Under The Radar Postseason News, Notes and Highlighted Games – Thursday, March 15th

While today is the beginning of the 1st round of the NCAA Tournament, there was one rumor that did officially come to fruition yesterday – Tubby Smith and Memphis parted ways after 2 seasons. All indications are that Memphis will pursue Penny Hardaway to be their next head coach, but that is by no means official as of yet.

There are a couple of updates as it relates to the SEC – Thad Matta was a strong possibility to become the next head coach at Georgia, but he has taken himself out of the running for that position, per a report from ESPN. It is also expected that Kermit Davis will move on from Middle Tennessee to Ole Miss, but that likely will not become official as long as MTSU remains alive in the NIT.

And speaking of the NIT, we have an oddity in that all the home teams DID win their openers in the first round. Larry Krystowiak was ejected in Utah’s win over UC-Davis, but the bigger fireworks came down in Baton Rouge where LSU beat Louisiana and actually saw the head coaches having to be separated from one another at the end of the game. LSU head coach Will Wade was not pulling punches in his postgame presser – click here to see how that transpired.

Chalk also held in the opening round of the CIT – Eastern Michigan, UT-San Antonio and Illinois-Chicago all won at home against Niagara, Lamar and St. Francis-PA, respectively. Another strange development is that there are 4 late entries into the field – Wofford, Portland State, Northern Colorado and Sam Houston State will now play 2nd round games against opponents to be determined.

The CBI has not been as hospitable to home teams in their bracket so far. North Texas was the biggest surprise – they won at South Dakota. That was only the 2nd loss at home for the Coyotes all year. Central Arkansas did indeed come up big on the West Coast and ended up beating Seattle 92-90 in overtime (as Jax State also did at Canisius – the Gamecocks also got a 2-point win in overtime). Mercer also made a cross-country trip to win at Grand Canyon. Campbell, New Orleans and San Francisco were the only teams at home to win – they beat Mother Miami, UTRGV and Colgate, respectively.

CIT (John McLendon Classic, CBS Digital Network)

-LOUISIANA-MONROE AT AUSTIN PEAY (8:00 PM).  This is the last game of the first round – it will be streamed on CBS Sports’s website. It will also be the first game Austin Peay has played at home since their roof sprung a leak in their home finale in OVC play.

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Bracketing Analysis 2018

Bracketologists, in addition to picking who they feel will be in and out of the tournament and what their seed will be, often come up with their predictions of how the final bracket will actually be built out.  To do so, we will follow the NCAA’s Principles and Procedures Manual which for the most part tells us how the matchups should be set.  For the third straight season, I have taken the official final seed list and looked at how the bracket was built, and which rules may have been relaxed or outright ignored.

  1. At the very top, North Carolina was 5th overall yet sent to the West Region instead of the East.  On top of that, the #6 team, Duke, was also not sent East, resulting in the Blue Devils going to the Midwest while Purdue went to the East.  Clearly, this year’s committee preferred a “true S-Curve” on the top two lines over keeping these teams in the natural regions.
  2. The top two four seeds were Auburn and Wichita State.  Upon choosing their site for first and second round games, the only two cities left were Boise and San Diego.  Both teams were sent to San Diego despite the difference in miles being fairly insignificant between the two cites, especially for Auburn.  This resulted in San Diego being filled and the final 4 seed, Arizona, being sent to Boise.  I just don’t get this logic — with a simple site flip for either Auburn or Wichita, Arizona could have been kept a lot closer to home.
  3. The Committee ran into a big problem on the 9 line.  With Xavier and Villanova as 1 seeds, the 8/9 games in the East and West regions could not have a Big East team in them.  Creighton and Seton Hall were on the 8 line and therefore went to the South and Midwest.  However, two more Big East teams (Butler and Providence) were slated for the 9 line, making all 4 regions ineligible.  NC State and Florida State should have been 10 seeds, but had to both slide up a seed line to deal with this conflict, while Butler and Providence dropped to 10’s.  This was the proper and only move for the Committee.
  4. Butler and Providence’s placement was strange.  Butler was higher than Providence on the Seed line, and therefore should have been sent to Detroit to play Arkansas, while Providence should have gone to Charlotte to play Texas A&M.  However, the committee flipped these two teams for no known reason.  If the Committee was going to ignore a rule, I would have preferred they ignore the rule against regular season matchups and just sent Providence to Pittsburgh to play Rhode Island!
  5. The “protected seed” rule actually did come into play this year as Lipscomb was the top 15 seed and Nashville was an option.  The Bison got properly sent to Charlotte instead of being allowed to play in their home city.
  6. UMBC was the top 16 seed and should have been sent to Pittsburgh to play Villanova.  Penn would have then gone to Charlotte to take on Virginia and the Radford/LIU Brooklyn winner would have gone to Wichita to play Kansas.  For some reason, the committee moved UMBC to Charlotte, sending Penn out to Wichita and the play-in game winner to Pittsburgh.  This may have been a travel issue, due to the relative short distance from Dayton to Pittsburgh as opposed to Dayton to Wichita.  Otherwise, it once again makes little sense.

