Conference tourney previews (Part 1 of 2)

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 14 conference tourneys getting underway this week, and you can check back next week for his picks concerning the 18 other conference tourneys.

America East tourney predicted champ: Vermont (#1 seed)
Dates: March 3-10
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Vermont (#1 seed)
Fun fact: only 3 teams to play in title game during past 6 years are Albany/Stony Brook/Vermont
Seeding: each of past 3 champs were #1 seed
Stony Brook finished the regular season with a losing record so that leaves us with a choice between Albany/Vermont. The Catamounts swept the Great Danes during the regular season, have the #1 seed wrapped up again, and almost went undefeated in conference play, which makes them the pick. They are 1 of the hottest teams in the nation, having lost only 2 games since early-December by a combined 3 PTS. If that were not enough, there are rumors that leading scorer Anthony Lamb (who has been out since December with a fractured left foot) might return for the postseason. Since the higher-seeded school gets to host each tourney game they play in, Vermont cannot wait to welcome teams to Patrick Gymnasium, where they have lost exactly 2 home games during the past 2 years by a combined 3 PTS. Coach John Becker has made a postseason tourney during each of his 6 years as the head man in Burlington and he is well-positioned to make it 7-for-7.

Atlantic Sun tourney predicted champ: Florida Gulf Coast (#1 seed)
Dates: February 26-March 4
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Florida Gulf Coast (#1 seed)
Fun fact: Florida Gulf Coast has appeared in the title game 5 times in the 6 years since it 1st became eligible to play in this tourney
Seeding: 6 of past 7 champs were top-2 seed
You can pretty much bank on FGCU making the title game. Lipscomb is the favorite to be their opponent as the #2 seed and the only other team in the conference with more than 14 overall wins. The Eagles lost 4 in a row in late-December, then reeled off 13 wins in a row before dropping 2 of their final 3 games (by a combined 7 PTS at home) to finish the regular season 21-10. 1 of those losses was to the Bisons (who scored 90 PTS) so this is far from a slam dunk, but I suspect that the late-season losses will cause Dunk City to refocus at just the right time. Coach Joe Dooley has a starting lineup consisting entirely of juniors/seniors and a pair of forwards who stand 6’9”/6’10”. They have won 2 straight conference tourneys and there is little reason to think they cannot make it 3 in a row.

Big South tourney predicted champ: Liberty (#5 seed)
Dates: February 27-March 4
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Winthrop (#1 seed)
Fun fact: only 5 champs in past 20 years are Coastal Carolina/Liberty/Radford/UNC Asheville/Winthrop
Seeding: 3 of past 5 champs were not top-2 seed
Since Coastal Carolina is no longer in this league and UNC Asheville is the #1 seed we will have to pick a winner from the trio of Liberty/Radford/Winthrop. The Eagles were looking solid until dropping their final 2 regular season games. As far as the other 2, the Highlanders swept the season series with the Flames so you would think they are the smart choice, but Liberty might not have to face them since they are on opposite sides of the bracket. Coach Ritchie McKay has a very young team with 3 sophomores in the starting lineup so they might be 1 year away from seriously contending, but they swept the Eagles this year and split with the Bulldogs so why not them?

Big 10 tourney predicted champ: Ohio State (#2 seed)
Dates: February 28-March 4
Location: New York, NY
Last year’s tourney champ: Michigan (#8 seed)
Fun fact: only 5 teams to play in title game during past 6 years are Michigan/Michigan State/Ohio State/Purdue/Wisconsin
Seeding: 4 of past 5 champs were not #1 seed
It is hard to pick against the Spartans after they finished the regular season on a 12-game winning streak but history has not been kind to the #1 seed in this tourney. Ohio State still cannot figure out how to beat Penn State (the only team who swept the Buckeyes this season), but as long as they can avoid the Nittany Lions they will have a ton of confidence knowing that they already have wins over each of the other top-5 seeds (Michigan/Michigan State/Nebraska/Purdue). You should never bet against Tom Izzo in March but it is Coach Chris Holtmann who can rely on senior leadership in the form of Jae’Sean Tate/Kam Williams. It also helps to have the best all-around player in the conference in Keita Bates-Diop.

