Exams are over, and we’ve got a HUGE day of college basketball!! Below is a rundown of all the action.
SPOTLIGHT GAMES
-NORTH CAROLINA VS KENTUCKY (CBS Sports Classic, Las Vegas NV). Definitely the showcase game of the day. It’s two highly ranked teams that will likely end up as protected seeds, and one or both could even wind up as #1 seeds. Whoever wins this will definitely have a #1 seed caliber win on their profile.
-MIDDLE TENNESSEE AT VCU. So, the first game is an obvious spotlight due to it being a showcase game. This is spotlighted due to the importance of the game on paper. Middle Tennessee is 10-1 and really looks good, but their chances to pick up wins against solid tournament teams are limited. A win at VCU, who is normally very solid at home, would continue to add to what is already a pretty good MTSU profile, and perhaps be their signature win up to this point. As for VCU, they’ve dropped some games that tournament teams should be expected to win, and although I think they’ll eventually pull themselves out of it they are in a bit of a tailspin. A win against a good Middle Tennessee team could be what gets them turned back around. So, it’s this game is between two good teams who both need the win for different reasons.
HIGHLIGHTED GAMES
-UMKC AT WEST VIRGINIA. If we’re highlighting a buy game, it’s because a West Virginia win would be the 800th of Bob Huggins’ career.
-ARIZONA VS TEXAS A&M (Lone Star Shootout, Houston TX). Both teams are out to impressive starts, and this should be a quality neutral floor match-up between two tournament teams, one of which is a possible protected seed if Arizona can get healthy.
-GEORGETOWN AT SYRACUSE (Old Big East). This is still a rivalry, and it’s still heated. It’s not a conference game, but it should feel like one. The resumes of both teams could use some work, so in addition to getting the bragging rights it’s about getting their NCAA Tournament resumes shored up as well.
-MEMPHIS AT OKLAHOMA. Both teams are having years that are probably a little better than expected, but both still have a lot of work to do and could really use this win today.
-TEXAS TECH AT RICHMOND. Texas Tech comes into this game with a very respectable 9-1 record, but this is their first true road game of the year, and although Richmond isn’t great it’s still one of their bigger tests of the year up to this point.
-SOUTH CAROLINA AT SOUTH FLORIDA. South Carolina is in the rankings and looks to be the better team, but they do come into this looking to rebound from a loss, and it is the first true road game for the Gamecocks. This is the return home game from last season.
-SAINT BONAVENTURE VS NIAGARA (Big Four Classic). The Bonnies are a modest 6-3 and need to start stringing together wins if they want to play their way into the NCAA Tournament picture.
-NOTRE DAME VS PURDUE (Crossroads Classic, Indianapolis IN). This is the first game of what should be a really fun doubleheader. Notre Dame comes into the game with just one loss, and the one game they lost was perhaps their most impressive performance of the year as they led Villanova for most of the game before coming up just short at the end. Both teams are in the rankings, and both have the potential to end up as protected seeds. This is the kind of game that protected seeds are able to win.
-EAST TENNESSEE STATE AT MOREHEAD STATE. East Tennessee State’s at-large hopes are small because their margin for error is small, but if they win out or come close to it then they should get a look.
-ARKANSAS VS TEXAS (Lone Star Shootout, Houston TX). Texas’s ship hasn’t quite been righted yet. At just 5-4 they need to start stringing together some wins just to get to the point to where they look like a tournament caliber team again, and the more time goes by without that happening the harder it’s going to be to do. Arkansas comes in at 8-1, but only one of those wins was even remotely noteworthy, so this is a chance to add some meat to their profile as well.
-OHIO STATE VS UCLA (CBS Sports Classic, Las Vegas NV). Ohio State really stubbed their toes in losing to Florida Atlantic, and I think that’s kind of soured them to a lot of people, but outside of that one game the team has looked good a lot more often than they’ve looked bad. They nearly picked up a big win at Virginia, and have a chance to completely turn their season around if they can take down a UCLA team that’s looking like they deserve a #1 seed right now.
-KANSAS STATE VS COLORADO STATE. Both teams have bloated records, but most of those wins have come against weaker teams. Both teams need some notable wins if they really want to get the attention of the committee. Colorado State did win at Colorado, but they need to do more than that, and considering how weak the Mountain West appears to be this is a game they definitely need to have circled.
-NORTHERN COLORADO AT DENVER. (Front Range). We at Hoops HD LOVE the Front Range!!
-CHARLOTTE VS FLORIDA (Orange Bowl Classic). Florida is coming off tough back-to-back losses to Florida State and Duke, and need to rebound against a respectable Charlotte team.
-LOYOLA CHICAGO AT UIC. These two teams are old Horizon League rivals that continue to play. Loyola can pick up their first true road win, and improve to 10-2 on the season. We’ve been excited about Wichita State and Illinois State, but it may be time to start keeping an eye on the Ramblers.
