OTHER VERY IMPORTANT LINKS
-For a rundown of all of today’s college hoops action, as well as a look back at the News and Notes from yesterday – CLICK HERE
-For Chad Sherwood’s Under the Radar Game of the Day between UIC and Wright State – CLICK HERE
Welcome back to another year of NCAA tourney predictions. Last year HoopsHD’s Jon Teitel correctly picked 66 of the 68 teams that made the tourney, including 62 right on the money or within 1 spot of their actual seed. He will spend the next 7 weeks predicting which 68 teams will hear their names called on Selection Sunday, with new updates each week. See below for his list of who would make the cut if they picked the field today, and let us know if you agree or disagree in the comments section. To compare how we stack up with other websites, check out: www.bracketmatrix.com.
SEED: TEAM (CONFERENCE)
1: Oklahoma (Big 12)
1: Villanova (Big East)
1: North Carolina (ACC)
1: Kansas (Big 12)
2: Xavier (Big East)
2: Iowa (Big 10)
2: Texas A&M (SEC)
2: Michigan State (Big 10)
3: Maryland (Big 10)
3: Virginia (ACC)
3: West Virginia (Big 12)
3: Iowa State (Big 12)
4: Miami Florida (ACC)
4: Oregon (Pac-12)
4: USC (Pac-12)
4: Arizona (Pac-12)
5: Kentucky (SEC)
5: Purdue (Big 10)
5: Louisville (ACC)
5: Dayton (A-10)
6: Baylor (Big 12)
6: Providence (Big East)
6: Duke (ACC)
6: South Carolina (SEC)
7: Pitt (ACC)
7: Indiana (Big 10)
7: Utah (Pac-12)
7: Texas (Big 12)
8: Butler (Big East)
8: Michigan (Big 10)
8: Notre Dame (ACC)
8: Colorado (Pac-12)
9: Florida (SEC)
9: Wichita State (MVC)
9: St. Mary’s (WCC)
9: Texas Tech (Big 12)
10: Gonzaga (WCC)
10: California (Pac-12)
10: George Washington (A-10)
10: St. Joseph’s (A-10)
11: Valparaiso (Horizon)
11: Seton Hall (Big East)
11: Connecticut (AAC)
11: UCLA (Pac-12)
11: Washington (Pac-12)
11: Florida State (ACC)
12: Monmouth (MAAC)
12: San Diego State (MWC)
12: Arkansas Little-Rock (Sun Belt)
12: VCU (A-10)
13: Chattanooga (SoCon)
13: Hawaii (Big West)
13: William & Mary (CAA)
13: UAB (CUSA)
14: IPFW (Summit)
14: Stony Brook (America East)
14: Princeton (Ivy)
14: Northern Illinois (MAC)
15: Belmont (OVC)
15: Texas A&M Corpus-Christi (Southland)
15: North Florida (Atlantic Sun)
15: Weber State (Big Sky)
16: UNC Asheville (Big South)
16: Cal State Bakersfield (WAC)
16: Navy (Patriot)
16: Wagner (NEC)
16: Hampton (MEAC)
16: Texas Southern (SWAC)
CONFERENCE: # OF TEAMS
AAC: 1
America East: 1
ACC: 8
Atlantic Sun: 1
A-10: 4
Big East: 5
Big Sky: 1
Big South: 1
Big 10: 6
Big 12: 7
Big West: 1
CAA: 1
CUSA: 1
Horizon: 1
Ivy: 1
MAAC: 1
MAC: 1
MEAC: 1
MVC: 1
MWC: 1
NEC: 1
OVC: 1
Pac-12: 8
Patriot: 1
SEC: 4
SoCon: 1
Southland: 1
SWAC: 1
Summit: 1
Sun Belt: 1
WCC: 2
WAC: 1
COMMENTS FROM DAVID
-We’ve never done this with Jon Teitel’s brackets, but I do feel compelled to comment. For starters, I understand (and would like to reiterate) that Jon is attempting to GUESS the ACTUAL COMMITTEE, and he’s damn good at it. He’s better at it than the major media guys that do it. The rest of us here put together brackets based on our own personal analysis and thoughts. With that being said….
If today were Selection Sunday, and the actual committee put Texas Tech on the #9 line, then I think we’d need to completely restructure this whole damn thing!! I know Texas Tech has some supporters among our staff, but they have done absolutely NOTHING that any NIT team couldn’t also do. They have just one true road win, and that was at TCU. They have two additional neutral floor wins against Minnesota and Mississippi State, but those two teams are a combined 3-14 away from home. Their best win is perhaps a home win against Little Rock. It was at Texas Tech, but at least Little Rock has a winning record away from home. Of their eight other wins, all were at home, none were against teams that are inside the bubble, and only South Dakota State has a winning record on the road. You shouldn’t get credit for beating teams at home that lose more than half their road games, and that’s all Texas Tech has done!!