All in all, there were very few strange bracketing choices this year compared to past seasons.  The most significant clearly was the decision to do a True S-Curve on the top two seed lines and ignore keeping the 2 seeds in the natural regions.  We will have to see if this continues in future years, but it will be something I likely attempt to do in all bracket predictions next season.

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Basketball and brains: HoopsHD interviews Belmont Academic All-American Dylan Windler

Earlier this month Belmont lost 68-51 to Murray State in the OVC tourney title game, but even though their season has come to a close the awards keep rolling in. On Monday JR wing Dylan Windler was named an Academic All-American. On the court he averaged 17.3 PPG/9.3 RPG for the Bruins: off the court he averaged a 3.84 GPA while majoring in Accounting. Earlier today HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with Dylan about facing Providence/TCU earlier this season and leading the conference in FG%.

You grew up in Indiana: what made you choose the Bruins? They showed a lot of interest in me from the start and came to my high school while I was a sophomore.  It was appealing, especially because other schools were not showing as much interest. Once I got to meet the coaches and get to know my players during my campus visit it seemed like I was able to fit into the direction they wanted the program to go in. It is a great school in the booming city of Nashville where there is a lot of stuff to do.

You play for Coach Rick Byrd: what makes him such a great coach, and what is the most important thing that you have ever learned from him? He does a lot of great things and 1 of the best offensive minds in the nation. He has a great ability to adapt from game to game: it feels like we are running a new offense in every game we play. He gets players started in the system early and by the time we are juniors/seniors it is like 2nd nature to us. He raises us to be good men and sets a good example for us both on/off the court.

You played 32 games as a freshman: how were you able to come in and contribute right from the start? We had a really good team with guys like Evan Bradds/Craig Bradshaw so I just slid into my role as a freshman around all of that great firepower. They lacked a little athleticism on the wing and I just tried to fill the gap with defense/rebounding.

Last month you had 36 PTS/20 REB/14-17 FG in a win over Morehead State: where does that rank among the best all-around games of your career? I would say it is up there: those kind of stats are not easy to get and to do that against a quality team is a big accomplishment.

You finished the year by leading the conference with 55.6 FG%: what is the secret to being a great shooter? Repetition for sure: you have to get a lot of shots up and feel confident with your stroke. Shot selection is also a big part of it: we do not shoot a lot of mid-range shots because Coach Byrd is a big numbers guy and knows that mid-range shots are not the most efficient ones.

In the OVC tourney title game you scored 10 PTS in a loss to Murray State: how did the Racers pull away from you after you build a 5-PT lead early in the 2nd half, and how do you think that they will do against West Virginia on Friday? They are a really good team who got really hot at the end of the season. They have 2-3 really good players like Jonathan Stark/Terrell Miller/Temetrius Morant. The title game was a game of runs but we just did not make enough shots down the stretch. I think that they have a good shot against West Virginia: they are 2 high-caliber teams who have good athleticism inside.

You had road losses to 2 other NCAA tourney teams last November in Providence/TCU: which of those 2 teams impressed you the most? We lost to Providence on a 3-PT buzzer-beater but they are both really good teams. TCU has an all-around good team even with their starting PG hurt. I think that both of them could make a run this month.

Do you consider this season to be a success (due to winning 24 games), or a failure (due to not making the postseason and having to play Georgia yet again), or something else? It is tough to define an entire season but I cannot say it is a failure. It was frustrating to not make the NCAA tourney but we had a really good year so I would call it a success, although it obviously did not end the way that we wanted it to.

