ARE MID-MAJORS
GOING TO GET HOSED?
Editor's note: The
NCAA tournament Bubble Watch has been updated through Thursday's games.
Nevada has
been ranked in the top 15 for the entire season, Buffalo has
lurked smack in the middle of the projected field for weeks now, Wofford is
appearing in some mock brackets as a No. 8 seed, and the cool bracket-making
kids these days are big believers in the likes of Utah State and Belmont.
Also, Gonzaga,
however you choose to classify Mark Few's program, is, as always, Gonzaga.
Given all that, how can 2019 possibly be in danger of
offering a bad Selection Sunday for mid-majors?
Its true Bubble Watch can't see the future, nor peer into
the furtive recesses of the preferences held by the individuals on the men's
basketball committee. But one thing Bubble Watch can do is count. Here's where
we are in terms of bids and mid-majors in 2019.
The mock-bracket consensus is that perhaps 37 bids will be
absorbed by just the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Big East, Pac-12 and SEC. Throw in
what's likely to be at least a three-bid American (and possibly four bids), and
you're already up to 40 invites.
Naturally, there's basketball left to be played, and there's
no guarantee these seven conferences will actually secure that many bids. But
just for the sake of discussion, let's consider these numbers: 40 bids for
seven leagues, meaning, of course, 33 at-large spots going to those
conferences.
As a dedicated reader of the Watch, you know there are just
36 total at-large slots available. In this scenario, then, there would be just
three at-large bids for the 25 conferences below the top seven.
Needless to say, the committee will make room in the bracket
for Nevada, Buffalo and, one presumes, Wofford, even if all of the above were
to fail to win their conference tournaments. But that's kind of the point, and
indeed that's where we've been now for the past four brackets.
Increasingly, the only way for mid-majors to increase their
numbers in the field of 68 is through upsets in conference tournaments. A year
ago, the Mountain West and Atlantic 10 both ended up having bid thieves, and
San Diego State and Davidson joined league rivals Nevada and Rhode Island,
respectively, in the field of 68.
In theory, a mid-major bid thief might be stealing a spot
from a fellow mid-major, but the post-2014 math here has tended to work in the
other direction. A mid-major bid thief is more likely to take an invite away
from a middle-of-the-pack team in a major conference.
No, it wasn't always like this. As recently as 2014, the six
major conferences sent "just" 32 teams (counting automatic bids) into
the NCAA tournament. Every year since then, however, that number's been in the
mid-to-high 30s, peaking at 38 in 2017.
Bid thievery in the MW and A-10 helped drive that figure
"down" to 37 last year -- the same number, to repeat, that mock
brackets are forecasting for major-conference bids in 2019. In short, this is
why Nevada, Buffalo and Wofford should all be recognized as great stories. The
Wolf Pack, Bulls and Terriers are all pushing against what appears to be a
strong and continuing trend.
Here’s how I see the bubble sitting today
BIDS FROM TRADITIONAL "ONE-BID" LEAGUES: 23
teams
LOCKS: 26 teams
THE BUBBLE: 29 teams for 19 available spots
SHOULD BE IN: 9 teams
WORK TO DO: 20 teams
ACC
LOCKS: Virginia, Duke, North Carolina, Louisville, Florida State, Virginia Tech
SHOULD BE IN: Syracuse
WORK TO DO: NC State, Clemson
SHOULD BE IN
Syracuse
Orange
In back-to-back games, Syracuse took its shots at Duke and
North Carolina only to go 0-for-2. In the latter game, the Orange tied a season
high by making 14 3-pointers and even that wasn't enough to sway the result.
The chances were missed, but, of course, there's no harm done here (unless it
leads to this team overlooking its next game at Wake Forest). Syracuse is still
going to be a No. 8 seed or something close, and Jim Boeheim's team still has
one more regular-season opportunity to improve that position. Virginia will
visit the Carrier Dome on Monday.
