WITH A MONTH UNTIL SELECTION SUNDAY, ALMOST NO ONE'S AS
SAFE AS THEY SEEM
One year ago at this time, the wheels were starting to come
off the Conestoga wagon.
Oklahoma took the country by storm in the first half of last
year. Behind the inimitable Trae Young, the Sooners won 10 of their first 11
games and started the Big 12 season at 6–3, with four wins over eventual NCAA
tournament teams Kansas, Texas Tech and TCU. Two straight losses to start
February didn’t dampen spirits in Norman or hurt the Oklahoma’s case in the
eyes of the NCAA Selection Committee. When it revealed its top 16 teams in
February last year, the Sooners received a No. 4 seed. It seemed they were a
lock for the NCAA tournament.
What first seemed like a blip on the radar eventually took
over Oklahoma’s season. The two-game mini-skid became a six-game losing streak,
landing the Sooners on the bubble. A late-season win over Kansas State, which
ultimately advanced to the Elite Eight, likely saved their tournament lives, and
they ended up a No. 10 seed in the big dance. Still, Selection Sunday was a
tense day for a team that, one month earlier, had been deemed one of the top-16
teams in the country by the Selection Committee.
Why the brief lesson in recent history? Well, the committee’s annual faux selection show was last weekend,
unveiling the 16 teams that should be feeling the best about themselves with a
little more than one month until Selection Sunday. In the two previous seasons
in which the committee has given us a glimpse at the field of 68 in February,
no team has fallen out of the tournament, and 28 of the 32 teams remained among
the top 16 seeds in the actual bracket. Still, Oklahoma proved last year that
there’s plenty of time for the bubble to creep up on almost anyone. With that
in mind, we’re going to be conservative with lock status in this edition of the
Bubble Watch.
SPOTS REMAINING: 18 (68 Spots — 19 Locks — 7
Near-Locks — 24 Unaccounted For Automatic Bids = 18)
LOCKS (19): Duke,
Gonzaga, Houston, Iowa State, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisville, LSU, Marquette,
Michigan, Michigan State, Nevada, North Carolina, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas
Tech, Villanova, Virginia, Wisconsin
NEAR-LOCKS (7): Cincinnati,
Florida State, Iowa, Kansas State, Maryland, Mississippi State, Virginia Tech
TEAMS ON THE
BUBBLE
BUFFALO
RECORD: 20–3,
NET: 24,
SOS: 96,
Q1: 1–1,
Q2: 4–1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
Don’t discount the idea of Buffalo falling into an
uncomfortable position over the final month of the season. After losing to
Bowling Green, the Bulls trailed Central Michigan at halftime before righting
the ship. They still have a regular-season game with Toledo, the second-best
team in the MAC, and their best win of the season came against Syracuse. This
is not a team that can withstand more than a loss or two before its tournament
life is in danger, no matter how safe it might seem.
TEXAS
RECORD: 14–11,
NET: 34,
SOS: 5,
Q1: 4–6,
Q2: 4–4,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
We here at SI.com are higher than most on Texas, and that
isn’t going to change short of a losing streak along the lines of 2018
Oklahoma. Sure, Texas’s résumé has some pockmarks with losses to Radford,
Oklahoma State and Georgia. The Longhorns also have wins over North Carolina,
Purdue and Kansas, all three of which were among the committee’s top-12 teams
last weekend, as well as Kansas State and Baylor, both of which are likely
headed to the dance. Kansas State evened the score with them on Tuesday, but
that’s not a troubling loss, even at home. So long as Texas doesn’t fall apart,
they’re going to play their way off the bubble in a positive direction.
OHIO STATE
RECORD: 16–7,
NET: 36,
SOS: 56,
Q1: 4–5,
Q2: 3–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
The Buckeyes have won three straight games, most notably
getting a road win over Indiana on Sunday. That gives them three impressive
true road victories, joining early-season wins against Cincinnati and
Creighton. One complicating factor for the Buckeyes is the strength of their
remaining schedule. They’ll play Michigan State, Maryland, Iowa, Purdue and
Wisconsin in five of their eight games left in the regular season. They could
feasibly lose all those games and be sitting at 19–12 overall and 9–11 in the
Big Ten going into the conference tournament. Even that would likely be good
enough to get them an at-large bid, and just one win over any of those
guaranteed or likely tournament teams would assuage any doubt.