Earlier this week you were named 2nd-team Academic All-American: how do you balance your work on the court with your work in the classroom? All student-athletes know how hard it is to find the perfect balance to excel at both aspects at the same time. The key is time management: there are only so many hours in the day.

You have a 3.84 GPA while majoring in Accounting: how did you pick that subject, and what do you hope to do with your degree? I have always been a big math guy dating back to middle school. I later took some finance classes that I liked and met some people who made a good living out of it so that is why I took that route. I am planning to do an internship this summer with PricewaterhouseCoopers for a couple of months, get my CPA after I finish college, and then try to do something in public accounting to get started.

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NCAA Tournament: First Four Review/Preview – Wednesday, March 14th

For the Puppet’s editorial on the NCAA Selection Committee – CLICK HERE
For a preview of other postseason games – CLICK HERE
For Jon Teitel’s tips/advice on picking your 2018 bracket – CLICK HERE

For Jon Teitel’s interviews:
– Elon Academic All-American Tyler Seibring – CLICK HERE
– Tennessee assistant women’s coach Bridgette Gordon – CLICK HERE

– NC Central F Pablo Rivas – CLICK HERE
– Penn PG Darnell Foreman – CLICK HERE
– Georgia State F Jordan Session – CLICK HERE
– For previous interviews – CLICK HERE

Finally, for FREE chili (spaghetti extra) – CLICK HERE!

There were a couple of games that were played last night to kick off the NCAA Tournament festivities in Dayton. Carlik Jones (a native of nearby Cincinnati, Ohio) was one of two Radford starters that led the Highlanders to their first ever NCAA Tournament victory with 12 points and 11 rebounds. Ed Polite, Jr. also had 13 points and 12 rebounds for Radford. Their reward will be a trip to Pittsburgh to play Villanova in the first round on Thursday.

In the nightcap, the game between UCLA and St. Bonaventure saw the Bruins climb their way to a 5-point 2nd half lead, but a 9-0 run by the Bonnies gave them the lead for good and they ended up with their first NCAA Tournament victory since they went to the Final Four in 1970 during Bob Lanier’s tenure with the then-Brown Indians. St. Bonaventure will travel to Dallas to take on Florida in the first round on Thursday.

TONIGHT’S GAMES

-TEXAS SOUTHERN VS. NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL (6:40 PM, TruTV). While Mike Davis’s team failed to win a single nonconference game, it wasn’t for lack of talent, but rather a very tough schedule that included teams like Gonzaga, Ohio State, Syracuse, Kansas and Clemson all on the road. While they defeated Arkansas-Pine Bluff in the SWAC Championship game (avenging 2 earlier losses to Pine Bluff in the regular season), NC Central picked up tough wins (by MEAC standards) against Savannah State, Morgan State and Hampton to win the MEAC title. The Eagles have finished as high as a 14 seed a few years ago, but are a likely underdog to Texas Southern for tonight. The winner advances to Nashville to play top-seeded Xavier Friday night.

-ARIZONA STATE VS. SYRACUSE (9:10 PM, TruTV). The best has been saved for last in Dayton – both the Sun Devils and the Orange were the last two teams selected into the NCAA Tournament field. When ASU was beating teams like Xavier, Kansas and Kansas State in the noncon, they were getting monster play from their backcourt. They’ll literally have a tall order in front of them in the form of Syracuse’s 2-3 zone. The Orange were able to get notable wins like Clemson, at Miami, and at Louisville to get an at-large bid despite a sub-.500 ACC finish. The winner of this game goes up I-75 to Detroit to play TCU in the first round on Friday night.

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Puppet Ramblings: The Good, the Bad, the Right, and the Wrong About the Basketball Selection Committee

Let me begin by sharing this….

I was once on a party planning committee for a 4th of July picnic.  Our committee decided (stupidly) that cold turkey and cheese sandwiches would be better than grilling out burgers and hotdogs.  Cold cuts and cheese typically costs more, and is not nearly as suitable for the 4th of July as burgers and dogs would be.  Our reasons for doing it were rather stupid as well.  Some said that hotdogs weren’t healthy.  Others worried that a kid may choke on a hotdog.  Someone mentioned the grill being a potential safety hazard.  We made a stupid decision with a predictable outcome.  People showed up and wanted to know where the burgers and dogs were.

