Sunday, March 29, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: Midwest/South Regional Finals

I knew I should have picked Villanova, I even wrote that yesterday. Despite one of the dumbest plays I’ve seen in awhile (the full court inbounds pass with ten seconds left), Scottie Reynolds finally had a game to remember on the national stage. I’m now 45-13 for the tournament with five games remaining. Because it is so late in the day, I’m going to speed through these two games briefly.


#2 Michigan State Spartans (29-6, 15-3 Big Ten) vs.
#1 Louisville Cardinals (31-5, 16-2 Big East)
Midwest Regional Final
Lucas Oil Stadium – Indianapolis, IN

I don’t know how many of you were able to catch the Louisville-Arizona game on Friday. If you didn’t tune into the first ten minutes, chances were CBS switched away from the game to show Syracuse-Oklahoma (not that that game was any better). It was ugly from the word go. Arizona made a valiant run in this tournament and had to weather three straight days of media blowhard after media blowhard talking bad about them. The Wildcats were just no match for anything Louisville threw at them. In fact, I doubt any team in the country could have hung with Louisville on Friday night. If they play like that three more times, they win the National Championship. Plain and simple.

Michigan State caught a break against Kansas. The Jayhawks went up five with a couple of minutes remaining and should have put that game to bed. Instead, they allowed Michigan State to get several second chance opportunities and go on a 12-2 run to end the game. I’m sure some of that was the Spartans tenacity on the board, but it was also Kansas failing to finish out MSU. I don’t think Michigan State deserved to make it this far. They’ve caught several generous bounces and calls at the end of the last two rounds. I don’t see this game coming down to the final two minutes, so it shouldn’t be a problem again.

The Spartans have proven one thing. They’ve proven that they are about more than Kalin Lucas. Even though he is their best player, and almost single-handedly guided MSU to a win over Kansas, the rest of the Spartans have chipped in along the way. Goran Suton has prove that he’s more than a Euro-stiff. Raymar Morgan has made key baskets. Travis Walton, Durrell Summers and even Draymond Green have played crucial minutes. The healthier the team has gotten, the more balanced they’ve become. MSU is more difficult to guard now than they were at this point in February. Again, it won’t matter. The Cardinals are too balanced even for Michigan State. If it’s not Earl Clark, it’s Terrence Williams. If it’s not Williams, it’s Samardo Samuels. If it’s not Samuels, it’s Jerry Smith or Edgar Sosa. Then you throw in Rick Pitino’s coaching ability, and this appears to be juggernaut that can’t be stopped.
Pick: Louisville 80, Michigan State 66


#2 Oklahoma Sooners (30-5, 13-3 Big XII) vs.
#1 North Carolina Tar Heels (31-4, 13-3 ACC)
South Regional Final
FedEx Forum – Memphis, TN
Here’s the main course for the day. The obvious storyline is the Tyler Hansbrough-Blake Griffin slugfest inside. For sake of time, and to avoid needlessly breaking down the two players, let’s just go ahead and call that match a draw. Griffin may be the slight favorite, but I think the two players will basically cancel each other out in terms of production. It’s the rest of the teams that need a little bit of analysis.

Start with the coaches. I think it’s a strong advantage to Roy Williams, and that’s rare to say. Williams is a great recruiter, a great showman. He knows how to handle his bench. But he’s not a good X’s and O’s coach. He relies heavily on his superior talent and depth to win games. But Jeff Capel is not someone that I’m really impressed with. As I said, he lucked into a great team that Kelvin Sampson recruited. He failed to do adjusting or coaching of any sort when Griffin was out with a concussion. Oklahoma looked completely lost without Griffin, and Capel is to blame. His Oklahoma teams have also had trouble in second halves of games, with or without Griffin. Again, that is on the coach. Williams is the better coach, and that’s saying a lot about Capel’s inability. Should be interesting to see what happens to OU without Griffin and Willie Warren next season.

Warren has to match up with Ty Lawson, who appears as healthy as possible (and it was possible that Lawson and Williams were playing possum with media about the severity of the injury to begin with). Warren may be a better NBA prospect than Lawson, but Ty is a better player right now and he should have the advantage at point. The remaining supporting cast favors UNC slightly. Wayne Ellington, Danny Green and Deon Thompson are better and more consistent than Taylor Griffin (foul prone), Tony Crocker (hot against Cuse, but struggled all month before that) and Austin Johnson (doesn’t have a defined role for OU). And other than Juan Pattillo off the bench, there isn’t a whole lot to cancel out UNC’s 9 to 10 deep rotation. It will be close, but it appears that UNC has the slight advantage at just about every position.
Pick: North Carolina 82, Oklahoma 79

Saturday, March 28, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: West/East Regional Finals

Another 3-1 evening puts me at 44-12…but no thanks to the former defending champions. True, Bill Self and Kansas got further than a lot of people thought they’d get (be honest, how many of you had them losing to the Fightin’ Hicks), but allowing Michigan State to go on 12-2 run in the closing minutes didn’t help my overall bracket. Two-for-two is the goal for today.


#3 Missouri Tigers (31-6, 12-4 Big XII) vs.
#1 Connecticut Huskies (30-4, 15-3 Big East)
West Regional Final
University of Phoenix Stadium – Glendale, AZ

The Huskies continue to roll through the tournament, despite the dealings of dirty Jim Calhoun and the lack of Jerome Dyson. In fact, of all eight teams remaining, UConn has bested everyone else. Their dominating performances of Texas A&M and Purdue is better than Villanova’s games against UCLA and Duke (especially since American almost tripped up the Cats). Louisville didn’t look good against Siena. Michigan State struggled against USC and Kansas. Pitt has escaped in all three rounds. UNC almost found a way to lose to LSU. Oklahoma couldn’t put Michigan away until late. UConn is the only team that has looked good in all three rounds.

Missouri, after struggling against an undermanned Marquette team, looked very impressive in Glendale against Memphis. Even as Memphis tried to make things interesting in the last 10 minutes, the game was never really in doubt. Missouri shredded the improved Memphis defense with ease. J.T. Tiller went from being a set-up guy to a 23-point scorer in one evening. Mizzou finally showed in the NCAA Tournament what they had been showing all season long in the Big XII. They forced 14 turnovers and added 17 assists. All five starters were in double digits. The Tigers got an extra 20 points off the bench. More importantly, Missouri got their transition game going again. It was lacking in their wins over Cornell and Marquette.

So as far as this game goes, I need Missouri to win (for the office pool) and I think they have a pretty good chance of winning. However, they don’t have the defensive players to stop Jeff Adrien and Hasheem Thabeet in a halfcourt game. If UConn limits the Tigers transition game, then there are mismatches all over the court for Connecticut. This game tilts to UConn, but without Dyson, the guard position is still a problem for the Huskies. And you saw how much freshman sensation Tyreke Evans struggled handling the ball on Thursday (His 33 points was good…but his six turnovers gave Mizzou several easy baskets. It got so bad, Antonio Anderson was running the point for the majority of the 2nd half). A.J. Price is good enough to keep the Tigers running game to a minimum. Stanley Robinson is always good for a couple of key plays. And if there is ever a game that Thabeet will prove he’s ready for the NBA, this has to be the one for UConn.
Pick: Connecticut 84, Missouri 79



#3 Villanova Wildcats (29-7, 13-5 Big East) vs.
#1 Pittsburgh Panthers (31-4, 15-3 Big East)
East Regional Final
T.D. Banknorth Garden – Boston, MA

Pittsburgh did their best to just skirt by in rounds one, two and three. They have yet to play a good 40 minutes in this tournament. DeJuan Blair has had several good, but nowhere near great games. Yet, Pitt has managed to beat two very good teams in Oklahoma State and Xavier. They also beat an under-seeded East Tennessee State. So in a weird way, that has to be encouraging to Pitt fans. Their team hasn’t looked good, but they’ve kept winning. Somehow Jamie Dixon managed not to choke before the Elite 8 this season. And most importantly, the Panthers managed to break through their personal glass ceiling. They have the Sweet 16 monkey off their back. These all have to be good signs for Pitt fans.

On the other hand, maybe it’s a sign of things to come. Maybe Pitt just isn’t good enough. Maybe the Pitt team we saw against OSU and Xavier is the same team that will show up the rest of the way. Maybe Blair is just a very good player and not a great player. Maybe Sam Young and Levance Fields will have to carry this Pittsburgh team instead. Especially since the roll players (Jermaine “Please Don’t Compare Me To Juan” Dixon, Tyrell Biggs and Brad Wanamaker) have virtually disappeared in the last couple of weeks. This Pitt squad has really become a three-man team.

Villanova, despite the record and the seeding, is the better of the two teams. Not only that, they made the NCAA Tournament a more tolerable place since they ejected the Dookies back to Durham for another long offseason. So there is a lot to like about these Wildcats. Since I’m running low on time, I’m going to go light on the actual analysis. Villanova has been dominating for the past 80 minutes of basketball. Their inside guys have stepped up, and they have the muscle to match up with Blair and Young. I think Villanova will win this game, but I took Pitt to make the Final Four when I filled out the brackets. I’m going to stick with the Panthers for the sake of my brackets, but that’s the only reason.
Pick: Pittsburgh 72, Villanova 68

Friday, March 27, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: Sweet 16, Day 2

After a 3-1 evening last night, the overall tournament record is a very solid 41-11. Unfortunately, my first final four team was taken out. Thanks a lot John Calipari. Way to show up against Maryland and then fail to make the trip out to Glendale. However, I would like to sincerely thank Jay Wright and Villanova for getting rid of the scum from Durham. Another nice season by Ratface and company...more All-American talent wasted. Good job Nerds, until next season you pricks.

SOUTH REGION

FedEx Forum
Memphis, TN

#3 Syracuse Orange (28-9, 11-7 Big East) vs.
#2 Oklahoma Sooners (29-5, 13-3 Big XII)

Zone, zone, zone. That’s all I’ve heard the last week when people start talking about this game. Blake Griffin, the consensus #1 pick in the 2009 NBA Draft, won’t be able to handle the infamous Jim Boeheim 2-3 zone. Oh really?

Last I checked, nine other teams this season managed to fight through the Syracuse zone. Most of them were not as talented as the Sooners. Also last I checked, Griffin and the Sooners have won 29 games this season. No team wins 29 games against BCS competition with only one great player. The Sooners happen to be a very good team.

The argument for Syracuse to win this game is that their patented 2-3 zone is tailor-made to stop Blake Griffin. And by collapsing on whichever Sooner is inside, and crashing on the glass, there is a rational argument to be made for that happening. Griffin may not have a great game. But the fact that he’s out there is going to create enough of a distraction for the rest of this team to have big games. First off, there’s the other Griffin. Taylor has had a very good season as well. No, he’s not as polished as his younger brother. But he’s still averaging 10 and 6 a game, which is pretty good considering that Blake takes 22.5 and 14.5 a game for himself. Then there is Willie Warren. NO ONE is talking about this guy. Along with Tyreke Evans, he may be the most NBA-ready point guard in the entire country. And there are three solid role players in Tony Crocker, Austin Johnson and Juan Pattillo. So it’s not as if the Sooners are going to be lost out there without a typical outing from Blake Griffin. And it’s not like Griffin is only going to score 12 points and grab 6 boards. I’m willing to bet that he gets close to his averages.