WORK TO DO
NC STATE
WOLFPACK
Kevin Keatts' team drew one severely front-loaded conference
schedule, and now that his guys have played Clemson, Virginia, Virginia Tech,
North Carolina, Syracuse and Duke just in the past few weeks, they're getting a
well-deserved respite of sorts. The game coming up this weekend at Florida
State will be no picnic, certainly, but other than that, NC State has games
against Boston College and Georgia Tech left to play. The prospective No. 10
seed is looking solid at 20-8 overall and 8-7 in the ACC.
CLEMSON
TIGERS
Late February was all about risk management for Clemson. The
Tigers didn't nail down an at-large bid by beating Boston College at home and
Pittsburgh on the road. Then again, a team variously seen as either a No. 12
seed or as "first four out" material could have driven its bid
probability down with a loss -- or especially two -- in a stretch like that.
Currently 17-11 and 7-8 in the ACC, Clemson now faces the main selection event:
North Carolina visits Littlejohn Coliseum this weekend. Beating the Tar Heels
would give the Tigers a second Quad 1 win to place alongside their 59-51 win at
home over Virginia Tech.
BIG
12
LOCKS: Kansas, Texas Tech, Iowa State, Kansas State
SHOULD BE IN: Baylor
WORK TO DO: Texas, TCU, Oklahoma
SHOULD BE IN
BAYLOR BEARS
Baylor still refuses to be typecast. First came the Bears'
fast 6-2 start in Big 12 play. Then there was the hobbled and short-handed
stretch, one in which King McClure and Makai Mason both
missed games and Baylor fell to 7-5 in the conference. After that, Scott Drew's
team recovered nicely, and with Mason back in the lineup, BU won at Iowa State
and secured a season sweep over the Cyclones. Now add still another curve to
this road: Playing at home against a short-handed version of Texas, Drew's men
recorded one of their more lifeless halves of the entire Big 12 season before
rallying to win in overtime. Baylor is churning toward something close to a No.
8 seed, and make no mistake, the Bears are doing so in a most mercurial
fashion.
WORK TO DO
TEXAS
LONGHORNS
Despite playing without both Kerwin Roach
II (suspension) and Dylan
Osetkowski (illness), the Longhorns nearly recorded their first
Quad 1 win in almost a month at Baylor. As it happens, however, UT fell short
84-83 and now sits at 15-13 overall and 7-8 in Big 12 play. If you're thinking
those numbers don't add up to a No. 10 seed in the making, keep in mind Texas
has some beautiful entries on its profile from earlier in the season, up to and
including its neutral-floor win over North Carolina and home victories over
Purdue and Kansas. The suspension of Roach introduces an element of
uncertainty, but this is a team that proved in Waco it can still hit 15 3s in
45 minutes and score points in bunches.
TCU HORNED
FROGS
The fourth Quad 2 loss of TCU's season, in triple-overtime
at West Virginia, doesn't do too much additional harm to the profile of a team
that entered the contest looking like a No. 9 or 10 seed. Those four losses
could well be balanced or at least partially offset by the Horned Frogs' two
big Quad 1 wins, both of which happen to have been recorded against Iowa State.
Which brings us to the sub-.500 question yet again: TCU looks like a group that
could wrap up Big 12 play at 7-11 or so. Being four games under .500 used to be
a no-fly zone for at-large aspirants, even with a committee that insists it
doesn't look at conference records. People who make mock brackets, however, are
taking the committee at its word in 2019. Anyway, Oklahoma may well be right
there with the Frogs on this same under-.500 horizon. The committee will
probably have more than one opportunity to be taken at its word.
OKLAHOMA
SOONERS
Not many teams through history have been 5-10 in conference
play yet able to conclude that they're still in the hunt for an at-large bid.
