THE BOUNDARIES OF
THE BUBBLE
Editor's note: The
NCAA tournament Bubble Watch has been updated through Wednesday's games.
It has long been the stated position of the NCAA men's
basketball committee that teams are not evaluated directly on metrics such as
straight wins and losses, conference records or their ranking on various rating
systems.
Strictly speaking, that is indeed correct. Bubble Watch has
spoken to enough people who have been "in the room" to know that no argument
on behalf of this or that team was ever won by citing wins and losses or a
straight ranking.
Nevertheless, tournament teams do, of course, tend to
cluster within certain numerical boundaries ... with a caveat. Simply being
within those boundaries is itself no guarantee of a bid.
Still, knowing the location of these limits can help flag
just how worried certain teams should be, and for which reasons, as we move
closer to Selection Sunday.
Here's how the boundaries of the 2019 bubble are looking at
the moment:
WINS AND LOSSES:
Guess which team Bubble Watch is going to start with
here? Indiana is earning serious consideration from the mock
brackets despite an overall record of 15-14. That's a lower number for wins
than any other team in the "lock," "should be in" or
"work to do" categories and it's also a larger number of losses than
any peer in that population except Texas (which also carries 14 losses).
Naturally, the Hoosiers can point to extenuating
circumstances to explain this anomaly. IU swept Michigan State and also won home games against Marquette and Louisville. No team in memory with so many losses has
nevertheless had wins this good.
NET RANKING:
One of the most interesting questions raised by the NCAA
adopting a new rating system is where, exactly, "the line" will fall
in terms of teams that earn at-large bids vs. those that do not. Obviously, the
committee isn't just going to go down the NET rankings from Nos. 1 to 36 to
populate the at-large field, but it didn't do that with the RPI, either, and a
line still emerged. It will take two or three selections, but we'll eventually
get a sense of that cutoff for the NET as well.
The lowest-ranked team found in Bubble Watch is
currently Georgetown, which clocks in at No. 72 on the NET. The Hoyas do
have competition for this distinction, however. Xavier (No. 70) and Arizona State (68) are both lurking in this same
numerical vicinity.
Then again, ranking extremities are a two-edged sword.
The highest-ranked team that's not showing up in mock brackets
is Penn State, at No. 48. (Why are the Nittany Lions getting no
love? See the previous category, "wins and losses." Penn State is
13-17.)
CONFERENCE RECORD:
On the one hand, talking about conference records in terms
of tournament selection is, according to some observers, completely irrelevant.
On the other hand, a new rule should be enacted, according to other observers,
so that tournament teams are required to have a conference record of .500 or
better.
This contradiction appears to be coming to a head in 2019
thanks to teams like Indiana and TCU. The Hoosiers are 6-12 in Big Ten play, the Horned Frogs
are 6-11 in the Big 12, and in any "normal" season we'd also be
talking about Oklahoma being 7-10 in league play.
For 20 years up to and including the 2018 tournament, no
team that won fewer than eight games in an 18-game conference schedule earned
an at-large bid. However, it appears that this unwritten rule could be adjusted
downward in 2019. We might be witnessing the redrawing of at least one bubble
boundary.
Here's how we're projecting the bubble right now.
BIDS FROM TRADITIONAL "ONE-BID" LEAGUES: 25
teams
LOCKS: 29 teams
THE BUBBLE: 30 teams for 14 available spots
SHOULD BE IN: 7 teams
WORK TO DO: 23 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
You know its March when Bubble Watch no longer uses the
hopeful future tense with regard to seed-improvement possibilities. Syracuse
took its swings at Duke, North Carolina and Virginia, in that order, over a
nine-day period, and came up 0-for-3. The upcoming visit to Clemson is, to be
sure, a Quad 1 affair, but that outcome alone is not going to move the
whole-season needle. No, short of a very big win or two at the ACC tournament,
it appears the Orange really will get that No. 8 seed, or something close to
it, that everyone has been talking about for a while now. In that capacity, Jim
Boeheim's men will be eminently well equipped to scare the wits out of some
zone-phobic top seed in the round of 32. That should be fun to watch.
WORK TO DO
NC STATE
WOLFPACK
Not only did NC State lose 63-61 at home to Georgia Tech, NC
State lost at home to a short-handed version of Georgia Tech.
The Yellow Jackets were playing without Curtis Haywood, who's been sidelined with an ankle injury.
