Championship Week Notebook: Monday, March 11th

199 TEAMS REMAIN!!! The breakdown is below

Follow Chad’s Viewing Guide for all of tonight’s action…

https://hoopshd.com/2013/03/10/conference-tournament-viewing-guide-march-11/

Also, check out our Bracket Racket Podcast linked here on Galen’s Crimson Cast site…

http://www.crimsoncast.com/2013/03/bracket-racked-03-10-13/

-ACC – 12 (Miami, FL (at-large), Duke (at-large), North Carolina (at-large), NC State (at-large), Virginia (under consideration), Maryland (under consideration), Florida State, Boston College, Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, Clemson, Virginia Tech)

-AMERICA EAST – 2 (Albany, Vermont,)

-ATLANTIC TEN – 12 (Saint Louis (at-large), VCU (at-large), La Salle (under consideration), Temple (under consideration), UMass (under consideration), Xavier (under consideration), Charlotte (under consideration), Saint Joseph’s, Richmond, Dayton, George Washington)

-ATLANTIC SUN – 1 (FGCU – champion)

-BIG TWELVE – 10 (Kansas (at-large), Kansas State (at-large), Oklahoma State (at-large), Oklahoma (at-large), Iowa State (under consideration), Baylor (under consideration), Texas, West Virginia, Texas Tech, West Virginia)

-BIG EAST – 14 (Louisville (at-large), Georgetown (at-large), Marquette (at-large), Pittsburgh (at-large), Notre Dame (at-large), Syracuse (at-large), Villanova (under consideration), Cincinnati (under consideration), Saint John’s (under consideration), Providence, Rutgers, Seton Hall, South Florida, DePaul)

-BIG SKY – 7 (Montana, Weber State, North Dakota, Montana State, Northern Colorado, Southern Utah, Northern Arizona)

-BIG SOUTH – 1 (Liberty (champion)

-BIG TEN – 12 (Indiana (at-large), Michigan (at-large), Michigan State (at-large), Ohio State (at-large), Wisconsin (at-large), Illinois (at-large), Minnesota (at-large), Iowa (under consideration), Purdue, Nebraska, Northwestern, Penn State)

-BIG WEST – 8 (Long Beach, Cal Poly, Pacific, UC Irvine, Hawaii, UC Davis, UC Santa Barbara, Cal State Fullerton)

-COLONIAL – 2 (Northeastern, James Madison)

-CONFERENCE USA – 11 (Memphis (at-large), Southern Miss (under consideration), UTEP, East Carolina, Tulsa, Houston, UAB, Tulane, Marshall, SMU, Rice)

-HORIZON LEAGUE – 2 (Wright State, Valparaiso)

-IVY – 1 (Harvard (champion))

-MAC – 11 (Akron (under consideration), Ohio, Western Michigan, Kent State, Ball State, Bowling Green, Eastern Michigan, Buffalo, Central Michigan, Northern Illinois, Miami OH)

-METRO ATLANTIC – 2 (Iona, Manhattan)

-MEAC – 13 (Norfolk State, North Carolina Central, Hampton, Savannah State, Morgan State, Delaware State, North Carolina A&T, Bethune Cookman, Coppin State, Florida A&M, Howard, South Carolina State, Maryland Eastern Shore)

-MISSOURI VALLEY – 2 (Creighton (champion), Wichita State (at-large)

-MOUNTAIN WEST – 9 (New Mexico (at-large), Colorado State (at-large), UNLV (at-large), San Diego State (at-large), Boise State (at-large), Air Force (under consideration), Fresno State, Wyoming, Nevada)

-NORTHEAST – 2 (LIU Brooklyn, Mount Saint Mary’s)

-OHIO VALLEY – 1 (Belmont (champion)

-PAC TWELVE – 12 (UCLA (at-large), California (at-large), Arizona (at-large), Oregon (under consideration), Colorado (under consideration), Arizona State (under consideration),Washington, USC, Stanford, Utah, Washington State, Oregon State)

-PATRIOT LEAGUE – 2 (Bucknell, Lafayette)