Then there's Oklahoma in 2019. The Sooners are still being shown as a No. 10
seed in mock brackets thanks to two basic factors. First, there was a
relatively strong non-conference performance, highlighted by wins over Wofford
(at home) and Florida (on a neutral floor). Second, membership in the Big 12
confers the privilege of knowing that many of your losses aren't
"bad" losses. It may seem crazy at first glance, but OU is still
alive.
BIG
EAST
LOCKS: Marquette, Villanova
SHOULD BE IN: St. John's
WORK TO DO: Seton Hall, Butler
SHOULD BE IN
ST. JOHN'S
RED STORM
Not to belabor the point, but St. John's is 3-1 this season
against the best two teams in the Big East, Marquette and Villanova. Against
the rest of the league, however, Chris Mullin's men are a mere 5-7. That latter
record now includes a rather listless 84-73 loss to Xavier at Carnesecca Arena.
Granted, Mustapha
Heron sat out the evening with a sore knee, while Shamorie
Ponds appeared to injure his right wrist early in the game. Though
the junior continued to play, he ended up scoring just 13 points on 5-of-16
shooting. Regardless, this was the worst thing that could happen to the St.
John's profile given the team's remaining schedule. The home game against
Xavier goes in the books as a Quad 3 loss, whereas an upcoming road test at
DePaul and a rematch with Travis Steele's group in Cincinnati will both be Quad
2 affairs. It appears there could be slippage in what previously looked like a
No. 9 seed for the Johnnies.
WORK TO DO
SETON HALL
PIRATES
Despite losing at St. John's, the Pirates should be fine on
paper. There's still the Hall's neutral-floor victory over Kentucky, of course,
just as there's still the road win at Maryland. So, yes, Kevin Willard's team
should be in good shape as a likely No. 11 seed. Rest easy, optimists! ... But
for you pessimists out there, here's the thing: Seton Hall's remaining games
are at Georgetown and at home against Marquette and Villanova. Is it really so
unthinkable that the Pirates (currently 16-11 overall and 7-8 in the Big East)
could lose two or, dare Bubble Watch say it, all three of those? This glass
might be half empty after all.
BUTLER
BULLDOGS
The Bulldogs have been trying really hard to take off for
much of February, but they are now at the end of the runway. Losing to
Providence isn't particularly damaging -- St. John's did it twice -- but the
fact that Butler did so at home does make it a Quad 3 defeat, the first one
incurred this season by a team that's 15-13 and 6-9 in its league. LaVall
Jordan's men now must try to play their way into the field from "first
four out" turf (at best) with games at Villanova, at home against Xavier
and on the road for the rematch with the Friars in Providence. Even a win on
the road against the Wildcats may not carry the necessary luster to get this
job done. The Bulldogs will have an awful lot of work to do at the Big East
tournament
BIG
TEN
LOCKS: Michigan State, Michigan, Purdue, Wisconsin, Maryland
SHOULD BE IN: Iowa
WORK TO DO: Ohio State, Minnesota
SHOULD BE IN
Iowa Hawkeyes
There are no drop-dead awful defenses in the Big Ten this
season, but it is true that Iowa ranks last in terms of points allowed per
possession in league play. It's also true the Hawkeyes certainly looked that
part in allowing Ohio State to ring up 90 points in 70 possessions in Columbus.
The result was a 20-point loss for the visiting team, a group that in all
probability is still going to earn a No. 6 or 7 seed in the field of 68. So, in
what is virtually foreordained to be a last write-up on Iowa before Fran
McCaffery's team is made a lock either by results or the calendar, allows
Bubble Watch to note that defense continues to be a concern with this
team.
WORK TO DO
OHIO STATE
BUCKEYES
Ohio State beating Iowa so easily at home was more
significant than winning at home might ordinarily be for a projected No. 10
seed. Yes, the Buckeyes were occupying that relatively safe position in mock
brackets before tipoff, but the struggles of Chris Holtmann's group on offense
over the previous few games gave the indication of a team that could,
conceivably, falter. Instead, Justin Ahrens went
nuts (29 points) and OSU beat the Hawkeyes by 20. Of course, Ohio State still
has three challenging games yet to play (on the road against Purdue and
Northwestern and at home against Wisconsin), but the worst-case scenario going
into the Big Ten tournament is now 18-13 overall and 8-10 in-conference. With
those 18 wins, including the one at Cincinnati, that should get the job done
even in the worst case.