There are two ways to beat Syracuse’s zone, and if the Sooners are patient with it, they have the talent to do both. The first way is to execute crisp passing. With Warren at the point, they should be able to accomplish this and get the zone out of sync. The second way to beat is to shoot threes. While no one on Oklahoma shoots remarkably well from beyond the arc, Warren, Johnson, Crocker and Pattillo all shoot 35% or better from out there. All it takes is one or two of them to go off to spread the zone out and make the inside more susceptible to Griffin’s dominance. OU should be able to accomplish that, and pull away in the 2nd half.
Pick: Oklahoma 75, Syracuse 65

***The Predictor Game of the Day***
#4 Gonzaga Bulldogs (28-5, 14-0 WCC) vs.
#1 North Carolina Tar Heels (30-4, 13-3 ACC)

I’ve also heard a lot of talk this week that Gonzaga can actually go talent for talent with UNC in this game. I don’t see it. The Zags are very talented. They are relatively deep, especially for a mid-major. Their entire starting five averages 10 points or more a game. But you can’t compare Josh Heytvelt to Tyler Hansbrough. You can’t compare Austin Daye to Deon Thompson. You can’t compare Matt Bouldin to Danny Green. Sure, statistically those guys are similar. But Gonzaga was doing most of that against the West Coast Conference. The Heels were doing it against the ACC. While Heytvelt’s stats may compare favorable to Hansbrough’s, the Zags don’t pass the “look test”.

This is by far one of the best Gonzaga teams that have come along in awhile. The Heytvelt-Daye-Bouldin-Pargo-Downs starting five is excellent. Maybe the best starting five left in the tournament…behind Carolina. Against Pitt or UConn, or even Louisville, I would really consider taking the Bulldogs to spring an upset. Especially with a great coach like Mark Few. And I love watching Jeremy Pargo. He is 6’8” power forward in a small shooting guard’s body. But there are two reasons I’m not going to go with the Zags. The first is UNC’s superior depth. When the Heels need to go to the bench, they can pull out Ed Davis and Larry Drew and Bobby Frasor. When Gonzaga goes to their bench, they have Steven Gray and a bunch of guys who play but don’t contribute. It’s one thing to have depth and capable players. The Zags have that. But other than Gray, Gonzaga can’t expect much production from the rest of their bench. At least not the way that UNC can.

The second reason I’m going with the Heels is simple. Gonzaga may have the offensive firepower to score with UNC, but they are undersized at just about every position. On top of that, their defense has been questionable all season…at least when they’ve played outside the WCC. Just this past Saturday, they gave up 81 points to Western Kentucky. WKU isn’t bad. They are a good offensive team. But they aren’t UNC. The Heels are far and away the best offense that Gonzaga has faced this season, and I don’t see any way they are going to stop them.
Pick: North Carolina 88, Gonzaga 83

MIDWEST REGION

Lucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis, IN

#12 Arizona Wildcats (21-13, 9-9 Pac-10) vs.
#1 Louisville Cardinals (30-5, 16-2 Big East)

I don't think anyone can question the inclusion of Arizona anymore. You had to know a team that had both Jordan Hill and Chase Budinger on it could compete at a national level. It also helps to play Cleveland State in the second round, but I digress. Anyway, good job by the Cats to shut all the blowhard analysts up. Stop whining Gottlieb.

As for this game, I think that Arizona runs into the wrong team. The Wildcats are a very athletic team that rarely plays as a single unit. They do well against teams that may show a good deal of teamwork, but are just overmatched in terms of pure athleticism. Zona struggles against other very athletic teams. A meeting against Wake Forest in the second round would have doomed the Wildcats. They caught a break in that round, but not in the regional semis. The Cardinals have several NBA prospects of their own and also work better as a team than Arizona does.

Terrence Williams, Edgar Sosa and Samardo Samuels get all the pub, but Earl Clark has quietly put together Louisville's best individual season. He leads the team with almost 14 points a game. He also grabs nine boards to go along with three dimes a game. He's a 6'9", 225 brute of a forward, but he plays a lot like a guard. The term "point forward" can be used to describe Clark. He is going to make a NBA team very happy next season. He is very similar to Andre Igoudala and Amare Stoudemire.

Look for Rick Petino's hybrid zones and pressure defenses to frustrate the exciteable Wildcats. Hill is the most reliable Arizona player, but has trouble against players as big, or as wide as he is. He'll have to face several tall Cardinals, and I see him on the bench in foul trouble and not making much of an impact in this game. Without him, Budinger and Nic Wise will have to carry the load themselves. I'm not sure they can do that against a better overall team.
Pick: Louisville 81, Arizona 68

#3 Kansas Jayhawks (27-7, 14-2 Big XII) vs.
#2 Michigan State Spartans (28-6, 15-3 Big Ten)

I think it's about time that the Big Ten bowed out of this tournament. As I guaranteed, only two of their seven teams would make the Sweet 16, and I expect that both of them are going to get bounced before the regional finals.

Now in all seriousness, I'm not picking against MSU because of my hatred of the Big Ten, I'm picking against them because Kansas is the better team and they have been playing better basketball for the past month. The Spartans were in cruise control for the final month of the regular season, and mailed in their conference tournament performance. Then they played terribly for 25 minutes against Robert Morris and 38 minutes against Southern Cal. The Jayhawks haven't played great in March, but they put together a complete performance at home against Mizzou, and they've looked good in three of their four halves in the tournament. So I'll spare you more analysis of this one, I think Kansas wins rather easily.
Pick: Kansas 77, Michigan State 65

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: Sweet 16, Day 1

Over the first four days of the tournament I went 38-10. That's pretty good. I only have 12 Sweet 16 teams correct, but all of my Elite 8 teams are alive. We start weekend number two with the East and West regions.

EAST REGION

T.D. Banknorth Garden
Boston, MA
#4 Xavier Musketeers (27-7, 12-4 A-10) vs.
#1 Pittsburgh Panthers (30-4, 15-3 Big East)
Once again, Jamie Dixon did everything in his power to make sure the Panthers didn’t play past the first weekend. However, Pitt didn’t respond to his usual choke job coaching techniques. After being outplayed by #16 seed East Tennessee State for 35 minutes, the Panthers went back and forth all day with an underrated Oklahoma State squad before pulling away in the final minutes. Pitt, which has relied heavily on defense for the past decade, has surrendered 70 or more points in their last three games and six of their last seven. Much has been made of Pitt’s new scoring prowess, but little has been said about the poor defense they’ve been playing. In other words, Pitt is far from the complete team that sports media is portraying them to be. If you were to put Pitt’s offense from this season with Pitt’s defense from any of the past seasons, then you’d really have something. But as of now, and it’s very weird to say this, the Pittsburgh Panthers can’t rely on their defense to win games or even keep them in games. If they don’t score, they are in trouble.

So now that Jamie Dixon has cleared Pitt’s second round hurdle, they have to clear an even bigger one…making it to the regional final. You would think that if Pitt can bust through what has been their ceiling in the new millennia, then they’d have the confidence to bust through to the Final Four. But they are facing a Xavier team that has more tournament experience than they do (mainly because the Muskies have made Elite 8’s in the previous seasons, while Pitt has not). Xavier has the defense that Pitt used to own. I know holding Wisconsin to 49 points isn’t impressive, but they held a good shooting Portland State team to 59. In fact, the Musketeers have held teams to 60 or less in seven of their last eight.

The problem for Xavier is that their last eight opponents didn’t have the firepower that currently resides on the Pitt roster. The DeJuan Blair-Sam Young team inside is lethal, especially to a mid-major that lacks height and depth inside. I expect a close, rather low scoring game, but Pitt will wear down the smaller Musketeers.
Pick: Pittsburgh 67, Xavier 63

#3 Villanova Wildcats (28-7, 13-5 Big East) vs.
#2 Duke Blue Devils (30-6, 11-5 ACC)
I think it’s safe to say that the Dookies are living on borrowed time. They played as well as they possibly could against an overmatched Texas team, and they needed several generous bounces and a couple of generous calls in avoiding the upset. While Ratface’s bunch played well, they won that game with smoke, mirrors and referees. Teams like that don’t last long in the tournament.

Meanwhile, there was nothing lucky about Villanova’s dominating performance of UCLA. From the opening tip to the final whistle, it was all Wildcats. There wasn’t a 30-second time frame in that contest when any basketball fan was able to believe that maybe UCLA had a chance. Complete dominance. As bad as Memphis made Maryland look, Villanova made a better Bruins team look even worse. I’d like to think that ‘Nova will blow out the Dookies, but I know the refs won’t allow that to happen.
Pick: Villanova 79, Duke 70

WEST REGION

Cardinals Stadium
Glendale, AZ
#5 Purdue Boilermakers (27-9, 11-7 Big Ten) vs.
#1 Connecticut Huskies (29-4, 15-3 Big East)
NCAA stupidity strikes again. First, the famous oligarchy orders their own courts for each host region. So now when you go back and forth between games, you have no idea what region you are looking at or where the game is being played since all the courts look the same and have the same massive logo at midcourt. Then the NCAA puts their logo on all the uniforms…just in case you couldn’t tell which organization was hosting the event. Was the big blue bubble at midcourt not enough of a giveaway? Now, the NCAA is refusing to call the new Glendale complex by its corporate University of Phoenix Stadium name. All because the University of Phoenix isn’t a NCAA institution. Despite the fact that it’s stupid to play college basketball games in NFL stadiums, if you don’t want to call a stadium by its proper name, then don’t play there. Both the Suns and Coyotes have their own buildings. Play at one of those. And just down the road in Tempe, Arizona State has a state of the art arena as well. If ASU can “host” a game at Cardinals Stadium, they can certainly host a game at their own gym.

Anyway, it’s been an interesting week for Jim Calhoun and UConn. Yahoo! Sports finally put the smackdown on a program that has been one of the nation’s dirtiest for a long time. Besides paying Khalid El-Amin and stealing him from Minnesota, and paying Rudy Gay (and/or his AAU team) and stealing him from Maryland, there have been numerous questionable recruits to circle through Storrs the last few seasons. And since the NCAA was too busy ordering new courts and deciding what to call stadiums to do anything about it, I’m glad to see a couple of journalists finally call out Calhoun. Hopefully the NCAA will do something more than a slap on the wrist. The NCAA won’t want to attack a program that has been one of the nation’s biggest cash cows (just like another program in Durham they refuse to investigate). It will be interesting to see what happens from here. The evidence is overwhelming against UConn on this one, so the NCAA better do something.