-SEC – 14 (Florida (at-large), Missouri (under consideration), Kentucky (under consideration), Ole Miss (under consideration), Alabama (under consideration), Tennessee (under consideration), Arkansas (under consideration), Georgia, LSU, Vanderbilt, Texas A&M, South Carolina, Mississippi State, Auburn)

-SOUTHERN CONFERENCE – 2 (Davidson, College of Charleston)

-SOUTHLAND – 8 (Stephen F Austin (under consideration), Northwestern State, Oral Roberts, Southeast Louisiana, Nicholls State, Sam Houston State, Central Arkansas, McNeese State)

-SUMMIT LEAGUE – 4 (South Dakota State (under consideration), Western Illinois, North Dakota State, IPFW)

-SUN BELT – 3 (Middle Tennessee (under consideration), Florida International, Western Kentucky)

-SWAC – 7 (Southern, Jackson State, Alcorn State, Prarie View A&M, Alabama State, Alabama A&M, Grambling)

-WAC – 10 (Louisiana Tech (under consideration) Denver (under consideration), New Mexico State, Utah State, Texas Arlington, Idaho, Texas State, San Jose State, TX San Antonio, Seattle)

-WEST COAST – 2 (Gonzaga (at-large), Saint Mary’s (under consideration)

NOTES

-Middle Tennessee and Wichita State have become the first teams to be knocked out of their tournaments, but not knocked off the list. I believe Wichita has an at-large bid locked up, whereas Middle Tennessee will get strong consideration.

Middle Tennessee won their conference by five games, and is clearly the best and most deserving team for them conference. The problem is that the Sun Belt, like all conferences, has a tournament to determine the champion. MTSU lacks big wins, but has a solid RPI and SOS, and for the most part avoided bad losses. I hope they get in.

-The Horizon League seasn was exciting, and the tournament has been incredibly exciting. It leads the nation in buzzer beaters, and that included both semifinal games. Wright State vs Detroit was close the whole way with Wright State leading late in the game. They seemed to have a chance to open it up some, but came up empty on several key possessions. Not the last possession, though. With the game tied they hit a last second shot over the backboard to knock out Detroit. Green Bay lost their two season games to Valparaiso, so it was surprising to see them in the lead for most of the game in the other semifinal. They appeared to have it won, which would have meant Wright State would have hosted the game, but Valpo hit a last second three point shot to win. Those two will face off tomorrow night at Valpo.

-Many people, including myself, felt that Belmont was safe whether they beat Murray State in the Ohio Valley championship game or not, but after trailing for much of the game they pulled off the win in overtime, so there is no doubt about it now. Something unfortunate did happen to Murray State at the end of regulation. After Belmont tied the score with less than ten seconds to go, Murray State looked to push the ball up the court, which is what they like to do in that situation. The problem was that the clock didn’t start. This resulted in what seemed like a five minute timeout in order to get it adjusted. It’s unfortunate that the game was managed as poorly as it was by the officials. I’m not making excuses for Murray, but I am saying that the officials need to have their acts together, and at the end of that game they did not.

-Liberty lost twenty games this year and was one of the three worst teams in the Big South. They won four straight in the conference tournament and are now the Big South champions. It is entirely up to a conference to collectively decide how they want to determine their champion. They can have a team bye into the semifinals, or they can play it on the home court of the first place finisher, or for that matter they don’t need to have a tournament at all. Having said that, I don’t like the idea of a perennial one-bid league not doing anything to reward the first place team. In the past the Big South was always at campus sites. This year it was at a predetermined site, so Charleston Southern and High Point received no advantage. It opens the door for a way less deserving team to win the conference tournament. As it turns out, all finishing in the bottom three meant was that Liberty never got to wear white. They are one of the worst teams to ever make the field, and will definitely be bound for Dayton.

Having said all that, Liberty didn’t just win. They won decisively over what had been a pretty good Charleston Southern team.

-We had two exciting semifinal games in the Colonial. George Mason jumped out to a 31-7 lead against Northeastern, but blew it. Northeastern came all the way back to win and advance to the final. This is the second straight year that George Mason has blown a 24 point lead in the conference semifinals. Northeastern will face James Madison, who knocked off Delaware in what was an equally exciting game.

-Harvard won and Princeton lost, so Harvard is the outright champion of the Ivy League. There will not be a playoff this year.