CAA tourney predicted champ: Charleston (#1 seed)
Dates: March 3-6
Location: North Charleston, SC
Last year’s tourney champ: UNC Wilmington (#1 seed)
Fun fact: UNC Wilmington is 2-time defending champ after not making the title game for the previous 9 years
Seeding: each of past 17 champs were top-3 seed
The Seahawks may be the 2-time defending champs but at 10-20 overall they will not be winning anything this March. 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 after Northwestern dropped out of the club last spring. The top-3 seeds are Charleston/Hofstra/Northeastern but the Cougars should be heavy favorites for 2 big reasons: they will have plenty of fan support since this tourney is at the North Charleston Coliseum (only 9 miles away from their home gym: the TD Arena), and they swept both the Huskies/Pride during an amazing 24-day stretch earlier this year. JR PG Jarrell Brantley missed the 1st 10 games of the season due to a knee injury but has bounced back to become 1 of the best players in the conference. Coach Earl Grant lost last year’s title game by single digits and his year-long wait to get back there is almost over.

Horizon tourney predicted champ: Wright State (#2 seed)
Dates: March 2-6
Location: Detroit, MI
Last year’s tourney champ: Northern Kentucky (#4 seed)
Fun fact: 6 different champs in past 7 years
Seeding: 5 of past 7 champs were not #1 seed
I do 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 smashed in ruins next to the blackboard in the locker room of the regular season champ. Valparaiso switched to the MVC last summer so you should not choose them to win the Horizon this March. The defending champs are back as the #1 seed and there are few mascots better than the Norse…but since they got swept by Wright State I will choose the Raiders to win it all. I never thought that Coach Scott Nagy would leave the Summit League after leading South Dakota State to 5 straight postseason appearances from 2012-2016, but he has been a great fit in Dayton with back-to-back seasons of 20+ wins. The fact that SR PG Justin Mitchell left the team in January for personal reasons is about as red of a flag as you can get, but the Raiders have somehow gone 10-4 without him. They have also given PG Cole Gentry some valuable experience even though he did not become eligible until mid-December after transferring from Coach Nagy’s old team in Brookings.

MAAC tourney predicted champ: Canisius (#2 seed)
Dates: March 1-5
Location: Albany, NY
Last year’s tourney champ: Iona (#3 seed)
Fun fact: Iona/Manhattan are only 2 champs over past 5 years
Seeding: each of past 7 champs were 2-4 seed
This is yet another situation where I do not love the #1 seed. The Gaels/Jaspers have owned this tourney for a while but they are both experiencing down years so the time is ripe for a new champ. Canisius/Rider have been the cream of the crop for the past 2 months and split their season series with the home team winning by 1 PT both times, so here is hoping for the riveting scenario where 2 teams meet 3 times during the season and have each game decided by a single PT! The Broncs only start 1 junior and 1 senior so it looks like they might be 1 year away from being a serious contender, plus they are 1 of the worst FT shooting teams in the entire nation (60.7 FT%). The Golden Griffins have won 17 of their past 20 games and have 6 different players who average more than 1 3PM/game, so good luck to Coach Reggie Witherspoon as he attempts to make his 1st NCAA tourney after 16 years as a D-1 coach.

MVC tourney predicted champ: Loyola Chicago (#1 seed)
Dates: March 1-4
Location: St. Louis, MO
Last year’s tourney champ: Wichita State (#2 seed)
Fun fact: only 2 champs from past 9 years who are still in this conference are Indiana State/Northern Iowa (Creighton/Wichita State both left after winning a pair of titles)
Seeding: each of past 16 champs were top-4 seed
Wichita State is now part of the AAC so the only “Shocker” will be if the Sycamores/Panthers win this tourney yet again because they are both giving newcomer Valpo company in the conference’s bottom tier. Loyola Chicago stumbled into conference play by losing 2 of their 1st 3 games, but their only other loss since early January was by 2 PTS on the road at Bradley. The Ramblers are 6-0 against the other top-4 seeds (Drake/Illinois State/Southern Illinois) so I expect Coach Porter Moser’s team to make a smooth transition from Arch Madness to March Madness. They have experience (2 seniors/2 juniors in the starting 5) and they make threes (7 different players shooting 35+ 3P%), so perhaps their road win at Florida in December was not as much of a fluke as originally thought.