Now again, this is not Jon’s personal pick, and the committee did take an equally abysmal UCLA team from last year. I know UCLA made the Sweet Sixteen, but to me that does not justify the selection. It should be based on merit and not potential future tournament success. If today were Selection Sunday, and the committee not only selected Texas Tech, but placed them on the #9 line, I think a little part of me inside would die. It’s basically saying that if you’re in a strong conference then all you need to do is win a bunch of home games against teams that are weak on the road.
I’m not big on Saint Mary’s either for pretty much the same reasons, but at least they have one notable win against Gonzaga (albeit at home). They also have a few other road wins against teams that aren’t tournament teams, but that have been strong at home. If this were debate class, and I were given the assignment of arguing for Saint Mary’s, I would at least have something to argue. It would be weak, but at least there is SOMETHING there. With Texas Tech, there is nothing there.
For the most part I like the rest of the field, and it gives me confidence that the committee will make some good picks and seed them accordingly. I think Monmouth is better than their seed, but with three bad losses I can see why the committee would knock them all the way down to the #12 line. I also like Valpo more than a #11 seed, but I can see why Jon would think the committee would have them there.





Throwback Thursday (Friday edition) – 1963 NCAA Tournament
Click here for Chad Sherwood’s UTR Game of the Day between Albany and Stony Brook (weather permitting).
Click here for a double feature of the weekly Bracket Rundown and Under The Radar podcasts
On the same week that we celebrated Martin Luther King Jr. Day, we also look back to the 1963 NCAA Tournament. Almost every diehard fan knows about 1966 and Texas Western and their significance, but not much is said about the tournament 3 years earlier that began to spur more widespread integration into the game.
We start with the Mideast Region – the 6 teams selected for this region were Loyola of Chicago, Mississippi State, Illinois, Notre Dame, Bowling Green and Tennessee Tech. Mississippi State had won the SEC regular season title 4 out of the past 5 seasons, but state laws forbidding the Maroons (as Mississippi State was known back in 1963) to play integrated teams would not allow them to appear in the NCAA Tournament. While sneaking out of Mississippi in the middle of the night to the regional site of East Lansing, Mississippi State would be making their first ever appearance in the NCAA Tournament. They would lose to Loyola in the semifinals of the region and would also beat Bowling Green in the Mideast 3rd place game. However, the team that emerged in the Mideast was Loyola; they would beat Tennessee Tech, MSU and downstate rival Illinois to earn a bid to the Final Four in Louisville. Loyola was believed to be the first team to start 5 black players in a regular-season game at Wyoming, but would not start such a lineup in the tournament like Texas Western would do 3 years later.
The East Region had 7 teams in the field; Duke, NYU, Pittsburgh, West Virginia, UConn, Princeton and Saint Joseph’s. While the field was unseeded, Duke did get the bye in the 1st round and would only have to beat NYU and Saint Joseph’s to earn their first ever trip to the Final 4 in program history under coach Vic Bubas. West Virginia would defeat NYU in the 3rd place game; this would represent the last time that NYU would make the NCAA Tournament at the Division I level.
In the Midwest Region, it was 2-time defending champion Cincinnati and everyone else (namely Colorado, Oklahoma City, Colorado, Texas and Texas Western). Cincinnati did survive a pair of tests against Texas and Colorado to earn their 3rd straight trip to the Final Four. Texas would earn 3rd place in the Midwest with a win over Oklahoma City.
In the West Region, UCLA, San Francisco, Oregon State, Arizona State, Utah State and Seattle all qualified for the NCAA Tournament. Many people would wonder how it was possible for UCLA, Oregon State and Arizona State to be in the same region, but people forget that what was the Pacific Coast Conference had to disband because of pay-for-play scandals. This caused Oregon State to be independent for 5 seasons before rejoining what was then the Pac-8 Conference that included UCLA. (Arizona State was in the WAC at that time). Led by legendary coach Slats Gill (the namesake of Gill Coliseum), the Beavers would defeat Seattle, San Francisco and Arizona State to earn the program’s 2nd Final Four bid. San Francisco would defeat UCLA for 3rd place in the West; UCLA was a year away from the beginning of their dynasty in men’s basketball.
When the Final Four convened in Louisville, Loyola defeated Duke 94-75 and Cincinnati would defeat Oregon State 80-46 in the other semifinal. Duke would defeat Oregon State for 3rd place and even propelled Art Heyman to Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four without being a part of the championship game. Cincinnati had defeated Ohio State in overtime in the previous 2 NCAA title games, but the 3rd time would not be a charm as Loyola would defeat the Bearcats 60-58 in overtime at Louisville’s Freedom Hall. Both Cincinnati and Loyola would feature integrated lineups in the championship; this was in stark contrast to the Brown v. Board of Education championship that would be staged in 1966 between Texas Western (now UTEP) and Kentucky.
Last Saturday, Mississippi State also wore uniforms to commemorate their 1963 team when they hosted Tennessee; click here for highlights of that game.