-BUTLER VS INDIANA (Crossroads Classic, Indianapolis IN). This is the second game of a huge doubleheader. Both teams are ranked in the top twenty, and both have already picked up notable wins. If Butler gets this win, you have to start thinking of them as a protected seed (at least for now). They did lose at Indiana State, but neutral floor wins against Arizona and Indiana would more than offset that.
-DELAWARE AT SETON HALL. I know this is technically a buy game, but Delaware has enough of a pulse to where it’s worth highlighting. A win for Seton Hall, who’s coming off a real nice win against South Carolina, will improve them to 9-2. We talk about Nova, Butler, and Xavier, but Seton Hall has shown that they can be a force in the Big East as well.
-DAYTON VS NORTHWESTERN (United Center). This is a “neutral” floor game in the United Center up in Chicago, and it’s a good one. Dayton looked really good against East Tennessee State last week, and can add another good piece to their NCAA Tournament profile if they’re able to knock off a Northwestern team that, for the most part, has looked pretty good this season. As for Northwestern, they have some feel-good wins, and they’ve looked good in close games against Butler and Notre Dame, but they still need some more meat on their profile and knocking off Dayton today would certainly qualify.
-RICE AT PITTSBURGH. Both teams come into this game with just two losses. Pitt looks to be the better team, but Rice is good enough to beat the Panthers if Pitt overlooks them.
-IOWA VS NORTHERN IOWA (Big Four Classic). Both teams have had their ups and downs so far, although Northern Iowa is the more likely of the two to have anything significant to play for when it comes to conference play beginning next month.
-DRAKE VS IOWA STATE (Big Four Classic). This is the second game of the annual Big Four Classic in Iowa, but there isn’t likely to be anything classic about this. Iowa State is in the rankings and Drake has just one win this year.
-OKLAHOMA STATE AT WICHITA STATE. Wichita is perfect at home, 9-2 overall, and knocking on the door of the Top 25, which isn’t at all surprising. Oklahoma State comes in with a solid 8-2 record, but will really get people’s attention if they can pull the upset in this one.
-DAVIDSON VS KANSAS (Kansas City MO). It’s a neutral floor game, but it’s a neutral floor game that will very much favor Kansas. Davidson is 5-3 and really showed they could play against North Carolina, so Kansas can’t just show up and go through the motions, but they’re still contending for a #1 seed whereas Davidson is just contending to land inside the bubble.
-TOWSON AT UMBC. We highlight this game because it’s a crosstown match-up, and those are always fun, but also to point out that UMBC may be the most improved team in all of college basketball. They are out to a very impressive 7-2 start with one of those losses coming in overtime at Richmond.
-MARSHALL AT AKRON. Both teams will have to put together a long string of wins to end up either on or in the bubble, but it isn’t entirely out of the question that they’d be able to, especially for Akron.
-WAKE FOREST AT XAVIER (Skip Prosser Classic). This is a long running series that was arranged to honor the late Skip Prosser, who coached at both schools. This year, the game is actually quite important on paper. Wake comes in at 8-2, and although we haven’t talked about them much, we will definitely need to start talking about them if they pick up this win. It would, in fact, be their fourth true road win of the season. Xavier keeps holding serve, but they haven’t always looked as impressive as we think they should, and this is the kind of game they could lose if they fall into a shooting funk.
-NEW MEXICO STATE AT ARIZONA STATE. A win for New Mexico State, which is very likely, will improve them to 10-2 and be their third true road win of the season.
-CHATTANOOGA AT VANDERBILT. The Mocs need this win if they want to end up safely inside the bubble, largely because their margin for error is small and this is probably more impressive than any win they can pick up the rest of the way with the exception of their game at East Tennessee State.
-BYU VS ILLINOIS (United Center, Chicago IL). This is the second game of a double header, and it pairs up two teams that have looked good at times, but still need to approach this game with a sense of urgency because both still have work to do.
-UNLV AT OREGON. This game should be a mismatch, but Oregon hasn’t really looked the part of being a top team at all this year, so it wouldn’t shock me if UNLV was able to stay with them.
BUY GAMES
-Eastern Kentucky @ Louisville
-Wagner @ Providence
-Charleston Southern @ Georgia
-The Citadel @ Virginia Tech
-Kennesaw State @ UMass
-Manhattan @ Florida State
-Fort Hays State (nondiv1) @ Colorado
-NJIT @ Temple
-Radford @ UNC Wilmington
-Cleveland State @ Ohio U – Technically not a buy game, but practically is
-Fairleigh Dickinson @ Cincinnati
-UMES @ Michigan
-Robert Morris @ Virginia
-Texas Southern @ LSU
-Prairie View A&M @ Utah
-Jackson State @ Baylor
-Cal Poly @ California
-UTVRG @ Houston
-Oral Roberts @ Creighton
-Troy @ USC
Throwback Thursday: The 2001 NCAA Tournament
For Chad Sherwood’s UTR Game of the Day between Coppin State and Goldey-Beacom, CLICK HERE. For the Puppet’s thoughts on last night’s action, click in the same place.