-As referenced earlier, for the second year in a row we’ve got two teams that barley finished above .500 in the championship game of the Sun Belt. Florida International upset Middle Tennessee yesterday, and Western Kentucky pulled off the upset against Arkansas State. If WKU wins, it will be the second year in a row they didn’t bye into the quarters and won four games in four days to win the conference tournament. The groundwork has been laid for their triumphant return to Dayton for the First four.

-Davidson had all kinds of unexpected trouble against Appalachian State, and even trailed by 15 in the second half, but came back to win. They absolutely dominated that conference, and are a potential dangerous team in the NCAA Tournament, but they didn’t do enough to earn an at-large bid, so they’ll have to knock off College of Charleston tonight to even have that chance.

-Despite finishing fifth, many felt Iona was still the best team in the Metro Atlantic, and that has held to form so far. They’ll face rival Manhattan tonight in the championship game. Two rivals in an all or nothing championship game. It just doesn’t get any better than that. Well, I suppose it would be better if the game was in New York and not Massachusetts, but it’s still pretty good.

-Second to last, but definitely far from least, what had been the feel good story of Championship Week ended when LMU lost to Gonzaga in the WCC semifinals. By all accounts this should have been a blowout, and it turned out to be one, but LMU actually led for the entire first half. It would have been the upset of all upsets. LMU winning the conference tournament would have been the story of the year. It would have perhaps even been bigger than the team that won the national championship. Gonzaga will face Saint Mary’s tonight. Saint Mary’s is on the bubble, but isn’t safe at all. A win puts them in for sure. As for Gonzaga, I believe a win wraps up a #1 seed. A loss will land them no lower than the #2 line.

-The opening round of the MAC and MEAC conference is tonight as well.

-Enjoy the games!!!

-Griggs

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Conference Tournament Viewing Guide – March 11

Here is the list of conference tournament games on the schedule for today, together with their available television/webstreaming options.  Please note that I only list webstreams for games without national television coverage, even if a stream may also be available. “Local TV” means that the game does not have full national coverage and you should check your local listings.  (PPV) means that there is a charge for the webstream.

(all times are eastern)

Monday, March 11

Colonial Championship:
7:00 PM – (1) Northeastern vs (3) James Madison, NBC Sports Network

Metro Atlantic Championship:
9:00 PM – (4) Iona vs (6) Manhattan, ESPN2

MAC First Round:
7:00 PM – (8) Buffalo vs (9) Central Michigan, mac-sports.com
7:00 PM – (7) Eastern Michigan vs (10) Northern Illinois, mac-sports.com
7:00 PM – (6) Bowling Green vs (11) Miami-Ohio, Local TV/mac-sports.com

MEAC First Round:
6:30 PM – (4) Savannah State vs (13) Maryland-Eastern Shore, meachoops.com
9:00 PM – (5) Morgan State vs (12) South Carolina State, meachoops.com

Southern Championship:
7:00 PM – (1) Davidson vs (3) College of Charleston, ESPN2

Summit Semifinal:
7:00 PM – (1) South Dakota State vs (5) IP-Fort Wayne, Local TV/Fox College Sports Atlantic
9:30 PM – (2) Western Illinois vs (3) North Dakota State, Local TV/Fox College Sports Atlantic

Sun Belt Championship:
7:00 PM – (4) Florida International vs (6) Western Kentucky, ESPN

West Coast Championship:
9:00 PM – (1) Gonzaga vs (2) St. Mary’s, ESPN

Posted in CBB on TV | 1 Comment

Field of 68 – March 10

Here is my Field of 68, through games of March 10, broken down by conference.  Note that the winner of the conference is the team that I feel is the best team in the conference, which may at times not be the first place team.

