1-3-1 Sports Field of 68 – March 4th

THE BRACKET:

Bracket 030414

PROJECTED SEEDING

The 1 Seeds

Florida, Arizona, Wichita State, Syracuse

The 2 Seeds

Villanova, Kansas, Wisconsin, Duke

The 3 Seeds

Virginia, Michigan, Creighton, Iowa State

The 4 Seeds

San Diego State, North Carolina, Michigan State, Cincinnati

The 5 Seeds

Saint Louis, Louisville, UCLA, Oklahoma

The 6 Seeds

Connecticut, New Mexico, Texas, Kentucky

The 7 Seeds

Ohio State, Iowa,  Massachusetts, VCU

The 8 Seeds

Memphis, Pittsburgh, SMU, Kansas State

The 9 Seeds

Arizona State, Gonzaga, George Washington, Oregon

The 10 Seeds

Oklahoma State, Xavier, St. Joseph’s (PA), Baylor

The 11 Seeds

Colorado, Stanford, Arkansas, BYU, Missouri

The 12 Seeds

Southern Miss, Toledo, Wisconsin-Green Bay, Harvard

The 13 Seeds

North Dakota State, Tennessee, Providence, Belmont, Stephen F. Austin

The 14 Seeds

Iona, Delaware, Mercer, Georgia State

The 15 Seeds

Boston U., UC Irvine, N.C. Central, Vermont

The 16 Seeds

Davidson, Robert Morris, Utah Valley, Weber State, High Point, Alabama State

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BUBBLE ACTION

Last Four In

BYU, Missouri, Tennessee, Providence

First Four Out

Minnesota, California, St. John’s, Nebraska

Next Four Out

Florida State, Dayton, Louisiana Tech, Georgetown

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CONFERENCE BREAKDOWN

Big 12 (7), Pac-12 (6), Big Ten (5), Atlantic 10 (5), ACC (5), American (5), SEC (5), Big East (4),  Mountain West (2), West Coast (2)

ACC – Syracuse, Duke, Virginia, North Carolina, Pittsburgh

America East – Vermont

American – Cincinnati, Louisville, Connecticut, Memphis, SMU

Atlantic 10 – Saint Louis, Massachusetts, VCU, George Washington, St. Joseph’s (PA)

Atlantic Sun – Mercer

Big 12 – Kansas, Iowa State, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Baylor, Oklahoma State

Big East – Villanova, Creighton, Xavier, Providence

Big Sky – Weber State

Big South – High Point

Big Ten – Wisconsin, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Iowa

Big West – UC Irvine

Colonial – Delaware

Conference USA – Southern Miss

Horizon – Wisconsin-Green Bay

Ivy – Harvard

MAAC – Iona

MAC – Toledo

MEAC – N.C. Central

Missouri Valley – Wichita State

Mountain West – San Diego State, New Mexico

Northeast – Robert Morris

Ohio Valley – Belmont

Pac-12 – Arizona, UCLA, Arizona State, Oregon, Colorado, Stanford

Patriot – Boston U.

SEC – Florida, Kentucky, Arkansas, Missouri, Tennessee

Southern – Davidson

Southland – Stephen F. Austin

Summit – North Dakota State

Sun Belt – Georgia State

SWAC – Alabama State

WAC – Utah Valley

WCC – Gonzaga, BYU

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1-3-1 Sports Field of 68 – February 28th

THE BRACKET:

Bracket 022814

PROJECTED SEEDING

The 1 Seeds

Florida, Arizona, Wichita State, Syracuse

The 2 Seeds

Kansas, Villanova, Duke, Creighton

The 3 Seeds

Wisconsin, Iowa State, Virginia, Michigan

The 4 Seeds

Michigan State, Cincinnati, San Diego State, Saint Louis

The 5 Seeds

North Carolina, Louisville, Texas, Massachusetts

The 6 Seeds

Kentucky, Ohio State, UCLA, Oklahoma

The 7 Seeds

Connecticut, Iowa, New Mexico, Pittsburgh

The 8 Seeds

VCU, Memphis, Gonzaga, SMU

The 9 Seeds

Kansas State, Arizona State, Colorado, George Washington

The 10 Seeds

Xavier, Stanford, Oregon, St. Joseph’s (PA)

The 11 Seeds

Baylor, Oklahoma State, California, Minnesota, BYU

The 12 Seeds

Missouri, Providence, Harvard, Wisconsin-Green Bay, North Dakota State

The 13 Seeds

Southern Miss, Belmont, Stephen F. Austin, Iona

The 14 Seeds

Delaware, Western Michigan, Mercer, UC Irvine

The 15 Seeds

Boston U., Georgia State, N.C. Central, Vermont

The 16 Seeds

Davidson, Robert Morris, Utah Valley, Weber State, High Point, Alabama State

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BUBBLE ACTION

Last Four In

Minnesota, BYU, Missouri, Providence

First Four Out

Arkansas, Tennessee, St. John’s, Florida State

Next Four Out

Nebraska, Richmond, Dayton, Georgetown

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CONFERENCE BREAKDOWN

Pac-12 (7), Big 12 (7), Big Ten (6), Atlantic 10 (5), ACC (5), American (5), Big East (4), SEC (3), Mountain West (2), West Coast (2)