NEC predicted champ: Wagner (#1 seed)
Dates: February 28-March 6
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Mount St. Mary’s (#1 seed)
Fun fact: only 4 champs in past 10 years are Fairleigh Dickinson/Long Island/Mount St. Mary’s/Robert Morris
Seeding: each of past 18 champs were top-4 seed
Wagner has made exactly 1 NCAA tourney in school history (2003) but Coach Bashir Mason has his team poised to celebrate the 15th anniversary of that feat in style. The Seahawks have been perfectly average outside of Staten Island (8-8), but when you are the top seed you get to stay at home…and they are 14-0 at the Spiro Sports Center…so abandon hope all ye who enter here. They are 6-2 against the other top-5 seeds in the conference (Mount St. Mary’s/Robert Morris/St. Francis NY/St. Francis PA), and with 1 senior/3 juniors in the starting lineup they should have enough leadership to emerge victorious.

OVC predicted champ: Jacksonville State (#4 seed)
Dates: February 28-March 3
Location: Evansville, IN
Last year’s tourney champ: Jacksonville State (#4 seed)
Fun fact: 6 different champs in past 7 years
Seeding: none of past 4 champs were top-2 seed
Belmont (4 titles)/Murray State (5 titles) have owned the regular season for the past 9 years but have been underwhelming in the postseason (only 4 of the past 8 tourney titles) so I would not be surprised if neither wins the tourney again. Defending champ Jacksonville State was 3-1 this year against the top-2 seeds (Bruins/Racers) so even though they had only 1 winning streak all season of at least 3 games they should have sufficient confidence to repeat this feat in March. The defending tourney champs have more size than almost any other mid-major with 7-footer Norbertas Giga manning the middle and a starting lineup full of juniors/seniors. Coach Ray Harper’s track record in postseason play is simply stunning: 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 he is now only a few wins away from making his 4th NCAA tourney in the past 7 years.

Patriot predicted champ: Bucknell (#1 seed)
Dates: February 27-March 7
Location: Campus sites
Last year’s tourney champ: Bucknell (#1 seed)
Fun fact: 5 different champs in past 6 years
Seeding: 4 of past 6 champs were not #1 seed
Bucknell is building a nice little dynasty in Lewisburg: they have a decent chance to win 25+ games for the 5th time in the past 8 years. The Bison have only lost 2 games since mid-December: a 5-PT home loss to BU to begin the calendar year (their only home loss of the season) and a 3-PT OT road loss at Lehigh in early-February. Coach Nathan Davis is 4-0 against the other top-3 seeds (Colgate/Navy) and has a trio of seniors (Stephen Brown/Nana Foulland/Zach Thomas) who are each among the best players in the entire conference.

Southern predicted champ: UNC Greensboro (#1 seed)
Dates: March 1-5
Location: Asheville, NC
Last year’s tourney champ: East Tennessee State (#3 seed)
Fun fact: only 3 champs over past 16 years who are still in this conference are Chattanooga/East Tennessee State/Wofford
Seeding: each of past 28 champs were top-3 seed
Defending champ East Tennessee State was looking like a no-brainer pick in early-February after putting together a 20-1 streak with the only mark against them being a 2-PT road loss to a little team called Xavier. However, dropping 3 straight home games to finish the regular season was enough to push me off of their bandwagon so I will take over the driver seat for UNC Greensboro instead. The Spartans have not made the NCAA tourney since 2001 but are 3-1 against the other top-3 seeds (East Tennessee State/Furman) and should have a solid cheering section because the drive from Greensboro to Asheville is under 3 hours. Coach Wes Miller certainly knows what it takes to win a title (he won it all in 2005 as a player for Roy Williams at North Carolina) and JR G Francis Alonso had the most clutch performance of anyone in the country this season during a 1-PT 3-OT road win at Liberty in early-December.

Summit predicted champ: South Dakota (#2 seed)
Dates: March 3-6
Location: Sioux Falls, SD
Last year’s tourney champ: South Dakota State (#4 seed)
Fun fact: only 2 champs over past 6 years are North Dakota State/South Dakota State
Seeding: 11 of past 12 champs were top-2 seed
How do you pick against the defending champ/#1 seed who has lost only 1 game in regulation since early-December and features the best player in the conference (Mike Daum)? Not easily…but for some reason this tourney adores #2 seeds, and the regulation loss mentioned above was by 19 PTS to the Coyotes in late-January. Coach Craig Smith’s 2015 debut season in Vermillion made him the school’s 3rd different coach in a 3-year span, but his continuity has righted the ship as evident by a 2nd straight season of 22+ wins. They might be a year away since they do not start a single senior…but when your coach served as an assistant to Tim Miles at a whopping 4 different schools (Mayville State/North Dakota State/Colorado State/Nebraska), anything is possible!