Nevertheless, Josh Pastner's team got the win. Conversely, Kevin Keatts' men
got the Quad 3 loss. Now the Wolfpack finish the season with a road game at
Boston College that suddenly appears fraught with peril. NC State is 20-10 and
seemed to be ticketed for a No. 10 seed, but this same team is just 2-8 in Quad
1 games. The Wolfpack's nonconference schedule was rather famously soft, and,
if the committee still wishes to flex those particular schedule-preferring
muscles, NC State clearly gives it the best opportunity to do so. The March
outlook has become far more uncertain in Raleigh.
CLEMSON
TIGERS
After watching Clemson barely escape with a 64-62 win at
Notre Dame, Bubble Watch is less certain than ever that the Tigers can win an
at-large bid based on regular-season exertions alone. It might instead require
at least one neutral-floor victory against a big name in the ACC tournament.
Yes, winning at home against Syracuse in the season finale would be great. But
that's not going to be a Quad 1 game, and even a victory leaves Clemson 19-12
overall, 9-9 in the ACC and 1-9 in Quad 1 games. Those numbers fairly scream
"just missed." It appears Brad Brownell's group might have work to do
in Charlotte, North Carolina, later this month.
BIG
12
LOCKS: Kansas, Texas Tech, Iowa State, Kansas State, Baylor
WORK TO DO: Texas, Oklahoma, TCU
WORK TO DO
TEXAS
LONGHORNS
For a team that's 16-14, Texas is arousing little notice or
controversy with its projected No. 10 or even 9-seed. Possibly that's a tribute
to a profile that includes wins on a neutral floor over North Carolina and in
Austin over Purdue. Perhaps the Longhorns are additionally getting bonus points
for closing in on that kind of seed as Kerwin Roach
II continues to sit because of a suspension. In any event, the
relative quiet might reflect a healthy instinct. Even after a 19-point loss at
increasingly formidable-looking Texas Tech, Shaka Smart's team is still
outscoring the Big 12 by a healthy margin on a per-possession basis. Moreover,
prior to the laugher in Lubbock, the Horns were showing up in the top 35
nationally in the NET rankings. This is not your ordinary 16-14 team, and a No.
10 or even 9-seed might end up being just about right
OKLAHOMA
SOONERS
Pay no mind to that 7-10 record in Big 12 play. For one
thing, it was 5-10 just a few days ago, so the trend line for Oklahoma is
positive. Besides, the Sooners are 19-11 for the season after beating Kansas
81-68 in Norman and putting the final nail in the coffin of the Jayhawks'
14-year streak of Big 12 titles. Shown as a No. 9 or 10-seed heading into the
game against KU, Lon Kruger's group has beaten Wofford at home, taken care of
Florida on a neutral floor and now stands at 4-9 in Quad 1 games. OU will
finish the regular season at Kansas State, so going into the Big 12 tournament
at 19-12 and 7-11 is a very real possibility. Nevertheless, there are plenty of
teams below the Sooners on the correct side of the mock cut line. The committee
will determine the real cut line, but, barring a major surprise, Oklahoma
appears to be on solid ground
TCU HORNED
FROGS
It is a truth universally acknowledged that major-conference
records don't matter in terms of selection, particularly not in 2019. But what
if TCU finishes 6-12 in the Big 12? Is the committee really going to set that
precedent? A team hasn't won an at-large bid with fewer than eight wins in an
18-game conference schedule since 1998. The Horned Frogs were thought to be a
No. 11 seed going into their 64-52 defeat at home to Kansas State. TCU has lost
six of its past seven, is now 6-11 and closes with a road game at Texas. The
profile ace in the hole for Jamie Dixon's team is its season sweep of Iowa
State. We might have the opportunity to see just how much weight that
carries.
BIG
EAST
Locks: Marquette, Villanova
Work to do: St. John's, Seton Hall, Creighton, Xavier, Georgetown
WORK TO DO
ST. JOHN'S
RED STORM
St. John's has lost three of its past four, and it's time to
ask what the consequences might be if Chris Mullin's group continues this
tendency and comes up short on the road at Xavier in the final game of the
regular season. In that case the Red Storm would finish the season at 20-11
overall and 8-10 in Big East play. The Johnnies, of course, posted a 3-1 record
against Marquette and Villanova, but this same team was also swept in its
season series against both Providence and DePaul. In fact, the Johnnies' record
against Quads 2 and 3 (6-6) is worse than their record against Quad 1 (6-4).
