Hoops HD Bracket Rundown: March 5th

NOTE: The seedlists were turned in at 7pm on Monday, March 5th.  None of the games played on Monday were factored in to the bracket

The staff members from Hoops HD each submitted a seedlist of their top 50 teams.  We then did a cross country ranking, came up with a master seedlist, and reveal them as we place them into the bracket line by line in a semi-Selection Sunday format.  From the #1 line all the way down to the bubble, we debate, discuss, and assess each team as it’s revealed.

 

Below is our final bracket, but you should watch the show before you look at it!

 

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

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Tourney Talk: HoopsHD interviews Murray State SR PF Terrell Miller Jr.

On Saturday Murray State beat Belmont 68-51 in the OVC title game to become the 1st team to earn an automatic bid to next week’s NCAA tournament. The Racers had a losing record in 2017 but bounced back this year to go 26-5 and claim the school’s 1st NCAA tourney bid since 2012. Earlier today HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to speak with SR PF Terrell Miller Jr. about almost beating Auburn in December and what it means to win a title.

In 2016 you were an NJCAA All-American at Southwest Mississippi Junior College: what made you choose the Racers? When I came here on my visit I saw the type of offense they had, the support they had from the fans, and I grew close to the coaching staff.

You play for Coach Matt McMahon: what is the most important thing that you have learned from him? He taught us that you really have to work hard to get anywhere in life. We come in every day prepared to work and never take a day off.

Last December you had a game-high 24 PTS/15 REB in a 4-PT loss to Auburn: where does that rank among the best performances of your career, and how close did you come to pulling off the upset? It was definitely 1 of the best games of my career: I had another good game last year against Ole Miss (27 PTS/10 REB/4-6 3PM in a 5-PT loss on the road). We learned from the Auburn loss and got better from it: we felt that we had the game in our hands before they pulled away in the final minutes.

After putting up 18 PTS/18 REB in a win over Jacksonville State on Friday, in the OVC title game on Saturday you scored 11 PTS in a win over Belmont to clinch an automatic bid: what did it mean to you to win a title, and what was the reaction like when you got back to campus? It meant a lot to me: that is what we have been preparing for all season. It was our main goal coming into this year and we really worked hard for that. When we got back to campus everyone showed us so much appreciation: the fans have loved us on/off the court so it feels great right now!

In the past couple of weeks Jonathan Stark (who led the conference in scoring for the 2nd straight season) was named conference POY/conference tourney MVP: what makes him such a great player? He works hard and it shows. He is 1 of our leaders and leads by example: he deserves every single award that he has received.

Since losing 2 out of 3 in mid-January your team has won 13 games in a row: what has been the key to your team’s success over the past 6 weeks? Great focus: we have been locked in on defense. Every practice we go out and compete hard against each other.

You have finished in the top-10 of the conference in RPG during each of the past 2 years: what is the key to being a good rebounder? You just have to be a dog and go get it. You need the heart to go get the ball when it comes off of the rim. As a big man that is what I bring to the table.

Your team’s 30.6 3P% allowed is top-10 in the nation: how has your defensive strategy been so effective at preventing long-range shots? We just move when we are on the side of the ball. In practice we follow the ball, which helps us run teams off of the 3-PT line.

I usually think that playing with a FR PG is a recipe for disaster, but how has Temetrius Morant (12.6 PPG/6.6 RPG/6.4 APG) been able to come in and run the show right from the start? He gets rebounds, makes good passes, and has a high basketball IQ, which is what separates him from a lot of freshman. He is long/athletic and can get to the basket.

What kind of seed do you think that you deserve, and what kind of seed do you think that you are going to get? I do not know exactly how the seeding works but I will just be ready to play against whoever we get to face. I think we should be around a #10 seed but might end up as a #11 or #12 seed.