WCC predicted champ: Gonzaga (#1 seed)
Dates: March 1-6
Location: Las Vegas, NV
Last year’s tourney champ: Gonzaga (#1 seed)
Fun fact: Gonzaga has won 15 titles in past 20 years and finished 2nd each of the other 5 times
Seeding: each of past 9 champs were top-2 seed
Coach Mark Few used to be the best coach to never make the Final 4, but after falling 6 PTS short of beating North Carolina in the title game last April he is making a strong case as the best coach to never win a NCAA title…yet. His dominance of this conference since taking over in Spokane is almost incomprehensible: 18 straight NCAA tourney appearances, 17 regular season titles, 14 conference tourney titles (including 5 straight title game victories by double-digits), and 11-time conference COY. There was a glimmer of hope after St. Mary’s beat them in the Kennel in mid-January…which was subsequently extinguished in a revenge road win over the Gaels in early-February. Therefore, unless Jock Landale turns into Wilt Chamberlain, you can start engraving this trophy in advance.

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Championship Week Video Notebook: Day 0

We preview the upcoming ASun Quarterfinal Games

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News, Notes, and Highlighted Games: Sunday, Feb 25th

NEWS AND NOTES

LOTS OF LINKS!!

For Jon Teitel’s latest Bracket Projections – CLICK HERE

For Jon Teitel’s interview with UNC Asheville Athletic Director and current Selection Committee member Janet Cone – CLICK HERE

-After playing what was perhaps the singular most impressive game of the season with their decisive win at Xavier and appearing to be in the driver’s seat for a first place finish and a #1 seed, Villanova fell at Creighton.  For the Bluejays it was a much needed win that pulled them out of a bit of a slump.  For Villanova it shouldn’t hurt them that much, especially when you consider that winning the conference tournament will still land them as one of the top 2 teams on the #1 line, but it did expose them a bit.

-Kansas got another hugely impressive road win at Texas Tech yesterday.  It was the third straight loss for Texas Tech and has been battling injuries, but will still be a dangerous team if they can get healthy before March.

-Florida got a much needed win at home against Auburn.  They weren’t in any danger of missing the dance, but this does polish up their resume.

-Arizona has had an interesting week.  We’ll detail some of that in a later post and/or podcast, but for now they lost on the road at Oregon.  They actually played really well for the first thirty minutes or so, but fell apart down the stretch.

-Marquette is on the bubble.  Marquette did not need to lose to a non-tournament team.  Marquette lost at DePaul.  Marquette did not need that.

-TCU got a real nice win and has won three straight.  They have a very solid resume and are now a virtual lock.

-Louisville desperately needed a good win, and they got one yesterday.  They’re still outside our bubble, but are infinitely closer after a road win at Virginia Tech.

HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-TULSA AT CINCINNATI (American).  Cincinnati is in good shape, but it looks like they need one more big win to secure a protected seed.  If they hold serve and pick up a win against either Wichita State next week or against Houston in the conference tournament then they should get it.

-EAST CAROLINA AT HOUSTON (American).  Houston is coming off a somewhat surprising loss against Houston, and should be able to bounce back today.  If they can’t, then they’re in real trouble.

-MICHIGAN STATE AT WISCONSIN (Big Ten).  Michigan will likely get a #1 seed if they win out through the Big Ten Tournament.

-MINNESOTA AT PURDUE (Big Ten).  Purdue is a virtual lock for a protected seed and should skate into it if they’re able to hold serve.

-COLORADO STATE AT NEVADA (Mountain West).  Nevada has been playing really well and should cruise into the top half of the NCAA Tournament bracket if they’re able to hold serve.

-UCLA AT COLORADO (Pac Twelve).  UCLA is right on the bubble and every game has a pivotal feel.  This is a road game, but it’s against a Colorado team that is nowhere near making the field, so a loss would really hurt UCLA.

-PENN STATE AT NEBRASKA (Big Ten).  Both teams are outside the bubble, but a win today and a strong showing in the Big Ten Tournament could be enough to get one of these teams in.

-FLORIDA STATE AT NC STATE (ACC).  Both teams are in our field, but both have room for improvement.  This is a resume building game and will look good for whichever team pulls it off.

-NORTHERN KENTUCKY AT IUPUI (Horizon League).  Northern Kentucky will clinch first place with a win today.

-FURMAN AT EAST TENNESSEE STATE (SoCon).  East Tennessee State is tied with UNC Greensboro in the standings and can get at least a share of it with a win today.

-SAMFORD AT UNC GREENSBORO (SoCon).  See above..

