Winning Points March Madness Newsletter
You guys might can pickup a few thoughts with this.......
Thursday, March 17
Indianapolis, IN
Illinois over Fairleigh Dickinson by 24
#1 vs. #16: You?ll get no ringing endorsement for laying the two-dozen-plus with the
impressive, 40% 3-point shooting, Big Ten champ. Illinois has a short turnaround time
having been in the last CT to conclude on Sunday, with the death last weekend of head
coach Bruce Weber?s mother as an added distraction into the short lead-in. FDU
stopped playing four days before Illinois did. Their upperclassmen guards run 6-0 to 6-
4 to not be overmatched in height, but Illinois? Roger Powell and Deron Williams are
more solid physical specimens. Although FDU guard Chad Timberlake hits 54% from
the field, his status as a third option in the offense is the more telling piece of info. A
7-foot, 260 soph center and 6-9, 205 junior stringbean power forward may be the real
keys to keeping the margin on the short side. Or not. ILLINOIS, 81-57.
Texas over Nevada by 1
#8 vs. #9: For Nevada, 6-11 sophmore Nick Fazekas can step out and knock down a
three. Texas? 6-8 junior Brad Buckman can do likewise. But Fazekas attempts about 2.5
time as many. For our money, Buckman is a relative stiff on a team full of chuckers,
who, if they don?t play D, don?t win. Both are Big Dance repeaters from last season,
despite the departure of key ingredients. For Nevada it was Kirk Snyder and daggershot
guard Todd Okeson. For Texas, it was the starting senior backcourt of Ivey and
Mouton, who had long tenure with Rick Barnes? team. These younger, yet talented
Longhorns weathered many injuries during the season and bowed out of the Big 12
tourney early (to Colorado) to help get everything straight. Not the most appealing of
teams and their bigs give away some inches to Fazekas and 6-10 teammate Pinkney, but
since Nevada?s best 3-point threat is 7 feet tall, if he don?t hit, the Wolfpack soon sit.
TEXAS, 59-58.
Saturday, March 19
Illinois over Texas by 11
Illinois over Nevada by 13
Thursday, March 17
Cleveland, OH
Alabama over Wisconsin-Milwaukee by 4
#5 vs. #12: They say that you shouldn?t lay points with a freshman point guard vs. an
experienced opponent. Alabama?s Ronald Steele dishes nearly 5 assists per game and the
Tide scores 76.5, but he is a 6-2 freshman going up against a WMU backcourt that
includes Ed McCants, a 6-3 senior who scores 17.5 per game. Boo Davis and Chris
Hill are the other key WMU guards, both upperclassmen, and 6-5 junior forward Joah
Tucker has been dropping 15 per game on outclassed Horizon League foes. Tucker,
however, may be up against it attempting to score in the paint against those long and
lean Alabamas like Jermareo Davidson and Evan Brock or the long and more solid
Kennedy Winston and Chuck Davis. But if WMU?s perimeter scorers enable them to
hang around, does Steele and Alabama start looking for the ghost of ice-blooded
Antoine Pettway? Underdog WMU will have had four extra days of prep time.
ALABAMA, 76-72.
Boston College over Penn by 4
#4 vs. #13: The Road to the Final Four detoured through the apartment window of
BC?s 10 ppg guard Jermaine Watson during a party last Saturday as he fled from some
bad people with bad things in their hands. He has missed practices since. Unlike
Watson vs. Thugs, Penn will not be intimidated. This version of Penn enjoys the kind
of bumping and grinding that BC is known to offer. Sharpshooting guard Tim Begley
has a 6-5, 230 body that won?t wear down, and his supporting cast includes 6-7, 220
Mark Zoller and 6-8, 225 Steve Danley, pulling down more than 11 boards per game
between them. Penn?s biggest player, Jan Fikiel, is a 6-10 senior who will play 20 minutes.
BC?s Craig Smith is tough, but he is 6-7, 250 and Nate Doornekamp wins no
awards simply for being a 7-footer. Other BC bigs are young, and the typical BC pace
is something that Penn can have no problems keeping down with. BOSTON COLLEGE,
66-62.
Saturday, March 19
Alabama over Boston College by 4
Alabama over Penn by 18
Boston College over Wisconsin-Milwaukee by 6
Wisconsin-Milwaukee over Penn by 5
Thursday, March 17
Boise, ID
LSU over UAB by 11
#6 vs. #11: There is a tendency to underrate scrappy and speedy UAB ? as this margin
seems to be doing ? but it?s just very hard to ignore the size and width of LSU?s 6-8,
250 Brandon Bass and 6-9, 310 freshman Glen ?Big Baby? Davis. UAB can cause
many opponents to become winded from chasing them around the floor, but LSU ?
first of all, is forewarned of UAB because the Blazers ousted LSU?s SEC rival Kentucky
from the Big Dance in the second round last season. Second of all, those two big LSUs,
plus 6-9, 235 Ross Neltner, have no excuse to not be owning boards in this match-up,
thereby preventing UAB from getting out on their break. Guys of that size, coupled
with a pair of guards sticking the three at better than 38%, make LSU a tough matchup
for anyone in this post-season, let alone this particular C-USA also-ran. Look at
Davis one time quickly, and you see Shaq! LSU, 77-66.
Arizona over Utah State by 4
#3 vs. #14: Was Lute crying (for no reason) to the officials for a call against Salim
Stoudamire late in the Pac 10 title loss to Washington because he feared that dropping
a seed or two would pit him against another Miami-OH, or Santa Clara ? under-theradar
schools that bounced Olson from the Big Dance before he became a Final Four
and Finals fellow? Can his guard Salim Stoudamire shoot 50% from 3-point range in
the mountains of Boise? Will Salim Stoudamire even pass the basketball? Utah State
just went through a season shooting better than 50% as a team ? a concept that
Stoudamire is often Kobe Bryant-like about. He might shout, he might pout. And if
he does, they could be out if they don?t play enough D against Utah State?s perimeter
shooters, or if the Aggies? bigs can grind the game down to their preferred Butler-
Princeton tempo ? which Arizona definitely struggled against in two non-******
(including a straight-up loss) to Washington State! ARIZONA, 73-69.
Saturday, March 19
LSU over Arizona by 2
LSU over Utah State by 9
Arizona over UAB by 7
UAB over Utah State by 1
Friday, March 18
Oklahoma City, OK
St. Mary?s over Southern Illinois by 2
#10 vs. #7: The Salukis of SIU have been very good at bringing fast-paced sides to their
slower tempo in the NCAA Tournament. But now they?re not matched up against raw
athletes who play basketball (like Georgia and Alabama). They face a bunch of upperclassmen
basketball players. Big difference. St. Mary?s may not have looked too sharp
early in the season when they came East to face Memphis and Mississippi State, but
that was 3,000 miles from home, against athletes who play basketball ? out of their
comfort zone. Now the Gaels are only crossing half a continent, to play against an
opponent whose four top scorers are 6-5 and smaller. SIU won?t beat many teams from
the inside, and they probably won?t beat St. Mary?s without a little luck, because St.
Mary?s bigs are bigger and their guards are as experienced, as well as better pure scorers.
Playing a halfcourt game is to St. Mary?s benefit. ST. MARY?S, 67-65.
Oklahoma State over Southeastern Louisiana by 20
#2 vs. #15: Eddie Sutton?s OK State Cowboys are a CT Winner from Sunday, laying a
big number. If you want to buck the rule that says to lean to the dog, we?ll overlook it,
since SE LA also last played on Sunday and has no extra prep edge. From their Sunday
SWAC Title Game win against 21-12 Northwestern State, here is the SE LA shot
breakdown: Dunks: 4-for-5; Layups: 8-for-8; Jumpers: 7-for-30; 3-point Jumpers: 1-
for-7. That is a fairly simple scouting report for Eddie Sutton to pass along to his team.
?Don?t let ?em penetrate. They couldn?t hit water from a boat.? SE LA will be hoping
to keep 6-10, 250 senior center Nate Lofton on the floor for as long as possible to help
clean up some messes and keep offensive rebounds away from Ivan McFarlin and Joey
Graham. OKLAHOMA STATE, 69-49.