America East (1): Vermont
ACC (4): Miami, North Carolina State, Duke, North Carolina
Atlantic Sun (1): Florida Gulf Coast
Atlantic Ten (5): Butler, Virginia Commonwealth, La Salle, Saint Louis, Temple
Big East (8): Syracuse, Marquette, Pittsburgh, Louisville, Cincinnati, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Villanova
Big Sky (1): Montana
Big South (1): Liberty
Big Ten (7): Michigan, Indiana, Michigan State, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois
Big Twelve (5): Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, Iowa State
Big West (1): Pacific
Colonial (1): Northeastern
Conference USA (1): Memphis
Horizon (1): Valparaiso
Ivy (1): Harvard
Metro Atlantic (1): Iona
MAC (1): Ohio University
MEAC (1): Norfolk State
Missouri Valley (2): Creighton, Wichita State
Mountain West (5): New Mexico, UNLV, Colorado State, San Diego State, Boise State
Northeast (1): Long Island University
Ohio Valley (1): Belmont
Pac 12 (5): Oregon, Arizona, UCLA, Colorado, California
Patriot (1): Bucknell
SEC (3): Florida, Missouri, Tennessee
Southern (1): Davidson
Southland (1): Stephen F Austin
SWAC (1): Southern
Summit (1): South Dakota State
Sun Belt (2): Middle Tennessee, Florida International
West Coast (2): Gonzaga, St. Mary’s
WAC (1): Denver

Last four in: Iowa State, Tennessee, Middle Tennessee, St. Mary’s
First four out: Iowa, Massachusetts, Kentucky, Ole Miss
Others considered: Maryland, Virginia, Charlotte, Providence, Baylor, Southern Miss, Stanford, Arizona State, Washington, Alabama, Louisiana Tech

A few notes about this week’s field:

The first of the two biggest changes from last week is the deletion of Virginia, a team that has proven it can beat some of the best in the nation while at the same time proviing it can lose to some of the worst, and their replacement with Iowa State that scored a pair of wins this week including one over a very good Oklahoma State team.

The second change was the deletion of Kentucky, despite their win over Florida.  This was not because Kentucky is not very close to being in the field, but rather due to the team that knocked them out.  Middle Tennessee lost Sunday night in the Sun Belt semifinals.  While MTSU has not really beaten anyone of note, the fact is they won 28 games this season.  If they get left out, it would set an all-time record for most wins left out of the field.  Iona received a somewhat perplexing spot in the First Four last season, and I can see MTSU receiving a similar bid this year.

Despite Kentucky falling out of the field this week, I believe the Wildcats are very close to making it in, and if they take care of business in the SEC quarterfinals, it may be enough to get in.  Tennessee just barely nosed out Kentucky for the final spot and if I re-did this field half a dozen times I would probably switch those two teams around every other time.  I also saw Ole Miss move back closer to being in the field after holding off Alabama this week.  The Rebels have a lot of work to do still, starting with a potential SEC quarterfinal against Missouri.

As for the single bid leagues, I have switched Pacific in for the Big West champion after they beat Long Beach fairly easily this weekend to tie for the league’s top spot (though Long Beach is still the #1 seed).  I also moved Denver in as the WAC champions, though Louisiana Tech is still on my board as an at-large possibility.  I don’t think they will be able to get in without the automatic bid, though if they beat Denver in the WAC finals, Joe Scott’s Pioneers may get a serious look.  Finally, I am now picking Ohio U to win the MAC and did not even put Akron under consideration.  Akron recently suspended their starting point guard indefinitely due to an arrest for some serious drug-related allegations, and then lost to Kent State.  While the Zips do have a bye into the MAC semifinals, right now I do not see them winning even that game, and they just are not the team they were a few weeks ago.

Finally, here is my S-Curve of the 68 teams:

1. Duke
2. Gonzaga
3. Indiana
4. Louisville
5. Georgetown
6. Kansas
7. Michigan
8. Michigan State
9. Miami
10. Ohio State
11. New Mexico
12. Marquette
13. Oklahoma State
14. Florida
15. Kansas State
16. Syracuse
17. Wisconsin
18. Arizona
19. Pittsburgh
20. Saint Louis
21. Minnesota
22. UNLV
23. VCU
24. Notre Dame
25. Butler
26. UCLA
27. North Carolina
28. Oklahoma
29. Colorado State
30. Creighton
31. Memphis
32. Temple
33. Illinois
34. North Carolina State
35. California
36. Cincinnati
37. Missouri
38. Oregon
39. Villanova
40. Wichita State
41. Boise State
42. San Diego State
43. Colorado
44. Belmont
45. La Salle
46. Saint Mary’s
47. Iowa State
48. Denver
49. Bucknell
50. Middle Tennessee
51. Tennessee
52. Ohio University
53. Davidson
54. Stephen F. Austin
55. Montana
56. South Dakota State
57. Valparaiso
58. Northeastern
59. Harvard
60. Pacific
61. Iona
62. Norfolk State
63. Florida Gulf Coast
64. Vermont
65. Florida International
66. Long Island University
67. Southern
68. Liberty

