaga has won 16 titles in past 21 years and finished 2nd each of the other 5 times
Seeding: each of past 10 champs were top-2 seed

For as much recognition as Kansas coach Bill Self gets for owning the Big 12, Coach Mark Few’s dominance of the WCC since taking over in Spokane 2 decades ago is almost incomprehensible: 19 straight NCAA tourney appearances, 18 regular season titles, and 15 conference tourney titles (including 6 straight title game victories by double-digits!).  The 12-time conference COY has seen his Bulldogs lose only 2 conference games during the past 3 YEARS combined so the smart bet in Vegas will not be on the rest of the field. Gonzaga won every single conference game this year by double-digits so if any of their opponents can even hold the Zags’ margin of victory to single-digits it would be considered a huge upset.

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