WHICH TEAMS COULD
BE LEFT OUT
Editor's note: The
NCAA tournament Bubble Watch has been updated through Saturday's games.
For the first time in years, the basketball played on
Selection Sunday 2019 will have no impact on the number of available at-large
bids. All of the bid thieves have already done their work and the games yet to
be played might change a seed or two, but they won't take away any bids from
any bubble teams.
Afforded this unusual luxury, Bubble Watch can therefore go
ahead right now and offer you everything you need to be an intelligent and
prepared viewer as the actual bracket is revealed. Here is what we think we
know in advance:
By far, the most important thing that Bubble Watch knows is
that no one outside the committee room really knows anything. This cannot be
emphasized strongly enough.
The actual men's basketball committee will do just as it
pleases, and anything offered by people outside the room is, by definition,
speculation.
Fair enough, let us engage in some learned speculation:
Bubble Watch is wrapping up this bubble season saying that, after Oregon stole
a bid with its victory over Washington in the Pac-12 title game, there are 21
teams competing for eight available spots.
You will notice that, within the group of 21, there's a
contingent of four "should be in" teams: VCU, Oklahoma, Florida and
Ohio State. Still another way of thinking about the heart of the bubble is
therefore to envision 17 teams vying for only four spots.
What's startling is that there's such strong agreement among
Joe Lunardi and other purveyors of mock brackets concerning which five
teams are competing for four available bids. Those five teams are:
TCU
Arizona State
Temple
St. John's
NC State
Which of these five will be left out? According to Lundardi,
it's NC State that will miss out because the Ducks took a bid off the board.
Now, could the larger mock-bracket consensus about the
"group of five" be incorrect? Absolutely. Repeat, the committee will
do whatever it wants.
Bubble Watch isn't offering a reading of the committee's
minds. (That's Lunardi's job description, and he does it well.) Instead, what's
offered here is one read on how surprised to be if and when the bracket doesn't
follow this particular script.
Note that there are no mid-majors represented on this list
of five candidates for the last four spots in the field. While of course
Wofford and Buffalo launched themselves far beyond mere bubble considerations
(and Gonzaga is always Gonzaga), a selection that really did play out this way
at the expense of UNC Greensboro and/or Belmont would be much discussed. Don't
be surprised by that discussion, either.
Here's our final projection of the bubble:
BIDS FROM TRADITIONAL "ONE-BID" LEAGUES: 21
teams
LOCKS: 39 teams
THE BUBBLE: 21 teams for 8 available spots
SHOULD BE IN: 4 teams
WORK TO DO: 17 teams
ACC
LOCKS: Virginia, Duke, North Carolina, Louisville, Florida State, Virginia Tech, Syracuse
WORK TO DO: NC State, Clemson
WORK TO DO
NC STATE
WOLFPACK
A nail-biter of a win against Clemson was followed by a
20-point loss to Virginia, and so NC State's run in the ACC tournament is
finished. Did the Wolfpack do enough between November and March for an at-large
bid? When Kevin Keatts' men tipped off against the Cavaliers, they were ranked
in the 30s on the NET and projected as a No. 11 seed that had possibly six
teams beneath them in the field of 68. In other words, there could be room here
for a safe landing, and, anyway, how much of a penalty is the committee going
to impose for losing to the 29-2 Hoos? On the flip side, at 22-11, did NC State
really beat the proverbial anyone this season? The best win on the profile is
undoubtedly the 78-71 victory at home over Auburn in December. Past that, you're
looking at neutral-floor wins over Penn State and Clemson, and those are your
three Quad 1 victories. Last, this team played an exceptionally soft
nonconference schedule, statistically speaking. That fact's already reflected
in the NET ranking and in the quadrant records, but, who knows, maybe the
committee will want to voice displeasure there. If not, however, the 19-2
record outside Quad 1 and particularly the NET ranking could be sufficient.
CLEMSON
TIGERS
After losing by a point to NC State in the ACC tournament,
Clemson will be on a few "last four in" and perhaps more "first
four out" lists. That's preferable to "next four out,"
certainly, but it's still a precarious position to occupy in the middle of what
is always a wild and tumultuous Championship Week. Even the slightest
contraction of the bubble brought about by even a single bid thief, for
example, could prove calamitous to the Tigers. Granted, at the end there could
still be an at-large bid in the offing for Brad Brownell's group, which
finished its playing days showing up in the 30s in the NET rankings. Stranger
things have transpired in the committee room, goodness knows. A more
appropriate working assumption for Brownell and his men, however, is that their
1-10 record in Quad 1 games will need to be either completely overlooked by or
somehow ingeniously smuggled past the committee in order for this team to get
an at-large.