ACC – Syracuse, Duke, Virginia, North Carolina, Pittsburgh

America East – Vermont

American – Cincinnati, Louisville, Connecticut, Memphis, SMU

Atlantic 10 – Saint Louis, Massachusetts, VCU, George Washington, St. Joseph’s (PA)

Atlantic Sun – Mercer

Big 12 – Kansas, Iowa State, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Baylor, Oklahoma State

Big East – Villanova, Creighton, Xavier, Providence

Big Sky – High Point

Big South – VMI

Big Ten – Wisconsin, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Iowa, Minnesota

Big West – UC Irvine

Colonial – Delaware

Conference USA – Southern Miss

Horizon – Wisconsin-Green Bay

Ivy – Harvard

MAAC – Iona

MAC – Western Michigan

MEAC – N.C. Central

Missouri Valley – Wichita State

Mountain West – San Diego State, New Mexico

Northeast – Robert Morris

Ohio Valley – Belmont

Pac-12 – Arizona, UCLA, Arizona State, Colorado, Stanford, Oregon, California

Patriot – Boston U.

SEC – Florida, Kentucky, Missouri

Southern – Davidson

Southland – Stephen F. Austin

Summit – North Dakota State

Sun Belt – Georgia State

SWAC – Alabama State

WAC – Utah Valley

WCC – Gonzaga, BYU

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1-3-1 Sports Field of 68 – February 24th

THE BRACKET:

Bracket 022414

PROJECTED SEEDING

The 1 Seeds

Florida, Arizona, Wichita State, Syracuse

The 2 Seeds

Kansas, Villanova, Duke, Creighton

The 3 Seeds

Wisconsin, Iowa State, Virginia, Saint Louis

The 4 Seeds

Michigan, Michigan State, Cincinnati, San Diego State

The 5 Seeds

Kentucky, North Carolina, Louisville, Ohio State

The 6 Seeds

Iowa, UCLA, Texas, Oklahoma

The 7 Seeds

Massachusetts, Connecticut, Memphis, New Mexico

The 8 Seeds

Pittsburgh, VCU, Gonzaga, SMU

The 9 Seeds

Kansas State, Arizona State, Colorado, George Washington

The 10 Seeds

Stanford, Baylor, California, Xavier

The 11 Seeds

Oregon, Missouri, St. Joseph’s (PA), Oklahoma State, Minnesota

The 12 Seeds

BYU, Richmond, Toledo, Harvard, Wisconsin-Green Bay

The 13 Seeds

North Dakota State, Middle Tennessee, Belmont, Stephen F. Austin

The 14 Seeds

New Mexico State, Delaware, Mercer, Iona

The 15 Seeds

UCSB, Boston U., Georgia State, N.C. Central

The 16 Seeds

Vermont, Davidson, Robert Morris, Weber State, Southern, VMI

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BUBBLE ACTION

Last Four In

Oklahoma State, Minnesota, BYU, Richmond

First Four Out

St. John’s, Providence, Dayton, Tennessee

Next Four Out

Nebraska, Southern Miss, Georgetown, Florida State

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CONFERENCE BREAKDOWN

Pac-12 (7), Big 12 (7), Big Ten (6), Atlantic 10 (6), ACC (5), American (5), Big East (4), SEC (3), Mountain West (2), West Coast (2)

ACC – Syracuse, Duke, Virginia, Pittsburgh, North Carolina

America East – Vermont

American – Cincinnati, Louisville, Memphis, Connecticut, SMU

Atlantic 10 – Saint Louis, Massachusetts, VCU, George Washington, St. Joseph’s (PA), Richmond

Atlantic Sun – Mercer

Big 12 – Kansas, Iowa State, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Baylor, Oklahoma State

Big East – Villanova, Creighton, Xavier

Big Sky – Weber State

Big South – VMI

Big Ten – Michigan State, Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Ohio State,  Minnesota

Big West – UCSB

Colonial – Delaware

Conference USA – Middle Tennessee

Horizon – Wisconsin-Green Bay

Ivy – Harvard

MAAC – Iona

MAC – Toledo

MEAC – N.C. Central

Missouri Valley – Wichita State

Mountain West – San Diego State, New Mexico

Northeast – Robert Morris

Ohio Valley – Belmont

Pac-12 – Arizona, UCLA, Arizona State, Colorado, California, Stanford, Oregon

Patriot – Boston U.