Today we go back in time to another checkpoint year in NCAA Tournament history – in this case, we look not only at the first tournament of the 21st century, but also the first year that the field expanded to 65 teams. This change came about from a desire to keep the number of at-large teams at 34. Up until the 2000 season, there were 30 conferences that awarded automatic bids into the NCAA Tournament. After the WAC split up into 2 conferences following the 1996-97 season, the Mountain West would finally be eligible for an automatic bid beginning with the 2001 season. The first 2 teams to be selected in the play-in game (colloquially called the “Opening Round” game by the NCAA Basketball Committee) would be Northwestern State and Winthrop. Northwestern State won the first such play-in game, but their prize was a matchup with top-seeded Illinois in the first round (Midwest region).
Chalk was the name of the game for the most part in the Midwest Region that season. Illinois, Arizona, Ole Miss and Kansas were the top 4 seeds – all moved on to the Sweet 16 with relative ease. Only Ole Miss was seriously challenged – they edged Notre Dame 59-56 on the day after St. Patrick’s Day. (Butler also hammered Wake Forest in the first round – that game had coaching carousel ramifications for Dave Odom, Skip Prosser, Thad Matta, Wake Forest, Xavier and Butler.) As for the regional games played in San Antonio, Illinois and Arizona advanced to the regional final. Arizona edged the Illini this time – this would be the Wildcats’ 4th trip to the Final 4 under Lute Olson thanks to guys like Gilbert Arenas, Michael Wright, Luke Walton and Jason Gardner.
The South region would be more chaotic – there was the defending champion Michigan State and a lot of chaos preceding the Sweet 16 in Atlanta. Gonzaga would make a remarkable run to the Sweet 16 for the 3rd straight season as a double-digit seed thanks to wins against Virginia and Indiana State (who themselves upset Oklahoma in Round 1). Penn State advanced to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1955 thanks to wins against Providence and 2nd-seeded North Carolina in the Superdome. Temple would one-up their neighbors in the Keystone State with wins against Texas and 3rd-seeded Florida to advance to Atlanta and also beat Penn State 84-72 to advance to the Elite 8 for the fifth time under John Chaney. They lost a close regional final to Michigan State, but that game turned out to be the last NCAA Tournament game of Chaney’s distinguished career.
The West region was even more wild than the South turned out to be. Only 3 of the higher seeds (Stanford, Maryland and Cincinnati) won their first-round games. The other winners included #9 Saint Joe’s, #10 Georgetown (over Arkansas), #11 Georgia State (over Wisconsin), #13 Kent State (over Indiana). Even more surprising was Hampton shocking 2nd-seeded Iowa State in Boise – this led to one of the most iconic images of the NCAA Tournament where coach Steve Merfeld was carried off the floor by one of the Hampton players. There were no lower-seeded victories in the 2nd round and the Sweet 16 – this meant Stanford beating UC in the Sweet 16 and Maryland beating Georgetown to advance to the West regional final in Anaheim. Not only was getting to the Elite 8 a breakthrough for Maryland, they upped the ante further with a decisive 87-73 victory to advance to the Final 4 for the first time in program history.
The East region was tailor-made for a potential Duke-Kentucky rematch in Philadelphia 9 years after their classic matchup in the Spectrum. Kentucky barely escaped against Holy Cross in their opener, and ultimately lost in the Sweet 16 against 6th-seeded USC. The Trojans scored upsets against 3rd-seeded Boston College and 2nd-seeded Kentucky to advance to their first Elite 8 since 1961. Duke/Mike Krzyzewski would be challenged by former Dukie Quin Snyder and Missouri in the 2nd round before ultimately succumbing to the Blue Devils by a 94-81 score. Upon advancing to Philadelphia, Duke would defeat both UCLA and USC to advance to the Final 4 for the 9th time under Krzyzewski.
When the Final Four convened in Minneapolis, Arizona easily defeated Michigan State 80-61 to advance to the championship game for the second time in their program’s history. (The Duke-Maryland matchup was the feature game – they already had a classic matchup at Cole Field House earlier in the season where Duke overcame a 10-point deficit in regulation to force overtime and beat the Terrapins on the road. Maryland got their revenge in Cameron on Duke’s Senior Night, and Duke returned the favor in the ACC Tournament.) In Minneapolis, Maryland would race out to a 21-point lead in the first half, but the Blue Devils would get a huge momentum shift thanks to stars like Shane Battier, Carlos Boozer, and freshman phenom Chris Duhon. Duke ended up winning 95-84 to advance to Monday night. The Duke-Arizona game was tight throughout, but the Blue Devils pulled away late with an 82-72 win in the championship game for Duke’s third national championship.
You can CLICK HERE for the video of the championship game and also CLICK HERE for their comeback against Maryland in the semifinal game.