BAYLOR
RECORD: 15–8,
NET: 32,
SOS: 59,
Q1: 3–5,
Q2: 6–1,
Q3+Q4
LOSSES: 2
Baylor has gone 1–2 since the previous edition of Bubble
Watch, losing to Texas and Kansas State, and beating Oklahoma. We’ll consider
that a wash, especially since they played the Kansas State game without Makai
Mason and King McClure. Mason returned for the win over Oklahoma, but McClure
remains out with a knee injury. He’s expected to be back on the floor soon, as
early as Saturday when the Bears visit Texas Tech. They follow that up with a
game at Iowa State and still have trips remaining to Kansas State and Kansas.
The Bears may need to pick off one of those games to be comfortable on
Selection Sunday, but it’s too early to say if that will be a necessity.
WASHINGTON
RECORD: 19–5,
NET: 31,
SOS: 55,
Q1: 1–4,
Q2: 5–1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Washington split its games in Arizona last week, beating the
Wildcats but losing to the Sun Devils. With those two games in the rearview
mirror, the Huskies, if they are who they believe themselves to be, should
cruise the rest of the regular season. Their only game left with a team that is
realistically in the at-large picture is against Oregon, and even the Ducks are
an extreme long shot to make the dance. Should Washington win out in the
regular season, it likely won’t matter how it performs in the Pac-12
tournament. Bet on the Huskies being in the dance one way or another.
AUBURN
RECORD: 15–7,
NET: 20,
SOS: 33,
Q1: 0–6,
Q2: 6–1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Auburn still exists in this odd space where they’re clearly
a tournament team by the eye test and most metrics, but have yet to beat anyone
of note. Take a look at their kenpom.com
page. Who’s the best win on there? Washington? Alabama? Florida?
Murray State? The Bubble and Bracket Watch Committees would say it’s
Washington, but it’s not as though that’s a signature win. We have the Crimson
Tide barely inside the field of 68, and Murray State is only in by virtue of being
our favorite in the Ohio Valley Conference. If Auburn holds steady the rest of
the season, it will get an at-large bid, but it won’t be in position to do much
damage in the tournament.
OLE MISS
RECORD: 16–7,
NET: 35, SOS: 80,
Q1: 3–7,
Q2: 3–0,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
As you can see above, Ole Miss has yet to lose a game
outside of Q1. Six of their seven losses are to teams in our current field of
68, while Florida, the lone team outside the field, is one of our first eight
out. That bodes well for a team with wins over Auburn, Baylor and Mississippi
State. The Rebels visit Auburn on Sunday, and then go on a three-game stretch
against non-tournament contenders in Missouri, South Carolina and Georgia.
WOFFORD
RECORD: 18–4,
NET: 27,
SOS: 158,
Q1: 2–4,
Q2: 3–0,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Wofford is in our field of 68 as the presumptive champion in
the Southern Conference. If the Terriers fall short, they will be an
interesting test case of the new NET rankings. If this is truly the sorting
tool that the NCAA claims it is, then Wofford should be able to withstand a
loss in the SoCon tourney, especially if it wins out in the regular season.
After all, Wofford is ahead of Iowa, Baylor, TCU, Texas and NC State in the
NET, just to name five teams. There’s a good chance none of them will be
sweating on Selection Sunday, and their conferences all afforded them plenty of
opportunities to build their respective résumés—opportunities that Wofford
didn’t have in the same abundance. Saturday’s game against UNC-Greensboro will
be a huge boost for the winner but could also scuttle the conference’s hopes of
getting two teams into the dance.
ALABAMA
RECORD: 15–9,
NET: 44,
SOS: 23,
Q1: 2–6,
Q2: 6–0,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 3
Alabama is the first team we’ve covered in this edition of
the Bubble Watch with three Q3+Q4 losses, yet it still rates quite highly,
slotting as a No. 9 seed in our most recent Bracket Watch. The Crimson Tide
have overwhelmed those losses with wins over Kentucky and Mississippi State.
They’ll also get some credit for two of those wins taking place before the
middle of December. The committee may not specifically weigh how a team is
playing over its final 10 games, but it’s clear that the Crimson Tide turned a
corner somewhere just before conference play began. They fell at Mississippi
State on Tuesday, but they will now get a chance to rack up some wins with
their next four games against Florida, Texas A&M (away), Vanderbilt and
South Carolina (away).
