Bracket Rundown: February 20th

Chad and David are once again joined by Warren Nolan, who is the publisher of WarrenNolan.com.  The three of them build the seed list line by line and tell you what teams they think would be in the NCAA Tournament, and where they would be seeded, if the season ended today.  As always, there is banter, arguments, and disagreements as they try to come to a consensus.

 

CLICK HERE to view the final bracket.

 

And for all you radio lovers, below is an mp3 version of the show…

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News, Notes and Highlighted Games for Thursday, Feb 19th

NEWS NOTES AND LINKS

-We will be recording our Bracket Rundown Video Podcast this evening.  We will once again be joined by Warren Nolan as he helps us put together the seed list and build our latest bracket, so be sure and check that out.

For our latest Under the Radar Video Podcast – CLICK HERE

-For Chad Sherwood’s UTR Game of the Day – CLICK HERE

-Last, and DEFINITELY not least…if you haven’t seen it yet, you need to see it.  To say it is the greatest thing in the history of the Pac Twelve doesn’t come close to doing it justice.  That’s like saying the surf was high the day the tsunami hit.  This is, without question, the greatest thing in the world’s entire history of sports fandom!  It is the Curtain of Distraction!!!  If you haven’t seen it, then you absolutely must click the link!  Arizona State’s student section is the first student section in the history of college basketball that has literally changed how the game is broadcast.  Now, when opposing teams shoot freethrows, the networks show a wide shot so we can see the Curtain of Distraction – CLICK HERE FOR THE MOST AMAZING VIDEO EVER!!

 

TONIGHT’S HIGHLIGHTED GAMES

-SOUTHERN MISS AT OLD DOMINION (Conference USA).  I think we’re pretty much done with Old Dominion.  They’re three games behind conference leader Louisiana Tech.  We highlight this game simply to point that out.

-SAINT JOSEPH’S AT DAYTON (Atlantic Ten).  Dayton is in good shape and will stay that way so long as they avoid doing things like losing at home to non tournament teams.

-TEMPLE AT SMU (American).  Good match up here between two teams that appear to be in good shape as far as the NCAA Tournament goes.  Temple could use this more than SMU, but losing this game won’t really hurt the Owls.

-LOUISIANA TECH AT CHARLOTTE (Conference USA).  If LA Tech wins out, they may get somewhat of a look from the committee, but only slightly.  Anything short of that and they pretty much have no chance at all.

-PURDUE AT INDIANA (Big Ten).  This is a hugely important game.  It’s a rivalry game between two teams who could really use the win.  Indiana was blown out of the place when they visited Purdue earlier this year.  Purdue is outside the bubble, but could REALLY get the attention of the selection committee if they’re able to pull off this road win.  This should be fun.  It’s been awhile since this game was important on paper to both teams.

-NEBRASKA AT MARYLAND (Big Ten).  Indiana v Purdue isn’t the only big time Big Ten rivalry this week!!  Nebraska and Maryland!!  Two conference foes that go all the way back to……November 2014.  Ahh, nevermind.  Maryland is inside the bubble and could end up as a protected seed.  Like we always say, they need to avoid home losses to non tournament teams.

-RUTGERS AT IOWA (Big Ten).  The heat just keeps getting hotter!!  Tonight we feature a THIRD in the series big bitter Big Ten rivalry games as Rutgers visits Iowa!!  You know it’s Rivalry Week when Rutgers is at Iowa!!  Iowa is going in the wrong direction and needs to avoid losing at home to a pitiful Rutgers team tonight.

-EASTERN KENTUCKY AT BELMONT (Ohio Valley).  Neither team is inside the bubble, but both are in a fight for first place in their division, which means a bye to the semifinals of the conference tournament, so this one is important tonight.

-UCONN AT MEMPHIS (American).  We highlight this game only to mention how truly disappointed we are in both of these teams.

-USC AT ARIZONA (Pac Twelve).  This is a conference game that may end up looking like a buy game.

-OLE MISS AT MISSISSIPPI STATE (SEC).  Ole Miss has really been playing well, and Mississippi State has…well…not been playing well.  Still, it’s not a walk in the park when you’re the road team in a rivalry game, and it’s a loss that Ole Miss’s profile could really do without.

-UC DAVIS AT LONG BEACH STATE (Big West).  Folks, there is no good reason in the world this should not have been Chad Sherwood’s pick for the UTR Game of the Day.  It features UC Davis, who is one of the great storylines in all of college basketball and one of the most improved programs in all of div1, taking on Long Beach on the road.  Davis is getting closer and closer to an outright first place finish, which would guarantee them a spot in the NIT, and hopefully put them in a good position to win the conference tournament and the automatic bid that comes with it.