As for this game, the Huskies have been playing well in the tournament, with or without Calhoun (and even though I’d like to give a cancer-survivor the benefit of the doubt, I have to believe that Calhoun missed the opening round game because of the Yahoo! story and it had nothing to do with his health). The distraction will make this game closer than it should be, but Purdue struggled with Jon Brockman last weekend. I don’t see them faring much better against Hasheem Thabeet and Jeff Adrian.
Pick: Connecticut 83, Purdue 77

***The Predictor Game of the Day***
#3 Missouri Tigers (30-6, 12-4 Big XII) vs.
#2 Memphis Tigers (33-3, 16-0 CUSA)
Finally, a game that I’m looking forward to. Maybe it has something to do with neither team being from the Big East or Big Ten. This game promises to be a fast-paced, high-scoring affair. Both teams will press. Both teams will run. Both teams like to force turnovers and get up and down in transition. It should be a lot of fun to watch.

It’s going to come down to athleticism, and Memphis has the advantage in that category. As it turns out, Memphis can do more than run up and down the floor and rebound. They can shoot pretty well too, as Maryland found out the hard way. Their defense has been much better this season. Their bug-a-boo from a year ago, free throw shooting, has also vastly improved. This may actually be a more complete Memphis team from a year ago. No, they don’t have Derrick Rose or Chris Douglas-Roberts, but they have NBA ready Tyreke Evans. The freshman gets turnover prone every once and awhile. But other than that, he may be the best guard left in the tournament. Better than a healthy Ty Lawson. Robert Dozier and Shawn Taggart give Memphis a solid inside game. Along with Evans, Antonio Anderson and Doneal Mack give Memphis their balance outside. All five starters can score, rebound and pass the ball. Anything that the CUSA Tigers can get from Wesley Witherspoon, Willie Kemp and Roburt Sallie is a bonus. And Sallie has been lights out in two tournament games thus far.

Mizzou has some nice players too. Despite being a running team, the strength of the Tigers isn’t their backcourt. Forwards DeMarre Carroll and Leo Lyons combine for more than 31 points and 13 rebounds a game. When the two big bodies get in foul trouble, or when the other team collapse, Mizzou does have five capable guards. The backcourt isn’t anything special, but they are deep and any one of them can go off on any given afternoon. J.T. Tiller and Zaire Taylor are the passers and set-up men. Kim English is the 6’6” tweener who can do a little bit of everything. He’s mostly an energy guy off the bench. Matt Lawrence is a reliable 3-point shooter and Marcus Denmon is a slasher who is still trying to find a consistent role on the team. Mike Anderson’s team is deep and they love to run opponents off the court.

While at UAB, Anderson’s defense used to give John Calipari’s Memphis teams fits. I suspect that Evans will be challenged and pressured the entire length of the court all day long. While the freshman may struggle to break Missouri’s press, I think that Memphis can otherwise run with Mizzou’s break-neck pace. And if Memphis can turn it into a halfcourt game in the last 10 minutes, I don’t think Missouri stands much of a chance. Look for Evans to have a down game, but the rest of Memphis to pick him up. Just make sure you tune in for this one.
Pick: Memphis 84, Missouri 81

Sunday, March 22, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: Round 2, Day 2

Well that was all kinds of ugly for Maryland. Not surprised that was the outcome. A little disappointed that Maryland never really mounted any sort of rally after the ten minute mark. But Memphis is pretty good. This is one of the top seeds that Maryland just didn’t match up with. Going into the game, I knew that Memphis would have to have an off shooting night, and they had the exact opposite. They hit everything. It was reminiscent to the 2nd round loss to UCLA in 2000. It didn’t matter what the Terps did. The Tigers were simply better yesterday. End of story. Still, a great ending to the season for Maryland. Reinforcements are coming. The days of Dave Neal and Landon Milbourne composing the frontcourt are over. If Greivis Vasquez stays, and Lance Stephenson does indeed come to College Park, Maryland could be very, very dangerous next season. We’ll have to see on that. Now to Sunday’s action. We’ll do the abbreviated version like I did yesterday. The record is now up to 31-9.

EAST REGION

University of Dayton Arena
Dayton, OH
#8 Oklahoma State Cowboys (23-11, 9-7 Big XII) vs.
#1 Pittsburgh Panthers (29-4, 15-3 Big East)

OSU has played very well over the past month. Pittsburgh hasn’t looked great since beating Connecicut several weeks ago. However, something tells me that Pittsburgh is due for a dominating game. You know, something to lull the rest of the country into believing that Jamie Dixon won’t choke again in the Sweet 16. Espeically after that lousy performance against East Tennessee. The Pokes can score, but they don’t have the inside game to contain DeJuan Blair and Sam Young. All the OSU big men either don’t play enough due to stamina or consistent foul trouble.
Pick: Pittsburgh 76, Oklahoma State 65

Taco Bell Arena
Boise, ID

#4 Xavier Musketeers (26-7, 12-4 A-10)
#12 Wisconsin Badgers (20-12, 10-8 Big Ten)
Another great coaching job by Leonard Hamilton sent the Seminoles back to Tallahassee and left the Badgers remaining in Boise. Normally, I wouldn’t have picked Lenny’s bunch to do much of anything. But they matched up so well against a Badgers team that can’t score and a Xavier team that couldn’t have gone inside against the taller Noles, they were just so tempting. I overlooked Leonard Hamilton at my own peril.

So now I’m left the Bo The Barnyard Owl and the Muskies. Hmmm… Well Xavier can at least get to 60 points without the aid of overtime and they had a nice relaxing win against Portland State. Let’s go with the Musketeers.
Pick: Xavier 69, Wisconsin 56

SOUTH REGION

American Airlines Arena
Miami, FL

#6 Arizona State Sun Devils (25-9, 11-7 Pac-10) vs.
#3 Syracuse Orange (27-9, 11-7 Big East)

This is another game where my Sweet 16 team is no longer around (just wait, this will be a recurring theme). ASU beat my upset special in Temple. Dionte Christmas showed up in Miami, but the rest of the Owls stayed in Philly. The reason I took Temple so far was because I thought they could legitimately beat ASU. I also thought that Syracuse was immensely overrated, and I had no confidence taking them after the first round. So even though I went against James Harden and the Sun Devils in round one, I like them today to knock this Big East squad back north for the summer.
Pick: Arizona State 72, Syracuse 66

MIDWEST REGION

University of Dayton Arena
Dayton, OH

#9 Siena Saints (27-7, 16-2 MAAC) vs.
#1 Louisville Cardinals (29-5, 16-2 Big East)
It figures that when I actually do take a Big Ten to win a tossup game, I somehow get it wrong. Michigan manages to pull one out. Florida State gives Wisconsin a gift. The Saints tried everything possible to give Ohio State a win. They missed free throws. They turned the ball over 22 times. The committee even handed OSU a home game. But the Buckeyes simply didn’t want to win it. This is the second year that these hacks from Albany have taken a bite out of my brackets, and I’m not happy about it. As for this game, there isn’t much to talk about. Louisville should cruise.
Pick: Louisville 85, Siena 68

Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome
Minneapolis, MN

***The Predictor Game of the Day***
#10 Southern California Trojans (22-12, 9-9 Pac-10) vs.
#2 Michigan State Spartans (27-6, 15-3 Big Ten)
I’m sitting here listening to Tim Brando and Mike Gminski argue over who the best Ratface coaching disciple is. The conversation went a good three to four minutes (in a game where Ratface was not involved) which is about three to four minutes longer than it should have gone. Here’s the short list: no one. Jeff Capel lucked into the Oklahoma job and lucked into having Blake Griffin on the team. Mike Brey has done nothing special at Notre Dame. Actually, he’s wasted quite a bit of talent. Johnny Dawkins has a long way to go at Stanford before the Cardinal are competitive again. And Quinn Snyder? He was last seen gelling his hair, paying his recruits and is now coaching somewhere in the D-League. So in other words, there is no one worth mentioning.

Anyway, there may not be a hotter team in the tournament than USC. I watched most of their game against BC, and they absolutely dominated the second half. They completely shut down Tyrese Rice, they didn’t let any of the supporting cast get hot from outside, and they utterly manhandled the Eagles inside. Taj Gibson has finally been playing up to his potential the past two weeks. I watched a few USC games back in February. The Gibson I saw then and the Gibson I saw Friday are two entirely different players. It wouldn’t surprise me in the least if the Trojans jumped up and bit Michigan State. I’m going to stick with Sparty for the sake of my brackets. That’s really the only reason.
Pick: Michigan State 67, Southern Cal 64

#11 Dayton Flyers (27-7, 11-5 A-10) vs.
#3 Kansas Jayhawks (26-7, 14-2 Big XII)

Ah, an upset I actually landed! Along with Arizona, the Flyers are single-handedly keeping me alive in the ol’ office pool (had FSU won, I’d actually be leading…again, thanks a lot Lenny). And a Big East team to boot! We’ll see Jump Suit Bobby and the Fightin’ Hicks next year…or not. They don’t have much coming in. But thanks to Chris Wright and Dayton, your check is in the mail.

Meanwhile, I knew that Young Kansas (as opposed to last year’s Old Kansas) would have problems with a veteran NDSU team with two very good scorers. So the final score doesn’t really concern me. It’s important for the Jayhawks to get a tournament game under their belt. I think Kansas has an easier time in this game with a Dayton team that just survived a dogfight.
Pick: Kansas 80, Dayton 68

American Airlines Arena
Miami, FL

#13 Cleveland State Vikings (26-10, 12-6 Horizon) vs.
#12 Arizona Wildcats (20-13, 9-9 Pac-10)

Could it be a Sweet 16 birth for Arizona? I think I smell one. Would is surprise anyone if Lute Olsen suddenly appeared in Miami and tried to take the team over to get all the credit? Not at all. Regardless, I was really surprised not that Cleveland State won, but how easy they made it look. I think that has more to do with Wake’s late season tank job than anything the Vikings actually did. So, as usual when these low seeded small teams spring an upset, it’s not that wise to pick them twice. Give me a suddenly dangerous Arizona team to advance to Indianapolis.
Pick: Arizona 76, Cleveland State 71

WEST REGION

Taco Bell Arena
Boise, ID
#6 Marquette Golden Eagles (25-9, 12-6 Big East) vs.
#3 Missouri Tigers (29-6, 12-4 Big XII)

Marquette managed to knock off another one of my upsets specials, Utah State, by one point in a game that they trailed by seven late. So now they get a team that they can’t run with, can’t score with and can’t stop defensively. In other words…why couldn’t Marquette just do me a favor and lose in the first round like I needed them to? These Eagles don’t have the firepower to run with Missouri. The Tigers didn’t look great against Cornell, as the Big Red did manage to slow the pace down and limit the transition game. Mizzou should be able to speed up a Marquette team without their star Dominic James.
Pick: Missouri 81, Marquette 66

Saturday, March 21, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: From California To Calipari



#10 Maryland Terrapins (21-13, 7-9 ACC) vs.
#2 Memphis Tigers (32-3, 16-0 CUSA)
NCAA Tournament 2nd Round, West Region
Sprint Center – Kansas City, MO


Fantastic win for the Terps, considering that they didn’t play all that well for the last 10 minutes of the first half and the first 10 minutes of the second half. I keep saying that it really doesn’t matter where the Terps go from here. A tournament bid and tournament win in a season with little talent is more than I expected. It’s certainly more than what most people expected. Assuming that Greivis Vasquez stays, the entire team will return intact with at least two legit big men coming in. And Lance Stephenson may not be far behind either.