Sunday, March 20
Oklahoma State over St. Mary?s by 10
Oklahoma State over Southern Illinois by 10
CHICAGO REGIONAL
7
Thursday, March 17
Boise, ID
Washington over Montana by 24
#1 vs. #16: Two NCAA Tournament credos clash. Washington is the Pac 10
Tournament winner laying points in the first round, a letdown situation. But the
underdog comes from the Big Sky Conference, where underdogs in non-conference
action are a miserable 37% ATS since the beginning of the 2003-04 season. Montana
is the most recent team to parlay the ?Pat Kennedy Off? angle into an NCAA
Tournament berth, following DePaul last year. But if the Huskies come to play for 40
minutes, the Grizzlies can be run off the floor with this step up in class. In most
instances, the side opposite Washington will be ?better defense, plus points,? as in a
potential second-round match-up with Pitt or Pacific. That?s not the case here as smaller
but quicker Huskies can beat Montana?s 6-10 and 6-7 relative lumberers to loose
balls. WASHINGTON, 92-68.
Pacific over Pittsburgh by 1
#8 vs. #9: The Big East favorite must cross two time zones by Thursday and prepare
for a seasoned team that ousted their Big East cousin Providence in the first round of
the Big Dance last season. Not an easy task for the Pitt Panthers. This Big West opponent
is their mirror image. Pacific plays the same moderate tempo, and they make the
most of their offensive opportunities. Pacific also sports the fourth-best field goal differential
in the nation this season of +9.6%. Pittsburgh?s is a nice 21st-best at +7.0%
and granted, it came against a slightly tougher schedule. But Pittsburgh covered only
39% of their action against that schedule and Pacific?s 6-9, 240 Christian Maraker can
step out and hit the three, an edge that can eventually force Pittsburgh?s big Taft or
Troutman out to cover him and open up the inside for Pacific 6-8 senior forward Yango
to tango! PACIFIC, 69-68.
Saturday, March 19
Washington over Pacific by 7
Washington over Pittsburgh by 1
Friday, March 18
Nashville, TN
George Washington over Georgia Tech by 2
#12 vs. #5: The ?upset? seed pairing. Pops has hops. Young Mr. Mensa-Bonsu of GW
can dipsy-doodle around the basket better than many, and he?ll be doing it vs. a mostly
smaller bunch of Yellow Jackets and his moves around the hoop might even send
Tech?s 7-footer Luke Schenser into a dizzying, foul-troubled spin. That Georgia Tech
bench behind the starters who went to the NCAA Title Game last season is loaded with
underclassmen. GW is stocked with upperclassmen, and 6-8 Mike Hall gives them the
added dimension of a big player who can step back and hit a three. Playing in a conference
full of jump shooters, GW still managed to make nearly 10 steals per game and
block 4.4 shots per game. They also beat both Tom Izzo and Gary Williams in one
weekend back in December. Since head coach Karl Hobbs is a Jim Calhoun disciple,
GW plays the UConn trapping style from the get-go that GT didn?t handle well
against?UConn last year! GEORGE WASHINGTON, 74-72.
Louisville over UL Lafayette by 20
#4 vs. #13. Just what this silly Sun Belt side didn?t need ? an opponent that plays the
way they want to play, with bigger, faster personnel than the Lafalots see on a nightly
basis in the Sun Belt Conference. To make matters worse, Louisville probably feels a little
miffed about their seeding. Little Ricky?s recruits also probably remember being
knocked out of the first round of this thing last season by a backcourt full of quality
seniors on Xavier. This affair could resemble Louisville?s first-round game from two seasons
ago, when their big guards ran up, down, over and around the Ohio Valley rep
Austin Peay while the Austin Peay coach?s pants fell from his waist, to his knees, to his
ankles. The Lafalots make their living stepping into the lane to pick off bad decisions
by Sun Belt foes. Louisville makes its living taking and making 3s over those kinds of
players, then spreading the floor so that opponents cannot get turnovers when the ball
goes into the paint. LOUISVILLE, 86-66.
Sunday, March 20
Louisville over George Washington by 4
George Washington over UL-Lafayette by 12
Georgia Tech over Louisville by 1
Georgia Tech over UL Lafayette by 20
Thursday, March 17
Tucson, AZ
UCLA over Texas Tech by 10
#11 vs. #6: What happens when Herr Knight?s team has three less days to prepare than
a Pac 10 opponent, and the game isn?t being refereed by Big 12 officials receiving a paycheck
from the Big 12 Conference, depriving depth-shy Texas Tech the red carpet treatment
that enabled them to ?accomplish? enough to merit an NCAA invitation? How
about they get blown out by an underrated, underclassmen-dominated group coached
by one of Knight?s equals? Pac 10 underdogs are usually something to jump on at this
time of the year. Howlin? Ben and the Bruins are long and lean and can apply those
physical edges on the perimeter to clamp down and wear out Tech?s smaller guards,
some of whom give up three inches to Aaron Affalo and Josh Shipp of UCLA. A 7-
foot, 270-pound junior center is a nice thing to have, and only one side here has
Michael Fey ? that?s UCLA. He is complemented by 6-10 senior Dijon Thompson,
UCLA?s leading scorer and rebounder. What?s up, Knight? Not you. UCLA, 79-69.
Gonzaga over Winthrop by 18
#3 vs. #14: Rony Turiaf, sometimes dominant, sometimes foul-plagued center for
Gonzaga, says he loves playing with 6-8 forward Adam Morrison. He never said that
about Blake Stepp, the departed guard and former offensive focal point, who was a
defensive liability and shot too much. Morrison shoots a lot ? 413 times this season
compared to 296 for the 6-10 Turiaf. But at 6-8 with a terrific outside shot, Morrison
is almost always getting a good look at the basket in a match-up nightmare for the
opponent. Winthrop has better-than-average size for a ?Mid-Minor.? Three guards that
go 6-4 to 6-5. A 6-10 center. But point guard Chris Gaynor is a 5-10 freshman who
plays 30 minutes and averages only 6.5 points per game. Playing 4-on-5 offensively,
especially if and when Gonzaga defensive stopper Errol Knight is guarding him, figures
to overwhelm Gaynor sooner or later. GONZAGA, 80-62.
Saturday, March 19
Gonzaga over UCLA by 4
UCLA over Winthrop by 10
Gonzaga over Texas Tech by 7
Texas Tech over Winthrop by 7
Thursday, March 17
Cleveland, OH
Creighton over West Virginia by 3
#10 vs. #7: The Mountaineers just played four games in four days in New York. Now,
with only four days? rest, they ship out to a different building and hook an opponent
with nine day?s rest. At Madison Square Garden, West Virginia?s point-spread margins
were +21, +11, +8.5 and ?3.5 against Providence (blah), Boston (we can?t be bothered)
College, Villa (we?re not really into this, either) Nova and, finally, a half-cranked
Syracuse. They are on a serious down-tick and they probably don?t even realize it.
Creighton head coach Dana Altman has been getting more aggressive play from his big
men, making the outside shots of Nate Funk and ****** Mathies, and the ball-handling
of senior point-guard Tyler McKinney more effective than usual. Missouri Valley
underdogs have been a hot commodity in non-conference action the last two years and
this one has five extra days of prep time! CREIGHTON, 70-67.
Wake Forest over Chattanooga by 27
#2 vs. #15: Ah, a nice, classy, ACC side that isn?t laying 25 points, bowed out of the
ACC Tournament early, and got the forewarned scare in their first-round game last season
(vs. VCU), when their point guard was only a freshman. Wake Forest?s Chris Paul
is now a year older and wiser, so are the rest of his buddies. Paul is also in a mood to
be completely serious to help erase the embarrassment of the one-game suspension that
caused him to miss Wake?s one-game appearance in the ACC Tournament. The
Southern Conference did not impress in non-conference action this season, when even
their 16-0 regular season champ Davidson didn?t cover home games vs. Georgetown or
Seton Hall. Wake has too much quality 6-9 to 6-11 stuff for the Mocs to dent or stop
inside, and too much experienced, versatile, swing-player length on either end of the
floor. Way too many turnovers are coming from Chattanooga. Then there is the Paul
penetration that makes Wake?s offense even harder to guard. WAKE FOREST, 91-64.