SEC – Florida, Kentucky, Missouri

Southern – Davidson

Southland – Stephen F. Austin

Summit – North Dakota State

Sun Belt – Georgia State

SWAC – Southern

WAC – New Mexico State

WCC – Gonzaga, BYU

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1-3-1 Sports Field of 68 – February 21st

THE BRACKET:

Bracket 022114

PROJECTED SEEDING

The 1 Seeds

Syracuse, Florida, Arizona, Wichita State

The 2 Seeds

Kansas, Villanova, Duke, Michigan State

The 3 Seeds

Creighton, Wisconsin, Cincinnati, San Diego State

The 4 Seeds

Virginia, Iowa State, Saint Louis, Michigan

The 5 Seeds

Kentucky, Iowa, North Carolina, UCLA

The 6 Seeds

Texas, Louisville, Ohio State, Connecticut

The 7 Seeds

Oklahoma, Massachusetts, Memphis, Gonzaga

The 8 Seeds

Pittsburgh, VCU, Colorado, Kansas State

The 9 Seeds

New Mexico, Arizona State, SMU, George Washington

The 10 Seeds

Xavier, Missouri, Stanford, Baylor

The 11 Seeds

Minnesota, California, Oregon, St. Joseph’s (PA), Oklahoma State

The 12 Seeds

Tennessee, St. John’s, Toledo, Harvard, Wisconsin-Green Bay

The 13 Seeds

North Dakota State, Middle Tennessee, Belmont, Delaware

The 14 Seeds

New Mexico State, Mercer, Stephen F. Austin, Iona

The 15 Seeds

UC Irvine, Boston U., Georgia State, Vermont

The 16 Seeds

N.C. Central, Davidson, Robert Morris, Weber State, Southern, Coastal Carolina

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BUBBLE ACTION

Last Four In

St. Joseph’s (PA), Oklahoma State, Tennessee, St. John’s

First Four Out

BYU, Providence, Richmond, Dayton

Next Four Out

Southern Miss, Georgetown, Nebraska, Indiana State

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CONFERENCE BREAKDOWN

Pac-12 (7), Big 12 (7), Big Ten (6), Atlantic 10 (5), ACC (5), American (5), SEC (4), Big East (4), Mountain West (2), West Coast (2)

ACC – Syracuse, Duke, Virginia, Pittsburgh, North Carolina

America East – Vermont

American – Cincinnati, Louisville, Memphis, Connecticut, SMU

Atlantic 10 – Saint Louis, Massachusetts, VCU, George Washington, St. Joseph’s (PA)

Atlantic Sun – Mercer

Big 12 – Kansas, Iowa State, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Baylor, Oklahoma State

Big East – Villanova, Creighton, Xavier, St. John’s

Big Sky – Weber State

Big South – Coastal Carolina

Big Ten – Michigan State, Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Ohio State,  Minnesota

Big West – UC Irvine

Colonial – Delaware

Conference USA – Middle Tennessee

Horizon – Wisconsin-Green Bay

Ivy – Harvard

MAAC – Iona

MAC – Toledo

MEAC – N.C. Central

Missouri Valley – Wichita State

Mountain West – San Diego State, New Mexico

Northeast – Robert Morris

Ohio Valley – Belmont

Pac-12 – Arizona, UCLA, Arizona State, Colorado, California, Stanford, Oregon

Patriot – Boston U.

SEC – Florida, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee

Southern – Davidson

Southland – Stephen F. Austin

Summit – North Dakota State

Sun Belt – Georgia State

SWAC – Southern

WAC – New Mexico State

WCC – Gonzaga

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The Daily 1-3-1 (February 20th)

1  Thought from the Games Last Night

Syracuse lost to WHO!?

Syracuse had been playing with fire all season when it came to remaining undefeated – last night, it finally caught up with them. Seriously though, raise your hand if you had Boston College as the team that would go into the Carrier Dome and hand the Orange their first loss of the season. Looks like nobody raised their hand; if you did, you’re a rapscallion and a liar… or a Boston College alum. This loss leaves Gregg Marshall’s Wichita State squad as the only remaining undefeated team in Men’s D1 college hoops.