As for the game against Cal, the Terps defense woke up just in time for the ACC and NCAA tournament. Now the defensive result against the Bears may have just been a result of California finally running into a team that doesn’t play in the Pac-10. But this was the first time that I can remember a Gary Williams team switching defense from possession to possession. The Terps were in man. Then they were in several different zones. Then back to man. They would full court press. Then not press. Then three-quarters court pressure. It was a potpourri that kept the Bears guessing. And other than a 5 to 7 minute timeframe in the beginning of the second half, the Bears never really got into any rhythm.

Also showing up just in time for March is Eric Hayes. It’s taken him almost three full seasons to get the confidence to look for his shot. He finally has it. It used to make Maryland fans nervous to see Hayes spot up, even though it didn’t happen a lot. Now Terps fans actually expect him to make shots whenever he squares. I had my doubts about him coming off the bench, but Gary has been proven right again. I’m still not a big fan of Sean Mosley getting the minutes he’s getting, but it does seem that Hayes is much more comfortable coming off the bench.

Other than Hayes, and the obvious contributions from Vasquez, the Terps got 15 points from Dave Neal. His dream season just won’t end. Almost every shot he made was crucial. Adrian Bowie and Landon Milbourne also rediscovered their games. Everything clicked for the Terps in their win over Cal…well, at least everything clicked in the final 10 minutes. The best news for Maryland? The Terps won using only seven players. Cliff Tucker played for two minutes, so he should be well rested to contribute this weekend. Why he played only two minutes is an issue to debate. But we won’t focus on that now. I fully expect him to see increased playing time against Memphis.

Ok, let’s focus on the Tigers, and do it quickly. Unfortunately I don’t have a lot of time to spend on this game or any other. It’s a shame since it could be the last time I talk about the Terps this season. But that’s the way it goes. Anyway, Memphis owns the best record of any team in the tournament, checking in at 32-3. 19 of those wins were racked up against pitiful Conference USA. The best that conference could offer up was 11-loss Tulsa, 12-loss Houston and 12-loss UAB. So in other words, as is the case every season, it was Memphis and everyone else. The Tigers lost close in late November against Memphis. They lost close in late December against Syracuse. And they lost in early December in overtime at Georgetown. That’s considerably better than Maryland fared against the Hoyas. Although I think both Memphis and Maryland have the last laugh. They do have relatively recent wins at Tennessee and at Gonzaga. They also own one against average Cincinnati. So what does that tell us about Memphis? As usual, not much. This is a team that no one can ever gauge because of the competition they play after the year turns. They could be really good. Or their record could be severely inflated.

Last year, Memphis was legit. Based on their last outing against Cal State – Northridge, the jury is still out on the 08-09 Tigers. What we do know is that Memphis is once again one of the most athletic teams in the country. They are all long and lean, and most are lightning quick. They are led by freshman guard Tyreke Evans (not Tyree Evans, the guard who had now infamous problems qualifying at UMD). This one-and-done is averaging almost 17 points a game. He grabs more than five rebounds per and averages almost four assists. He’s fast. He’s a good ball-handler. And he actually plays defense. Helping Evans out is one of Memphis’ few returning players, Robert Dozier. The often foul-prone forward is managing 13 and 7 when he manages to stay on the court. Shawn Taggert, Antonio Anderson and Doneal Mack are also all big contributors. And Roburt Sallie, who has been quiet most of the season, managed 35 points in their win over the Matadors. He is an occasional three-point specialist and someone Maryland may want to keep an eye on.

The leader of this band of future NBA players is John Calipari. During his career, Gary has had the best of Calipari. In 1994, the Terps came into the NCAA tournament as the 10 seed. After beating Saint Louis in the first round, Gary and company advanced to take on 2nd seeded UMass. The coach at UMass was Calipari, who employed (probably literally) Marcus Camby. Maryland had a rather easy time with the Minutemen and Calipari, advancing to the Sweet 16. History repeating itself would be nice.

Five years ago, the Terps and Tigers met in Massachusetts for a preseason tournament. Again, Maryland rolled over a Calipari-led team. Now that Memphis team was not as talented as the current outfit, and this Terps team is not as talented as the one from five years ago, but the coaches are still the same. Calipari can recruit well (and probably pay well), but his coaching skills leave a little to be desired.

All one needs to do is check the game footage from their game against Northridge. The Matadors threw a couple of different zones at Memphis. For 35 minutes, the Tigers and their freshman point guard looked lost. They couldn’t get anything going in their half court sets. Their frustrations on offense turned in to frustrations on defense. The typical run and gun didn’t work because the Tigers weren’t really trying on the defensive end. Until the vast athletic advantage that Memphis possessed kicked in at the end of the game, the Tigers were easily outplayed by an inferior Northridge team.

So look for Maryland to use a lot of zones. Also, since the Terps are one of the best teams in the country in terms of turnover margin, the Tigers offense shouldn’t have the fast breaks they need to go on a quick run that can change the game. Being extra careful with the ball and throwing some zones at Memphis will help keep it close. I just don’t see Maryland winning. There are too many tall players. There are too many guys who shoot well. There are too many players that are good at contesting shots. This team is much more balanced than the Cal squad Maryland just disposed of. If Vasquez doesn’t go off for 30 plus, I don’t think Maryland will be able to score enough. It’s been a great run in the last month, and I hope it continues. I wish I could be more optimistic. I expect the Terps to keep it close – and who knows – with some more luck, they could pull off another upset.

Memphis 76
Maryland 67


As for the rest of the country, I was doing extremely well up until midnight. Then FSU somehow blew a 12-point lead to Wisconsin, a team that sometimes struggles to score 12 points all together. Ohio State lost a game in which their opponents gave them 22 turnovers. And if anyone has seen Wake Forest recently, the concerned citizens in Winston-Salem would like to know. Who would have thought the last three ACC teams alive would UNC, Duke…and Maryland! Crazy. I was 25-7 in the first round, which is still pretty good. I landed my upset picks of Arizona, Dayton, USC and WKU. So all and all, not bad.

EAST REGION

Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, NC

***The Predictor Game of the Day***
#7 Texas Longhorns (23-11, 9-7 Big XII) vs.
#2 Duke Blue Devils (29-6, 11-5 ACC)

My favorite part of the Duke-Binghamton game was when every single Bearcats starter was whistled for one foul in the first three minutes of the game. Duke was in the one-and-one bonus before the first TV timeout. If that generous officiating happens again, poor Texas won’t stand a chance. On the assumption it doesn’t, I like the Longhorns here. Turkish sensation Dogus Balbay has locked down the UT point position, and the Longhorns have been playing good ball ever since. Texas is more physical inside than most teams that the Dookies have played in the ACC. And A.J. Abrams is one of the most dangerous scorers left in the tournament. The more balanced, and bigger Longhorns advance.
Pick: Texas 79, Duke 75

Wachovia Center
Philadelphia, PA
#6 UCLA Bruins (26-8, 13-5 Pac-10) vs.
#3 Villanova Wildcats (27-7, 13-5 Big East)
Definition of fair: the opposite of what the Bruins have to go through. After playing a knock down, drag out game against VCU (By the way Ratface, did you see what Darren Collison did against Eric Maynor on the final shot? That’s how a team is supposed to play defense against a premier scorer. Good thing your team couldn’t do it two years ago.), UCLA has to play a virtual road game at 10:10 am back on the West Coast. All signs point to Villanova in this one.
Pick: Villanova 68, UCLA 62

SOUTH REGION


Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, NC

#8 LSU Tigers (27-7, 13-3 SEC) vs.
#1 North Carolina Tar Heels (29-4, 13-3 ACC)
The Tigers are the only team left carrying the SEC banner entering the first weekend. Based on how they barely squeaked by Butler, and how Tennessee and Mississippi State played, the SEC is as bad as everyone thought it was. With or without Ty Lawson, the Heels roll here.
Pick: North Carolina 92, LSU 74

Sprint Center
Kansas City, MO
#10 Michigan Wolverines (21-13, 9-9 Big Ten) vs.
#2 Oklahoma Sooners (28-5, 13-3 Big XII)

On the opposite end of the spectrum from the SEC, was the performance put on by the Big XII. The power of the Great Plains had a spotless 6-0 record in round one, and most of the games weren’t close. Meanwhile, the Wolverines needed some Oliver Purnell coaching (or whatever it is he does on the sideline) to make it through to round two. Sooners should have no problem with the smaller and slower Wolverines.
Pick: Oklahoma 81, Michigan 68

Rose Garden
Portland, OR

#12 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers (25-8, 15-3 Sun Belt) vs.
#4 Gonzaga Bulldogs (27-5, 14-0 WCC)
WKU had no problems dispatching an overmatched and vastly overrated Illinois team. Gonzaga took a siesta for the first half of their game against Akron before taking command early in the 2nd. It was a rather easy win for both teams, and both should be well rested. That’s good because neither team is exceptionally deep. If this is the best Zags team in years, then they should have another easy win. Something tells me this is going to much, much closer than expected. In the end, the Hilltoppers will be one possession short from their second straight Sweet 16 trip.
Pick: Gonzaga 80, Western Kentucky 78

WEST REGION

Wachovia Center
Philadelphia, PA

#9 Texas A&M Aggies (24-9, 9-7 Big XII) vs.
#1 Connecticut Huskies (28-4, 15-3 Big East)
Well, I said that Texas A&M was a streaky team. I just didn’t expect them to be on a hot streak on Thursday. The Aggies hit their first ten shots and never looked back against the Stormin’ Mormons. Of the seven games I lost, only Wake’s ugly performance against Cleveland State made me look worse than A&M’s dominating game over BYU. The other five games I got wrong were decided by a total of 17 points and three overtimes. A hot A&M team could give UConn trouble, but the taller guards for the Huskies should give Josh Carter and company fits.
Pick: Connecticut 77, Texas A&M 69

Rose Garden
Portland, OR

#5 Purdue Boilermakers (26-9, 11-7 Big Ten) vs.
#4 Washington Huskies (26-8, 14-4 Pac-10)

If anyone missed Jon Brockman’s performance against Mississippi State, then you missed a treat. It may have been one of the best big-man performance of the year. Not only did he shut down Jarvis Varnardo on both ends of the floor, he finally looked like the NBA prospect that he’s been claimed to be. The 14 rebound-game was really impressive. Even though Purdue has a great backcourt, the Huskies have the obvious advantage in the paint, and their backcourt can hold their own. I originally had Purdue advancing in my locked bracket. That will obviously stay the same. Here, I’m going to change my pick and go with UW. Brockman, Isaiah Thomas and Quincy Pondexter will be too much in what should be a home game for Washington.
Pick: Washington 84, Purdue 77

Friday, March 20, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: Round 1, Day 2

I went 14-2 yesterday, and one of the losses was Oliver Purnell related. I shouldn't be blamed for that. Anyway, it will be interesting today because I've picked several upsets. Let's see if the record holds.