It's an odd profile that has caused no small degree of confusion. A vocal
minority of mock brackets, for example, isn't forecasting any particular bid
jeopardy for St. John's. Bubble Watch isn't so sure about that in the event of
a loss in Cincinnati.
SETON HALL
PIRATES
Things did not look especially promising for Seton Hall's
tournament chances when the Pirates trailed Marquette 64-55 at home with 4
minutes, 40 seconds left in the game. After all, Kevin Willard's men tipped off
their game against the Golden Eagles knowing they were on a good many
"last four in" lists, and that their NET ranking was one of the
lowest in the bubble field. But then SHU closed on an 18-0 run and recorded a
badly needed 73-64 Quad 1 win. Myles Powell scored
34 points, and now he and his mates have a worthy "quality win"
companion for the victories at Maryland and against Kentucky at Madison Square
Garden. Seton Hall is not in the field yet, but, with Villanova coming to the
Prudential Center for the season finale, the Pirates have an excellent shot at
getting there.
CREIGHTON
BLUEJAYS
For the balance of the Big East season, Greg McDermott's
team was a pincushion for the cruelest of the hoops gods, as the Bluejays lost
overtime games not only to the aforementioned Golden Eagles but also to
Villanova and to Seton Hall. Now, however, CU is starting to even those
accounts. Creighton got back into this discussion by winning a close game at
Marquette, and the Bluejays followed that up with a six-point victory at home,
in overtime no less, over Providence. If McDermott's men wrap up the season
with a win at home against DePaul, they'll arrive at the Big East tournament at
18-13 overall and 9-9 in conference. The Bluejays have a shot.
XAVIER
MUSKETEERS
Xavier played itself into this conversation by winning five
in a row, capped off by a road victory over St. John's in Queens. The
Musketeers aren't out of the running because they then lost one game at Butler,
but it doesn't help matters, either. The best-case scenario for Travis Steele's
men is now to win at home in the rematch against the Red Storm and thus wrap up
the regular season with three Quad 1 wins at 17-14 overall and 9-9 in the Big
East. That is a classic "work to do" look heading into the Big East
tournament. (Updated: March 5)
GEORGETOWN
HOYAS
It's not going to be easy for the Hoyas. Sitting at 18-12
overall and 8-9 in the Big East might look bubbly enough, as do the three Quad
1 wins. But after a notably lopsided 101-69 loss at DePaul, Georgetown is just
8-6 this season against Quads 2 and 3. Moreover, the team's NET ranking going
into that game was in the 70s (which might, if the new metric turns out to be
used a bit like the old one was, turn out to be prohibitively low). It won't be
easy, but Bubble Watch can at least envision a path to making this an
interesting question, one that starts with winning at Marquette and ends with
beating either the Golden Eagles or Villanova in the Big East tournament
semifinals. Go to it, Hoyas.
BIG
TEN
LOCKS: Michigan State, Michigan, Purdue, Wisconsin, Maryland
SHOULD BE IN: Iowa
WORK TO DO: Ohio State, Minnesota, Indiana
SHOULD BE IN
IOWA HAWKEYES
At the risk of overreacting to events, Iowa isn't doing its
seed any favors. A team that Bubble Watch has been trying to move to a lock for
over a week now has instead lost back-to-back games to Ohio State (on the road)
and Rutgers (in Iowa City) by a combined margin of 34 points. Prior to the Quad
3 loss to the Scarlet Knights, the Hawkeyes were 17-0 against Quads 2, 3 and 4.
Fran McCaffery missed the evening because of a two-game suspension stemming
from a postgame tirade in Columbus directed at referee Steve McJunkins, and
perhaps that had some connection to Iowa's sleepy performance on senior night.
In any event, something in the vicinity of the No. 7 seed the Hawkeyes were
looking at might now require additional wins, starting with upcoming visits to Wisconsin
and Nebraska.
WORK TO DO
OHIO STATE
BUCKEYES
Without Kaleb Wesson,
Ohio State is in free fall. The 6-foot-9 sophomore was suspended indefinitely
and has now missed two games, the second of which was a 68-50 loss at
Northwestern. Chris Holtmann's team had already seen its projected bracket
position slip from the No. 9 line to a No. 10 seed, but now OSU has larger
concerns than mere seeding. The Buckeyes close their season at home against
Wisconsin, and a loss there would leave Ohio State 18-13 overall and 8-12 in
conference. True, all season long this team has clung to its road win at
Cincinnati in the first game of the season. That is indeed a great win; it's
just that OSU hasn't been able to give that victory much in the way of company.