BIG
12
LOCKS: Kansas, Texas Tech, Iowa State, Kansas State, Baylor
SHOULD BE IN: Oklahoma
WORK TO DO: TCU, Texas
SHOULD BE IN
OKLAHOMA
SOONERS
The profile is set in stone for the Sooners. Shown as a No.
8 seed heading into a 72-71 loss to West Virginia in the Big 12 tournament, Lon
Kruger's group has beaten Wofford at home, taken care of Florida on a neutral
floor and stands at 4-10 in Quad 1 games. (For the record, the Sooners are 15-3
in Quads 2 and 3, and 0-0 against Quad 4.) The early exit from the conference
tournament could drop Oklahoma to a double-digit seed, but, at 7-11 in the Big
12, the Sooners will gladly become the first team in over 20 years to earn an
at-large with fewer than eight wins in an 18-game conference season. TCU might
join that club as well. (Updated: March 13)
WORK TO DO
TCU HORNED
FROGS
The Horned Frogs closed out their profile with a bit of a three-game
roller coaster. One game after playing their way onto the No. 12 or even 11
line in mock brackets with a big win at Texas, Jamie Dixon's team blew a
21-point lead in the second half and nearly lost to Oklahoma State in the first
round of the Big 12 tournament in Kansas City, Missouri. Fortunately for TCU
fans, however, the Frogs escaped 73-70, only to bow out 70-61 to top-seeded
Kansas State in the quarterfinals. At 20-13 with a season sweep of Iowa State
and a road win in Austin to show in the Quad 1 trophy case, the Horned Frogs
may have done enough for a bid. But it's going to be close
TEXAS
LONGHORNS
Bubble Watch has waxed eloquent (naturally) on the subject
of not writing off "work to do" teams just because we saw them lose
their last game. In the specific case of the Longhorns, however, we're
confronted with a different question entirely. Is the committee going to give a
bid to a team with a 16-16 record? That answer has never been "yes"
before, whether with respect to the 16 losses or the .500 record. Words like
"never" do not sound promising for UT's tournament hopes.
BIG
EAST
LOCKS: Marquette, Villanova, Seton Hall
WORK TO DO: St. John's, Creighton, Georgetown, Xavier
WORK TO DO
ST. JOHN'S
RED STORM
St. John's was projected as a No. 11 seed going into the
Marquette game, and Bubble Watch supposes, if a few more bubble teams had won a
few more games this week, there could be a discussion on whether this team is
now in real trouble. Chris Mullin's men were blown out 86-54 by Marquette, and
the NET ranking attached to the Red Storm even going into a lopsided loss
already was in the mid-60s. Now factor in that, in the eyes of the rating
system, the Johnnies actually were playing a "home" game at Madison
Square Garden when they were hammered by 32 points. Meaning this NET ranking
could get ugly. Still, there also are two things going in this team's favor.
First, even after the debacle against the Golden Eagles in the Big East
tournament, St. John's is still 3-2 against Marquette and Villanova for the
season. Second, well, the committee does have to get to 68 somehow.
CREIGHTON
BLUEJAYS
A two-point loss to Xavier in the Big East tournament
probably leaves Creighton just short of the tournament field. The Bluejays
covered a good deal of ground to make it that far, and a win against the
Musketeers would have changed this picture considerably. Instead, CU has
stopped playing at 18-14, leaving it difficult to point to any one facet of the
profile that recommends Greg McDermott's team at the expense of other at-large
candidates. Creighton's NET ranking is in the 50s, which is fine but not great,
a description that also might apply to the 3-10 Quad 1 record and the 13-3 mark
in Quads 2, 3 and 4. It was a spirited turnaround from 13-13, but it doesn't
appear to be quite enough.
GEORGETOWN
HOYAS
Georgetown gave this thing a run for its money when pretty
much no one in mid-February saw the run coming, but it appears the Hoyas have
come up short. Losing by 16 in your conference tournament quarterfinals (to
Seton Hall) when you're being shown as "next four out" material does
not customarily presage receiving an at-large bid. The all-freshman backcourt
of James Akinjo
and Mac McClung gives
the Hoyas all kinds of hope for the future, and who knew before the season that
this would be the fastest-paced team in Big East play? Alas, it just wasn't
enough, apparently, to get into the field this time.
XAVIER
MUSKETEERS
Xavier needed that game against Villanova, and the
Musketeers led for roughly 28 minutes of regulation before the Wildcats took
the proceedings to overtime. You know the rest: Travis Steele's men came up
short, and the same can almost certainly be said for XU's shot at at-large bid.