EAST REGION

University of Dayton Arena
Dayton, OH

#16 East Tennessee State Buccaneers (23-10, 14-6 A-Sun) vs.
#1 Pittsburgh Panthers (28-4, 15-3 Big East)

Jamie Dixon is back! And this time with a number one seed. Surely this means the Panthers can’t choke before the Sweet 16 this season…right?
Pick: Pittsburgh 73, East Tennessee State 48

#9 Tennessee Volunteers (21-12, 10-6 SEC) vs.
#8 Oklahoma State Cowboys (22-11, 9-7 Big XII)
I know that the Vols lost Chris Lofton and JaJuan Smith from last year, but there is just too much talent on the roster for Tennessee to be as bad as they were this season. Bruce Pearl, as gifted a showman and recruiter as he may be, is turning out to be an average coach. His teams have folded twice in the NCAA Tournament to competition they probably should have beaten. Pearl’s Volunteers needed 40 minutes to dispose of American last season in the first round. And this season, Pearl has taken Top 10 talent and turned them into a national afterthought.

OSU is the hotter team. Their win over rival Oklahoma in the Big XII tournament should give them some momentum coming into the big dance. Their only losses in the past month were a four point loss in Norman and an eight point loss to Missouri last weekend. The Cowboys have the horses to run up and down the court with Tennessee, and have the guards to score if the Volunteers happen to get hot. James Anderson and Byron Eaton are tweeners who can score, rebound and distribute. I like OSU’s versatility and I really like how they entered the tournament.
Pick: Oklahoma State 77, Tennessee 69

Taco Bell Arena
Boise, ID

#13 Portland State Vikings (23-9, 11-5 Big Sky) vs.
#4 Xavier Musketeers (25-7, 12-4 A-10)

There are three great examples of the pod system not working. First, why in the world is Villanova allowed to play at the Wachovia Center. That is their second home arena. I don’t care if they didn’t play “enough” home games to have it qualify as a host site. That practice has got to stop. The second example is the Boise sub-regional. I know it’s tough to get local teams to Boise, seeing as Idaho, Montana and Wyoming aren’t exactly bastions of college basketball. But Boise is hosting Xavier, Missouri, Florida State and Cornell this weekend. Two of those teams, including Xavier, are “protected” seeds. I’m not sure how sending those schools to Boise is protecting them, or cutting down on travel time. The third example is even more curious, and we’ll get to it soon.


Nothing says "big game" like Boise, Idaho. I'm sure all FSU's fans are looking forward to a vacation in a city whose average March temperature is 45 degrees.

As for Xavier, I thought last year’s team, with six capable scores, was much better than this year’s squad. Xavier managed to lose five times in conference (if you include the A-10 tournament) and only one of those was to Temple and one to Dayton. Losses to Duquesne, Charlotte and Richmond really have me questioning how good the Muskies are. Portland State is a gift #13 seed for Xavier, and they should have no problems here. The Vikings are about two seeds two high, and won’t be able to handle the initial wonders of B.J. Raymond and C.J. Anderson. However, PSU is the second best three-point shooting team in the country. If they get hot, they have a puncher’s chance.
Pick: Xavier 73, Portland State 63

#12 Wisconsin Badgers (19-12, 10-8 Big Ten) vs.
#5 Florida State Seminoles (25-9, 10-6 ACC)

The Noles return to the dance for the first time in 11 years. Looks like Leonard Hamilton finally did something right. Now how in the world he didn’t manage to make the tournament when he had both Toney Douglas and Al Thornton on the same team is a question that should be asked. But right now, people in Tallahassee are ignoring that.

Other than the trip to Boise, FSU has to be pretty happy with their initial draw. They get the weakest Big Ten school in the field and they potentially get a struggling mid-major in the 2nd round. On Selection Sunday, analysts were shocked – SHOCKED – to see the Badgers as a 12 seed. Surely this was a team that should have been an eight or nine. I’m not sure what was so preposterous. Wisconsin was 19-12 in a bad basketball conference. They had a six-game losing streak in January. Their season-saving five-game winning streak in February isn’t that impressive since two of the wins came against Iowa and Indiana. Six of their ten conference wins came to teams below them in the standings. This team would be lucky to get a 12 seed in the NIT (and yes, I know the NIT seeds only go to eight…thank you Mr. NIT Expert). Wisconsin doesn’t belong here and FSU will expose them.
Pick: Florida State 66, Wisconsin 52

SOUTH REGION


American Airlines Arena
Miami, FL

#14 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks (24-7, 13-3 Southland) vs.
#3 Syracuse Orange (26-9, 11-7 Big East)

By allowing Syracuse to get a three seed, the committee is basically telling major teams across the nation that the regular season is worthless. All you have to do is show up to your conference tournament, win a couple of games (and it wouldn’t hurt if one was a headline grabbing 6-OT game) and lose in the later rounds respectively. Nevermind the seven conference losses, including one to Georgetown. Or the sixth place finish in the overrated Big East. Or the out of conference loss to Cleveland State. Nevermind that the point guard is a thug who beats up women. No, the Orange had a good three days in New York City, and that’s good enough for the committee. Here’s your three seed and the worst 14th seeded team to go with it. Enjoy!
Pick: Syracuse 78, Stephen F. Austin 61

#11 Temple Owls (22-11, 11-5 A-10) vs.
#6 Arizona State Sun Devils (24-9, 11-7 Pac-10)
Is it just me, or do all the 11 seeds in this tournament look really good? I had UCLA escaping in the first round from VCU, but I don’t like the chances for any of the other sixes. Temple, for several reasons, looks really appealing to me. I’ve seen them play in person once, and they looked real sharp at The Palestra for 39 minutes against St. Joe’s. They almost blew it at the free throw line, but that wasn’t what I was paying attention to. Other than Dionte Christmas, who stands out in every game he plays, I was amazed at how good a passing team the Owls are. Everyone passes the ball real well, including some of their awkward big men. There are six guys on this team that average two or more assists per game. Temple is reliant on Christmas to have a big game, but they do have two players who can score inside if need be. With Lavoy Allen averaging 11 and 9, it’s not entirely a one man show.


The more Temple wins, the more lame Christmas jokes we'll have to suffer through. Prepare yourself.

Arizona State looked like a team to be reckoned with back in mid-February. Since that time, they have not played great basketball. On Saturday, they choked away a 15-point halftime lead to the sixth place Pac-10 team. James Harden is terrific player, but when he doesn’t score, the Sun Devils struggle to win. Temple plays solid defense, and I don’t think it will be easy for Harden to get his 20 points per game. Although it is nice to picture the NC State fans having to watch Herb Sendek in a tournament game while the Wolfpack missed the tournament…again.
Pick: Temple 68, Arizona State 62

MIDWEST REGION


University of Dayton Arena
Dayton, OH

#16 Morehead State Eagles (20-15, 12-6 OVC) vs.
#1 Louisville Cardinals (28-5, 16-2 Big East)

I was unhappy to see that Morehead State (please no laughing, grow-up people) knocked off Alabama State in the play-in – err – opening round game. Otherwise I would have been able to talk about Alabama State’s 7’1” center Chief Kickingstallionsims, who would definitely have a place at center on my all-name team (I don’t know who else would be on that team at the current moment, but I think I’d also reserve a space for God Shammgod). Tough break for Alabama State and Kickingstallionsims.

I was also happy and unhappy to see the Cardinals get the number one overall seed. I was happy for Rick Pitino, who continues to be one of my favorite coaches for the way his teams press and play defense. I was unhappy because I was hoping that Louisville would grab a two seed, and I could pick them to win the National Championship while everyone else picked either Pitt or UNC. My mind was made up in early March that the Cards would win it all. But my secret is out now.
Pick: Louisville 80, Morehead State 53

#9 Siena Saints (26-7, 16-2 MAAC) vs.
#8 Ohio State Buckeyes (22-10, 10-8 Big Ten)

Ugh, I really don’t want to talk about this game. Nothing says ugly basketball like a mid-major that can’t score against good teams and a Big Ten team. I wasn’t impressed with Siena last season, even when they stomped on Vanderbilt in the first round. I’m even less impressed with them this season, and they should really be a 12 or 13 seed. Plus, the Buckeyes got a gift with a virtual home game in Dayton. Ohio State is probably just good enough to win.
Pick: Ohio State 64, Siena 57

Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome
Minneapolis, MN

#15 Robert Morris Colonials (24-10, 15-3 NEC) vs.
#2 Michigan State Spartans (26-6, 15-3 Big Ten)
Even though Duke is the weakest #2 seed in the field, if I had to pick one #2 to lose in the first round, it would be Michigan State. They still aren’t playing as a complete unit thanks to their plethora of injuries. Even when healthy, the Spartans don’t score enough to run away from a lot of opponents…even lesser ones. However, Raymar Morgan and Kalin Lucas are more physical than anyone RMU possesses. With no player taller than 6’7”, RMU will get worn down by the second half.
Pick: Michigan State 72, Robert Morris 56

#10 Southern California Trojans (22-11, 9-7 Pac-10) vs.
#7 Boston College Eagles (22-11, 9-7 ACC)

The Trojans picked the right time to get hot, and managed to surprise the Pac-10 from the sixth seed to clinch the automatic birth. Otherwise, despite playmakers like Taj Gibson, Daniel Hackett and freshman star DeMar DeRozan, USC would have been sitting at home. This is not similar case to Mississippi State, a team ran through a conference that was wide open. The Pac-10 has several good to great teams at the top. So what took the Trojans so long to realize their potential? Well, they are the worst three-point shooting team in their conference. With a bunch of “stars”, there isn’t a lot of focus on team defense. And there is no contribution from the bench. In three tournament games, the Trojans got fewer than 20 points combined from their bench.

The Eagles aren’t deep either. As Maryland fans know by now, Tyrese Rice is their only real scoring threat of note. Sometimes Rakim Sanders gets frisky. And it always seems like one of the other starters will step up in a big game. But other than 18 to 20 a game from Rice, there is no reliable scoring option for Al Skinner. He’s been using smoke and mirrors all season to get BC to 22-11. I think the Trojans will stay hot for a little longer, just hot enough to knock off the Eagles.
Pick: Southern Cal 66, Boston College 65

***THE PREDICTOR GAME OF THE DAY***
#14 North Dakota State Bison (26-6, 16-2 Summit) vs.
#3 Kansas Jayhawks (25-7, 14-2 Big XII)

Congrats to the Bison! NDSU, in their first year of NCAA Tournament eligibility, brought March Madness to the Dakotas for the first time. It’s a great story, and one that could conceivably continue. The Bison are a senior-heavy team, and even though they obviously don’t have tournament experience, lots of seniors counts for something at this time of year. They also have Ben Woodside, who is the leading scorer for all tournament teams. He averaged almost 23 ppg and had a 60-point game against Stephen F. Austin earlier this season. This team is only a few years removed from beating Wisconsin in Madison and beating Minnesota in this very city.