-IONA AT RIDER (Metro Atlantic).  Rider is tied with Canisius in the conference standings, but won both meetings during the season and owns the tiebreaker.

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Sowing the seeds we love: HoopsHD interviews Selection Committee member/UNC Asheville Director of Athletics Janet Cone

Repost of February 20, 2018 interview by Jon Teitel:

For those of you who simply could not wait 3 more weeks until Selection Sunday to find out what the Selection Committee was thinking, the top-16 teams were revealed in a sneak preview on February 11th. This was not a crystal ball previewing exactly which schools will be protected seeds on March 11th…although 3 of the #1 seeds from last year’s preview DID become #1 seeds last Selection Sunday (Gonzaga/Kansas/Villanova). Rather, it served as a peek behind the curtain at what the committee was thinking and what criteria they were using in their analysis of everyone’s body of work. HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel got to chat with Selection Committee member Janet Cone about how schools put together a schedule and how her Bulldogs are doing this season.

How many hours/week have you been working on selection stuff this month, and what changes would you recommend to keep your fellow committee members from losing their sanity on Selection Sunday? On Sunday after watching my men’s team play and taking care of a few things I spent 3 hours watching games/looking up information/reviewing my notes. We have a framework of how to follow schools but each of us develops the best way to do it efficiently/effectively. I probably spend a minimum of a couple of hours each day working on it, including an hour each morning as I am working out at 4:30AM. I realized a couple of things after first joining the committee. You have a couple of new people each year but 7-8 of us have experience and can share our best practices so that each of us can do the very best job possible. The NCAA staff is so well-organized with their team sheets and can help us look up anything else we need. We also use Synergy so we can go back and watch any important games that we missed.

Which primary conferences are you assigned to this year, and how much weight do you give to input from representatives of these conferences? We have 3-4 conference calls throughout the season. I have 4 conferences as the primary contact and 4 as the secondary contact. We try to get updates on injuries, previews of key games to watch, etc. I keep a notebook and am really fortunate that the conference representatives have provided me with very good information. I am not advocating for any conference: just providing information to the rest of the committee. I have had the SEC in the past, the CAA, the SoCon, the MVC, etc. However, I can never have the Big South because my school (UNC Asheville) is part of that.

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?What I do is look at as much information as I can to see a school’s whole resume: who you played, where you played, etc. I use the team sheet/nitty gritty sheet, look at injuries, and watch a lot of games.

This season the committee has implemented a new 4-tier system that emphasizes the location of wins/losses: has it made your life easier/harder, and do you think that this new system renders the “eye test” a thing of the past? The new quadrants help us pay more attention to neutral/road games. I also like some of the other metrics that they have added to the top of the team sheets. I am doing my homework by getting the whole breadth of what a team has done throughout the season.

What role do injuries (such as Rawle Alkins of Arizona)/suspensions (such as Terrence Phillips of Missouri) have on a team’s seed (if any)? If I know that a school is missing 3 starters and still wins a game on the road, it makes me think “wow”, while if they lose that game then I will circle that 1 as a discussion point. When we get to New York it is such a paper-thin difference to see which schools are better than other schools. This year you will watch a game on a Tuesday and think that the result is an upset…but then the next night it might not seem as big of an upset depending on what else happens.

If a team wants to make the 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? I am an athletic director so I realize that after playing your conference schedule you only have a certain # of games left to play. Some schools need to schedule guarantee games but it is also important to challenge yourself on the road. We also look for good competition in our neutral/home games. As a former women’s coach I always said that scheduling is an art AND a science.  The conference you are in will also determine your non-conference schedule: if you are in a mid-major conference with a couple of teams who are struggling then you might need to schedule some power-conference teams in non-conference play.

For those who want to compare your committee to the College Football Playoff committee, what significance (if any) is there to the fact that 1 is governed by the NCAA and 1 is not? I think the biggest difference is that in football you only play 1 game/week. What makes our committee different is that there are games going on every single night so the rankings are constantly changing, which makes it more challenging for us.

Your UNC Asheville Bulldogs are 19-10 and tied with Winthrop atop the Big South standings: how proud are you of all that they have accomplished? We play Winthrop this Thursday night on ESPNU. I am very proud of what our student-athletes/coaches have done: our 4 seniors (Raekwon Miller/Ahmad Thomas/Kevin Vannatta/Alec Wnuk) just became the winningest senior class in the history of our school!  As a fan I cannot wait until Thursday but regardless of whether we win or lose we just have to come back ready for our next game on Saturday.