TCU
RECORD: 17–6,
NET: 33,
SOS: 55,
Q1: 1–6,
Q2: 5–0,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
TCU got the huge win it was desperate for last weekend,
going into Ames and coming out with a 92–83 victory over Iowa State. The Horned
Frogs previously had wins over Baylor and Texas, but beating the Cyclones on
their floor is a true signature victory. That has them positioned to get into
the dance. At this point, there are two realistic paths that could keep them
from earning an at-large bid. The first would be losses to Oklahoma State and
West Virginia, the two teams left on their schedule that have no chance for an
at-large bid. The other would be a losing spree to end the season. If the
Horned Frogs lost, say, five of their seven remaining games, and then fell in
the first round of the Big 12 tournament, they could have a nervous Selection
Sunday. Both of those are unlikely to happen.
CLEMSON
RECORD: 15–8,
NET: 39,
SOS: 25,
Q1: 2–6,
Q2: 2–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Does Clemson’s résumé sound familiar? There are a lot of
similarities between its case and TCU’s, right down to when the two teams
earned their best wins of the season. Clemson knocked off Virginia Tech at home
last week, and while the Hokies were playing without Justin Robinson, that
still qualifies as a signature win for the Tigers. Six of their eight losses
are to teams in our current field of 68. The other two were to Creighton and
Nebraska, both of which are among our first eight out. At the time Clemson lost
to Nebraska, the Cornhuskers looked like an easy tournament team and likely
still would had they not lost Isaac Copeland to a season-ending ACL tear. After
visiting Miami Wednesday, Clemson travels to Louisville over the weekend, then
returns home for a game with Florida State next week. If they can split the
Louisville and Florida State games, they’ll be in great position with five games
left in the regular season.
ST. JOHN’S
RECORD: 18–7,
NET: 48,
SOS: 63,
Q1: 4–4,
Q2: 4-1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 2
The closer we get to Selection Sunday, the more St. John’s
looks like one of this year’s ultimate Jekyll and Hyde teams. The Red Storm
started last week by beating Marquette in Milwaukee, earning a season sweep of
the Golden Eagles. They followed that up by losing to Providence at home.
They’ve also dropped games to DePaul and Georgetown at home, and while all
three of those teams remain on the at-large radar, it’s more likely than not
that none get an invite to the dance. They got a big win on Tuesday, protecting
their home floor with an overtime win over fellow bubble team Butler. They get
a real chance to pad the résumé with a home game against Villanova on Sunday.
SYRACUSE
RECORD: 17–7,
NET: 47, SOS: 28,
Q1: 2–3, Q2: 3–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 2
The Orange are about to begin a stretch that will—not could,
but will—make or break their season. Their next four games,
starting Wednesday, are against NC State (away), Louisville, Duke and North
Carolina (away). After a brief respite in the form of a road trip to Wake
Forest, they end the regular season by hosting Virginia and visiting Clemson.
In the space of 24 days, the Orange will play four games against tournament
locks, two of which are currently No. 1 seeds, and two more against likely or
potential tournament teams. If they win three of those games that necessarily means
that one of the victories came against Duke, Virginia, Louisville or North
Carolina. That should be enough to get the job done. A 4–2 mark in those six
games would all but guarantee a tournament berth.
NORTH CAROLINA
STATE
RECORD: 17–7,
NET: 37,
SOS: 249,
Q1: 1–6,
Q2: 5–0,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1)
NC State’s remaining schedule is as realistically close as
possible to Syracuse’s polar opposite. The two teams play one another on
Wednesday. After that, the Wolfpack visit Duke. From there, four of their five
remaining games are against Boston College, Wake Forest and Georgia Tech, with
one more possible résumé-builder against Florida State. The Wolfpack’s best
wins this season came against Auburn and Clemson. Both of those rate as solid,
but not spectacular, victories. They may need to beat Duke or Florida State, or
make a run in the ACC tournament, to be in a good position on Selection Sunday.
One thing is for certain: They cannot afford a loss in any of those four games
against the dregs of the ACC.