At 18-15, the Musketeers are a respectable 4-9 against Quad 1 but just 8-6
against Quads 2 and 3. That, plus a lackluster NET ranking meant this team had to
have that win against Nova. It almost happened.
BIG
TEN
LOCKS: Michigan State, Michigan, Purdue, Wisconsin, Maryland, Iowa, Minnesota
SHOULD BE IN: Ohio State
WORK TO DO: Indiana
SHOULD BE IN
OHIO STATE
BUCKEYES
At best, Ohio State ended its conference tournament run at a
time when the committee was listing it as one of the last four byes in the
field. At worst, the Buckeyes were something closer to the last team in
the field, period. You're not on the committee and neither is Bubble Watch, so
we don't know where in that range OSU was located when the team lost 77-70 to
Michigan State in the Big Ten tournament quarterfinals. If the former is closer
to correct, Ohio State has a good shot at staying in the field of 68. If, on
the other hand, the latter scenario is closer to the truth, then Chris
Holtmann's team is in trouble. Being the last team in the field before VCU fell
in the Atlantic 10 tournament (very likely taking an at-large bid off the
table) means, effectively, you're no longer in the field. The Buckeyes will
wait until Sunday to find out which of these two assumptions is valid. (
WORK TO DO
INDIANA
HOOSIERS
It would be very much in keeping with an Indiana team that's
confounded every succeeding expectation, both good and bad, throughout the
entirety of 2019 if the Hoosiers now not only got a bid but earned a high seed.
Alas, it appears instead that this wild and always unpredictable IU roller
coaster has finally reached its final turn. With the four-point loss to Ohio
State, Archie Miller's team sits at 17-15. The point of that season sweep of
Michigan State, after all, was never that those two games alone would propel
Indiana into the field of 68. Rather, the expectation was that two wins against
the Spartans would give the Hoosiers the platform to show what they could
really do. But a first-game exit from the Big Ten tournament might have brought
this conversation to a close at last
PAC-12
LOCK: Washington
WORK TO DO: Arizona State
WORK TO DO
ARIZONA STATE
SUN DEVILS
The Sun Devils, who were being projected as a No. 10 seed,
fell to Oregon in overtime in the Pac-12 semifinals, leaving Bobby Hurley's team
22-10. ASU has played six Quad 1 games all season and won three of them. In
theory, a team claiming a victory on a neutral floor over Mississippi State as
its best win and with a NET ranking lower than that of any at-large candidate
save only St. John's might feel a bit uneasy right now. In practice, Arizona
State isn't competing with what should be a good profile. This group is instead
competing with other bubble teams, and on that basis (and absent any more bid
thieves) ASU might well earn an at-large bid
SEC
LOCKS: Tennessee, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi
State, Auburn, Ole Miss
SHOULD BE IN: Florida
WORK TO DO: Alabama
SHOULD BE IN
FLORIDA
GATORS
Mike White's team reached the SEC semifinals, and gave
Auburn a game for the full 40 minutes before falling 65-62. So, to repeat a
sentiment voiced by Bubble Watch when this same team beat LSU one day earlier:
That should do the job. True, the committee's pulled surprises out of its hat
before with teams that look like they're in (ask USC about its 2018 Selection
Sunday sometime), but that's kind of the point with regard to the Gators. We
have to invoke committee wackiness to come up with the best scenario for UF not
receiving an at-large bid. At 19-15 with two wins over LSU and a beautiful NET
ranking in the low 30s to its credit, Florida appears to be in good position
for at least a No. 11 seed.
WORK TO DO
ALABAMA
CRIMSON TIDE
After a tense five-point win over OIe Miss, reality set in
for Alabama in the form of an 18-point loss to Kentucky. The Wildcats had Reid Travis back
in the lineup for the first time since mid-February and, even though the senior
came off the bench, UK played like a team at full strength. As for the Crimson
Tide, an 18-14 record with a 3-10 mark in Quad 1 games and a NET ranking in the
high 50s will have to be sufficient for an at-large bid. Is that going to be
enough? Speaking normatively, it feels a little thin. In comparative terms,
however, those numbers are more or less in line with plenty of other bubble
candidates. There has been no ticket punched here, to say the least, but Bubble
Watch isn't sure this matter is closed, either.