Saturday, March 19
Wake Forest over Creighton by 19
Wake Forest over West Virginia by 19
ALBUQUERQUE REGIONAL
8
Tuesday, March 15
Dayton, OH
Oakland vs.Alabama A&M Available on game day at www.winningpoints.com
Friday, March 18
Charlotte, NC
North Carolina over Oakland by 29
North Carolina over Alabama A&M by 36
#1 vs. #16: Good team, off a loss. North Carolina dropped out of the ACC
Tournament after two days, with a sluggish, defensively poor win vs. Clemson and a
loss to a Georgia Tech team that ?needed? to extend themselves to get into this thing.
Roy Williams rested his most important player down the stretch because Roy is now a
March icon and wants to be associated with competing for the National Championship
he has never won. Oakland is full of freshman and sophomores. Alabama A&M is tiny.
After extending themselves on Tuesday, neither would figure to have enough gas in the
tank to stop Carolina from doing whatever it wants to do in front of a pro-Tar Heels
crowd in Charlotte. NORTH CAROLINA, 95-66 or 105-69.
Minnesota over Iowa State by 2
#9 vs. #8: Minnesota?s lined schedule comprised just 51.7% SU winners and they covered
2 out of every 3. Iowa State?s schedule strength in lined games was about the same
? 51.1% -- and they were a nice 15-10 ATS despite not generating much offense from
the perimeter. An edge here may be traced back to last season, when Iowa State
advanced to the semifinals of the NIT. The Cyclones gained valuable tournament experience
in the process, when their go-to guy Curtis Stinson was only a freshman. Yet rare
is the NCAA Tournament team that shoots under 30% from three-point range, as Iowa
State does. Which big man wins out? Minnesota?s 7-foot, 270 Jeff Hagen, or ISU?s 6-
11, 250 Jared Homan? Minnesota may be fresher at the end, because three ISU starters
have been averaging at least 35 minutes. MINNESOTA, 72-70.
Sunday, March 20
North Carolina over Iowa State by 16
North Carolina over Minnesota by 18
Friday, March 18
Nashville, TN
Villanova over New Mexico by 16
#5 vs. #12: New Mexico?s late pseudo-roll has them thinking they are better than they
are. Now, a Mountain West team that was getting red-carpet treatment from a conference
desperate for a second NCAA rep besides Utah hooks a real opponent in a neutral
setting. They fattened up early on the Duquesnes, later on the awful BYUs,
Wyomings and San Diego States, and then got past Utah a few times. Says New
Mexico?s all-everything Danny Granger: ? Utah's a top 25 team and we beat them
twice." Ahem?Utah won?t be a Top 25 team after they lose to UTEP,. ?Nova?s pit-bull
perimeter defenders will turn New Mexico mother-chuckers into low-percentage scorers
for this game, and no Mountain West kid whose starting point guard has been out
since January can win a game by himself against a Big East foe. New Mexico got 0
bench points in their Mountain West title game win. VILLANOVA, 78-62.
Florida over Ohio by 8
#4 vs. #13: The Gators won the SEC Tournament playing +13.5, +5 and +19 points
better than the spread. They will have a lot of bandwagon money on them. But they
also represent a major conference tournament winner now favored in the first round.
Proceed with caution. The Lee and Walsh-led Gators could certainly have another big
game or two left in them. Ohio head coach Tim O?Shea, an ex-Boston College assistant,
joked that he should just retire following his team?s overtime MAC Tournament
win against Buffalo, when each side made some dumb plays in crunch time. But underdogs
that can play the game never lay down. The Bobcats trailed by 19 points vs.
Buffalo in the second half. Florida will be looking ahead to Villanova or New Mexico,
and probably be surprised by Ohio?s quickness and shot-making abilities. You don?t
come back fro 19 down without depth or without shooters. Ohio has experienced, roleplaying
height on the bench to make a game out of this. FLORIDA, 79-71.
Sunday, March 20
Villanova over Florida by 1
Villanova over Ohio by 12
Florida over New Mexico by 10
Ohio over New Mexico by 1
Friday, March 18
Oklahoma City, OK
Wisconsin over Northern Iowa by 2
#6 vs. #11: Missouri Valley underdogs are fashionable, early-round takes. Badgers head
coach Bo Ryan has his work cut out for him with short notice against an opponent that
will have had eight days of extra prep time before this. Northern Iowa used the extra
time well prior to their first-round cover vs. Georgia Tech of the ACC last season, and
they have a pair of outside shooters ? Jacobson and Crawford ? who nail their jumpers
betters than any Wisconsin guard this season. Both 6-3, they present at least a minor
obstacle for quicker, but erratic-shooting Badgers 6-1 guards Taylor and Chambliss.
Wisconsin?s Clayton Hanson must relocate his outside shot for Wisconsin to avoid the
upset, because going to big Wilkinson and shifty Tucker cannot carry them in this
match-up vs. fundamentally sound and experienced inside players Stout and Coleman,
spelled by 6-10 senior Godfread. WISCONSIN, 70-68.
Kansas over Bucknell by 17
#3 vs. #14: Bucknell beat Pittsburgh at Pitt and just knocked off Holy Cross, Ralph
Williard?s perennial Patriot League rep in the Big Dance. They also beat 19-win St.
Joseph?s at St. Joe?s, and MAAC Champ Niagara. But that only serves to give Bill Self
and the Jayhawks some notice. His team is coming in on a relatively cold streak?probably
because he didn?t want them to peak too soon. Self is a Mr. March Man. He has
been shuffling bodies in and out of the lineup all year long, didn?t play second-leading
scorer Keith Langford in the Big 12 Tourney, and after being bounced in those semis
by Oklahoma State said, ?Anything that gets you better prepared next week is the most
important thing." Bucknell guard Kevin Bettancourt plays 32.7 minutes per game, but
against this backcourt, instead of points, he?ll have exposure and exhaustion, especially
after running back to play D after one-and-dones. KANSAS, 75-58.
Sunday, March 20
Kansas over Wisconsin by 10
Kansas over Northern Iowa by 15
Wisconsin over Bucknell by 13
Northern Iowa over Bucknell by 10
Friday, March 18
Worcester, MA
North Carolina State over NC Charlotte by 3
#10 vs. #7: Who trusts Lutz?s Klutzes of Charlotte to play the necessary D vs.
Princetonian-style offense run by NC State players who are quicker and who usually
shoot more accurately than a difficult-to-defend Princeton team would? Charlotte normally
faces some willy-nilly C-USA teams that play slop-ball ? like Cincinnati,
Southern Miss, Houston ? or teams they can just run with like Louisville and
Memphis. Motion offense? What up with that? Notre Dame?s version of it wasn?t even
very good, yet they made Charlotte look like a junior high team in the first round of
the NCAAs several years ago. NC State?s Julius Hodge is an enigma, and he totally took
his team out of a second-round loss to Vanderbilt last season by being an on-court doofus.
Maybe, just maybe, he can play a sound game for 40 minutes, make life difficult
for Charlotte gunner Brendan Plavich, and a team that weathered some mid-season
injuries can reclaim some respect. NORTH CAROLINA STATE, 71-68.
Connecticut over Central Florida by 24
#2 vs. #15: Not the same Central Florida team that covered a big number in the first
round vs. Pittsburgh last season. Last year?s match-up was much better for them
because Pitt didn?t pick ?em up at three-quarter court with a trap like UConn will from
the start. Pitt was a great match-up for UCF last season, because they played the same
styles and UCF matched up well in height and width. Pitt had also gone to the wire in
the Big East title game vs. UConn. But now UCF is smaller and this opponent is bigger,
and rested. Turning it over to pressure and D-ing up against 6-11 Villanueva, 6-10
Boone and 6-9 Gay will not be fun. For UCF?s low-post players spotting three inches,
getting offensive put-backs won?t be as easy as it has been. As for UCF?s 41% 3-point
shooter Gary Johnson, well, he was 1-for-6 from deep moving up in class against Utah
State in November. CONNECTICUT, 80-56.