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Bracketology 2018: March Madness Predictions (Version 10.1)

We are only 6 days away from Selection Sunday as we continue to make our NCAA tourney predictions. Last March HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked every single 1 of the 68 teams that made the tourney, 63 of which were within 1 spot of their actual seed, including 43 right on the money. He will spend the rest of this week predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on March 11th. 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 we stack up with other websites (ranked 4th out of 113 entries over the past 5 years), check out: www.bracketmatrix.com

SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Virginia (ACC)
1: Villanova (Big East)
1: Xavier (Big East)
1: Kansas (Big 12)

2: Duke (ACC)
2: Purdue (Big 10)
2: North Carolina (ACC)
2: Michigan State (Big 10)

3: Auburn (SEC)
3: Cincinnati (AAC)
3: Tennessee (SEC)
3: Wichita State (AAC)

4: Texas Tech (Big 12)
4: West Virginia (Big 12)
4: Michigan (Big 10): AUTO-BID
4: Clemson (ACC)

5: Arizona (Pac-12)
5: Gonzaga (WCC)
5: Kentucky (SEC)
5: Ohio State (Big 10)

6: Florida (SEC)
6: Houston (AAC)
6: TCU (Big 12)
6: Miami FL (ACC)

7: Texas A&M (SEC)
7: Arkansas (SEC)
7: Nevada (MWC)
7: Seton Hall (Big East)

8: Virginia Tech (ACC)
8: Rhode Island (A-10)
8: Creighton (Big East)
8: Oklahoma (Big 12)

9: Missouri (SEC)
9: Florida State (ACC)
9: NC State (ACC)
9: Butler (Big East)

10: St. Mary’s (WCC)
10: Arizona State (Pac-12)
10: Kansas State (Big 12)
10: USC (Pac-12)

11: St. Bonaventure (A-10)
11: Texas (Big 12)
11: Providence (Big East)
11: Alabama (SEC)
11: UCLA (Pac-12)
11: Baylor (Big 12)

12: Middle Tennessee (CUSA)
12: Loyola-Chicago (MVC): AUTO-BID
12: New Mexico State (WAC)
12: Louisiana-Lafayette (Sun Belt)

13: Murray State (OVC): AUTO-BID
13: South Dakota State (Summit)
13: Buffalo (MAC)
13: Vermont (America East)

14: Charleston (CAA)
14: UNC Greensboro (SoCon)
14: Montana (Big Sky)
14: Bucknell (Patriot)

15: UC Davis (Big West)
15: Wright State (Horizon)
15: Penn (Ivy)
15: Wagner (NEC)

16: Lipscomb (Atlantic Sun): AUTO-BID
16: Iona (MAAC)
16: Radford (Big South): AUTO-BID
16: Hampton (MEAC)
16: Nicholls State (Southland)
16: Arkansas Pine-Bluff (SWAC)

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Hoops HD Staff Bracket Projection – Monday, March 5th

For our latest installment of the Championship Week Video Notebook – CLICK HERE

Links from Jon Teitel as it relates to Championship Week:
CLICK HERE for Part 2 of All-Conference Awards
CLICK HERE for Part 2 of Conference Tournament Previews
CLICK HERE for his interview with Selection Committee member Tom Burnett (Southland Conference Commissioner)

-Today, it falls upon staff member John Stalica to put together the weekly NCAA Tournament bracket. This is not a projection of what the NCAA Selection Committee will do; that is Jon Teitel’s area of expertise among our group. This is merely a checkpoint of what Stalica feels the field will look like after games played through Sunday.

-Without further ado, here is the bracket for this week:

First Four Out: Alabama, USC, Arizona State, Utah

Next Four Out: Louisville, Penn State, Nebraska, Oregon

COMMENTS FROM JOHN

-Right now, I would say that there are 8 teams that could realistically win a #1 seed – Virginia, Villanova, Xavier, Kansas, Duke, North Carolina and either Auburn or Tennessee depending on which one of them wins the SEC Tournament. The latter two are more of a longshot, but not completely impossible if they end up beating a gauntlet of teams in the SEC Tournament.

-Last week, I briefly pulled Cincinnati out of the Top 4 lines after their 2-game slide. That changed in a hurry with their win at Wichita State that also cemented the overall American regular season championship. Likewise, I also have Michigan as a protected seed after earning wins against Nebraska, Michigan State and Purdue in the Big 10 Tournament this weekend.

-It has been a rough week for teams like Rhode Island and Nevada with their recent losses. I still think they’re safe as far as making the field, but their seeds are starting to decline.

-I finally gave in to the Puppet and gave him the Border War rivalry that he’s been seeking all these years. It’s up to Missouri and Kansas Sta, oh, never mind.