MINNESOTA
GOLDEN GOPHERS
Now Minnesota's season truly begins. At 18-11 and 8-10 in
the Big Ten, the Gophers can play their way into the tournament by winning one
or, better yet, two Quad 1 games against Purdue in Minneapolis and Maryland in
College Park. Richard Pitino's team appears to be right on the line between
"in" and "out," along with fellow peers in peril Temple,
Clemson and Utah State. Minnesota made an emphatic statement by winning at
Wisconsin in January before fairly staggering through a 2-6 February. March now
beckons, and the Gophers have what every team says it wants. Jordan Murphy and
his mates have a chance.
PAC-12
SHOULD BE IN: Washington
WORK TO DO: Arizona State
SHOULD BE IN
WASHINGTON
HUSKIES
Well, that was unexpected. Mike Hopkins' team was using
superb defense to crush all resistance in what everyone agreed was an aberrantly
weak Pac-12. Then the Huskies went on the road and ran into the most hapless of
all the league's teams, Cal, whereupon the Bears proceeded to light up this
vaunted defense to the tune of 1.20 points per possession. For reference,
that's about what Gonzaga did to this same D when the Bulldogs played
Washington in Spokane back in December. The loss in Berkeley goes in the books
as a 76-73 Quad 4 defeat when, prior to Thursday night, UW didn't even have
any Quad 3losses. This absolutely makes what was previously
projected as a No. 7 seed far more questionable.
WORK TO DO
ARIZONA STATE
SUN DEVILS
Bubble Watch could be persuaded to take Arizona State losing
at Oregon in stride, relatively speaking. The Ducks actually look pretty good
in NET terms, and a loss in Eugene is categorized as a Quad 1 defeat. That
said, the Sun Devils were hammered 79-51, and there is a
danger in Bobby Hurley's team letting its own NET ranking fall too far.
Entering the game against UO, Arizona State was ranked No. 63, meaning ASU was
already near the bottom of the at-large-hopeful bin along with the likes of
Seton Hall and Minnesota. The committee isn't just going to go down the list of
rankings from Nos. 1 to 68, of course, but a number dropping into the 70s would
not be a positive development for a team that started the week slotted for a
No. 11 seed.
SEC
LOCKS: Tennessee, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi
State
SHOULD BE IN: Auburn, Ole Miss
WORK TO DO: Florida, Alabama
SHOULD BE IN
AUBURN TIGERS
The knock on the Tigers is that that they're an efficient
bunch beloved of the NET (having entered the game at Kentucky ranked a lofty
No. 20) but that, oh by the way, Auburn doesn't actually beat any good teams.
Needless to say, losing to the Wildcats at Rupp Arena by 27 points did zero to
refute that school of thought. Bruce Pearl's men are now just 2-6 against SEC
opponents listed as locks, should-be-ins or work-to-dos by Bubble Watch, and
the wins came at home against Alabama and Florida. AU is shown as a No. 8 seed,
and with three Quad 1 opportunities remaining on the schedule, there's still a
chance for this team to both improve its position in the bracket and, yes, to
shake its "all stats, no statements" reputation.
OLE MISS
REBELS
The Rebels let one slip away and lost at home to Tennessee
73-71. Kermit Davis was displeased by a charge drawn by Admiral
Schofield on a Devontae
Shuler 3-point attempt 30 feet from the basket in the closing
seconds, and the coach's protests earned him a technical foul. The home crowd
was predictably irate, but Bubble Watch is all about the whole-season big
picture. First, Ole Miss will have an equally good chance at a signature win
(an even better one, actually) when Kentucky visits Oxford next week. Second,
the Rebels are being slotted on perhaps the No. 8 line in mock brackets,
meaning this program's on the cusp of earning its best seed in either 17 or 18
years. Carry on, Coach Davis, you are working relative wonders.