Sunday, March 20
North Carolina State over Connecticut by 1
North Carolina State over Central Florida by
Connecticut over NC Charlotte by 6
NC Charlotte over Central Florida by 16
SYRACUSE REGIONAL
9
Friday, March 18
Charlotte, NC
Duke over Delaware State by 32
#1 vs. #16: For Duke?s Beady-Eyed Devil Coach K, it?s not always about basketball. It?s
about teaching lessons in life. For instance, for this game, the lesson would be that if
you have the misfortune to be the winner of the Northeastern Conference, you must
be prepared to face the embarrassment that showing up for a no-win situation virtually
guarantees. Since your team does not consist of blue-chip recruits who train in stateof-
the-art facilities and whose brains include computer-chip implants with directives
from the coach, you must be prepared to absorb the punishment that blue-chip recruits
are capable of dishing out when they are programmed to play pressure defense from the
opening tip, generating offense from defense, opening up a margin early, forcing the
other side out of their game plan, and shooting their favorite shots and running up the
score so that the Duke alumni can make a quick return on their investment. And then
Coach K says, ?All watching, worship me!?? DUKE, 91-59.
Stanford over Mississippi State by 10
#8 vs. #9: Awesome. The versatile Stanfords vs. the one-way, Flying Stansburys of
MSU. Basketball, vs. whatever they call it at Mississippi State, where big Lawrence
(Overrate Me) Roberts is throwing two-handed overheads 75-feet down the floor to
goofy, early-release guards looking for trash buckets. Slick Rick and his band of assistants
recruit for speed, buy nice suits, and then hope that transfers like Roberts fall into
their laps. Hey, maybe they?ll better this rating. But Roberts can?t launch a transition
pass off a three-pointer nailed by Stanford?s Chris Hernandez, MSU can?t cope with a
tempo slowed to Stanford?s preference by excellent dirty work done by 6-11 and 6-10
Haryasz and Little, and Winsome (Lose Some) Frazier is far from automatic on their
perimeter. Toss in questionable half-court play from Gary Ervin and the seriously
hurtin? leg of their experienced outside shooter Shane Power. STANFORD, 69-59.
Sunday, March 20
Duke over Stanford by 13
Duke over Mississippi State by 15
Friday, March 18
Worcester, MA
Michigan State over Old Dominion by 5
#5 vs. #12: ODU has the personnel to hang in there, led by 6-9 Alex Loughton and
ice-blooded floor leader Isiah Hunter, who heads a quick group of turnover-minded,
up-tempo-oriented guards. Aside from 6-10 Paul Davis ? who must match Loughton?s
bank shots ? Michigan State becomes the Big Ten version of Virginia Commonwealth,
with a bunch of 6-4 to 6-6 players seeing the bulk of the minutes, and no real point
guard. Hey, ODU knows all about that. They just beat that in the Colonial title game,
although they were allowed to mug the opponent almost like Michigan State is allowed
to mug theirs when they play non-conference games in East Lansing. But we?re at a neutral
site, and if Loughton?s 6-8 front line buddy Arnaud Dahi is healthy, this game is
decided by MSU?s superior free-throw shooting, and Tom Izzo owning Blaine Taylor
from the bench. MICHIGAN STATE, 84-79.
Syracuse over Vermont by 6
#4 vs. #13: ?Two years ago, Vermont had to head West through snowstorms with a
young team, to face Arizona. Last year, they had to face eventual National Champ
Connecticut in the first round (and covered). Now, with 6-9, 250, 25.7 ppg Taylor
Coppenrath and point guard T.J. Sorrentine seniors, they first expose Syracuse?s big
man Craig Forth as a coattail rider of every other good player on the roster for the last
few years, then force Gerry Mac to have another one of his 40-point games to frustrate
and eventually tire them out. Sorrentine has nice touch from deep but going for 35
minutes vs. this caliber eventually drains him. Yet judging Vermont on their prior two
NCAA appearances, or their losing trips to high altitude Nevada the last two seasons
(where there was a big man to step out against Coppenrath), is probably not the right
way to be looking at this. SYRACUSE, 78-72.
Sunday, March 20
Syracuse over Michigan State by 7
Syracuse over Old Dominion by 11
Michigan State over Vermont by 1
Vermont over Old Dominion by 4
Thursday, March 17
Tucson, AZ
UTEP over Utah by 7
#6 vs. #11: A running theme here for most of the 2004-05 year has been that the
Mountain West is not as good as the it, or the public, thinks it is. Utah hasn?t turned
the ball over much this season and Andrew Bogut has dominated most of their opponents,
but who have they played, besides?nobody? Okay, Washington early.
Washington didn?t have its full complement of players, and Utah didn?t cover. Here we
have a UTEP team whose offense is run very nicely by Filiberto Rivera, probably the
only point-guard with NBA potential on the floor in this match-up. He?s quick. He can
penetrate, he can dish to tall Tofi, versatile, productive small forward Omar Thomas,
under-the-radar Jason Williams, or he can hit the outside shot. And the Utah kids can
get tired from attempting to defend all this, and by being defended for a change, and
they can become dispirited from UTEP hitting all their free-throws (79%!). Utah gets
WAC-ed. UTEP, 75-68.
Oklahoma over Niagara by 11
#3 vs. # 14: Niagara can?t stop anyone, but can anyone stop them? You?d think that a
Kelvin Sampson-coached Oklahoma team could, but it?s not a safe bet. Is the Big 12 so
great this year? We?re thinking not. Niagara?s inside stud Juan Mendez is a little beefier
than Oklahoma?s Taj Gray, with one more year of college ball, and Niagara senior guard
David Brooks is 6-3, 220. Brooks will be looking down on Oklahoma?s Drew Lavender
and Lawrence McKenzie in both size and years, and if Sampson wants a better height
match-up he needs to turn to a freshman, David Godbold. Niagara?s other starting
guard, Alvin Cruz, is a senior blood-brother to Brooks and all four leading scorers ?
Mendez included ? will take and make the 3. Four Niagara starters average 33.6 minutes
or more, but they?ll have had five extra prep days leading into their one big shot.
This could be closer than indicated. OKLAHOMA, 84-73.
Saturday, March 19
UTEP over Oklahoma by 2
Oklahoma over Utah by 9
UTEP over Niagara by 6
Niagara over Utah by 1
Thursday, March 17
Indianapoolis, IN
Iowa over Cincinnati by 1
#10 vs. #7: It?s a bad Selection Committee Chairman that wouldn?t get his own school
off the bubble and into the Big Dance, and an even worse Selection Committee
Chairman that wouldn?t orchestrate a favorable match-up for the school where he is
Athletic Director. ?I know,? Bob Bowlsby of Iowa likely said to himself. ?After my
school gets every call in the Big Ten Tournament, I?ll match us up against the guy who
all the wise guys say is the worst tournament coach in the nation!? Bob Huggins?
Bearcats were given a first-round boot by Gonzaga as a ?5 chalk two seasons ago, and
were nearly ousted by +10 underdog East Tennessee State of the Southern Conference
in the first round last season. They recently tanked their C-USA quarterfinal against
South Florida, but wouldn?t you if you were going to be out-coached in a week and
needed to find some kind of edge? Iowa can make the deeper-than-normal three-pointer,
trade elbows, and keep their cool while freshman point-guard led Cincy feels the
pressure. IOWA, 70-69.
Kentucky over Eastern Kentucky by 23
#2 vs. #15: Not likin? that Ohio Valley Conference that Eastern Kentucky exits. Most
of the conference was at or near the bottom of the Schedule Strength list for most of
the 2004-05 regular season, and when suspect team like Samford make winning streak
runs, you know something isn?t up to par. Kentucky is the quintessential good team off
an embarrassing defeat, in the SEC Title Game. Tubby to team: ?Now that I have your
attention?? The SEC may be overrated, but most of the EKU players can be knocked
off stride with a strong breath, there are no serious size mismatches for Kentucky to fear,
and the EKU arms will be getting tired from hoisting long-range three-pointers from
farther out than they want to be. KENTUCKY, 72-49.