-GONZAGA AT PACIFIC (West Coast).  Gonzaga should end up getting the #1 seed if they win out, but if they lose any time between now and the end of the season I don’t think they have any real chance.

-UTAH AT OREGON STATE (Pac Twelve).  Oregon State isn’t a tournament team, but they’re much improved and aren’t the easiest team in the world to beat on the road.  Utah is in good shape, but this won’t be a walk in the park.

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Under the Radar Game of the Day: Thursday, February 19, 2015: New Mexico State at Utah Valley

For our latest Under the Radar podcast, CLICK HERE.

New Mexico State at Utah Valley, 9:00 PM Eastern, UVU-TV/free streaming at wacsports.com

Rivalry Week.  Perhaps it is nothing more than an invention by ESPN to further drum up the excitement surrounding the first of each year’s two North Carolina-Duke games.  But there are, even after realignment, quite a few very good rivalries still out there, especially among the UTR conferences (check out last night’s podcast for a discussion of some of the top ones).  But how does a rivalry form?  I for one would argue that there are four factors that can help build one.  First, geographic location is very important (see Duke-UNC), but not always required (see Gonzaga-St. Mary’s).  Second, being inn the same conference is always important, but also not required (see Xavier-Cincinnati or Kentucky-Louisville).  Third, both teams being good at the same time is pretty much a necessity.  For example, Duke vs North Carolina does not have even near the same intensity in football as it does in basketball, mostly because neither team has a hstory of being a national powerhouse in football, and Duke has never had much national relevance in football.  The final factor is the “X factor.”  It is a precipitating event that may occur, such as the Xavier-Cincinnati brawl, that pushes the intensity of the games up a notch above everything else.

Tonight’s UTR Game of the Day is not a rivalry match, though it could be one.  New Mexico State and Utah Valley are not exactly close geographically, at least not within an easy drive for each team’s fans to come to the road games.  They are in the same conference together, though this is only the second season they have been so.  While they were the top two teams in the WAC last season, UVU has slipped this season (sixth place entering tonight’s game) and the teams will probably need to battle each other for the top spot in the WAC for quite a few more years if they want to meet the third factor.  However, the fourth factor, the “X Factor” may already be in place.  It happened last season when the Aggies visited Orem, Utah.  K.C. Ross-Miller (who plays now for Bruce Pearl at Auburn), upon seeing that his Aggies had just lost, giving UVU one of their biggest home wins in school history, took the basketball and threw it hard right at Utah Valley’s Holton Hunsaker.  A fight erupted between the teams as the court was stormed, causing fans to get involved as well.  You can watch it in all its ugliness right here:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDuOZFCPVdg

 

The fight, while a very nasty incident, was enough for us to believe we had the makings of a new rivalry in the WAC.  Utah Valley got upset in the WAC tournament denying us a rematch of the two teams last season.  They did meet this year at New Mexico State back on January 24, with the Aggies cruising to a 25 point victory.  However, tonight’s game, back at the “scene of the crime,” is the true rematch from last season’s game.  While Ross-Miller transferred and Hunsaker graduated, it is still a huge game tonight.  The Aggies are in first place in the WAC and trying to get the top seed in the conference tournament.  The Wolverines’ fans proved last season that they can bring an electric atmosphere to Orem, Utah.  Hopefully they turn out tonight and help us build a rivalry so that, 10 or 15 years from now, we can look at this matchup and state that it truly does belong in Rivalry Week.

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Under the Radar: February 18th

Chad and David are back for the Rivalry Week edition of Under the Radar.  On this episode, they look at what they think are some of the best rivalries from outside the power conferences.  As always, they run through all 23 UTR conferences, reveal their Top Ten, and look at this week’s upcoming games.

 

And for all you radio lovers, below is an mp3 version of the show…

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“Rivalry Week” Is Now Crap. It Used To Be “Rivalry Season”

We rarely do editorials during the season, but I think this is the appropriate time to offer up the following….

This is the week that ESPN has dubbed “Rivalry Week.”  It’s an entire week that’s basically built around the Duke v North Carolina game, along with some other rivalries that are on the bill, but not as the headliner.  It actually wasn’t a bad idea at first.  A week where many of the biggest conference rivals faced off against each other.  But, we went from having big conference rivals to supposed conference rivals, and then from that we went to match ups that weren’t even conference rivals.  One year we had Xavier playing Georgia as part of Rivalry Week, and they actually ran a promo mentioning the rivalry that existed between the two.  Huh??