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3  Games to Watch Tonight

i. (5) Duke @ North Carolina, ESPN – 9 PM
Let’s try this again! With all do respect to Louisville/Kentucky, Michigan/Michigan State, Georgetown/Syracuse, and Cincinnati/Xavier, this is the best rivalry in college basketball. It is a mere 9 miles from Durham to Chapel Hill, and there is no love lost when the two Tobacco Road goliaths tango on the basketball court. This year’s edition promises to be filled with plenty of excitement and hoopla, as freshman phenom Jabari Parker has really settled into his role in the past few games. North Carolina also seems to have settled into their fast-paced style of play, having won 7 straight games. 

ii. (25) Gonzaga @ BYU, ESPN2 – 11 PM
For all the night owls and people who live on the West coast, this game is one to watch in terms of shuffling of seeding (and entry into) the NCAA tournament. BYU has been flirting with earning an at-large birth into the tournament field, but so far they’ve just been a tease. Gonzaga has an impressive 23-4 record, albeit a bit misleading – their three tough non-conference games (Dayton, Kansas State, and Memphis) all resulted in losses.

iii. Penn State @ Nebraska, ESPNU – 7 PM
Many people would say I’m really scraping the bottom of the barrel when I list this game as one you might want to watch. Those people have a valid point, but have you seen my other options for tonight? Slim pickings. Nonetheless, Nebraska is at least in the conversation as a tournament bubble team after their win in East Lansing this weekend. If they can manage to finish above .500 in the topsy-turvy Big 10, it’s going to be hard to leave them out of the field.

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1  Bold Prediction for Tonight’s Slate

BYU plays their way back into the thick of the bubble discussion with a close home win over Mark Few and Co.

The Marriott Center has proven to be unfriendly confines for visiting West Coast Conference opponents, who are winless against the Cougars when playing in Provo. Something deep down in my gut tells me Tyler Haws is going to find a way to will this team to a narrow victory – he might even drop 30 on the Bulldogs along the way.

The Daily 1-3-1 (February 18th)

1  Thought from the Games Last Night

If I was the coach of a potential 2 or 3 seed, I would want to avoid drawing North Carolina as the 6 or 7 in my sub-regional.

Even with James Michael McAdoo dealing with foul trouble for the entirety of the game, the Heels were able to go on the road and beat a decent Florida State team. This team is fast, athletic, and is the only team to have knocked off a full-strength Michigan State squad – I don’t care if that game took place in early December; it’s still very impressive.

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3  Games to Watch Tonight

i. George Washington @ Richmond, NBC Sports Network – 7 PM
This game has Bubblicious written all over it; hopefully it doesn’t lose its intrigue and flavor as fast as the infamous chewing gum. The Colonials are looking to save their season and tournament hopes after back-to-back losses to VCU and Massachusetts. They control their own destiny, with two opportunities to get quality road wins this week – at Richmond and at Saint Louis. The Spiders are right on the cusp of the field – they must defend home court against the other top teams in the A10 to earn a tournament birth.

ii. (19) Texas @ (17) Iowa State, ESPN2 – 7 PM
It is a forgone conclusion that Kansas is the class of the Big 12. Who is the second best team in the conference? I think this game will do a lot to answer that question. The Cyclones have been less than impressive in their last two games, getting throttled by West Virginia and surviving at home against Texas Tech. Texas has yet to play the conference elite on the road, and this will be the start of a 4-game stretch that also features games in Lawrence and Norman; it’s time for the Longhorns to prove they belong in the conversation of contenders for a deep tournament run.

iii. (9) Villanova @ Providence, Fox Sports 1 – 7 PM
The Wildcats have been able to take care of business against everyone in the Big East not named Creighton, but on the road at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center isn’t going to be a cakewalk (stretch of a pun somewhat intended). Providence is in a similar situation to Richmond – another tournament-caliber conference foe is coming onto their floor, and they’re smack dab in the center of the bubble. If the Friars want to feel more comfortable about their tournament chances, they should probably win this game or their season finale at Creighton; winning this game seems like a much more feasible task.

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1  Bold Prediction for Tonight’s Slate

Marshall Henderson will attempt at least 7 three-point field goals, and will make less than half of those attempts.

He’s a dog without a leash, and Andy Kennedy has enabled him and allowed that to happen – for better or for worse. Henderson’s antics are polarizing, his confidence is incessant, and he’s never afraid to risk taking the blame in order to earn the glory. I’m fairly confident that John Calipari will have the Wildcats ready to shut him down and shut his mouth.

1-3-1 Sports Field of 68 – February 17th

THE BRACKET:

Bracket 021714

PROJECTED SEEDING

The 1 Seeds

Syracuse, Florida, Arizona, Wichita State

The 2 Seeds

Kansas, Duke, Villanova, Michigan State

The 3 Seeds

Wisconsin, Creighton, Cincinnati, San Diego State

The 4 Seeds

Virginia, Iowa State, Michigan, Saint Louis

The 5 Seeds

Kentucky, Iowa, UCLA, Texas

The 6 Seeds

Louisville, Ohio State, Connecticut, Oklahoma

The 7 Seeds

Massachusetts, Gonzaga, Memphis, North Carolina

The 8 Seeds

Pittsburgh, VCU, Arizona State, Colorado

The 9 Seeds

Kansas State, New Mexico, Minnesota, Oklahoma State

The 10 Seeds

SMU, Xavier, California, George Washington

The 11 Seeds

Missouri, Stanford, Oregon, St. Joseph’s (PA), Providence

The 12 Seeds

Richmond, Tennessee, Toledo, Harvard, Wisconsin-Green Bay

The 13 Seeds

North Dakota State, Louisiana Tech, Belmont, Delaware

The 14 Seeds

New Mexico State, Mercer, Stephen F. Austin, Iona

The 15 Seeds

Georgia State, UC Irvine, Boston U., Vermont

The 16 Seeds

N.C. Central, Davidson, Weber State, Robert Morris,  Southern, Coastal Carolina

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BUBBLE ACTION

Last Four In

St. Joseph’s (PA), Providence, Richmond, Tennessee

First Four Out

Baylor, BYU, St. John’s, Georgetown

Next Four Out

Florida State, Dayton, Southern Miss, St. Mary’s (CA)

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CONFERENCE BREAKDOWN

Pac-12 (7), Big 12 (6), Big Ten (6), Atlantic 10 (6), ACC (5), American (5), SEC (4), Big East (4), Mountain West (2), West Coast (2)

ACC – Syracuse, Duke, Virginia, Pittsburgh, North Carolina

America East – Vermont

American – Cincinnati, Louisville, Memphis, Connecticut, SMU

Atlantic 10 – Saint Louis, Massachusetts, VCU, George Washington, St. Joseph’s (PA), Richmond

Atlantic Sun – Mercer

Big 12 – Kansas, Iowa State, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas State, Oklahoma State

Big East – Villanova, Creighton, Xavier, Providence

Big Sky – Weber State

Big South – Coastal Carolina

Big Ten – Michigan State, Wisconsin, Michigan, Iowa, Ohio State,  Minnesota

Big West – UC Irvine

Colonial – Delaware

Conference USA – Louisiana Tech

Horizon – Wisconsin-Green Bay

Ivy – Harvard

MAAC – Iona

MAC – Toledo

MEAC – N.C. Central

Missouri Valley – Wichita State

Mountain West – San Diego State, New Mexico

Northeast – Robert Morris

Ohio Valley – Belmont

Pac-12 – Arizona, UCLA, Arizona State, Colorado, California, Stanford, Oregon

Patriot – Boston U.

SEC – Florida, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee

Southern – Davidson

Southland – Stephen F. Austin

Summit – North Dakota State

Sun Belt – Georgia State

SWAC – Southern

WAC – New Mexico State

WCC – Gonzaga

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The Daily 1-3-1 (February 12th)

1  Thought from the Games Last Night

San Diego State’s loss in Laramie last night might drop them two whole seed lines.

Alliterations aside, San Diego State can’t afford another loss the rest of the way if they want to have a résumé worthy of a 2-seed. It’s not the worst loss in the world, as Wyoming is at least a borderline NIT team and it was on the road. Nevertheless, watching this team play, I’ve always questioned their ability to put the ball in the basket against top-caliber opponents (which appears well-founded, with their Adjusted Offensive Efficiency outside of KenPom’s Top 50), so maybe they aren’t deserving of a 2-seed.

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3  Games to Watch Tonight

i. (8) Duke @ North Carolina, ESPN – 9 PM
With all do respect to Louisville/Kentucky, Michigan/Michigan State, Georgetown/Syracuse, and Cincinnati/Xavier, this is the best rivalry in college basketball. It is a mere 9 miles from Durham to Chapel Hill, and there is no love lost when the two Tobacco Road goliaths tango on the basketball court. This year’s edition promises to be filled with plenty of excitement and hoopla, as freshman phenom Jabari Parker has really settled into his role in the past few games. North Carolina also seems to have settled into their fast-paced style of play, having won 5 straight games by double digits.

ii. George Washington @ VCU, NBC Sports Network – 7 PM
VCU has their aptly-named “Havoc” defense, and George Washington has wooden teeth. In all seriousness, the Colonials are also capable of playing some high-pressure, lock-down defense when the time comes – and the time will come tonight. Tonight’s battle at the Siegel Center will be a means for determining (temporarily anyway) who is numero dos in the Atlantic 10 behind Saint Louis. Look for Mo Creek to have a big game if George Washington wants to go on the road and get a huge W.

iii. (1) Syracuse @ (25) Pittsburgh, ESPN – 7 PM
These two teams already met once earlier this season at the Carrier Dome, and the Orange slogged their way to an ugly 59-54 victory. The Panthers have the undefeated, unanimous #1 team in the country coming into their backyard; this gives them a chance to finally beat a quality opponent this season. Just to be clear, Pitt has played four legitimately good teams all season – Cincinnati, Syracuse, Duke, and Virginia. Their record in those four games? 0 wins, 4 losses. If they want the committee to take their over-inflated record seriously, they need to have a quality win on their team sheet for Selection Sunday.