You guys might can pickup a few thoughts with this.......
Thursday, March 17
Indianapolis, IN
Illinois over Fairleigh Dickinson by 24
#1 vs. #16: You?ll get no ringing endorsement for laying the two-dozen-plus with the
impressive, 40% 3-point shooting, Big Ten champ. Illinois has a short turnaround time
having been in the last CT to conclude on Sunday, with the death last weekend of head
coach Bruce Weber?s mother as an added distraction into the short lead-in. FDU
stopped playing four days before Illinois did. Their upperclassmen guards run 6-0 to 6-
4 to not be overmatched in height, but Illinois? Roger Powell and Deron Williams are
more solid physical specimens. Although FDU guard Chad Timberlake hits 54% from
the field, his status as a third option in the offense is the more telling piece of info. A
7-foot, 260 soph center and 6-9, 205 junior stringbean power forward may be the real
keys to keeping the margin on the short side. Or not. ILLINOIS, 81-57.
Texas over Nevada by 1
#8 vs. #9: For Nevada, 6-11 sophmore Nick Fazekas can step out and knock down a
three. Texas? 6-8 junior Brad Buckman can do likewise. But Fazekas attempts about 2.5
time as many. For our money, Buckman is a relative stiff on a team full of chuckers,
who, if they don?t play D, don?t win. Both are Big Dance repeaters from last season,
despite the departure of key ingredients. For Nevada it was Kirk Snyder and daggershot
guard Todd Okeson. For Texas, it was the starting senior backcourt of Ivey and
Mouton, who had long tenure with Rick Barnes? team. These younger, yet talented
Longhorns weathered many injuries during the season and bowed out of the Big 12
tourney early (to Colorado) to help get everything straight. Not the most appealing of
teams and their bigs give away some inches to Fazekas and 6-10 teammate Pinkney, but
since Nevada?s best 3-point threat is 7 feet tall, if he don?t hit, the Wolfpack soon sit.
TEXAS, 59-58.
Saturday, March 19
Illinois over Texas by 11
Illinois over Nevada by 13
Thursday, March 17
Cleveland, OH
Alabama over Wisconsin-Milwaukee by 4
#5 vs. #12: They say that you shouldn?t lay points with a freshman point guard vs. an
experienced opponent. Alabama?s Ronald Steele dishes nearly 5 assists per game and the
Tide scores 76.5, but he is a 6-2 freshman going up against a WMU backcourt that
includes Ed McCants, a 6-3 senior who scores 17.5 per game. Boo Davis and Chris
Hill are the other key WMU guards, both upperclassmen, and 6-5 junior forward Joah
Tucker has been dropping 15 per game on outclassed Horizon League foes. Tucker,
however, may be up against it attempting to score in the paint against those long and
lean Alabamas like Jermareo Davidson and Evan Brock or the long and more solid
Kennedy Winston and Chuck Davis. But if WMU?s perimeter scorers enable them to
hang around, does Steele and Alabama start looking for the ghost of ice-blooded
Antoine Pettway? Underdog WMU will have had four extra days of prep time.
ALABAMA, 76-72.
Boston College over Penn by 4
#4 vs. #13: The Road to the Final Four detoured through the apartment window of
BC?s 10 ppg guard Jermaine Watson during a party last Saturday as he fled from some
bad people with bad things in their hands. He has missed practices since. Unlike
Watson vs. Thugs, Penn will not be intimidated. This version of Penn enjoys the kind
of bumping and grinding that BC is known to offer. Sharpshooting guard Tim Begley
has a 6-5, 230 body that won?t wear down, and his supporting cast includes 6-7, 220
Mark Zoller and 6-8, 225 Steve Danley, pulling down more than 11 boards per game
between them. Penn?s biggest player, Jan Fikiel, is a 6-10 senior who will play 20 minutes.
BC?s Craig Smith is tough, but he is 6-7, 250 and Nate Doornekamp wins no
awards simply for being a 7-footer. Other BC bigs are young, and the typical BC pace
is something that Penn can have no problems keeping down with. BOSTON COLLEGE,
66-62.
Saturday, March 19
Alabama over Boston College by 4
Alabama over Penn by 18
Boston College over Wisconsin-Milwaukee by 6
Wisconsin-Milwaukee over Penn by 5
Thursday, March 17
Boise, ID
LSU over UAB by 11
#6 vs. #11: There is a tendency to underrate scrappy and speedy UAB ? as this margin
seems to be doing ? but it?s just very hard to ignore the size and width of LSU?s 6-8,
250 Brandon Bass and 6-9, 310 freshman Glen ?Big Baby? Davis. UAB can cause
many opponents to become winded from chasing them around the floor, but LSU ?
first of all, is forewarned of UAB because the Blazers ousted LSU?s SEC rival Kentucky
from the Big Dance in the second round last season. Second of all, those two big LSUs,
plus 6-9, 235 Ross Neltner, have no excuse to not be owning boards in this match-up,
thereby preventing UAB from getting out on their break. Guys of that size, coupled
with a pair of guards sticking the three at better than 38%, make LSU a tough matchup
for anyone in this post-season, let alone this particular C-USA also-ran. Look at
Davis one time quickly, and you see Shaq! LSU, 77-66.
Arizona over Utah State by 4
#3 vs. #14: Was Lute crying (for no reason) to the officials for a call against Salim
Stoudamire late in the Pac 10 title loss to Washington because he feared that dropping
a seed or two would pit him against another Miami-OH, or Santa Clara ? under-theradar
schools that bounced Olson from the Big Dance before he became a Final Four
and Finals fellow? Can his guard Salim Stoudamire shoot 50% from 3-point range in
the mountains of Boise? Will Salim Stoudamire even pass the basketball? Utah State
just went through a season shooting better than 50% as a team ? a concept that
Stoudamire is often Kobe Bryant-like about. He might shout, he might pout. And if
he does, they could be out if they don?t play enough D against Utah State?s perimeter
shooters, or if the Aggies? bigs can grind the game down to their preferred Butler-
Princeton tempo ? which Arizona definitely struggled against in two non-******
(including a straight-up loss) to Washington State! ARIZONA, 73-69.
Saturday, March 19
LSU over Arizona by 2
LSU over Utah State by 9
Arizona over UAB by 7
UAB over Utah State by 1
Friday, March 18
Oklahoma City, OK
St. Mary?s over Southern Illinois by 2
#10 vs. #7: The Salukis of SIU have been very good at bringing fast-paced sides to their
slower tempo in the NCAA Tournament. But now they?re not matched up against raw
athletes who play basketball (like Georgia and Alabama). They face a bunch of upperclassmen
basketball players. Big difference. St. Mary?s may not have looked too sharp
early in the season when they came East to face Memphis and Mississippi State, but
that was 3,000 miles from home, against athletes who play basketball ? out of their
comfort zone. Now the Gaels are only crossing half a continent, to play against an
opponent whose four top scorers are 6-5 and smaller. SIU won?t beat many teams from
the inside, and they probably won?t beat St. Mary?s without a little luck, because St.
Mary?s bigs are bigger and their guards are as experienced, as well as better pure scorers.
Playing a halfcourt game is to St. Mary?s benefit. ST. MARY?S, 67-65.
Oklahoma State over Southeastern Louisiana by 20
#2 vs. #15: Eddie Sutton?s OK State Cowboys are a CT Winner from Sunday, laying a
big number. If you want to buck the rule that says to lean to the dog, we?ll overlook it,
since SE LA also last played on Sunday and has no extra prep edge. From their Sunday
SWAC Title Game win against 21-12 Northwestern State, here is the SE LA shot
breakdown: Dunks: 4-for-5; Layups: 8-for-8; Jumpers: 7-for-30; 3-point Jumpers: 1-
for-7. That is a fairly simple scouting report for Eddie Sutton to pass along to his team.
?Don?t let ?em penetrate. They couldn?t hit water from a boat.? SE LA will be hoping
to keep 6-10, 250 senior center Nate Lofton on the floor for as long as possible to help
clean up some messes and keep offensive rebounds away from Ivan McFarlin and Joey
Graham. OKLAHOMA STATE, 69-49.