We here at Hoops HD still laugh about that.

So, with so many conferences being carved up with realignment, many of the rivalries have been carved up as well.  We used to have so many rivalries that you couldn’t possibly fit them all into one week.  Now we have so few that we have to pretend that some of the games are rivalry games when in reality they are not.  Like…Kansas v West Virginia for instance, or Lousville v Syracuse.  At best those are just regular conference games.

I complain about how I miss the Border War between Kansas and Missouri, and I do, but as I’m sure most of the people who regularly follow us have figured out, me complaining about it is strictly hyperbole for the sake of amusement.  I do miss rivalries in general, though.  Rivalries are what fueled college athletics, and college basketball in particular.  It wasn’t that long ago when the majority of conferences were single divisions consisting pretty much entirely of traditional and regional rivals, and that played balanced double round robin schedules.  It was great.  We didn’t have “Rivalry Week,” we had “Rivalry Season.”  The Big Eight/Big Twelve used to consist of Kansas, Missouri, Kansas State, Nebraska, Colorado, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Iowa State.  Nearly every match up featured two teams that hated each other.  The Big East had Boston College, UConn, Syracuse, Georgetown, Saint John’s, Pitt and West Virginia.  Even Seton Hall and Rutgers had some heat between them.  The ACC, in its classic nine team format, featured a rivalry game in just about every single conference game.  The vast majority of that is gone now.

I’m about to say something that to me seems rather obvious, but at the same time seems to be understood by very few people, particularly diehard fans and athletic administrators.  Ninety percent of college basketball fans are casual fans.  They get excited when their team is doing well, and they love being a part of the atmosphere, but it isn’t the most critical element of their lives.  They don’t care about fancy ribbon boards and video screens that tell us how many assists each player has.  Many of them would probably need it explained to them how a player is even credited with an assist.  Casual fans are excited by big rivalry games, and when those are cut out the way they have been, the casual fans are somewhat alienated.  Try convincing a casual Georgetown fan that playing against Xavier and Butler is a bigger deal than playing against Syracuse or UConn.  Try convincing a Missouri fan that playing against Vanderbilt and Georgia is a bigger deal than playing against Kansas or Nebraska.  Try convincing casual West Virginia fans that games against Oklahoma and TCU are a bigger deal than games against Pitt or Louisville.  You can’t.

So, with that in mind, has anyone else noticed a decline in attendance since we had all this realignment??  They jack up prices, they cut out rivalries, and strangely enough, attendance has dipped.  I wonder why??

NCAA Athletics is the only sports organization in the world that collectively avoids the rivalries rather than embraces them.  I’m not a huge NFL, NBA or MLB guy, but one of the things all three of those leagues understand is that rivalries are important, and to have the rivalry teams in the same divisions is important.  If the Yankees and Red Sox were college programs instead of MLB franchises, chances are they’d switch conferences and then not even play each other in an out of conference game while insisting they had nothing to gain by doing so.  It makes sense to have the Browns, Bengals, Steelers and Ravens all in the same division.  But, if those were colleges, they’d all try and get away from each other and insist they had nothing to gain by playing each other.  You gotta wonder what the NCAA would look like if the NFL or NBA was in charge of aligning the conferences and setting the schedules.  It would probably look a lot different, and it would probably be for the better.

I still love college basketball.  It is still my favorite sport.  But, it’s not as exciting as it used to be throughout the course of the entire season.  It’s not even close.  TV ratings and attendance seem to reflect that.  In fact, I think there is a much stronger sense of rivalry and true conference identity in the so-called Under the Radar conferences than in the power conferences.  I was watching Manhattan v Iona the other night, and it dawned on me that there aren’t many power conference rivalries like that one any more.  Same with the MAC and NEC leagues, where every game features some bitterness.  The best fan experience and exciting brand of ball may actually now lie in the non-major conferences.

Below is an incomplete list that I began about a year ago.  I’ll eventually go through all 351 teams and finish it some day, but have yet to do so.  My apologies to the UTR schools that have not been included yet.  The goal is 40 conferences, all of which are single division leagues featuring between eight and ten teams.  You can say a lot of things about this, but one thing that cannot be denied is that fan interest would go through the roof if something were done to force the NCAA to align all the conferences this way (or in some sort of similar fashion).