You aren't alone if you've never heard of Ben Woodside. Hopefully Kansas brushes up on his scoring abilities.

Against any other three seed, I would really consider taking the Bison (especially against either of the three seeds from the Big East). However, Bill Self has finally removed the hex that hovered over the Jayhawks during Roy Williams’ tenure. This is no longer a program that can’t win in March. This is no longer a team that is going to lose to Bucknell. Even though Kansas recently lost to both Texas Tech and Baylor, they also managed to beat Oklahoma, Missouri and Texas within the past month. Great season for the Bison, but they didn’t luck out with their first round matchup.
Pick: Kansas 77, North Dakota State 68

#11 Dayton Flyers (26-7, 11-5 A-10) vs.
#6 West Virginia Mountaineers (23-11, 10-8 Big East)

Minneapolis is the Gus Johnson region, and since I don’t see an upset in the other three games (since I don’t count USC beating BC as a huge upset), then I have a feeling this is going to be the one. It wouldn’t be the first round without Gus leaving one of his lungs on press row.

The more I look at West Virginia, the worse they look. They have a lot of medium-sized guys. Not a lot of true power forwards. Certainly no point guards of any note with Joe Mazzulla out for the season. Freshman Darryl Bryant runs the point. Freshmen and March don’t go together well. WVU doesn’t rebound all that well. They are good on the defensive end under Bob Huggins, but tend to get complacent from time to time. It’s a team that’s ripe for an upset.

Dayton has had some bad losses in conference. But they beat the Big East’s Marquette when Dominic James was healthy, and Marquette was better than WVU during the season. Both Chris Wright and Marcus Johnson can take games over. WVU has also been strictly average away from home…as most Huggins teams are. I like the Flyers and I hear a classic Gus Johnson call in the making.
Pick: Dayton 68, West Virginia 64

American Airlines Arena
Miami, FL

#13 Cleveland State Vikings (25-10, 10-6 Horizon) vs.
#4 Wake Forest Demon Deacons (24-6, 11-5 ACC)

So the Deacs return to the NCAA Tournament with a lot of questions surrounding them. Five of their six conference losses were of the bizarre variety, falling to ACC teams well beneath them in the standings. However, this is still the same Wake team that owns victories over UNC, Duke, Clemson and Florida State. But make no mistake about it, this team struggles away from Winston-Salem because of their youth, and their inexperience will be their eventual undoing. Not here though, not against an also-ran from an average mid-major conference.
Pick: Wake Forest 77, Cleveland State 61

#12 Arizona Wildcats (19-13, 9-9 Pac-10) vs.
#5 Utah Utes (24-9, 12-4 Mountain West)

And now for the third example of how the pod system isn’t working. If you choose to skip South Beach and head to the Heat’s basketball arena for the day, you’ll get to see Utah, Arizona and Arizona State. Not the easiest locale for their fans to get to. And both Utah and Arizona possess rather large fan bases. Is there no way for some of these teams to play in Boise, Portland or even Kansas City?

As for the actual game, there’s been a lot of whining about Arizona. But I’m going with the Wildcats in this one. They remind me a lot of last year’s Villanova team that made the Sweet 16 as a 12 seed. They have two NBA ready players in Chase Budinger and Jordan Hill, which is a luxury the Utes do not have. Plus, the main reason Zona made the dance is their out of conference gauntlet. That included wins over Kansas, Gonzaga and San Diego State. Add in wins against UW and UCLA, and that’s good enough for me.
Pick: Arizona 72, Utah 71

WEST REGION


Taco Bell Arena
Boise, ID
#14 Cornell Big Red (21-9, 11-3 Ivy) vs.
#3 Missouri Tigers (28-6, 12-4 Big XII)

It will be interesting to see how the Ivy League kids handle the newest installment of “40 Minutes of Hell”. I don’t think they saw anything like it during their SAT’s.
Pick: Missouri 83, Cornell 55

#11 Utah State Aggies (30-4, 14-2 WAC) vs.
#6 Marquette Golden Eagles (24-9, 12-6 Big East)

I’ve been targeting Marquette for a first round exit ever since Dominic James got hurt. In many ways, this Marquette team is comparable to the Indiana team that limped into the tournament last year after Kelvin Sampson was fired. While losing a player is not as serious as NCAA violations and probation, it seems to have the same effect on Marquette. This has been a dead team walking since early March.

Utah State is one of only two teams entering the tournament with 30 wins, and they are a very good team. Don’t let the mid-major label fool you. If Gonzaga went 30-4, they’d be a two seed. USU has to have this kind of season on a consistent basis to get better seeding in the future. Gary Wilkinson is a great story. He went from high school dropout who had never picked up a basketball, to WAC Player of the Year in less than six years. He’s turned his life around, picked up the game very easily, gotten married and is about to lead the Aggies to a first round win.
Pick: Utah State 70, Marquette 63

Thursday, March 19, 2009

2009 NCAA Tournament: Invited...And It Feels So Good



#10 Maryland Terrapins (20-13, 7-9 ACC) vs.
#7 California Golden Bears (22-10, 11-7 Pac-10)
NCAA Tournament 1st Round, West Region
Sprint Center – Kansas City, MO


Like most parties, you may decide not to show up, you’re not sure who else is going, but being invited is always nice. And it was nice to see the Terps get an invite to the NCAA Tournament. Now we could sit here for hours and debate whether they deserved to go. Here is the short answer. Compared to last season’s Maryland team, or several others that haven’t made the NCAA Tourney, this Maryland team doesn’t deserve to get in. They simply aren’t that good. However, when you compare the Terps to the other bubble teams, then it’s obvious to most casual basketball observers (including the committee) that Maryland did indeed deserve their invite to the dance. What, you’d rather see Penn State?

As far as the seeding goes, is Maryland a bit high? Yeah, probably. Maybe by one slot. But I’ve always argued that seeding is never really important. The year Maryland won the NCAA Tournament, and they were seeded as a #1, they had to play Wisconsin (8 seed), Kentucky (4 seed), Connecticut (2 seed), Kansas (1 seed) and finally Indiana (the easiest of the bunch at a 5 seed). It didn’t matter that Maryland was a one seed. They had to play five legitimately good teams to win the championship. That very same year, Indiana got to play Utah (12 seed), UNC-Wilmington (13 seed), Duke (a very weak 1 seed), Kent State (10 seed) and Oklahoma (2 seed) before facing Maryland. Indiana as a five seed had an easier road than Maryland did as a one. So it doesn’t necessarily matter where you are seeded because sometimes the chalk holds and sometimes it doesn’t. Really, does Maryland have a better chance of reaching the second weekend as a 10 seed rather than an 11? Uh, no.

The complaint shouldn’t be where one team is seeded and another isn’t. The complaint should always be focused around did your team get in the tournament or did your team get left out. For all the Kansas fans complaining about a 3 seed or Clemson fans complaining about a 7 seed, let me ask you this: would you rather be where you are than where St. Mary’s is? Or Penn State? Or any of the other 280-something teams that didn’t get into the tournament? Your team is in, stop complaining. I said this two years ago, to advance in this tournament, you are going to have to beat a plethora of good teams. It doesn’t matter what your seed is.

Maryland’s draw looks rather interesting. I think the Terps landed in the most wide open quarter of the bracket. The one seed is UConn, which hasn’t played all that well since losing Jerome Dyson. Memphis and Missouri are the two and three seeds. Both teams have shown plenty of promise, but Memphis doesn’t play anyone decent after New Year’s and Missouri has no tournament experience. The four seed is Washington, a team that won the Pac-10 regular season title, but didn’t do so convincingly. They also looked terrible in the Pac-10 tournament. And it’s not as if the Pac-10 as a whole is lighting the country on fire. Purdue checks in at the five seed. They are an anomaly. The Boilers are a Big Ten team that can actually score. But they play very little defense. They even struggled to keep fellow Big Ten teams off the board. Now they are going to have to face real offenses. Marquette is the six seed, and like UConn, they have not been the same since losing one of their top players, Dominic James. After that, it is a potpourri of good, but obviously flawed teams. Texas A&M, BYU, Utah State and Mississippi State could all potentially make noise, but none are all that scary to better seeded teams. Same goes for California. More on them in a moment.

I want to go back to something that I’ve loosely been talking about for the past month. If Gary Williams didn’t prove how good a coach he is this season, than he never will. He took a roster with no capable player taller than 6’7” and managed to do enough in one of the deepest years in the history of the ACC to make the NCAA Tournament. I’d like to see any other coach in America get the current Maryland roster to 20 wins. Yes, you can say what you will about him as a recruiter. It is partially his fault his roster looks the way it does. But you can never question his coaching abilities. Ever. This team should be a 15-16 win team and 4-12 or 5-11 in the ACC. At best. I don’t want to hear one more Maryland fan, or opposing fan, or local columnist ever question Gary’s ability to coach. No one else in the country could have willed this current team to 20 wins with victories over UNC, Michigan State and Wake Forest. No one. Kudos Gary on another job well done.


In College Park, there's always time for an awkward man hug.

Now let’s talk a little bit about the Golden Bears. At first glance, our friends from Berkeley seem to be an above average Pac-10 team. And in many ways they are. They have several glaring deficiencies. The main one, like Maryland, is their inability to rebound and establish consistent inside play. Cal possesses tall players, but most of them are projects and don’t contribute. Both of Cal’s 7-footers see very little time. They have a couple of other players who are hovering around 6’8” that do contribute. Jamal Boykin is a little small, but is not out of position playing power forward. He leads the team in rebounding with 6.4 per. As a whole, California only grabs 33.7 rebounds a game, which is less than the Terps.

One reason that Cal doesn’t grab a whole lot of rebounds is that they don’t miss a whole lot of shots. They shoot 48.5% from the floor, which is well above the national average. The thing that worries me, and should worry all Maryland fans, is the fact that Cal shoots 43.4% for three. That is the best percentage in the nation…by far. The next closest team is fellow NCAA squad Portland State, and they are a full percent-and-a-half behind the Bears. Leading the charge from beyond the arc is Jerome Randle. This is Cal’s version of Greivis Vasquez, except he is much smaller and shoots much better. At only 5’10”, it is not impossible to defend Randle on the perimeter. But he is one of the quickest guards in the country and loves to create his own shot. In fact, he’s probably more comparable to Ty Lawson than Vasquez. He leads the Bears in both points (18.4) and assists (4.9) per game. The 50% FG percentage is really astonishing considering how small he is and how many threes he takes.


Hopefully Maryland will play defense better than this against Jerome Randle.

Along with Randle, the Golden Bears possess two other threats. Both are 6’5” swing players who are probably a bit too large and slow to be shooting guards, but are too short to be small forwards. Patrick Christopher and Theo Robertson both are well over double digits in scoring. But other than that, neither one of them contributes on the glass (both under four per game) or in distributing (both slightly above two assists per game, low for guards who get a lot of playing time). Neither one is able to play great defense. Christopher isn’t much of threat from the outside but can drive. Robertson shoots better than Randle from the three point line but doesn’t do much other than hang around the perimeter. In other words, both are dangerous, but without Randle feeding them the ball, they tend to struggle. Neither one is a complete player. Offensively they tend to be one-dimensional and their defense is nothing to write home about.