WORK TO DO
FLORIDA
GATORS
Few at-large aspirants rely more heavily on forcing
turnovers than Florida. The Gators have actually been outscored in SEC play on
the "effective" (turnover-less) possessions recorded by both UF and
its opponents. Nevertheless, the fact that Mike White's men have forced those
same conference foes to give the ball away on 23 percent of their offensive
possessions has evened those scales. Florida is expected to earn something in
the area of a No. 10 seed, and when you fill out your bracket, you might want
to glance at that No. 7 seed's guards and how well they take care of the
ball. (Updated: Feb. 28)
ALABAMA
CRIMSON TIDE
An eight-bid SEC is beginning to look fairly solid. Alabama
did its bit to raise that probability by beating the league's ninth aspirant
for a bid, South Carolina, on the Gamecocks' home floor. The win lifts the
Crimson Tide to 17-11 overall and 8-7 in conference play. More importantly,
Avery Johnson's team was being slotted in mock brackets for either a No. 11 or
12 seed before the South Carolina game but will now close its regular season
with nothing but Quad 1 opportunities (at home against LSU and Auburn and on
the road at Auburn). There are no proverbial bad losses to be had there, and
this is still a team that beat Kentucky in Tuscaloosa. Yes, it's looking like
the SEC might end up with eight bids, very likely no more and quite possibly no
less.
AMERICAN
LOCKS: Houston, Cincinnati
WORK TO DO: UCF, Temple
WORK TO DO
UCF KNIGHTS
Congratulations, UCF. You recorded your first Quad 1 win of the
season with your 75-63 victory at South Florida. That's not going to get you
into the field by itself, but it fills an important hole on the profile for a
projected No. 11 seed. Right, about that seed: Finishing up with games at
Houston, against Cincinnati and at Temple gives you the perfect chance to do
something about that. Keep winning, Knights.
TEMPLE OWLS
This situation is becoming clearer and clearer: Temple beat
Houston, period. That, it appears, may be more or less everything the Owls have
to show on their profile. To be sure, there's another Quad 1 victory on the
ledger, the team's 70-69 overtime win at South Florida in mid-February.
Nevertheless, beating the Bulls doesn't carry quite the same "in the
room" cache as giving the Cougars their only loss of the season. Fran
Dunphy's guys did have a shot to perhaps play themselves off the "last
four in" list with a better win than the one in Tampa, but Temple lost
81-73 at Memphis. No more Quad 1 chances remain, unless this team sees Houston
in the conference tournament. The Owls' signature victory may not be enough to
get it done, though. In the meantime, Dunphy and his men should absolutely be
hoping UH continues to win.
OTHERS
LOCKS: Gonzaga, Nevada, Buffalo
SHOULD BE IN: Wofford
WORK TO DO: VCU, Utah State, Belmont, Saint Mary's, Furman,
Lipscomb
SHOULD BE IN
WOFFORD
TERRIERS
The Southern Conference has never sent an at-large team to
the NCAA tournament, but there's a first time for everything. Wofford is in
this discussion because the Terriers are 25-4, with the losses coming to North
Carolina, Oklahoma, Kansas and Mississippi State. Mike Young's team
additionally own Quad 1 wins at Furman, UNC Greensboro and East Tennessee State.