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1  Bold Prediction for Tonight’s Slate

The three abovementioned games will all be decided by single digit margins.

Grab some popcorn and settle in for some great basketball tonight, ladies and gentlemen… I think we have three truly great matchups between six teams that are all capable of making the second weekend (and beyond in the case of Duke and Syracuse) come March. If you put a gun to my head and told me to pick each game, I might just flip a coin for each one, because it would be that tough for me to make a decision. Since you twisted my arm, I’ll make some picks: Duke goes on the road and picks up a big W, VCU uses their home court to nix GW, and Cuse’s bid for an undefeated regular season lives to see another day.

The Daily 1-3-1 (February 11th)

1  Thought from the Games Last Night

Can a 3-point overtime loss (on the road) to an in-state rival (that’s also a tournament team) really drop you a seed line?

I don’t know if I have a definitive answer to that question just yet, because I have to see how the rest of the week’s games play out. However, the Jayhawk faithful may not like the conclusion I am leaning towards at this very moment. Last night’s loss in Manhattan was the sixth loss of the year for Kansas, and it’s hard for me to see an 18-6 team deserving a 2-seed, even with the brutally tough schedule they’ve played to this point.

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3  Games to Watch Tonight

i. (15) Michigan @ (22) Ohio State, ESPN – 9 PM
The stakes aren’t quite as high when these two bitter rivals meet on the hardwood as opposed to the gridiron, but I’m sure the game is bound to get quite chippy. These two teams are also trending in opposite directions. After a demoralizing home loss to Penn State, Ohio State has righted the ship with 3 wins in a row, including road wins against Wisconsin and Iowa. Michigan, on the other hand, has loss two of three, after starting 8-0 in conference.

ii. Oklahoma State @ (19) Texas, ESPN2 – 7 PM
The Marcus Smart shoving incident was blown way out of proportion, but that’s a tangent I may address on another day. Nonetheless, Smart’s three-game suspension is going to have a major impact on the Cowboys, who have to prevent the wheels from completely falling off in his absence. In their first game sans their star, OK State faces a stern road test against the surprising Longhorns. It’s not an NCAA tournament game, so I’m sure Rick Barnes will actually have the squad ready to roll this evening.

iii. (3) Florida @ Tennessee, ESPN – 7 PM
Tennessee is that relative that you’re pretty sure has bipolar disorder – you just keep your mouth shut and enjoy the entertaining portion of their performances. Florida is that affluent, well-spoken relative that has had a great deal of consistent success in their life. The family is having a cozy little get-together in Knoxville tonight; we’ll see if the bi-polar relative smashes out the windows on the affluent relative’s Mercedes, or if the affluent relative will overwhelm all their cousins with their general aura and power.

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1  Bold Prediction for Tonight’s Slate

The Gators go on the road and hang a 15+ point beatdown on the Volunteers, further muddling Tennessee’s perplexing bubble résumé.

Billy Donovan’s squad is far better than every other team in the SEC, save Kentucky. Whether that speaks more about the lack of depth in the SEC, or the strength of Florida, I’m not sure… I guess we’ll find out in March!

March Madness – Every Team has a Weakness

I’m a huge college basketball fanatic, so March is inherently one of my favorite months of the year. Never mind the 30-degree Michigan weather outside; I’m ready to hunker down inside and watch some college hoops anyway. With March comes the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Tournament, which I affectionately call The Big Dance. With The Big Dance, we inevitably see everybody and their brother (or sister…no sexism here) suddenly become a college basketball guru, as they fill out their bracket either by chalk (picking almost exclusively higher seeds) or by some crazy strategy (coin flips, cooler mascot, dartboard, team colors, etc.). I hate both methods, but mostly because I desperately want my statistical analysis and basketball knowledge to actually reflect in the success of filling out a bracket, and too often it is the case that it does not. Nevertheless, I will not stop in my hunt for filling out a truly great bracket.

Sometimes I worry that I may have peaked in my bracket-predicting ability too young. I correctly picked the NCAA Champion 6 years in a row in a stretch from the 2001-2002 season (shout out to Steve Blake and Juan Dixon for starting the streak with the Terps) to the 2006-2007 season (How could you pick against Al Horford and Joakim Noah after winning the year before?). Starting in 2008, Kevin Love, Russell Westbrook, and UCLA let me down by falling to Memphis in the Final Four. That left a sour taste in my mouth, but not as sour as watching the star-studded Pittsburgh team I picked to win it all in 2009 (Levance Fields, DeJuan Blair, and Sam Young) fall in the Elite 8 after letting Scottie Reynolds of Nova drive coast to coast with 5 seconds left to win the game with a layup. I didn’t think it could get any worse…and that, of course, is when it gets worse. With the ballsiest three-point attempt of the decade, Ali Farokhmanesh of Northern Iowa sealed the fate of my National Championship pick Kansas in the Round of 32 in 2010; for the third straight year, things had gotten progressively worse.