Posted in Bracketology | Comments Off on Field of 68 – March 10

Conference Tournament Notebook: Sunday, March 10th

211 TEAMS REMAIN!!! The breakdown is below

-ACC – 12 (Miami, FL (at-large), Duke (at-large), North Carolina (at-large), NC State (at-large), Virginia (under consideration), Maryland (under consideration), Florida State, Boston College, Georgia Tech, Wake Forest, Clemson, Virginia Tech)

-AMERICA EAST – 4 (Albany, Stony Brook, Vermont, UMBC)

-ATLANTIC TEN – 12 (Saint Louis (at-large), VCU (at-large), La Salle (under consideration), Temple (under consideration), UMass (under consideration), Xavier (under consideration), Charlotte (under consideration), Saint Joseph’s, Richmond, Dayton, George Washington)

-ATLANTIC SUN – 1 (FGCU – champion)

-BIG TWELVE – 10 (Kansas (at-large), Kansas State (at-large), Oklahoma State (at-large), Oklahoma (at-large), Iowa State (under consideration), Baylor (under consideration), Texas, West Virginia, Texas Tech, West Virginia)

-BIG EAST – 14 (Louisville (at-large), Georgetown (at-large), Marquette (at-large), Pittsburgh (at-large), Notre Dame (at-large), Syracuse (at-large), Villanova (under consideration), Cincinnati (under consideration), Saint John’s (under consideration), Providence, Rutgers, Seton Hall, South Florida, DePaul)

-BIG SKY – 7 (Montana, Weber State, North Dakota, Montana State, Northern Colorado, Southern Utah, Northern Arizona)

-BIG SOUTH – 2 (Liberty, Charleston Southern)

-BIG TEN – 12 (Indiana (at-large), Michigan (at-large), Michigan State (at-large), Ohio State (at-large), Wisconsin (at-large), Illinois (at-large), Minnesota (at-large), Iowa (under consideration), Purdue, Nebraska, Northwestern, Penn State)

-BIG WEST – 8 (Long Beach, Cal Poly, Pacific, UC Irvine, Hawaii, UC Davis, UC Santa Barbara, Cal State Fullerton)

-COLONIAL – 4 (George Mason, Northeastern, James Madison, Delaware)

-CONFERENCE USA – 11 (Memphis (at-large), Southern Miss (under consideration), UTEP, East Carolina, Tulsa, Houston, UAB, Tulane, Marshall, SMU, Rice)

-HORIZON LEAGUE – 2 (Wright State, Valparaiso)

-IVY – 1 (Harvard (champion))

-MAC – 11 (Akron (under consideration), Ohio, Western Michigan, Kent State, Ball State, Bowling Green, Eastern Michigan, Buffalo, Central Michigan, Northern Illinois, Miami OH)

-METRO ATLANTIC – 4 (Niagara, Iona, Manhattan, Fairfield)

-MEAC – 13 (Norfolk State, North Carolina Central, Hampton, Savannah State, Morgan State, Delaware State, North Carolina A&T, Bethune Cookman, Coppin State, Florida A&M, Howard, South Carolina State, Maryland Eastern Shore)

-MISSOURI VALLEY – 2 (Creighton (at-large), Wichita State (at-large)

-MOUNTAIN WEST – 9 (New Mexico (at-large), Colorado State (at-large), UNLV (at-large), San Diego State (at-large), Boise State (at-large), Air Force (under consideration), Fresno State, Wyoming, Nevada)

-NORTHEAST – 2 (LIU Brooklyn, Mount Saint Mary’s)

-OHIO VALLEY – 1 (Belmont (champion)