Finally, it's worth noting Wofford won at South Carolina by 20, even though
that shows up on the profile as a Quad 2 victory. In fact, the Terriers are a
perfect 19-0 against Quads 2, 3 and 4
WORK TO DO
VCU RAMS
At 22-6 overall and in sole possession of first place in the
Atlantic 10, Mike Rhoades' team has a No. 10 seed waiting for it next month if
mock brackets are to be trusted. Of course, mock brackets in February can't
necessarily be trusted. Nevertheless, if VCU has a plausible method at hand for
turning projections into reality, it is defense. In the Rams' 85-57 win at home
over George Washington last weekend, Marcus Evans and
company uncorked a 21-0 second-half run as they held the Colonials scoreless
for more than 10 minutes. That's the kind of performance that can earn an
at-large bid, even in the absence of Quad 1 opportunities. Keep winning, Rams
UTAH STATE
AGGIES
The entire Mountain West has had this game circled forever,
and now it's finally here. Nevada is coming to Utah State at last, so allow
Bubble Watch to phrase this question in its starkest terms: Can the Aggies,
currently listed as one of Lunardi's last four teams in, get an at-large bid if
they lose to the Wolf Pack in Logan? The committee has done far wilder things
than that, goodness knows, but on paper it would be difficult. USU's best win
on the season is a neutral-floor victory over Saint Mary's, and Craig Smith's
men would be going up against competing bubble profiles with better bling than
that. Conversely, a home win over Nevada at least gives this team its very best
shot. For the better part of the past two months, Utah State has played with an
eye towed having this game matter. Now it's here, and it does.
BELMONT
BRUINS
Belmont won a game in Pauley Pavilion against UCLA in
December, but (fans in Westwood will want to stop reading right here) it's the
fact that Rick Byrd's team swept a nonconference home-and-away series with local
rival Lipscomb that really brightens a team sheet in 2019. Now the Bruins of
Nashville are competing with Ja Morant and
Murray State for Ohio Valley Conference supremacy. Morant likely has OVC Player
of the Year locked up (Bubble Watch is out on a limb here), but in any other
season voters would be taking a very long look at Dylan Windler and
his prolific yet highly efficient scoring as a stretch-4. Belmont is variously
shown as one of the last teams in or as lurking just outside the field in most
projections, but at 23-4, Byrd's guys have won 12 straight and are looking to
run the table.
SAINT MARY'S
GAELS
In six of the past nine years, the West Coast Conference has
sent two or more teams into the NCAA tournament. Saint Mary's is working to
join presumptive No. 1 seed Gonzaga and make that WCC run seven of the past 10
years. At 20-10, the Gaels own one of Bubble Watch's more obscure Quad 1 wins,
a road victory at New Mexico State in November. More recently, Randy Bennett's
team hasn't lost to a non-Gonzaga opponent in over a month. Speaking of the
Bulldogs, they'll come to Moraga this weekend for the WCC regular-season finale
for both teams. A win for the home team would be just one more piece of data in
a profile made up of the entire season, where each game is considered equally
and . . . no, just kidding. A win would change everything, not to mention put
SMC into an exclusive club with just Tennessee and North Carolina as fellow
"We beat the Zags" members.
FURMAN
PALADINS
It's a mark of how strong the Southern Conference is in 2019 that Furman can
lose at home to Wofford and still be in the discussion for an at-large bid. No,
the Paladins aren't "should be in" material just yet, but Bob
Richey's group does have that memorable Quad 1 win at Villanova and the Dins
could be helped along by the mighty SoCon in still another way. The loss to the
Terriers drops Furman in the conference title race to such an extent that it's
conceivable Richey's guys could see Wofford in the league tournament prior to
the title game. A third game against the Terriers on a neutral floor in
Asheville, North Carolina, would be a Quad 1 opportunity.
LIPSCOMB
BISONS
Before last week, the Bisons' worst loss was at home to fellow Bubble Watch
denizen Belmont, meaning it wasn't that bad a loss at all. Unfortunately for
Casey Alexander's team, however, this is no longer the case. Lipscomb went on
the road and lost 67-61 at Florida Gulf Coast. The Eagles entered that contest
ranked No. 244, making this a Quad 4 defeat for the Bisons. It's a huge blow to
Lipscomb's at-large hopes
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