Sunday, March 20
Oklahoma State over St. Mary?s by 10
Oklahoma State over Southern Illinois by 10
CHICAGO REGIONAL
7
Thursday, March 17
Boise, ID
Washington over Montana by 24
#1 vs. #16: Two NCAA Tournament credos clash. Washington is the Pac 10
Tournament winner laying points in the first round, a letdown situation. But the
underdog comes from the Big Sky Conference, where underdogs in non-conference
action are a miserable 37% ATS since the beginning of the 2003-04 season. Montana
is the most recent team to parlay the ?Pat Kennedy Off? angle into an NCAA
Tournament berth, following DePaul last year. But if the Huskies come to play for 40
minutes, the Grizzlies can be run off the floor with this step up in class. In most
instances, the side opposite Washington will be ?better defense, plus points,? as in a
potential second-round match-up with Pitt or Pacific. That?s not the case here as smaller
but quicker Huskies can beat Montana?s 6-10 and 6-7 relative lumberers to loose
balls. WASHINGTON, 92-68.
Pacific over Pittsburgh by 1
#8 vs. #9: The Big East favorite must cross two time zones by Thursday and prepare
for a seasoned team that ousted their Big East cousin Providence in the first round of
the Big Dance last season. Not an easy task for the Pitt Panthers. This Big West opponent
is their mirror image. Pacific plays the same moderate tempo, and they make the
most of their offensive opportunities. Pacific also sports the fourth-best field goal differential
in the nation this season of +9.6%. Pittsburgh?s is a nice 21st-best at +7.0%
and granted, it came against a slightly tougher schedule. But Pittsburgh covered only
39% of their action against that schedule and Pacific?s 6-9, 240 Christian Maraker can
step out and hit the three, an edge that can eventually force Pittsburgh?s big Taft or
Troutman out to cover him and open up the inside for Pacific 6-8 senior forward Yango
to tango! PACIFIC, 69-68.
Saturday, March 19
Washington over Pacific by 7
Washington over Pittsburgh by 1
Friday, March 18
Nashville, TN
George Washington over Georgia Tech by 2
#12 vs. #5: The ?upset? seed pairing. Pops has hops. Young Mr. Mensa-Bonsu of GW
can dipsy-doodle around the basket better than many, and he?ll be doing it vs. a mostly
smaller bunch of Yellow Jackets and his moves around the hoop might even send
Tech?s 7-footer Luke Schenser into a dizzying, foul-troubled spin. That Georgia Tech
bench behind the starters who went to the NCAA Title Game last season is loaded with
underclassmen. GW is stocked with upperclassmen, and 6-8 Mike Hall gives them the
added dimension of a big player who can step back and hit a three. Playing in a conference
full of jump shooters, GW still managed to make nearly 10 steals per game and
block 4.4 shots per game. They also beat both Tom Izzo and Gary Williams in one
weekend back in December. Since head coach Karl Hobbs is a Jim Calhoun disciple,
GW plays the UConn trapping style from the get-go that GT didn?t handle well
against?UConn last year! GEORGE WASHINGTON, 74-72.
Louisville over UL Lafayette by 20
#4 vs. #13. Just what this silly Sun Belt side didn?t need ? an opponent that plays the
way they want to play, with bigger, faster personnel than the Lafalots see on a nightly
basis in the Sun Belt Conference. To make matters worse, Louisville probably feels a little
miffed about their seeding. Little Ricky?s recruits also probably remember being
knocked out of the first round of this thing last season by a backcourt full of quality
seniors on Xavier. This affair could resemble Louisville?s first-round game from two seasons
ago, when their big guards ran up, down, over and around the Ohio Valley rep
Austin Peay while the Austin Peay coach?s pants fell from his waist, to his knees, to his
ankles. The Lafalots make their living stepping into the lane to pick off bad decisions
by Sun Belt foes. Louisville makes its living taking and making 3s over those kinds of
players, then spreading the floor so that opponents cannot get turnovers when the ball
goes into the paint. LOUISVILLE, 86-66.
Sunday, March 20
Louisville over George Washington by 4
George Washington over UL-Lafayette by 12
Georgia Tech over Louisville by 1
Georgia Tech over UL Lafayette by 20
Thursday, March 17
Tucson, AZ
UCLA over Texas Tech by 10
#11 vs. #6: What happens when Herr Knight?s team has three less days to prepare than
a Pac 10 opponent, and the game isn?t being refereed by Big 12 officials receiving a paycheck
from the Big 12 Conference, depriving depth-shy Texas Tech the red carpet treatment
that enabled them to ?accomplish? enough to merit an NCAA invitation? How
about they get blown out by an underrated, underclassmen-dominated group coached
by one of Knight?s equals? Pac 10 underdogs are usually something to jump on at this
time of the year. Howlin? Ben and the Bruins are long and lean and can apply those
physical edges on the perimeter to clamp down and wear out Tech?s smaller guards,
some of whom give up three inches to Aaron Affalo and Josh Shipp of UCLA. A 7-
foot, 270-pound junior center is a nice thing to have, and only one side here has
Michael Fey ? that?s UCLA. He is complemented by 6-10 senior Dijon Thompson,
UCLA?s leading scorer and rebounder. What?s up, Knight? Not you. UCLA, 79-69.
Gonzaga over Winthrop by 18
#3 vs. #14: Rony Turiaf, sometimes dominant, sometimes foul-plagued center for
Gonzaga, says he loves playing with 6-8 forward Adam Morrison. He never said that
about Blake Stepp, the departed guard and former offensive focal point, who was a
defensive liability and shot too much. Morrison shoots a lot ? 413 times this season
compared to 296 for the 6-10 Turiaf. But at 6-8 with a terrific outside shot, Morrison
is almost always getting a good look at the basket in a match-up nightmare for the
opponent. Winthrop has better-than-average size for a ?Mid-Minor.? Three guards that
go 6-4 to 6-5. A 6-10 center. But point guard Chris Gaynor is a 5-10 freshman who
plays 30 minutes and averages only 6.5 points per game. Playing 4-on-5 offensively,
especially if and when Gonzaga defensive stopper Errol Knight is guarding him, figures
to overwhelm Gaynor sooner or later. GONZAGA, 80-62.
Saturday, March 19
Gonzaga over UCLA by 4
UCLA over Winthrop by 10
Gonzaga over Texas Tech by 7
Texas Tech over Winthrop by 7
Thursday, March 17
Cleveland, OH
Creighton over West Virginia by 3
#10 vs. #7: The Mountaineers just played four games in four days in New York. Now,
with only four days? rest, they ship out to a different building and hook an opponent
with nine day?s rest. At Madison Square Garden, West Virginia?s point-spread margins
were +21, +11, +8.5 and ?3.5 against Providence (blah), Boston (we can?t be bothered)
College, Villa (we?re not really into this, either) Nova and, finally, a half-cranked
Syracuse. They are on a serious down-tick and they probably don?t even realize it.
Creighton head coach Dana Altman has been getting more aggressive play from his big
men, making the outside shots of Nate Funk and ****** Mathies, and the ball-handling
of senior point-guard Tyler McKinney more effective than usual. Missouri Valley
underdogs have been a hot commodity in non-conference action the last two years and
this one has five extra days of prep time! CREIGHTON, 70-67.
Wake Forest over Chattanooga by 27
#2 vs. #15: Ah, a nice, classy, ACC side that isn?t laying 25 points, bowed out of the
ACC Tournament early, and got the forewarned scare in their first-round game last season
(vs. VCU), when their point guard was only a freshman. Wake Forest?s Chris Paul
is now a year older and wiser, so are the rest of his buddies. Paul is also in a mood to
be completely serious to help erase the embarrassment of the one-game suspension that
caused him to miss Wake?s one-game appearance in the ACC Tournament. The
Southern Conference did not impress in non-conference action this season, when even
their 16-0 regular season champ Davidson didn?t cover home games vs. Georgetown or
Seton Hall. Wake has too much quality 6-9 to 6-11 stuff for the Mocs to dent or stop
inside, and too much experienced, versatile, swing-player length on either end of the
floor. Way too many turnovers are coming from Chattanooga. Then there is the Paul
penetration that makes Wake?s offense even harder to guard. WAKE FOREST, 91-64.