The Buckeyes' other Quad 1 wins were at Creighton, at Nebraska and at Indiana.
That body of work might not be enough in the event of a loss to the Badgers and
a quick, Wesson-less exit from the Big Ten tournament.
MINNESOTA
GOLDEN GOPHERS
Amir Coffey is
the first Golden Gopher to score 30 points or more in back-to-back games since
Vincent Grier did it in 2004-05. The 6-foot-8 junior's explosion has coincided
with badly needed wins for Minnesota at Northwestern and, most crucially, at
home against Purdue. The temptation is to say a bid is now secure (the
Boilermakers entered the game in Minneapolis at No. 11 in the NET rankings),
but, at a minimum, Richard Pitino's team will want to keep pushing. The game at
Maryland will be no easy task, obviously, and a loss there leaves the Gophers
at 19-12 and 9-11 in the Big Ten. The wins at home against Purdue and on the
road at Wisconsin are beautiful, and Minnesota's in much better shape than a
week ago. That said, the bubble can shrink at any time and there's still
basketball to be played
INDIANA
HOOSIERS
With still another thrilling win over Michigan State and a
season sweep against the Spartans, Indiana is back in the bubble discussion.
The Hoosiers can claim six Quad 1 wins on the season, and while they also have
suffered nine Quad 1 defeats, the high number of quality victories is
sufficient for IU's profile to at least get a hearing "in the room,"
as they say. If (and it's no small if) Archie Miller's men win at Illinois and
at home against Rutgers, they'll finish the season at 17-14 overall and 8-12 in
the Big Ten. That could get the job done. (Updated: March 2)
PAC-12
LOCK: Washington
WORK TO DO: Arizona State
WORK TO DO
ARIZONA STATE
SUN DEVILS
Here's a Bubble Watch fun fact: Arizona State is the only
team in the "lock," "should be in" or "work to
do" categories that has lost games in all four quadrants. Yes, the losses
at home to Princeton and to Washington State qualify as Quad 4 defeats, and
indeed, the Sun Devils are a notably so-so 10-4 against Quads 3 and 4. See,
this is the kind of thing we miss with our single-minded focus on just one of
the quadrants. Now, let's focus single-mindedly on Quad 1: ASU's win in Tempe
against Kansas as well as ones on a neutral floor against Mississippi State and
Utah State might get this team a bid provided its NET ranking isn't too controversially
low. Going into Sunday night's 74-71 win at Oregon State, that ranking was in
the high 60s and Bobby Hurley's group was on Joe Lunardi's "last four
in" list. It could work out as is, but if the Sun Devils want to feel
safe, there's work to do
SEC
LOCKS: Tennessee, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi
State, Auburn
SHOULD BE IN: Ole Miss
WORK TO DO: Florida, Alabama
SHOULD BE IN
OLE MISS
REBELS
There needs to be a name for the paradox in which Ole Miss
finds itself right now. The Rebels are in zero danger, but 40 more minutes
could change that. Kermit Davis and his men played a tough game at home against
Kentucky and came up just short, 80-76. Ole Miss went into that contest
expecting a No. 9 or a 10-seed, which, again, conveys that there's little or no
danger lurking in the vicinity. All true enough, but what if the Rebels were to
lose their final game of the season, at Missouri? You would then be looking at
a 19-12 team that had lost five of its past six. To be sure, wins on the road
at Auburn and at Mississippi State are a great wind to have at your back, the
kind that will land you in the field of 68. Still, Bubble Watch is open to the
possibility that it could end up being a closer call than we think. ("The
paradox of the unforeseen close call"? Too wordy. Bubble Watch will keep
at it)
WORK TO DO
FLORIDA
GATORS
The final minute has not been kind to Florida over the past
two games. First, the Gators lost by six points at home to Georgia. Then, with
mock brackets showing them as a No. 9 or No. 10 seed, Mike White's men took LSU
to overtime in Gainesville before falling 79-78. The loss drops UF to 17-13,
and the danger here is that this record could quickly flip to 17-14 with a loss
at Kentucky in the season finale. Florida still has its road win at LSU as the
heart and soul of its profile, of course, but that's not preventing the Gators
from sliding ever so gradually toward the precipice. Moreover, the fact that
other teams are even closer to the present edge than UF doesn't mean the ground
itself can't suddenly give way in the form of a bid thief or two. Florida could
have work to do at the SEC tournament.