-The elephant in the room this week is the absence of teams like Arizona State and Alabama. In the case of the Sun Devils, they have done very little of note since the calendar turned to 2018. They were looking like a protected seed after wins away from home against Kansas State, Xavier and Kansas. I still think they can get into the field this year, but they have to beat Colorado in the first round of the Pac-12 Tournament and then have to beat Arizona in the quarters to really feel safe as far as inclusion.

-For Alabama, they’ve lost 5 straight games and are now 17-14 overall. While they do have wins against Auburn, Tennessee and Rhode Island in their back pocket, they also have a high quantity of losses that include 6 losses to teams that won’t make the NCAA Tournament field. They have the fifth overall strength of schedule in the country, but they are going to need to win their opener against Texas A&M and their quarterfinal against Auburn to really have a shot at making this field.

-And how about the Big 12? Right NOW, I have them getting 9 bids. That’s not to say that’s where they ultimately end up – a team like Oklahoma State is racking up quality wins that now includes a season sweep of Kansas. They still have a lot of work to do to make up for what are overall bad computer metrics – they must beat Oklahoma in their opener and could really use a 3rd win against Kansas in the Big 12 quarters.

COMMENTS FROM THE HOOPS HD STAFF

THE PUPPET’S COMMENTS:

-John is gone!!  He has lost his mind!!!  For starters, WHERE IS NEBRASKA!!!??  Their win against Michigan earlier this year is a spectacular win!  They need to be included!!  To say otherwise is to align with the Dark Web!!  #DarkWebConspiracy

-I’ve been railing against Cincinnati as a protected seed all year, but after their win at Wichita State and an outright first place finish in a conference that, quite frankly, ain’t that bad, I can see giving it to them, especially when you look at what all the teams in that area have done (or not done).

-I’m just not on board with Saint Bonaventure.  They beat Rhody at home and Syracuse on the road.  I suppose I could argue for them if I really had to.  Like if it were debate class and I was assigned to do it.  But, I just can’t get behind a team that ran up a bloated record against sub-NIT teams.  Everyone, including many misguided individuals here at Hoops HD, were talking about what a great win they had against Davidson.  Uhh, since when did beating fringe NIT teams at home in overtime become a great win?  It was a great GAME in the sense that it was exciting, but it was hardly a great win.

-He has Loyola Chicago, who won at Florida and also beat up on a bunch of sub-NIT teams, on the #12 line.  This is what I don’t understand.  If you do like the Bonnies, then don’t you kinda have to like Loyola a little bit more??

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Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 7, Sunday

WELCOME SELECTION COMMITTEE MEMBERS!!  We are just one week away from Selection Sunday, but you do not need to feel overwhelmed!!  We are here to help you!!  CLICK HERE to check out our SURVIVAL BOARD

Four more teams punched their tickets to the NCAA Tournament with Loyola Chicago making it for the first time since 1985, Lipscomb making it for the first time ever (in Division I, at least) after winning a wild one at Florida Gulf Coast, and Radford winning a thriller at the buzzer against Liberty.  And last, but certainly not least, Michigan won the Big Ten for the second year in a row with their win over Purdue.  We look at all of that, and review all of the other action in the Summit League, Metro Atlantic, Colonial, Horizon, and SoCon.  We do that, preview all of Monday’s action, update the Survival Board, and end with our nightly Championship Week Trivia Question.

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

CONFERENCE TOURNAMENT BRACKETS OF TONIGHT’S ACTION

MEAC

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

The end of the regular season means that it is time to recognize the best players in college basketball. 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. Players are listed in a traditional 5-position lineup (G-G-F-F-C) whenever possible with several exceptions, with special awards for Player of the Year, Rookie of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, 6th Man of the Year, and Coach of the Year. If you think he has overlooked anyone then feel free to tweet us your comments. Part 1 of his awards were announced last week (https://hoopshd.com/2018/02/28/handing-out-the-hardware-all-conference-awards-of-the-year-part-1-of-2-3) and now we hand out the remaining conference awards in Part 2.