After that, there is a real drop-off for Cal. Other than Boykin, they have no one else averaging close to double digits. Only two guys leave the bench. The three guards average well over 30 minutes a game. Jordan Wilkes, one of the 7-footers, will start at center. But as I said above, he’s a real project. He’s not smooth in anything he does. His stamina isn’t great. He’s below 20 minutes per game, which is the red flag. If he could contribute consistently, at his height, you know he’d be out on the floor more. To his credit, he hasn’t fouled out once this season, but that’s probably because he doesn’t see enough playing time. This is a seven-man team, and the bench is barely responsible for 10% of the scoring. In many ways, this is a team like Virginia Tech. There is a three-headed monster, but if you limit Randle, the rest of this team will fall apart. And unlike Tech, there’s no Jeff Allen waiting inside to get a rebound or flip off the crowd.

The Bears are coached by Mike Montgomery. He coached across the bay at Stanford for 18 years from 1986-2004. His teams were always good but often flopped in the NCAA Tournament (1998 being the one exception and Final Four run). Montgomery took a quick sabbatical/NBA coaching gig/NBA failure with Golden State, before returning to California before this season. Jeez, someone needs to tell Mike there is life outside the greater Bay Area. What’s a road trip for this guy…Sacramento? Anyway, Montgomery inherited very little in Berkeley and has done a nice job turning it around in one season.

When looking at these two teams from style of play, statistics and other factors, Maryland and California are really similar to one another. They are both dominated by guard play, especially the play of one guard in particular. Both teams struggle inside on both ends. Both teams shoot very well from the free throw line. Maryland’s defensive numbers are slightly better than Cal’s, but the Bears shooting percentages are much better than Maryland’s. How much of that is skill, and how much of that is Pac-10 defenses not being as good as ACC defenses will be determined Thursday.

Here are three things that Maryland needs to do to win this game. First, lose the zone defense. It won’t work here. I know it’s worked somewhat well recently, but that was against NC State and Wake, two teams that you can zone into taking terrible shots. The zone was largely ineffective against Duke, who easily shot over it. Cal shoots better than the Dookies. A zone would be suicide. Go back to man-to-man, but make sure someone like Landon Milbourne is available to help on the speedy Randle if he blows by his man. Secondly, and this goes with the man-to-man defense, Maryland needs to press the Bears all day. Again, this team is only seven deep, and none of the big men are that athletic. If the press and fast break can tire them out early, Maryland might actually have the advantage inside. I know…hard to believe. Finally, give the ball to Vasquez. I know this sounds obvious. But the Bears have no one to guard him. Randle is too small (he gives up seven inches) and the other two guards are not great defenders. Get Vasquez driving to the basket among the slow forwards and get him to the free throw line. There will be easy points in there. In fact, all the guards would be well advised to attack the basket. The Terps will find it much easier than attacking the basket in ACC play. The only person who should be taking threes is whoever finds themselves against Randle (most likely Hayes or Mosley). If it’s Hayes, then fire away. Otherwise, please attack the rim.

It’s fun to be back in the dance, and it’s fun to see a different team from across the country. Other intangibles: Maryland has played much better the past month than the Bears. California seemed to peak in mid-February. Since then they’ve lost ugly to Oregon State, Arizona State, UCLA and USC (in the Pac-10 tournament). So the Terps should have some momentum coming in from that win against Wake, and even the win against UNC.

I don’t see the crowd being much of factor. Maryland will probably travel better than Cal, but the difference probably won’t be noticeable. I have a feeling that Cal will be streaky in this game, so Maryland is going to have to endure a series of three-point basket runs. But it shouldn’t matter if the Terps go inside. Last time Gary and Montgomery squared off, Gary out-coached him for 40 minutes in the NCAA Regional Final in Anaheim in 2001. I’d like to think the coaching advantage still favors Williams.

It has been nothing short of a remarkable run for Maryland. This team should not be in the tournament, but Gary Williams has willed them there with a brilliant and emotional coaching job. Anything from here on out is gravy. But while we’re out in Kansas City, how about a win? Let’s just take it one step at a time.

Maryland 77
California 72


2009 BRACKETS


Day number one, here we go across the rest of the country. I have plenty of good stuff so hopefully you’ll read through it. I don’t have a lot of upsets today (just two according to the seedings). But I promise you, there are juicy ones coming up tomorrow. So let’s fire this thing up in honor of Jimmy Valvano, Bryce Drew and Gus Johnson…who is already screaming somewhere even though he won’t start calling games until Friday.

There are two ways to predict the tournament games. The most common, and the one used in office pools and online challenges, is the locked bracket. You make all your picks at once and you have up until the first game to change it. After that, if your championship team loses in the first round, you are pretty much screwed. You keep track of those using a point system (1 point for a first round win, 2 points for a second round win, etc…). I will put in my locked bracket in a minute. However, I also want to predict and talk about each game. So before each round of action, I analyze the games for that upcoming day. Even if I didn’t have either team in my locked bracket, I will make new predictions for each round. For example, I have Gonzaga and Western Kentucky advancing to the second round. If both Gonzaga and WKU lose in the first round, it will hurt my locked bracket for the rest of the tournament (Not only would I lose two points for getting the games wrong, but I would not be able to pick up two points for the next round). In the “refreshing bracket”, I would be charged for the two losses as usual. However, I would be able to make a new prediction on the second round game between Akron and Illinois that I wouldn’t be able to make if the bracket was locked. Those picks will come daily. I’ll keep track of those picks using a win/loss record.

Locked bracket is as follows:

East
1st round winners: Pittsburgh, Oklahoma State, Xavier, Florida State, Villanova, UCLA, Duke, Texas
2nd round winners: Pittsburgh, Florida State, Villanova, Texas
Sweet 16 winners: Pittsburgh, Villanova
East Regional Finalist: Pittsburgh

South
1st round winners: UNC, LSU, Gonzaga, Western Kentucky, Syracuse, Temple, Oklahoma, Clemson
2nd round winners: UNC, Gonzaga, Temple, Oklahoma
Sweet 16 winners: UNC, Oklahoma
South Regional Finalist: North Carolina

Midwest
1st round winners: Louisville, Ohio State, Wake Forest, Arizona, Kansas, Dayton, Michigan State, USC
2nd round winners: Louisville, Wake Forest, Kansas, Michigan State
3rd round winners: Louisville, Kansas
Midwest Regional Finalist: Louisville

West
1st round winners: Connecticut, BYU, Washington, Purdue, Missouri, Utah State, Memphis, Maryland
2nd round: Connecticut, Purdue, Missouri, Memphis
3rd round: Connecticut, Memphis
West Regional Finalist: Memphis

Final Four
Semifinals: UNC over Pittsburgh, Louisville over Memphis
Finals: Louisville 78, North Carolina 72

This bracket will be saved right on this post for all to come back and laugh at after the tournament’s over. My predictions for the first round games will be identical to the first round picks in the locked bracket (but with analysis). The difference between the locked and refresh brackets will become more obvious on Saturday. Friday’s games will be predicted tomorrow. Enjoy.

EAST REGION

Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, NC

#15 Binghamton Bearcats (23-8, 13-3 America East) vs.
#2 Duke Blue Devils (28-6, 11-5 ACC)

Of all the two seeds, Duke remains the weakest in my mind. Sure they won the ACC Tournament, but didn’t have to go through UNC or Wake to do it (they were a combined 1-3 against the two best teams in the ACC). And it was only a year ago that the Dookies needed several breaks to sneak past 15th-seeded Belmont. Meanwhile, Binghamton clinches it’s first ever bid. It comes complete with an article full of accusations by the New York Times that some Bearcats players may not be academically eligible. And those are the tamest of the accusations. Anyway, this Duke team seems slightly better than last year’s version, but they still may not get to the second weekend.
Pick: Duke 82, Binghamton 68

#10 Minnesota Golden Gophers (22-10, 9-9 Big Ten) vs.
#7 Texas Longhorns (22-11, 9-7 Big XII)

Tubby Smith continues to turn around a Minnesota program that was a mess only a few seasons ago. While Tubby is dancing, the team that ran him out on a rail will be watching the Big Dance. And while Smith is not the only coach getting revenge on a former team (see: Sendek, Herb), it has to be the most satisfying. The divorce between him and Kentucky was particularly ugly. Most of it had nothing to do with basketball. Turns out Kentucky is still a pretty racist state! Who knew?

While I want to focus more on the Big Ten mediocrity, I’ll skip it here since there will be plenty of time for that later. Texas is a team that really intrigues me. While they have struggled in the Big XII, they’ve had some solid wins outside of the conference. They’ve beaten Villanova, UCLA and Wisconsin. Plus, their point guard play has slowly improved as the season has gone along. I think a venture outside the Big XII will do Texas good…and may even get them to Boston.
Pick: Texas 74, Minnesota 65

Wachovia Center
Philadelphia, PA

#14 American Eagles (24-7, 13-1 Patriot) vs.
#3 Villanova Wildcats (26-7, 13-5 Big East)

If Jeff Jones is going to jump to a better job, this would be the year to do it. There are seven seniors on this team, and all seven are important. The odds of American reaching the tournament in the next few seasons are slim to none. While I like the Garrison Carr-Derrick Mercer backcourt, the frontcourt for the Eagles continues to be a question mark. They are going to be playing a physical Big East team with undersized Brian Gilmore and Jordan Nichols. Dante Cunningham, a true power forward, will be too much for the smaller Eagles to handle. Only way American wins is if Carr channels a little Stephen Curry.
Pick: Villanova 76, American 63

***THE PREDICTOR GAME OF THE DAY***
#11 VCU Rams (24-9, 14-4 CAA) vs.
#6 UCLA Bruins (25-8, 13-5 Pac-10)

Oh, look out! Here is the popular upset pick. Two years ago, VCU rolled into the tournament at a #11 seed and beat an overrated Duke team with head coach Anthony Grant at the helm and sophomore Eric Maynor as his best weapon. This time, the Rams are a #11 seed with Anthony Grant at the helm and senior Eric Maynor as his best weapon. And now the Rams even have a frontcourt player! Larry Sanders is coming off the CAA Championship Game when he had an eye-popping 18 points, 20 boards and seven blocks. No wonder this smells like an upset.

Conveniently, everyone seems to have forgotten about Darren Collison. He’s only one of the best defensive players in the country. With him, UCLA possesses a defense against Maynor that Duke didn’t have two years ago. While Maynor has the potential to become the Curry of this tournament, and while I correctly picked VCU two years ago against the Dookies, this upset pick seems to be too popular. I’m going to avoid it and go with the veteran Bruins in a close one.
Pick: UCLA 71, VCU 69


The Eric Maynor Stopper.