MINNESOTA
RECORD: 16–8,
NET: 58,
SOS: 64,
Q1: 3–6,
Q2: 4–1. Q3+Q4
LOSSES: 1
Minnesota has lost three straight games, all against the
conference’s elite. Losses to Purdue, Wisconsin and Michigan State may not hurt
the Golden Gophers’ résumé, but they do represent missed opportunities for a
team firmly on the bubble. The Gophers have three games left against guaranteed
or likely tournament teams—one apiece with Michigan, Purdue and Maryland, with
the first two coming at home. They spend this week facing off with fellow
bubble teams in Nebraska and Indiana, beginning in Lincoln on Wednesday. If
they can split those, pick off one of the big teams they still have in the
regular season, and take care of business against Rutgers and Northwestern,
they’ll be in a good spot going into the Big Ten Tournament.
OKLAHOMA
RECORD: 15–9,
NET: 41,
SOS: 11,
Q1: 3–7,
Q2: 5–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Oklahoma’s 2018–19 season is eerily similar to its 2017–18
season, only without Trae Young so it’s a lot less fun. The Sooners went into
conference play this year at 11–1. They went into the Big 12 portion of their
schedule at 10–1 last season. They didn’t race out to as hot a start in the Big
12 this year as they did last year, but they have been sent reeling by a
five-game losing streak that threatens to knock them out of the dance. Last
year’s six-game slide nearly did the same. Five of their six remaining games
are with guaranteed, likely or potential tournament teams, starting Saturday
when they visit TCU. They get a week off before playing Texas, Iowa State
(away), Kansas and Kansas State (away) in four of their final five games of the
regular season.
SETON HALL
RECORD: 14–9,
NET: 69,
SOS: 39,
Q1: 2–6,
Q2: 7–1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 2
Seton Hall is still trading on non-conference wins over
Kentucky and Maryland, both of which came away from home. Last weekend’s win
over Creighton gave them seven Q2 victories on the season and moved them to 8–7
in Q1 and Q2 games combined. The résumé isn’t overwhelming, but it’s certainly
that of a tournament team at this stage of the season. They’ll spend most of
the rest of the season playing bubble teams before ending the regular season
with games against the Big East powerhouses, Marquette and Villanova. A win in
either of those games could be all the Pirates need to lock up an at-large bid,
assuming they don’t fall apart over the next couple weeks.
VCU
RECORD: 17–6,
NET: 43,
SOS: 34,
Q1: 1–3,
Q2: 2–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
The Atlantic 10 will likely be a one-bid league this year,
with Davidson and Dayton mere blips on the at-large radar. The only way the
conference gets multiple bids to the dance is if VCU dominates the rest of the
way and then loses in the A-10 tournament. In that scenario, though, the Rams
would be in trouble. They beat Texas back in the first week of December, but
that’s their only win against a likely tournament team all season. Their only
other victory against a potential tournament team came against a Temple squad
that is firmly on the bubble. VCU hosts Richmond and visits Dayton this week.
The Flyers should be their final real hurdle in the regular season; with their
final six games coming against teams all ranked 132nd or worse on kenpom.com.
INDIANA
RECORD: 13–11,
NET: 49, SOS: 31,
Q1: 4–8, Q2: 2–3,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
The SI.com Bubble Watch Committee understands that it’s hard
to get behind an at-large bid for a team that’s barely over .500. Try to forget
for a second Indiana’s flaws, which all bubble teams have, and pay attention to
its strengths. Specifically, consider the high points of its résumé. The
Hoosiers own wins over Marquette, Louisville and Michigan State, all of which
have already realistically earned bids to the dance. All three were among the
top-16 teams in the Selection Committee’s peek behind the curtain last weekend,
and the bet here is that they’ll all still be there on Selection Sunday. We
can’t ignore the bad on Indiana’s résumé, but seven of their 11 losses are to
teams that will be dancing next month, one more was to a full-strength Nebraska
team, and another was to an Arkansas squad on the bubble. This team has done
enough to date to be on the right side of the bubble. They’ve got a huge game
on Saturday at fellow bubbler Minnesota.
BUTLER
RECORD: 14–11,
NET: 53,
SOS: 30.
Q1: 1–7,
Q2: 6–3,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
Butler is quietly putting together a solid résumé, with wins
over Florida, Mississippi, St. John’s, Creighton, Seton Hall and Georgetown.
None of those teams are a sure thing for the tournament, but three—Ole Miss,
St. John’s and Seton Hall—are in our current field of 68, and all count as
quality victories for a bubble team. The Bulldogs still have one game apiece
with Marquette and Villanova, though both of those are on the road. A win in
either could make their season, but if they lose both they’ll need to do
serious work in their remaining games against potential tournament teams.