Saturday, March 19
Wake Forest over Creighton by 19
Wake Forest over West Virginia by 19
ALBUQUERQUE REGIONAL
8
Tuesday, March 15
Dayton, OH
Oakland vs.Alabama A&M Available on game day at www.winningpoints.com
Friday, March 18
Charlotte, NC
North Carolina over Oakland by 29
North Carolina over Alabama A&M by 36
#1 vs. #16: Good team, off a loss. North Carolina dropped out of the ACC
Tournament after two days, with a sluggish, defensively poor win vs. Clemson and a
loss to a Georgia Tech team that ?needed? to extend themselves to get into this thing.
Roy Williams rested his most important player down the stretch because Roy is now a
March icon and wants to be associated with competing for the National Championship
he has never won. Oakland is full of freshman and sophomores. Alabama A&M is tiny.
After extending themselves on Tuesday, neither would figure to have enough gas in the
tank to stop Carolina from doing whatever it wants to do in front of a pro-Tar Heels
crowd in Charlotte. NORTH CAROLINA, 95-66 or 105-69.
Minnesota over Iowa State by 2
#9 vs. #8: Minnesota?s lined schedule comprised just 51.7% SU winners and they covered
2 out of every 3. Iowa State?s schedule strength in lined games was about the same
? 51.1% -- and they were a nice 15-10 ATS despite not generating much offense from
the perimeter. An edge here may be traced back to last season, when Iowa State
advanced to the semifinals of the NIT. The Cyclones gained valuable tournament experience
in the process, when their go-to guy Curtis Stinson was only a freshman. Yet rare
is the NCAA Tournament team that shoots under 30% from three-point range, as Iowa
State does. Which big man wins out? Minnesota?s 7-foot, 270 Jeff Hagen, or ISU?s 6-
11, 250 Jared Homan? Minnesota may be fresher at the end, because three ISU starters
have been averaging at least 35 minutes. MINNESOTA, 72-70.
Sunday, March 20
North Carolina over Iowa State by 16
North Carolina over Minnesota by 18
Friday, March 18
Nashville, TN
Villanova over New Mexico by 16
#5 vs. #12: New Mexico?s late pseudo-roll has them thinking they are better than they
are. Now, a Mountain West team that was getting red-carpet treatment from a conference
desperate for a second NCAA rep besides Utah hooks a real opponent in a neutral
setting. They fattened up early on the Duquesnes, later on the awful BYUs,
Wyomings and San Diego States, and then got past Utah a few times. Says New
Mexico?s all-everything Danny Granger: ? Utah's a top 25 team and we beat them
twice." Ahem?Utah won?t be a Top 25 team after they lose to UTEP,. ?Nova?s pit-bull
perimeter defenders will turn New Mexico mother-chuckers into low-percentage scorers
for this game, and no Mountain West kid whose starting point guard has been out
since January can win a game by himself against a Big East foe. New Mexico got 0
bench points in their Mountain West title game win. VILLANOVA, 78-62.
Florida over Ohio by 8
#4 vs. #13: The Gators won the SEC Tournament playing +13.5, +5 and +19 points
better than the spread. They will have a lot of bandwagon money on them. But they
also represent a major conference tournament winner now favored in the first round.
Proceed with caution. The Lee and Walsh-led Gators could certainly have another big
game or two left in them. Ohio head coach Tim O?Shea, an ex-Boston College assistant,
joked that he should just retire following his team?s overtime MAC Tournament
win against Buffalo, when each side made some dumb plays in crunch time. But underdogs
that can play the game never lay down. The Bobcats trailed by 19 points vs.
Buffalo in the second half. Florida will be looking ahead to Villanova or New Mexico,
and probably be surprised by Ohio?s quickness and shot-making abilities. You don?t
come back fro 19 down without depth or without shooters. Ohio has experienced, roleplaying
height on the bench to make a game out of this. FLORIDA, 79-71.
Sunday, March 20
Villanova over Florida by 1
Villanova over Ohio by 12
Florida over New Mexico by 10
Ohio over New Mexico by 1
Friday, March 18
Oklahoma City, OK
Wisconsin over Northern Iowa by 2
#6 vs. #11: Missouri Valley underdogs are fashionable, early-round takes. Badgers head
coach Bo Ryan has his work cut out for him with short notice against an opponent that
will have had eight days of extra prep time before this. Northern Iowa used the extra
time well prior to their first-round cover vs. Georgia Tech of the ACC last season, and
they have a pair of outside shooters ? Jacobson and Crawford ? who nail their jumpers
betters than any Wisconsin guard this season. Both 6-3, they present at least a minor
obstacle for quicker, but erratic-shooting Badgers 6-1 guards Taylor and Chambliss.
Wisconsin?s Clayton Hanson must relocate his outside shot for Wisconsin to avoid the
upset, because going to big Wilkinson and shifty Tucker cannot carry them in this
match-up vs. fundamentally sound and experienced inside players Stout and Coleman,
spelled by 6-10 senior Godfread. WISCONSIN, 70-68.
Kansas over Bucknell by 17
#3 vs. #14: Bucknell beat Pittsburgh at Pitt and just knocked off Holy Cross, Ralph
Williard?s perennial Patriot League rep in the Big Dance. They also beat 19-win St.
Joseph?s at St. Joe?s, and MAAC Champ Niagara. But that only serves to give Bill Self
and the Jayhawks some notice. His team is coming in on a relatively cold streak?probably
because he didn?t want them to peak too soon. Self is a Mr. March Man. He has
been shuffling bodies in and out of the lineup all year long, didn?t play second-leading
scorer Keith Langford in the Big 12 Tourney, and after being bounced in those semis
by Oklahoma State said, ?Anything that gets you better prepared next week is the most
important thing." Bucknell guard Kevin Bettancourt plays 32.7 minutes per game, but
against this backcourt, instead of points, he?ll have exposure and exhaustion, especially
after running back to play D after one-and-dones. KANSAS, 75-58.
Sunday, March 20
Kansas over Wisconsin by 10
Kansas over Northern Iowa by 15
Wisconsin over Bucknell by 13
Northern Iowa over Bucknell by 10
Friday, March 18
Worcester, MA
North Carolina State over NC Charlotte by 3
#10 vs. #7: Who trusts Lutz?s Klutzes of Charlotte to play the necessary D vs.
Princetonian-style offense run by NC State players who are quicker and who usually
shoot more accurately than a difficult-to-defend Princeton team would? Charlotte normally
faces some willy-nilly C-USA teams that play slop-ball ? like Cincinnati,
Southern Miss, Houston ? or teams they can just run with like Louisville and
Memphis. Motion offense? What up with that? Notre Dame?s version of it wasn?t even
very good, yet they made Charlotte look like a junior high team in the first round of
the NCAAs several years ago. NC State?s Julius Hodge is an enigma, and he totally took
his team out of a second-round loss to Vanderbilt last season by being an on-court doofus.
Maybe, just maybe, he can play a sound game for 40 minutes, make life difficult
for Charlotte gunner Brendan Plavich, and a team that weathered some mid-season
injuries can reclaim some respect. NORTH CAROLINA STATE, 71-68.
Connecticut over Central Florida by 24
#2 vs. #15: Not the same Central Florida team that covered a big number in the first
round vs. Pittsburgh last season. Last year?s match-up was much better for them
because Pitt didn?t pick ?em up at three-quarter court with a trap like UConn will from
the start. Pitt was a great match-up for UCF last season, because they played the same
styles and UCF matched up well in height and width. Pitt had also gone to the wire in
the Big East title game vs. UConn. But now UCF is smaller and this opponent is bigger,
and rested. Turning it over to pressure and D-ing up against 6-11 Villanueva, 6-10
Boone and 6-9 Gay will not be fun. For UCF?s low-post players spotting three inches,
getting offensive put-backs won?t be as easy as it has been. As for UCF?s 41% 3-point
shooter Gary Johnson, well, he was 1-for-6 from deep moving up in class against Utah
State in November. CONNECTICUT, 80-56.