MEMPHIS REGION

Greensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, NC

#16 Radford Highlanders (21-11, 15-3 Big South) vs.
#1 North Carolina Tar Heels (28-4, 13-3 ACC)

Without a healthy Ty Lawson, the Heels can lose to any team in the country. Wait…they’re playing Radford? Nevermind. More on the Heels Saturday.
Pick: North Carolina 93, Radford 69

#9 Butler Bulldogs (26-5, 15-3 Horizon) vs.
#8 LSU Tigers (26-7, 13-3 SEC)

The ultimate toss-up game in round number one. There are several things to dislike about both teams. We’ll start with Butler. Other than their terrible style of basketball, which should automatically qualify them for membership in the Big Ten, the Bulldogs are one of the youngest teams in the country. I don’t know if you’ve paid any attention to the NCAA Tournament for say – I don’t know – 25 years, but young and inexperienced tournament teams tend not to go very far. Plus, this Butler outfit managed to lose three times in Horizon league play and once in the conference tournament. And that doesn’t include the several close calls they had in conference during the regular season. Something tells me that national competition will be a little less forgiving.

On the other hand, you have LSU. Their 13-3 conference mark would usually seem very impressive. That is until you consider the state of the SEC this season. Have you seen this conference lately? Actually, chances are you haven’t, since none of their teams have been relevant this season. The fact that LSU was the best team by far in the conference, and they could only muster an eight seed, should tell you about the SEC as a whole. However, LSU still contains some key players from the team that knocked off Duke a few years ago. So they have a tad more experience than the Bulldogs do (those who remember their upset of Maryland two years ago would not recognize this current Butler team). I think I’ll take my chances with the Tigers in an ugly game. The fact that this will be the first game of the first day is not the best way for CBS to sell the tournament.
Pick: LSU 58, Butler 53

Sprint Center
Kansas City, MO

#15 Morgan State Bears (23-11, 13-3 MEAC) vs.
#2 Oklahoma Sooners (27-5, 13-3 Big XII)
No, the Sooners have not been playing the best basketball for the past month or so. And yes, Morgan State managed to beat Maryland this season. But the Terps didn’t have a guy named Blake Griffin. The Sooners do. That’s where rational discussion of this game ends.
Pick: Oklahoma 86, Morgan State 60

#10 Michigan Wolverines (20-13, 9-9 Big Ten) vs.
#7 Clemson Tigers (23-8, 9-7 ACC)

Again with the Big Ten teams. And this is one of the two that didn’t deserve to make the field. Tell me what about Michigan’s 20-13 record was so appealing. Was it the fact that they only have two players average in double-digits, and the next closest scorer only has 7.0 ppg? Was it the fact they only averaged 67 points a game as a team? How about the fact they only broke 80 in a game four times, and two of them came at the hands of cupcake competition (one was against Duke…go figure). Was it the fact that they barely managed to go 9-9 in the strictly mediocre Big Ten? Or the fact that they managed to lose to awful Iowa just three weeks ago? What exactly about this team screams anything other than NIT?

The Big Ten as a conference was a joke this year. Unless I counted wrong (I did go to Maryland and did not major in math), only five teams in the Big Ten scored 80 or more points in a conference game this season. That is unbelievable. There's a good chance that ACC teams would score 80 or more in conference games five times over the course of a week. This isn’t the 1950’s. This isn’t a case of great defense. It’s a case of terrible offense and bad teams. Other than Michigan State, and possibly Purdue, you can’t possibly expect any of the other five teams that made it to reach the Sweet 16. That Michigan tied for seventh place in this conference and still made The Dance over a team like St. Mary’s is disgusting.

Before I hand it over to Clemson, we always have to take into account the Oliver Purnell Factor. If there is a way to lose, Purnell will help the Tigers figure it out. This team was way too talented to finish at 9-7 in the ACC. Recently, Doug “I hate everyone but Oklahoma State” Gottlieb managed to take the Purnell-hating to a new level. After penciling in Gonzaga to the Elite 8 for the 7th straight year, Gottlieb started talking about Clemson. He actually thinks Michigan will win because, and I quote, “Purnell’s Clemson teams always choke in the tournament.” Always, Doug? They’ve only been in once under Purnell. And they lost a close game to under-seeded Villanova. I’m taking Clemson in a blowout if for no other reason than to pick against Gottlieb.
Pick: Clemson 83, Michigan 66



Annual tournament sponsor Scarlett Johansson is ignoring Big Ten basketball and anything Doug Gottlieb has to say.

Rose Garden
Portland, OR

#13 Akron Zips (23-12, 10-6 MAC) vs.
#4 Gonzaga Bulldogs (26-5, 14-0 WCC)

I’ll be honest. I don’t know much about the Zips. I like the name. Their mascot is some sort of kangaroo thing. Plus, it makes this the Zips-Zags game! I like it.

Akron was 10-6 in the MAC, which is the Big Ten of mid-major conferences. There was not a lot of scoring in that league along with a bunch of average teams cannibalizing themselves. When they do score, it seems to be balanced. Five players are hovering at or around 10 ppg.

The real question is…will this finally be the year for the Zags? Since reaching the Elite 8 and becoming America’s Cinderella ten years ago, Gonzaga has yet to improve on that plateau. Well, they should win this game easily. Their “draw” is relatively easy until UNC in the Sweet 16. I just refuse to be suckered in by this team anymore. Sorry Gottlieb.
Pick: Gonzaga 75, Akron 61

#12 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers (24-8, 15-3 Sun Belt) vs.
#5 Illinois Fighting Illini (24-9, 11-7 Big Ten)

Finally, an upset I can get behind! Like VCU-UCLA, this one has upset written all over it. Illinois’ best player is injured. The Illini don’t score that many points to begin with (they allowed 38 points in a game against Penn State…AND LOST). And frankly, like the rest of the Big Ten, they aren’t that good. Plus, WKU pulled an upset last season against an Illinois-clone Drake and they’ve had a history of pulling out upsets over the course of the last 10-12 seasons.

The reason a lot of people aren’t jumping on the Western Kentucky bandwagon is a lot of people don’t know who the Hilltoppers are. I’ve seen a few of their games, and I like what I see. Four players average double digits. A.J. Slaughter has a great name and a game to go with it. Check him out if you get the chance. The Illini picked the wrong year to be a five seed.
Pick: Western Kentucky 71, Illinois 58

WEST REGION


Wachovia Center
Philadelphia, PA

#16 Chattanooga Mocs (18-16, 11-9 Southern) vs.
#1 Connecticut Huskies (27-4, 15-3 Big East)

We return to our regularly scheduled program of me ignoring 16 vs. 1 games. The Mocs were a thorn in the side of the NCAA and the tournament committee by winning Davidson’s conference. They kept Mr. Curry out of the spotlight and extra change from the NCAA coffers. They were punished by being offered up as a sacrifice to UConn.
Pick: Connecticut 84, Chattanooga 57

#9 Texas A&M Aggies (23-9, 9-7 Big XII) vs.
#8 BYU Cougars (25-7, 12-4 Mountain West)

Whoa, I have a weird case of déjà vu. Didn’t this matchup happen last year? With the exact same seeding too? Oh wait, it did.

Apparently, the committee was convinced this year to have Texas A&M as a nine seed and BYU as an eight. For whatever reason, they couldn’t figure out a way for the Stormin’ Mormons to play on Thursday/Saturday unless it was against the Aggies. If you are not familiar with LDS rules, Mormons are not allowed to play games on Sundays. So the committee painted themselves into a corner and had to go with a rematch, which the committee typically hates to do. First, why couldn’t you switch the A&M with Butler? Seems to work just fine. Also, this is the second time the committee has bent over backwards to make sure the Cougars aren’t potentially playing on Sunday. I don’t remember the exact year, but within the last decade, the committee put BYU in a Friday/Sunday sub-regional, only to later inconvenience several teams and change the brackets after they came out. I understand trying to keep BYU from potentially playing on Sundays if possible. But if it can’t be helped, then tough luck for the Cougars. BYU can either break the rule and play on Sunday, or forfeit their tournament bid. No other team gets this kind of treatment.


Ahhhhhh! When Mormons attack! (Just not on a Sunday)

Last year I correctly picked Texas A&M over the Mormons. This year, the Aggies have been too inconsistent for my taste. This was proven just recently in a loss to dreadful Texas Tech in the Big XII Tournament. If Josh Carter doesn’t get going, the Aggies really have no chance to win. And he’s either very hot, or very cold. I’m going to take the more consistent Lee Cummard (not touching that one) and the Missionaries to advance. Thankfully they won’t be playing on Sunday.
Pick: BYU 75, Texas A&M 71

Sprint Center
Kansas City, MO
#15 Cal State Northridge Matadors (17-13, 11-5 Big West) vs.
#2 Memphis Tigers (31-3, 16-0 CUSA)

Eesh…this might as well be a 16 vs. 1 game. The Matadors did a nice job holding off Pacific out in the Big West. But there are way too many athletic bodies on the Tigers for CSN to contend with. We’ll talk about Memphis more in depth during the weekend. How much more in depth depends on their next opponent.
Pick: Memphis 76, Cal State Northridge 49

Rose Garden
Portland, OR

#13 Mississippi State Bulldogs (23-12, 9-7 SEC) vs.
#4 Washington Huskies (25-8, 14-4 Pac-10)
Poor Lorenzo Romar. After a couple of tough seasons, he finally gets the Huskies back on to the national stage. He wins the Pac-10 regular season title. His team gets a four seed. And he has to face a dangerous and hot BCS school in Mississippi State. Looking at the other 13 seeds (Portland State, Cleveland State and Akron), MSU is probably not the one he wanted to see.

Like the Bulldogs from Georgia last season, the Bulldogs from Starksville got hot at the right time and ran through an incredibly open and weak power conference tournament. The funny thing is, MSU had the talent to win a few more games than they did this season. They have the nation’s leading shot blocker, and perhaps the best big defensive player in Jarvis Varnado. They have a team that scores both inside and out. The Dogs have four capable scorers, so they’re balanced. Not sure what took them so long to get their act together.

Two things worry me about MSU. First, their best win outside of the lousy SEC was Western Kentucky. They also lost to Washington State, who the Huskies beat twice with relative ease. Second, Georgia was so exhausted from their run through the Tornado Tournament last season, that they put together a lackluster performance against Xavier in the first round. This game will be close, and I would have picked MSU if they beat anyone outside of their conference, but I think the Huskies prevail.
Pick: Washington 75, Mississippi State 68

#12 Northern Iowa Panthers (23-10, 14-4 MVC) vs.
#5 Purdue Boilermakers (25-9, 11-7 Big Ten)

Like I hinted at above, this is the only Big Ten that remotely intrigues me. We know Michigan State is good, but they aren’t necessarily fun to watch. Purdue can at least score. Robbie Hummel finally appears to be healthy, and joins E’Twaun Moore and JaJuan Johnson as the third scorer and a normally spelled name. The Panthers were able to win the Missouri Valley Conference, but it was not a typical year in the MVC. Other than Creighton, there wasn’t a whole lot of challenge for UNI, and losses to Iowa, Iowa State and Wyoming don’t exactly inspire a lot of confidence.
Pick: Purdue 72, Northern Iowa 57