Fast forward ahead to 2012, and it had been 4 straight years of INCORRECTLY picking the National Champion after 6 straight years of glory. The essentially all-professional college team led by John Calipari out of Lexington was a virtual lock to win it all last year, and both my basketball knowledge and statistical analysis (which has been nicknamed “The Bracket Machine”) confirmed this. Thus, I was able to get back on the horse last year and correctly pick the NCAA Tournament Champion. However, I don’t want that streak to last a mere year, so I need to break down this year’s field and see who has the best chance to cut down the nets. Herein lies the problem; with so much more parity in college basketball this year than in past years, it is going to be very difficult to accurately pick the champion. My basketball knowledge favors one team, while “The Bracket Machine” is telling me something else. Thus, I’m going to fill out two brackets this year – one with picks from the gut, the other with picks from a statistical analysis machine.

In reality, every team with a legitimate shot at making a final four run has at least one glaring weakness, and it’s just a matter of deciding which team’s weaknesses will be hidden and which will be on display. That’s what I’m here for – breaking down the final four contenders and their weaknesses, and telling you what my gut says, as well as what the machine spit out.

THE BIG PLAYERS

These are the big dogs that have a very good shot at making the Final Four. I expect at least 3 of these teams to compose the group of 4 that makes it to Atlanta, with the National Champion coming from this group.

1. Louisville –
 Weakness: Inconsistent play from Russ Smith. Russdiculous is a great player and the Cardinals leading scorer at 18 points a game, but he is maddeningly erratic from game-to-game with his shot selection and decision-making. In Louisville’s 5 losses this season, Smith is shooting 25 for 78 from the field, so if he has a woeful game, the Cardinals could fall victim to an upset.

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(I’m not so certain I would put my trust in Russ…but that does look like a mighty delicious plate of waffles.)

2. Indiana Weakness: Tom Crean’s lack of NCAA tournament success. While Crean is generally considered one of the better coaches in all of college basketball, he’s had a surprising lack of tournament success. Since becoming a head coach in 1999 at Marquette, Crean’s only made it to the final four once (on the back of Dwayne Wade), and his career NCAA Tournament record is 7-6, which is far from sterling.

3. Kansas – Weakness: Offensive Efficiency. Kansas has improved their offense leaps and bounds since that abysmal loss to TCU earlier this year, but it’s still not pretty. This team may win with defense, but since 2003, every national champion has had an offensive efficiency above 115.5 and in the top 20 – Kansas is at 112.7 and 25th.

4. Florida – Weakness: No go-to guy. Billy Donovan’s team is very well-rounded, but they don’t have that one go-to guy that they can get the ball to in a tie game with the pressure on. Erik Murphy doesn’t have the ball skills and speed to be that guy, Scottie Wilbekin is way more of a defender than an offensive stalwart, and Kenny Boynton is too passive in settling for a jump shot.

5. Syracuse – Weakness: Mental toughness. When the going gets tough, the Orange most certainly do not get going. Boeheim and his crew had Louisville on the ropes in the first half of the Big East Championship, and at the first sign of amped up Louisville pressure and some adversity, they folded like a beach chair.

6. Ohio State – Weakness: Live and die by Deshaun Thomas. Nobody on Ohio State is averaging double figures in scoring besides Deshaun Thomas. Furthermore, Thomas has a tendency to sometimes slip into a mode where he wants to get his before he cares about the outcome for his team. If he can get a lot of touches in his sweet spot on the left block, the Buckeyes will be a tough out. By the same token, if he starts settling for contested threes, they could be an earlier out.

7. Duke – Weakness: Defense. The Blue Devils can hit shots from all over the court and score in bunches. If Cook, Kelly, and Curry are all knocking down shots, this team is damn near impossible to guard. However, they also have a tendency to fall asleep on the other end of the court and let hot shooting opponents do the same thing. Team that with the fact that they don’t have a reliable rebounder outside of Plumlee, and this team is susceptible to defeat at the hands of a more physical, grind-it-out type of team.

8. Michigan State – Weakness: Keith Appling. I don’t mean to single out one player, but in the case of the Spartans, I really have no choice. Appling is capable of being one of the better point guards in the nation, but unlike Adreian Payne and Gary Harris, he hasn’t even come close to approaching his ceiling. Unfortunately for Spartan fans, it has become a nightmarish trend to watch Appling disappear in big games, often times because he tries too hard to out-duel the opposing team’s point guard.