1. Florida, Florida State, Miami FL, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Clemson, South Carolina, UCF, USF (9)

2. Virginia, Virginia Tech, West Virginia, Pitt, Maryland, UNC, Duke, Wake, NC State, Penn State (10)

3. UMass, UConn, Boston College, Providence, Rhode Island, Temple, Villanova, Syracuse, Georgetown (9)

4. Wazzu, Washington, Oregon State, Oregon, Stanford, Cal, UCLA, USC, San Diego State, Gonzaga (10)

5. Louisville, Kentucky, Memphis, Vandy, Tennessee, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Auburn, Alabama (9)

6. Indiana, Purdue, Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State (8)

7. Iowa, Iowa State, Kansas State, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Colorado, Colorado State, Wyoming, Air Force (10)

8. Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech, Baylor, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, LSU, Arkansas, Tulsa (9)

9. Xavier, Dayton, Butler, Saint Louis, Marquette, DePaul, Notre Dame, Cincinnati, Northwestern (9)

10. Ohio, Miami OH, Bowling Green, Toledo, Kent State, Akron, Wright State, Cleveland State, Youngstown State (9)

11. BYU, Utah, Utah State, New Mexico, New Mexico State, UNLV, Nevada, Arizona, Arizona State (9)

12. Eastern Michigan, Central Michigan, Western Michigan, Detroit, Oakland, IPFW, IUPUI, Ball State, Northern Kentucky (9)

13. UTEP, TCU, SMU, Rice, Houston, UTSA, Arlington, Louisiana Tech, Louisiana Monroe, Louisiana Lafayette (10)

14. VCU, Richmond, Old Dominion, Saint Joe’s, La Salle, Drexel, Saint John’s, Seton Hall, Rutgers, (9)

15. Vermont, Hartford, Quinnipiac, Boston U, Northeastern, Central Connecticut, Sacred Heart, New Hampshire (8)

16. Towson, Duquesne, Saint Bonaventure, George Mason, George Washington, UNC Wilmington, Hofstra, Delaware (8)

17. Boise State, Idaho, Denver, Northern Colorado, Montana, Montana State, North Dakota, North Dakota State, South Dakota, South Dakota State (10)

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Under the Radar Game of the Day – Wednesday, February 18, 2015: UMKC at Seattle

For the rest of today’s highlighted games, CLICK HERE.

UMKC at Seattle, 10:00 PM Eastern, free streaming at wacsports.com

Ten years ago, the Western Athletic Conference was a borderline Top Ten Conference.  UTEP captured the automatic bid and received an 11 seed, while Nevada got an at-large bid and a 9 seed.  Five years ago, New Mexico State captured the automatic bid and a 12 seed, while Utah State got an at-large, also landing as a 12.  Then came realignment.  This season, the WAC is ranked as the third from worst conference in the entire country.  Our bracket projections almost all season have had New Mexico State as the champion — and heading to Dayton for a First Four game (and not the game that 11 and 12 seeds play in).  What was once a conference that had a solid argument that it was better than a mid-major is now barely a conference at all.  But it is a conference, and it does get an automatic bid.  And it is certainly Under the Radar.

Tonight’s UTR Game of the Day focuses on a WAC regular season conference game for the first time this season as the UMKC Kangaroos head to Seattle to battle the Redhawks.  UMKC enters tonight’s game at 6-3 in conference play, tied with Grand Canyon for second place (and with Grand Canyon ineligible for the WAC tournament as a transitional team, in sole possession of the #2 seed spot for the WAC tournament).  The ‘roos are only 11-15 overall but did start the season with a huge upset, winning at Missouri.  Things have not gone so well since then as UMKC has dropped seven games to teams outside the KenPom top 200.  However, they have won 6 of 8 games entering play tonight and will be looking to further move towards locking in that #2 seed tonight.  Sophomore Martez Harrison has been the standout player so far for the Kangaroos, only being held to single digit scoring once this season (last time out in a win at Chicago State).

Seattle is sitting in fifth place in the WAC at 4-6 in conference and 11-13 overall.  While the Redhwaks have picked up home wins over UC-Davis and New Mexico State this season, they enter tonight’s game having lost five out of six and desperately need a win to turn their season around as we head towards the conference tournament.  The Redhawks are led by the duo of Isiah Umipig and Jarell Flora.  These two seniors have been consistent double-digit scoring threats all season, with the two combining for 43 of Seattle’s 57 points in a loss at Texas-Pan American on Saturday.  If the two can get some more help from their teammates, they should give the Kangaroos a very good game tonight.

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