TEMPLE
RECORD: 17–7,
NET: 55,
SOS: 57,
Q1: 1–5,
Q2: 5–1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
After losing at Tulsa last weekend, Temple is in serious
danger of falling out of the field of 68. The Bracket Watch Committee assumed
it would be dropping Temple after that game, but further examination of the
résumés resulted in Temple remaining just ahead of Arizona State, Florida,
Nebraska and UCF. Still, one more loss will completely zero out the capital
Temple built up by beating Houston last month. The Owls must take care of
business against SMU and South Florida this week, even with the latter
registering a pulse on the at-large radar.
UNIVERSTY OF NORTH
CAROLINA GREENSBORO
RECORD: 20–3,
NET: 46,
SOS: 187,
Q1: 1–3,
Q2: 1–0,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0)
UNC-Greensboro is the last team in our current field, which
is sure to be a controversial decision. Here’s our thinking. The Spartans are
never going to get the volume of chances that teams like Arizona State,
Florida, Nebraska, UCF, Arkansas, Creighton and Georgetown get to build its
résumé. It’s nearly impossible to compare their résumés on an apples to apples
basis, which is why metrics like the NET exist. If the NET is to be taken at
face value, then the fact that UNC-Greensboro is ahead of Arizona State,
Indiana, Syracuse, St. John’s, Butler, Temple, Creighton, Minnesota, Arkansas,
Seton Hall and Arizona should matter. It’s just behind UCF, Florida, Nebraska,
Oklahoma, Alabama and VCU, which suggests it could do as well as those teams
have against at-large quality competition if it got as many chances to prove
itself. If Selection Sunday were last weekend and UNC-Greensboro couldn’t get
in with its résumé, then no team like it could ever hope to get an at-large
bid, and that violates not only the spirit of competition, but the existence of
metrics like the NET. Everything could change for the Spartans with games this
week against Furman and Wofford, but for now they have one of the 36 best
at-large résumés in the country.
ARIZONA STATE
RECORD: 16–7,
NET: 72,
SOS: 73,
Q1: 3–1,
Q2: 4–3,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 3
When you’re a bubble team that already has lost to teams
like Princeton, Utah and Stanford, you can’t go out and drop a home game to a
team ranked 177th in NET and on kenpom.com. That’s exactly what the Sun Devils
did last week, losing to lowly Washington State. To their credit, they
recovered with a win against Washington over the weekend and are one of the
only teams you’ll find in this neighborhood of the bubble with three Q1 wins.
Those victories against Kansas, Mississippi State and Washington aren’t going
anywhere, and form a great foundation for any bubble team. They don’t have any
real résumé-builders on their schedule the rest of the regular season, but
let’s say they win out before the Pac-12 tournament. They’d go into it at 23–7
overall, and likely 4–1 in Q1 games and 8–3 in Q2 games. There’s the path to an
at-large bid for Arizona State.
FLORIDA
RECORD: 12–11,
NET: 42,
SOS: 28,
Q1: 1–9,
Q2: 4–1,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
No matter who you beat or your metrics, the Selection
Committee has never shown much appetite for granting at-large bids to teams
right around .500. That means the Gators are going to have to rack up wins over
the next month, no matter the quality of opponent. It would help, though, if at
least a few of those came against at-large-worthy teams, considering that
Florida’s best wins to date were over Ole Miss, Butler and Arkansas. If we’re
being realistic about the Gators’ chances, they’ll have to take care of
business in their four remaining regular-season games with also-rans (two
against Vanderbilt, one apiece with Missouri and Georgia) and then pick off a
win or two against Alabama, LSU (whom they play twice) and Kentucky. They can
start that quest in earnest by winning at Alabama on Saturday.
NEBRASKA
RECORD: 14–11,
NET: 40,
SOS: 79,
Q1: 2–8,
Q2: 4–3,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Nebraska’s season has completely unraveled over the last
month, exacerbated by Isaac Copeland’s torn ACL. The Cornhuskers have lost
seven straight games, the first three of which came with Copeland on the floor,
to fall to 3–10 in the Big Ten. Their best conference win is over Indiana, and
all of their meaningful victories won’t mean much to the committee considering
they came with a healthy Copeland. After games with Minnesota, Northwestern and
Penn State (away) over the next week, Nebraska ends its season by playing
Purdue, Michigan (away), Michigan State (away) and Iowa. It’s impossible to see
the Huskers getting an at-large bid unless they pick off a couple of the big
boys.