-PAC TWELVE – 12 (UCLA (at-large), California (at-large), Arizona (at-large), Oregon (under consideration), Colorado (under consideration), Arizona State (under consideration),Washington, USC, Stanford, Utah, Washington State, Oregon State)

-PATRIOT LEAGUE – 2 (Bucknell, Lafayette)

-SEC – 14 (Florida (at-large), Missouri (under consideration), Kentucky (under consideration), Ole Miss (under consideration), Alabama (under consideration), Tennessee (under consideration), Arkansas (under consideration), Georgia, LSU, Vanderbilt, Texas A&M, South Carolina, Mississippi State, Auburn)

-SOUTHERN CONFERENCE – 4 (Davidson, Elon, College of Charleston, Appalachian State)

-SOUTHLAND – 8 (Stephen F Austin (under consideration), Northwestern State, Oral Roberts, Southeast Louisiana, Nicholls State, Sam Houston State, Central Arkansas, McNeese State)

-SUMMIT LEAGUE – 6 (South Dakota State (under consideration), Western Illinois, North Dakota State, Oakland, IPFW, UMKC)

-SUN BELT – 4 (Middle Tennessee (under consideration), Arkansas State, Florida International, Western Kentucky)

-SWAC – 7 (Southern, Jackson State, Alcorn State, Prarie View A&M, Alabama State, Alabama A&M, Grambling)

-WAC – 10 (Louisiana Tech (under consideration) Denver (under consideration), New Mexico State, Utah State, Texas Arlington, Idaho, Texas State, San Jose State, TX San Antonio, Seattle)

-WEST COAST – 2 (Gonzaga (at-large), Saint Mary’s (under consideration)

 

-More analysis and breakdowns to come later.

For all of today’s action, check out Chad’s viewing guide linked below.

https://hoopshd.com/2013/03/10/conference-tournament-viewing-guide-march-10-2013/

Posted in News and Notes | Comments Off on Conference Tournament Notebook: Sunday, March 10th

Conference Tournament Viewing Guide – March 10, 2013

Here is the list of conference tournament games on the schedule for today, together with their available television/webstreaming options.  Please note that I only list webstreams for games without national television coverage, even if a stream may also be available. “Local TV” means that the game does not have full national coverage and you should check your local listings.  (PPV) means that there is a charge for the webstream.

(all times are eastern)

Sunday, March 10

America East Semifinal:
5:00 PM – (2) Vermont vs (6) Maryland-Baltimore County, espn3
7:30 PM – (1) Stony Brook vs (4) Albany, espn3

Big South Championship:
12:00 PM – (S1) Charleston Southern vs (N5) Liberty, ESPN2

Colonial Semifinal:
2:00 PM – (1) Northeastern vs (4) George Mason, NBC Sports Network
4:30 PM – (2) Delaware vs (3) James Madison, NBC Sports Network

Metro Atlantic Semifinal:
2:00 PM – (1) Niagara vs (4) Iona, espn3
4:30 PM – (6) Manhattan vs (7) Fairfield, espn3

Missouri Valley Championship:
2:00 PM – (1) Creighton vs (2) Wichita State, CBS

Southern Semifinal:
6:00 PM – (1) Davidson vs (4) Appalachian State, espn3
8:30 PM – (2) Elon vs (3) College of Charleston, espn3

Summit Quarterfinal:
7:00 PM – (4) Oakland vs (5) IP-Fort Wayne, Local TV/Fox College Sports Atlantic
9:30 PM – (3) North Dakota State vs (6) UMKC, Local TV/Fox College Sports Atlantic

Sun Belt Semifinal:
7:30 PM – (1) Middle Tennessee vs (4) Florida International, Local TV/espn3
10:00 PM – (2) Arkansas State vs (6) Western Kentucky, Local TV/espn3

Posted in CBB on TV | 1 Comment

Conference Tournament Brackets Part 2

Below are the links to the conference tournaments brackets that will be announced on March 9 and 10.  This post will be updated as they are released.

ACC

Atlantic 10

Big 12

Big East

Big Sky

Big Ten

Big West

Conference USA

Great West

Mid-American

Mountain West

Pac Twelve

SEC

Southland

WAC

Posted in News and Notes | Comments Off on Conference Tournament Brackets Part 2