AAC
G: Shake Milton (SMU)
G: Jeremiah Martin (Memphis)
F: Gary Clark (Cincinnati)
F: Junior Etou (Tulsa)
C: Shaquille Morris (Wichita State)
POY: Jeremiah Martin (Memphis)
ROY: Shawn Williams (East Carolina)
DPOY: Gary Clark (Cincinnati)
6TH: Darral Willis Jr. (Wichita State)
COY: Kelvin Sampson (Houston)

A-10
G: Jaylen Adams (St. Bonaventure)
G: Luwane Pipkins (Massachusetts)
G: BJ Johnson (La Salle)
F: Peyton Aldridge (Davidson)
F: Justin Tillman (VCU)
POY: Jaylen Adams (St. Bonaventure)
ROY: Eric Williams Jr. (Duquesne)
DPOY: Joseph Chartouny (Fordham)
6TH: Courtney Stockard (St. Bonaventure)
COY: Mark Schmidt (St. Bonaventure)

ACC
G: Jerome Robinson (Boston College)
G: Ky Bowman (Boston College)
F: Marvin Bagley III (Duke)
F: Luke Maye (North Carolina)
C: Omer Yurtseven (NC State)
POY: Marvin Bagley III (Duke)
ROY: Marvin Bagley III (Duke)
DPOY: Ben Lammers (Georgia Tech)
6TH: Tadric Jackson (Georgia Tech)
COY: Brad Brownell (Clemson)

Big 12
G: Trae Young (Oklahoma)
G: Jevon Carter (West Virginia)
F: Mohamed Bamba (Texas)
F: Kenrich Williams (TCU)
C: Udoka Azubuike (Kansas)
POY: Trae Young (Oklahoma)
ROY: Trae Young (Oklahoma)
DPOY: Mohamed Bamba (Texas)
6TH: Terry Maston (Baylor)
COY: Chris Beard (Texas Tech)

Big East
G: Shamorie Ponds (St. John’s)
G: Jalen Brunson (Villanova)
F: Mikal Bridges (Villanova)
F: Kelan Martin (Butler)
C: Jessie Govan (Georgetown)
POY: Shamorie Ponds (St. John’s)
ROY: Omari Spellman (Villanova)
DPOY: Tariq Owens (St. John’s)
6TH: Donte DiVincenzo (Villanova)
COY: Chris Mack (Xavier)

Big Sky
G: Ahmaad Rorie (Montana)
G: Geno Crandall (North Dakota)
G: Andre Spight (Northern Colorado)
F: Bogdan Bliznyuk (Eastern Washington)
C: Zach Braxton (Weber State)
POY: Bogdan Bliznyuk (Eastern Washington)
ROY: Holland Woods (Portland State)
DPOY: Brekkott Chapman (Weber State)
6TH: Brandon Boyd (Idaho State)
COY: Travis DeCuire (Montana)

Big West
G: Kyle Allman (Cal-State Fullerton)
G: TJ Shorts II (UC Davis)
F: Leland King II (UCSB)
F: Gabe Levin (Long Beach State)
F: Tavrion Dawson (Cal-State Northridge)
POY: Leland King II (UCSB)
ROY: Terrell Gomez (Cal-State Northridge)
DPOY: Jalen Canty (UCSB)
6TH: Jack Purchase (Hawaii)
COY: Joe Pasternack (UCSB)

C-USA
G: CJ Burks (Marshall)
G: Jon Elmore (Marshall)
F: Ajdin Penava (Marshall)
F: Nick King (Middle Tennessee)
C: Ronald Delph (Florida Atlantic)
POY: Jon Elmore (Marshall)
ROY: Jhivvan Jackson (UTSA)
DPOY: Ajdin Penava (Marshall)
6TH: Jhivvan Jackson (UTSA)
COY: Rick Stansbury (Western Kentucky)

Ivy
G: Matt Morgan (Cornell)
G: Mike Smith (Columbia)
G: Brandon Anderson (Brown)
F: Seth Towns (Harvard)
F: Stone Gettings (Cornell)
POY: Matt Morgan (Cornell)
ROY: Desmond Cambridge (Brown)
DPOY: Steven Julian (Cornell)
6TH: Chris Knight (Dartmouth)
COY: Steve Donahue (Penn)