My point is this.  Committees of all sorts get things wrong all the time.  Most people reading this have probably been a part of some sort of committee that collectively made a stupid decision for a stupid reason.  Hell, chances are everyone reading this has been on a hiring committee, or a planning committee, or some sort of committee that made a decision they didn’t like, but had to go along with because it was a committee decision.

The Men’s Basketball Selection Committee really isn’t any different.  It’s made up of ten people who all have other jobs and who primarily do other things.  The committee changes every year.  There are two members who leave, and two members who join.  So, what the committee tends to favor one year may not be the same was what they favor in future years.  That’s the nature of ANY committee.  As much as I love the work that bracketologists do, there is a human element to this as well that oftentimes isn’t accounted for.  It’s a group of ten people that is always changing that are tasked with selecting the 36 best non-automatic qualifiers, and then ranking/seeding them.  The word “best” can mean twenty different things to ten different people.

Is it corrupt??  Haha.  Well I believe that it is part of the human condition that when we don’t get something that we want, we feel it is a huge miscarriage of justice!  It’s unfair!  And furthermore, it must be due to a conspiracy!  When under the radar teams like Middle Tennessee this year, and Illinois State last year, are left out people jump up and down and scream and yell about how the committee is biased toward the power programs, and how the networks are concerned about money, and how it’s a conspiracy of the highest order!  In years where we see a lot of mid-majors selected, it’s the same thing!  People jump up and down and scream and yell about how the committee is biased, and how the networks want the Cinderella stories, and how those teams play in easy conferences, and all that stuff.  Anyone that doesn’t get what they want is going to scream about how it was unfair, and furthermore they’re going to be convinced that there some sort of conspiracy working against them.

Does the committee get things wrong??  Yes.  Like my 4th of July committee, all kinds of committees get things wrong.  Are there things that put Under the Radar programs at a circumstantial disadvantage when it comes to scheduling that the committee oftentimes does not account for??  In my opinion, yes.  Is the committee corrupt and do they conspire against a certain group of teams??  No.  And when you stop and think about it, it’s kind of ridiculous to think that they would.

Committee members receive little to no money for being on the committee.  They all work in college athletics, but all have other jobs and primarily do other things.  They receive no personal gain whatsoever based on who gets into the tournament and who doesn’t.

The NCAA makes $1.1 billion a year off the tournament, and will continue to do so throughout 2032.  That is also a set amount that won’t change regardless of who is in the tournament.  That’s fifteen years into the future.  Pretty much anyone that had anything to do with putting this tournament together, be it a selection committee member or someone on the NCAA staff that works with championships, will be retired by then.  I just can’t believe that they would make any decisions or selections because they’re worried about what the new television deal is going to look like fifteen years from now.

The NCAA is also an organization that failed miserably the last time they tried to conspire.  The whole thing with Miami and Nevin Shapiro kind of blew up in their faces, and that was a rather simplistic conspiracy compared to what it would take to rig the basketball committee year after year after year.  When people are wrong, sometimes they are simply that.  Wrong.  They’re not wrong on purpose due to some sort of elaborate conspiracy.

So I guess this raises another question.  Should there even be a committee that puts the tournament together?  We now have a committee in college football.  But, we didn’t used to.  We had a BCS formula that people also didn’t like.  So it would seemingly change every year.  Kind of like the committee.  So, that didn’t work, and we have a committee now, and a lot of people feel that isn’t working either.

Should the RPI go away??  This debate always intrigues me.  As a power ranking the RPI is awful.  The thing is, it’s not used by the committee as a power ranking.  It’s used as a very general rating.  It isn’t quite as basic as simply looking at a team’s record, but it is only slightly more sophisticated.  And, it is treated as such.  No one argues that a team’s overall record shouldn’t be on the profile.  The RPI is just supposed to be a slightly better general indicator.  I also think it’s funny that while people whine about how bad the RPI is, others also use it as evidence as to why a team like Middle Tennessee should have been in this year.  So, again, we have people on two different sides of the fence and every time a decision is made, the people on the side of the fence that didn’t get their way will think the committee did it wrong.  Damned if you do.  Damned if you don’t.