Earlier this year NCAA tournament media coordinator David Worlock stated that for the 1st time you and the other committee members will see many other rankings on the official team sheets in addition to the traditional RPI (such as BPI/KPI/KenPom): have you made great use of these advanced metrics in the past, and do you have a favorite 1? I do not have a favorite because I use a lot of different ones for comparison purposes. I try to soak up as much information as I can but the bottom line is that I only get 1 vote so I am just trying to have the very best information and get the very best teams into March Madness. I will watch as many games as I can without getting overwhelmed.

For the 2nd straight year the selection committee unveiled its top-16 seeds in February: what was the reaction like to this year’s unveiling, and what was the most important conclusion from this year’s snapshot? It was a little different this year because we met on a Thursday and did not release the seeds until Sunday so we needed to have a few phone calls in between. When they decided to do it last year I was unsure if it would be a good idea but the public seems to have enjoyed the unveiling. It is just a snapshot of 1 particular day so it changes all the time.

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Bracketology 2018: March Madness Predictions (Version 9)

We are only 2 weeks 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 next 2 weeks 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: Xavier (Big East)
1: Kansas (Big 12)
1: Villanova (Big East)

2: Duke (ACC)
2: Purdue (Big 10)
2: Michigan State (Big 10)
2: Auburn (SEC)

3: North Carolina (ACC)
3: Cincinnati (AAC)
3: Tennessee (SEC)
3: Texas Tech (Big 12)

4: Wichita State (AAC)
4: Clemson (ACC)
4: West Virginia (Big 12)
4: Arizona (Pac-12)

5: Ohio State (Big 10)
5: Gonzaga (WCC)
5: Kentucky (SEC)
5: Rhode Island (A-10)

6: Michigan (Big 10)
6: Nevada (MWC)
6: TCU (Big 12)
6: Houston (AAC)

7: Arizona State (Pac-12)
7: Florida State (ACC)
7: Texas A&M (SEC)
7: Seton Hall (Big East)

8: Butler (Big East)
8: Oklahoma (Big 12)
8: Alabama (SEC)
8: Missouri (SEC)

9: Florida (SEC)
9: Arkansas (SEC)
9: Creighton (Big East)
9: Miami FL (ACC)

10: Virginia Tech (ACC)
10: St. Mary’s (WCC)
10: NC State (ACC)
10: Kansas State (Big 12)

11: Providence (Big East)
11: St. Bonaventure (A-10)
11: USC (Pac-12)
11: Texas (Big 12)
11: Baylor (Big 12)
11: Syracuse (ACC)

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

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

14: East Tennessee State (SoCon)
14: Charleston (CAA)
14: Rider (MAAC)
14: Montana (Big Sky)

15: Bucknell (Patriot)
15: Northern Kentucky (Horizon)
15: UC Santa Barbara (Big West)
15: Penn (Ivy)

16: Wagner (NEC)
16: UNC Asheville Big South)
16: Florida Gulf Coast (Atlantic Sun)
16: Nicholls State (Southland)
16: Southern (SWAC)
16: Savannah State (MEAC)

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Under the Radar Game of the Day: Iona at Rider

Iona at Rider, 2:00 PM Eastern, gobroncs.com

The Rider Broncs have a chance to take the Metro Atlantic regular season title today when they host the Iona Gaels in our Under the Radar Game of the Day.  By virtue of the tiebreaker rules, a win will guarantee the 1 seed to the Broncs, no matter what Canisius does, while a loss will guarantee the title to the Golden Griffins.  Rider currently sits at 21-9 overall, after defeating Canisius at home last weekend and then suffering a lop-sided upset loss at Monmouth on Thursday night.  Dimencio Vaughn led the way in the Canisius win with 22 points and 9 rebounds.  Another big effort may be necessary today against an always-dangerous Iona team

Iona enters today’s game at 17-12 overall and 11-6 in MAAC play, half a game behind third place Niagara.  The Gaels picked up a win on Friday night over their top rival, Manhattan, by 13 points.  Schadrac Casimir had a huge game for Tim Cluess’ team in that win, scoring 30 points.  Also keep an eye on Rickey McGill who had 13 points and 9 assists in the first meeting between these two teams, which was won by Rider 91-64.  That game may have been a blowout, but Rider should not be celebrating the championship quite yet – it is almost March and you can never count out Iona in the MAAC in March.

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