AMERICAN
LOCKS: Houston, Cincinnati, UCF
WORK TO DO: Temple, Memphis
WORK TO DO
TEMPLE OWLS
An 80-74 loss to Wichita State in the American quarterfinals
greatly increases Temple's risk, but might not be enough to knock the Owls out of
the field. Fran Dunphy's men entered the contest being shown as a No. 11 seed,
and, to be sure, Temple is now in a position where it needs to count every bid
thief carefully. That said a 23-8 record that includes a win over Houston, even
with a 2-6 mark in Quad 1 contests, looks pretty strong next to some of the
competing bubble profiles.
MEMPHIS
TIGERS
You were the James Dean of Bubble Watch, Memphis. You lived fast, and left us
far too soon. That was a nice try against Houston, and you played down the
stretch like you knew you needed the win to have absolutely any chance at an
at-large bid. Bubble Watch particularly appreciated both your defense (the
Cougars didn't score from the field in the last 9:56 of the game) and
specifically your free throw defense (UH missed four straight free throws in
the last 71 seconds of the contest). Nevertheless, it wasn't enough: Houston
61, Memphis 58.
OTHERS
LOCKS: Gonzaga, Nevada, Buffalo, Wofford, Utah State, Saint Mary's, Murray State
SHOULD BE IN: VCU
WORK TO DO: Belmont, UNC Greensboro, Furman, Lipscomb
SHOULD BE IN
VCU Rams
The loss to Rhode Island in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals
came at a moment when VCU was seen as heading for a No. 8 seed. Instead, Mike
Rhoades' team may well be wearing the visiting uniforms in the round of 64. The
Rams wrapped up their profile at 25-7, a record built in no small part on a
12-game win streak that extended from January to March. VCU's marquee win was
long thought to be the road victory at Texas, but, with the Longhorns finishing
the season at 16-6, that game has lost some of its previous luster. Still, the
Rams went 2-2 in Quad 1, and a NET ranking in the 30s will continue to serve
this team well in the committee room.
WORK TO DO
BELMONT
BRUINS
Now, the Bruins must wait. Ja Morant erupted
for 36 points, and Murray State beat Belmont 77-65 in the Ohio Valley
Conference title game. Rick Byrd's team hopes the committee will put stock in
the positives on this profile. There is, for starters, the NET ranking that
was, at least when Belmont stopped playing, higher than those of Iowa, Ohio
State, Indiana, TCU, Temple, Minnesota, Alabama, Arizona State and the entire
Big East bubble (Creighton, St. John's, Xavier and Georgetown). The Bruins also
were short-handed against the Racers and played without Nick
Muszynski. Lastly, Belmont was 5-3 this season against Quads 1 and
2. Conversely, Byrd's men won't want the committee to linger on a negative like
the 3-2 record against Quad 3. In any event, the Bruins profile is set, but the
bubble will continue to shift in ways that will either help or hurt Belmont's
chances.
UNC
GREENSBORO SPARTANS
For 35 minutes in the Southern Conference title game, the
Spartans were the superior team against Wofford. Then the Terriers closed the
contest on a 20-3 run, and Mike Young's team captured the automatic bid 70-58.
As for at-large possibilities, UNCG actually shares some profile similarities
with Wofford. Like the Terriers, Wes Miller's team has an excellent record
(28-6) built on a small number of "good" losses, to LSU, Kentucky,
Furman and, yes, Wofford (three times). The Spartans own two Quad 1 wins (at
East Tennessee State and over Furman on the neutral floor in the SoCon
semifinals), and Francis
Alonso& Co. are an immaculate 24-0 in Quads 2, 3 and 4. Could
all of the above plus the impressive showing against the Terrier juggernaut
(21-0 against SoCon opponents this season) pry an at-large bid from the
committee? In Bubble Watch's estimation, it's a long shot.
FURMAN
PALADINS
The season is in the books for the Paladins after a 66-62
loss to UNC Greensboro in the Southern Conference tournament semifinals. Bob
Richey's team sits at 25-7 with the memorable win at Villanova to its credit.
Alas, that win (plus a sweet NET ranking in the 40s) might form the sum total
of the case for Furman on Selection Sunday. It's not a bad case, but the Dins
might have trouble standing out from the crowd. Saint Mary's, to take one
example, has a NET ranking that's even sweeter than Furman's.
LIPSCOMB
BISONS
The Bisons show two Quad 1 wins on their profile, at TCU and
at Liberty, and their NET ranking is in the 40s. Those are the elements that
kept Casey Alexander's group in the at-large discussion for weeks, but Lipscomb
let its safest chance slip away when it lost 74-68 on its home floor to Liberty
in the Atlantic Sun conference title game. An at-large now appears to be a long
shot.
No comments:
Post a Comment