9. Miami (FL) – Weakness: Lack of tournament experience. Outside of Jim Larranaga’s improbable Final Four run when he was at the helm of George Mason, the members of this team (and this program in general) lack the NCAA Tournament pedigree and experience. Handling the moment when you’ve never been there before can be quite a challenge, even for a starting lineup filled with 4 seniors.


THE MIDDLE-MEN THAT CAN MAKE A RUN

These teams have a solid shot of sneaking out of their regional (one of them will probably pull it off) and getting to Atlanta, but might not have quite enough firepower, experience, or clutch to win the whole thing.

1. Gonzaga – Weakness: Haven’t been tested because of soft schedule. I will give credit to the Zags for going out and playing at Oklahoma State and at Butler, and having Illinois and Kansas State come out to Spokane. However, they went 2-2 in those games against teams whose average seed line in this tournament is 5.5. What’s going to happen when they have to consistently match up with the big boys and win multiple games in a row to survive?

2. Michigan – Weakness: Playing soft. The Wolverines are great on the offensive end of the floor and have two NBA-caliber guards in Trey Burke and Tim Hardaway Jr.. However, on the defensive end, they struggle with being physical and stopping dribble penetration using guard-to-guard help. John Beilein’s defensive strategies of avoiding fouls and switching ball-screens have been figured out and exploited by Big Ten teams this season, so it’ll be a matter of how he adjusts going into the tournament.

3. Wisconsin – Weakness: Inability to play from behind. If you’re in to fundamentally-sound, slow, methodical basketball on both ends of the court, then Wisconsin basketball is for you. Unfortunately, this style does not lend itself to comebacks and playing from behind, something a team must be capable of doing in order to make a run in the tournament. If Wisconsin lets a team get hot from the field early, they could be leaving the tournament early.

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 (Instead of stealing Christmas, Bo Ryan steals joy out of my heart.)

4. New Mexico – Weakness: A tendency to go ice cold from the field. The Lobos play some very effective defense, are athletic, and really take care of the ball. However, they averaged under 58 points per game in their 5 losses this season – a number which was actually significantly inflated by a 89-88 loss to Air Force to end the regular season. It’s hard to see them finding ways to consistently outscore opponents and make a deep run with such inconsistent shooting performances.

5. Georgetown – Weakness: Otto Porter Jr. can’t do everything in every game. Porter leads the Hoyas in points per game, rebounds, steals, blocks, free throw percentage, three point percentage, and minutes per game. He is mister do-it-all for John Thompson III and crew, and has been an All-American up to this point in the season. However, at some point, he’s going to get burnt out and need his teammates to pick up the slack – something I’m not sure they are all that capable of doing.


THE SLEEPERS

There are a lot of crazies out there that love picking a good dark horse to pull some stellar upsets and make a run; if you’re going to do that, I suggest you pick from this list.

1. Saint Louis – Weakness: Putting the ball in the basket. The Billikens take care of the basketball and don’t give up any easy baskets on the defensive end of the court. However, in order to string together multiple wins in this tournament, you have to be able to get some easy baskets and score the ball. This well-rounded team has the capability to make a run based on their defense, but could get tripped up early if they continue to struggle on the offensive end.

2. VCU – Weakness: Facing teams that don’t turn the ball over. The “Havoc” defense that Shaka Smart and his deep, athletic team employee on a game-to-game basis can cause opposing coaches hairs to turn gray. However, when the opposing team handles the pressure and limits their turnovers, VCU becomes a surprisingly average team on both the offensive and defensive end, as well as on the glass.

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(I don’t think VCU’s “Havoc” defense can single-handedly lead them to another deep tournament run.)

3. North Carolina – Weakness: Playing defense with a small lineup. North Carolina has experienced some great success this season ever since Roy Williams switched to his newfound, smaller, four-guard lineup. That being said, this lineup has caused North Carolina to fall into stretches where defense and consistent rebounding disappear, and those are obviously two things that can’t happen if UNC wants to make a run this year.

4. NC State – Weakness: A lack of passion, heart, and emotion. NC State is one of the most athletic, talented, and capable teams in the entire tournament. However, they’re also one of the most underachieving, and have been all season long. Richard Howell is a man among boys, Scott Wood consistently knocks down threes, and C.J. Leslie is a freak athlete and player. Unfortunately, it is too often the case that I’ve seen this team not handle adversity well this season, and play emotionless, passionless basketball. 

After all the basketball I’ve watched and all the numbers I’ve crunched, I still can’t quite make a decision on who to pick as my National Champion. Having watched the copious amounts of college basketball I’ve watched this season, my gut tells me that Indiana is the best basketball team in the country. The statistical analysis from “The Bracket Machine” seems to believe that Louisville is the team to beat. Either way, I really hope these two teams meet in Atlanta on Monday, April 8th (assuming, of course, that my alma mater falls short of the championship), because that would be one hell of a matchup for a chance to hold up the trophy.