MAC
G: Thomas Wilder (Western Michigan)
G: CJ Massinburg (Buffalo)
F: Tre’Shaun Fletcher (Toledo)
F: Elijah Minnie (Eastern Michigan)
C: James Thompson IV (Eastern Michigan)
POY: Thomas Wilder (Western Michigan)
ROY: Teyvion Kirk (Ohio)
DPOY: Elijah Minnie (Eastern Michigan)
6TH: Nick Perkins (Buffalo)
COY: Nate Oats (Buffalo)

MEAC
G: Jermaine Marrow (Hampton)
G: RJ Cole (Howard)
F: Femi Olujobi (North Carolina A&T)
F: Desmond Williams (Florida A&M)
F: Shawntrez Davis (Bethune-Cookman)
POY: RJ Cole (Howard)
ROY: RJ Cole (Howard)
DPOY: Brandon Tabb (Bethune-Cookman)
6TH: Pablo Rivas (NC Central)
COY: Jay Joyner (North Carolina A&T)

MWC
G: Justin James (Wyoming)
G: Chandler Hutchison (Boise State)
F: Hayden Dalton (Wyoming)
F: Brandon McCoy (UNLV)
F: Caleb Martin (Nevada)
POY: Chandler Hutchison (Boise State)
ROY: Brandon McCoy (UNLV)
DPOY: Cody Martin (Nevada)
6TH: Anthony Mathis (New Mexico)
COY: Eric Musselman (Nevada)

Pac-12
G: Aaron Holiday (UCLA)
G: Allonzo Trier (Arizona)
F: DeAndre Ayton (Arizona)
F: Tres Tinkle (Oregon State)
C: Thomas Welsh (UCLA)
POY: DeAndre Ayton (Arizona)
ROY: DeAndre Ayton (Arizona)
DPOY: Matisse Thybulle (Washington)
6TH: Remy Martin (Arizona State)
COY: Mike Hopkins (Washington)

SEC
G: Daryl Macon (Arkansas)
G: Collin Sexton (Alabama)
F: Jeff Roberson (Vanderbilt)
F: Yante Maten (Georgia)
C: Tyler Davis (Texas A&M)
POY: Yante Maten (Georgia)
ROY: Collin Sexton (Alabama)
DPOY: Robert Williams (Texas A&M)
6TH: Jontay Porter (Missouri)
COY: Cuonzo Martin (Missouri)

Southland
G: Jordan Howard (Central Arkansas)
G: Roddy Peters (Nicholls State)
F: Travin Thibodeaux (New Orleans)
F: Colton Weisbrod (Lamar)
C: Ishmael Lane (Northwestern State)
POY: Jordan Howard (Central Arkansas)
ROY: David Caraher (Houston Baptist)
DPOY: Hayden Koval (Central Arkansas)
6TH: Roddy Peters (Nicholls State)
COY: Richie Riley (Nicholls State)

SWAC
G: Demontrae Jefferson (Texas Southern)
G: Martaveous McKnight (Arkansas-Pine Bluff)
G: Gary Blackston (Prairie View A&M)
F: Donte Clark Texas (Southern)
F: Jared Sam (Southern)
POY: Demontrae Jefferson (Texas Southern)
ROY: Jacoby Ross (Alabama State)
DPOY: Paris Collins (Jackson State)
6TH: Jacoby Ross (Alabama State)
COY: George Ivory (Arkansas-Pine Bluff)

Sun Belt
G: D’Marcus Simonds (Georgia State)
G: Tookie Brown (Georgia Southern)
F: Jordan Varnado (Troy)
F: Kevin Hervey (Texas-Arlington)
C: Johnny Hamilton (Texas-Arlington)
POY: D’Marcus Simonds (Georgia State)
ROY: Justin Forrest (Appalachian State)
DPOY: Jakeenan Gant (LA-Lafayette)
6TH: Demario Beck (Coastal Carolina)
COY: Bob Marlin (LA-Lafayette)

WAC
G: Nick Dixon (UT Rio Grande Valley)
G: Jordan Hill (Seattle)
G: Zach Lofton (New Mexico State)
F: Jemerrio Jones (New Mexico State)
C: Akolda Manyang (Utah Valley)
POY: Nick Dixon (UT Rio Grande Valley)
ROY: Alessandro Lever (Grand Canyon)
DPOY: Akolda Manyang (Utah Valley)
6TH: Damiyne Durham (Bakersfield)
COY: Mark Pope (Utah Valley)

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