Sunday, March 20
North Carolina State over Connecticut by 1
North Carolina State over Central Florida by
Connecticut over NC Charlotte by 6
NC Charlotte over Central Florida by 16
SYRACUSE REGIONAL
9
Friday, March 18
Charlotte, NC
Duke over Delaware State by 32
#1 vs. #16: For Duke?s Beady-Eyed Devil Coach K, it?s not always about basketball. It?s
about teaching lessons in life. For instance, for this game, the lesson would be that if
you have the misfortune to be the winner of the Northeastern Conference, you must
be prepared to face the embarrassment that showing up for a no-win situation virtually
guarantees. Since your team does not consist of blue-chip recruits who train in stateof-
the-art facilities and whose brains include computer-chip implants with directives
from the coach, you must be prepared to absorb the punishment that blue-chip recruits
are capable of dishing out when they are programmed to play pressure defense from the
opening tip, generating offense from defense, opening up a margin early, forcing the
other side out of their game plan, and shooting their favorite shots and running up the
score so that the Duke alumni can make a quick return on their investment. And then
Coach K says, ?All watching, worship me!?? DUKE, 91-59.
Stanford over Mississippi State by 10
#8 vs. #9: Awesome. The versatile Stanfords vs. the one-way, Flying Stansburys of
MSU. Basketball, vs. whatever they call it at Mississippi State, where big Lawrence
(Overrate Me) Roberts is throwing two-handed overheads 75-feet down the floor to
goofy, early-release guards looking for trash buckets. Slick Rick and his band of assistants
recruit for speed, buy nice suits, and then hope that transfers like Roberts fall into
their laps. Hey, maybe they?ll better this rating. But Roberts can?t launch a transition
pass off a three-pointer nailed by Stanford?s Chris Hernandez, MSU can?t cope with a
tempo slowed to Stanford?s preference by excellent dirty work done by 6-11 and 6-10
Haryasz and Little, and Winsome (Lose Some) Frazier is far from automatic on their
perimeter. Toss in questionable half-court play from Gary Ervin and the seriously
hurtin? leg of their experienced outside shooter Shane Power. STANFORD, 69-59.
Sunday, March 20
Duke over Stanford by 13
Duke over Mississippi State by 15
Friday, March 18
Worcester, MA
Michigan State over Old Dominion by 5
#5 vs. #12: ODU has the personnel to hang in there, led by 6-9 Alex Loughton and
ice-blooded floor leader Isiah Hunter, who heads a quick group of turnover-minded,
up-tempo-oriented guards. Aside from 6-10 Paul Davis ? who must match Loughton?s
bank shots ? Michigan State becomes the Big Ten version of Virginia Commonwealth,
with a bunch of 6-4 to 6-6 players seeing the bulk of the minutes, and no real point
guard. Hey, ODU knows all about that. They just beat that in the Colonial title game,
although they were allowed to mug the opponent almost like Michigan State is allowed
to mug theirs when they play non-conference games in East Lansing. But we?re at a neutral
site, and if Loughton?s 6-8 front line buddy Arnaud Dahi is healthy, this game is
decided by MSU?s superior free-throw shooting, and Tom Izzo owning Blaine Taylor
from the bench. MICHIGAN STATE, 84-79.
Syracuse over Vermont by 6
#4 vs. #13: ?Two years ago, Vermont had to head West through snowstorms with a
young team, to face Arizona. Last year, they had to face eventual National Champ
Connecticut in the first round (and covered). Now, with 6-9, 250, 25.7 ppg Taylor
Coppenrath and point guard T.J. Sorrentine seniors, they first expose Syracuse?s big
man Craig Forth as a coattail rider of every other good player on the roster for the last
few years, then force Gerry Mac to have another one of his 40-point games to frustrate
and eventually tire them out. Sorrentine has nice touch from deep but going for 35
minutes vs. this caliber eventually drains him. Yet judging Vermont on their prior two
NCAA appearances, or their losing trips to high altitude Nevada the last two seasons
(where there was a big man to step out against Coppenrath), is probably not the right
way to be looking at this. SYRACUSE, 78-72.
Sunday, March 20
Syracuse over Michigan State by 7
Syracuse over Old Dominion by 11
Michigan State over Vermont by 1
Vermont over Old Dominion by 4
Thursday, March 17
Tucson, AZ
UTEP over Utah by 7
#6 vs. #11: A running theme here for most of the 2004-05 year has been that the
Mountain West is not as good as the it, or the public, thinks it is. Utah hasn?t turned
the ball over much this season and Andrew Bogut has dominated most of their opponents,
but who have they played, besides?nobody? Okay, Washington early.
Washington didn?t have its full complement of players, and Utah didn?t cover. Here we
have a UTEP team whose offense is run very nicely by Filiberto Rivera, probably the
only point-guard with NBA potential on the floor in this match-up. He?s quick. He can
penetrate, he can dish to tall Tofi, versatile, productive small forward Omar Thomas,
under-the-radar Jason Williams, or he can hit the outside shot. And the Utah kids can
get tired from attempting to defend all this, and by being defended for a change, and
they can become dispirited from UTEP hitting all their free-throws (79%!). Utah gets
WAC-ed. UTEP, 75-68.
Oklahoma over Niagara by 11
#3 vs. # 14: Niagara can?t stop anyone, but can anyone stop them? You?d think that a
Kelvin Sampson-coached Oklahoma team could, but it?s not a safe bet. Is the Big 12 so
great this year? We?re thinking not. Niagara?s inside stud Juan Mendez is a little beefier
than Oklahoma?s Taj Gray, with one more year of college ball, and Niagara senior guard
David Brooks is 6-3, 220. Brooks will be looking down on Oklahoma?s Drew Lavender
and Lawrence McKenzie in both size and years, and if Sampson wants a better height
match-up he needs to turn to a freshman, David Godbold. Niagara?s other starting
guard, Alvin Cruz, is a senior blood-brother to Brooks and all four leading scorers ?
Mendez included ? will take and make the 3. Four Niagara starters average 33.6 minutes
or more, but they?ll have had five extra prep days leading into their one big shot.
This could be closer than indicated. OKLAHOMA, 84-73.
Saturday, March 19
UTEP over Oklahoma by 2
Oklahoma over Utah by 9
UTEP over Niagara by 6
Niagara over Utah by 1
Thursday, March 17
Indianapoolis, IN
Iowa over Cincinnati by 1
#10 vs. #7: It?s a bad Selection Committee Chairman that wouldn?t get his own school
off the bubble and into the Big Dance, and an even worse Selection Committee
Chairman that wouldn?t orchestrate a favorable match-up for the school where he is
Athletic Director. ?I know,? Bob Bowlsby of Iowa likely said to himself. ?After my
school gets every call in the Big Ten Tournament, I?ll match us up against the guy who
all the wise guys say is the worst tournament coach in the nation!? Bob Huggins?
Bearcats were given a first-round boot by Gonzaga as a ?5 chalk two seasons ago, and
were nearly ousted by +10 underdog East Tennessee State of the Southern Conference
in the first round last season. They recently tanked their C-USA quarterfinal against
South Florida, but wouldn?t you if you were going to be out-coached in a week and
needed to find some kind of edge? Iowa can make the deeper-than-normal three-pointer,
trade elbows, and keep their cool while freshman point-guard led Cincy feels the
pressure. IOWA, 70-69.
Kentucky over Eastern Kentucky by 23
#2 vs. #15: Not likin? that Ohio Valley Conference that Eastern Kentucky exits. Most
of the conference was at or near the bottom of the Schedule Strength list for most of
the 2004-05 regular season, and when suspect team like Samford make winning streak
runs, you know something isn?t up to par. Kentucky is the quintessential good team off
an embarrassing defeat, in the SEC Title Game. Tubby to team: ?Now that I have your
attention?? The SEC may be overrated, but most of the EKU players can be knocked
off stride with a strong breath, there are no serious size mismatches for Kentucky to fear,
and the EKU arms will be getting tired from hoisting long-range three-pointers from
farther out than they want to be. KENTUCKY, 72-49.
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