UCF
RECORD: 17–5,
NET: 45,
SOS: 101,
Q1: 0–2,
Q2: 4–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
UCF had a chance to make a statement last week, and it got
run out of its own gym by Houston. The Cougars led for the final 37 minutes and
29 seconds of gameplay, running up a lead of 20 points with seven minutes left
in the game. The Knights still have another game with Houston, as well as both
of their regular-season meetings with Cincinnati, and they need at least one of
those games to be in the at-large discussion at the start of the AAC
tournament. This is a take-care-of-business week for them, with home games
against South Florida and Memphis.
UTAH STATE
RECORD: 17–6,
NET: 38,
SOS: 117,
Q1: 1–2,
Q2: 2–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 2
The at-large case for Utah State is similar to that for
UNC-Greensboro. The Aggies, too, have a strong NET rating that suggests they
are on equal footing with bubble teams from power conferences. The big
difference between the two, especially for the committee’s purposes, is that
Utah State has lost two games outside of the top two quadrants, and two more in
Q2. All three of Greensboro’s losses are in Q1. Greensboro also held a lead on
Kentucky in the second half and lost by six at LSU. Utah State got crushed when
it stepped up in weight class, losing to Arizona State, BYU by 15 and Houston
by 10. The Aggies need to keep things clean against Wyoming and Air Force this
week.
ARKANSAS
RECORD: 14–10,
NET: 63,
SOS: 43,
Q1: 1–5,
Q2: 2–3,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 2
Arkansas is fighting an uphill battle to get an at-large
bid, despite its win over LSU from two weekends ago. That’s not enough to
counteract losses to Western Kentucky and Georgia Tech, especially when it’s
only other win over a potential at-large team to date came against Indiana. The
Razorbacks still have five potential résumé-builders in the regular season,
including games against guaranteed or likely tournament teams in Kentucky,
Auburn and Mississippi State. The first of those is this Saturday at home
against the Bulldogs. That is the Razorbacks’ biggest game to this point of the
season. Win there, and we can start to take their at-large case a bit more
seriously.
CREIGHTON
RECORD: 12–11,
NET: 57,
SOS: 10,
Q1: 2–9,
Q2: 3–2,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 0
Creighton is done with Villanova in the regular season—it
lost both games to the Wildcats—and has also already played both of its games
with Butler and Georgetown. That makes its second game against Marquette on
March 3 precious. The Bluejays don’t have a signature win this season, and it’s
unlikely that they counteract that deficiency by racking up decent wins over
fellow bubble teams the way Butler has. They almost certainly need that game
against Marquette to remain on the at-large radar.
GEORGETOWN
RECORD: 15–9,
NET: 78,
SOS: 83,
Q1: 3–3,
Q2: 4–4,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 2
On balance, Georgetown’s position is similar to Creighton’s.
It has more overall wins and one more victory in each of the first two
quadrants, but it has also suffered bad losses at the hands of Loyola Marymount
and SMU, and does not have a victory over a tournament lock. The Hoyas play
Villanova next week and Marquette in their season finale. It’s possible they
could lose both those games and get an at-large bid, but that would likely
require that they win the rest of their remaining regular-season games (two
with Seton Hall, two with DePaul, one with Creighton) and do a little damage in
the Big East tournament.
ARIZONA
RECORD: 14–10,
NET: 85,
SOS: 69,
Q1: 1–4,
Q2: 2–5,
Q3+Q4 LOSSES: 1
We were just going to put Arizona in the “others in the mix”
section and call it a day, but we felt that would be too jarring for Wildcats
loyalists checking out the column. After getting swept by the state of
Washington last week, though, it’s likely Pac-12 tournament championship or
bust for the Wildcats. Their non-conference win over Iowa State has taken them
as far as it possibly can, and it isn’t possible for them to build their résumé
in a meaningful way considering their remaining schedule in the regular season.
The Wildcats are done with Washington and have a home game remaining with
Arizona State, but a win there wouldn’t move the needle very much.
Others in the mix: Lipscomb (in our current field as
Atlantic Sun automatic qualifier), Murray State (in our current field as Ohio
Valley automatic qualifier), Belmont, Providence, Saint Mary’s, San Francisco,
Oregon, Furman, DePaul, Fresno State, Davidson, Memphis, South Florida, Dayton,
Oregon State.
No comments:
Post a Comment