I personally don’t think it’s the committee that needs fixing.  I think the fundamental problem is that outside of the P5/multi bid leagues, we have 22 conferences, which consists of close to 250 of the teams, that simply do not get enough opportunities to play against the teams they need to in order to impress the committee.  A team like Alabama can improve throughout the year, get hot in February, and rack up quality wins.  A team like Middle Tennessee or New Mexico State gets limited chances in November and December, and they better hope they’re good enough to take advantage of them then.  After that, if they’re fortunate enough to win a big game or two, the best they can hope for in January in February is to not blow it.  So you get P5/multi-bid teams that are making their case in January and February, and a smattering of UTR teams that won big games in the first half of the season simply trying to avoid bad losses in conference play.

Now, how do we fix that??  I really don’t know.  But, that’s what needs fixing more than anything.  That has nothing to do with the committee.  They can only evaluate what they see.  They’re not part of some conspiracy because they’re worried about what the next TV deal will look like in fifteen years.

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Basketball and brains: HoopsHD interviews Elon Academic All-American Tyler Seibring

Earlier this month Elon lost 86-79 to Delaware in their CAA tourney opener, but even though their season has come to a close the awards keep rolling in. On Monday JR PF Tyler Seibring was named an Academic All-American for the 2nd year in a row. On the court he averaged 15.4 PPG/6.8 RPG for the Phoenix: off the court he averaged a 3.95 GPA while double-majoring in English/Economics. Earlier this week HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with Tyler about facing Duke/Charleston earlier this season and making shots from behind the arc.

You grew up in Illinois before coming to the Phoenix to play for Coach Matt Matheny: what makes him such a good coach, and what is the most important thing that you have ever learned from him? His knowledge of the sport is really strong because he has been around the game for such a long time. He does a great job of passing down information to us: it just radiates from him.

In 2016 you were named to the CAA All-Rookie Team: how were you able to come in and contribute right from the start? There was a lot of trust placed in me to start that season. We put in a lot of hard work and I was given an opportunity to play right away: everyone on the team helped me a lot.

In February of 2017 you scored a career-high 30 PTS/8-11 3PM and had 12 REB in a 1-PT 2-OT loss to Northeastern: was it just 1 of those scenarios where every shot you put up seemed to go in because you were “in the zone”? It was a really intense game: obviously the result was not what we wanted but it was still a lot of fun. It felt like the basket kept getting bigger after each shot that I made.

In your season opener this year you scored 11 PTS in a loss at Duke: what makes the Blue Devils so great and how far do you think that they can go this month? The structure that they have put in place for their team is 2nd to none. They have earned their reputation and continue to further it each year. They have so much talent that anything is on the table: they could beat anybody.

In January you scored 17 PTS in a 5-PT win over Charleston: what is your scouting report on the Cougars as they prepare to face Auburn in the NCAA tourney on Friday? They can defend and have a lot of different guys who can score. PG Joe Chealey is a really talented player who can create/score, Jarrell Brantley can play both inside/outside, and SO SG Grant Riller is a good young scorer so they will be tough to beat.

You beat Delaware last month to improve to 14-11 this season before losing 7 in a row to finish 14-18: what the heck happened?! It was a tough stretch for us. A lot of guys lost their confidence after the 1st couple of losses in February and we just could not recover. We will try to get better and start next year off well, which is what we are training for right now.

Your 40.8 career 3P% is #2 in school history: what is the secret to making shots from behind the arc? If I knew the secret then I would probably be #1! For me it is about getting into the gym and shooting as much as possible to get the practice. The team puts me in great positions to knock down shots.

In 2017 you were named 3rd-team Academic All-American and earlier this week you were named 1st-team Academic All-American: how do you balance your work on the court with your work in the classroom? A lot of the skills you pick up in basketball are transferable to other parts of your life. Honestly, it helps me balance my affairs because I need to keep a rigid schedule. We have great academic advisers but you need a lot of discipline to succeed as a D-1 athlete.

You have a 3.95 GPA while double-majoring in English/Economics: how did you pick those 2 subjects, and what do you hope to do with your degree? My freshman year I had those 2 classes in my course load and enjoyed each of them because they are so different from each other. I go from 1 class where I am comparing GDPs of different countries to another class where I am comparing literature from different authors. I am not exactly sure what the future holds but these 2 subjects help me discover things that I find fascinating about our world.

Your brother Trevor/sister Katy played college basketball: who is the best athlete in the family? They both played at D-3 Illinois Wesleyan. We all play a little differently but if you are talking strictly about the best athlete then I would pick my younger sister Bri: she will run and jump us under the table!

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