ALABAMA
CRIMSON TIDE
Sometimes a win that everyone says is "huge" in
real time actually turns out to be even more important. Alabama's victory at
home in January over Kentucky is looking that way in March. Take away those 40
minutes, and you're left with a Crimson Tide profile where the best win and
indeed only Quad 1 victory is the game where Avery Johnson's guys prevailed at
home against Mississippi State. That's a pretty good notch to have on your
belt, sure, but the UK win has lifted the Tide to a different part of the
discussion entirely. Even so, at 17-13 overall and 8-9 in the SEC, Alabama now
might be playing to stay in the field of 68. A final Quad 1 chance at Arkansas waits
before the Tide play in what will be a loaded conference tournament. No fewer
than seven SEC teams are currently ensconced in the top 50 of the NET rankings.
Quad 1 opportunity will abound in Nashville, Tennessee.
AMERICAN
LOCKS: Houston, Cincinnati
SHOULD BE IN: UCF
WORK TO DO: Temple
SHOULD BE IN
UCF Knights
There was already a lot to like about a UCF team that had
just one bad loss (Florida Atlantic in November) even if it didn't have any
really great wins. Now, that second need has been addressed. The Knights went
on the road and did what no other team's been able to do in 2018-19: Johnny
Dawkins' men won 69-64 at Houston. Collin Smith picked
a nice moment to score a season-high 21 points on 8-of-15 shooting inside the
arc. The victory marks, kind of, UCF's first Quad 1 win of the season. (The win
at South Florida was Quad 1 when it happened, but not for long.) The Knights will
doubtless carry a higher seed than their previous spot on the No. 11 line when
the next set of mock brackets is released.
WORK TO DO
TEMPLE OWLS
This situation is becoming clearer and clearer: Temple won a
home game against Houston, period. That, it appears, might be more or less
everything the Owls have to show on their profile. True, Fran Dunphy's team
will get one more Quad 1 chance when it hosts UCF in the final game of the
regular season. In the meantime, however, the Owls have to hope their signature
victory is enough to get it done, a wish that, to be clear, was done no favors
by the Knights' even more impressive win on the Cougars' home floor.
OTHERS
LOCKS: Gonzaga, Nevada, Buffalo
SHOULD BE IN: Wofford, VCU
WORK TO DO: Utah State, Belmont, Murray State, 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. Indeed, Wofford
is fast becoming a foregone conclusion in this discussion because the Terriers
are 26-4, with the losses coming to North Carolina, Oklahoma, Kansas and
Mississippi State. Mike Young's team additionally owns 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 20-0 against Quads 2, 3 and
4.
VCU RAMS
Mike Rhoades' men went on the road and made short work of
George Mason, holding the Patriots to just 36 points in a 67-possession game.
That is one extreme yet nevertheless telling display of the kind of defensive
mastery the Rams have been exhibiting during this 11-game win streak. At 24-6
overall and in sole possession of first place in the Atlantic 10, VCU has a No.
9 seed waiting for it later this month if mock brackets are to be trusted.
There are no remaining Quad 1 opportunities for the Rams even in any potential
A-10 tournament game, but the 54-53 win at Texas in December will continue to
fill that need on the profile quite satisfactorily.
WORK TO DO
UTAH STATE
AGGIES
Utah State came really, really close to furnishing us with a
very interesting conversation. After everyone had declared the coronation
complete with the win at home against Nevada, the Aggies went on the road and
needed overtime before escaping with a 100-96 win at Colorado State. Now Craig
Smith's team is indeed assured of at least a share of the regular-season
Mountain West title. Projected as a No. 11 seed, USU really has only two
remaining dangers. One is a shrinking bubble, and the other would be an
ostentatiously early exit from the conference tournament in Las Vegas. But,
assuming both of those disasters fail to materialize, Utah State does appear to
be in good shape for its first bid since 2011.
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 25-4, Byrd's guys have won 13 straight and are looking to
run the table. (Updated: March 2)
MURRAY STATE
RACERS
The fact that Murray State hasn't lost a game since January
is rightly landing the Racers on a number of "first four out"
lists. Ja Morant and
his mates are now 25-4, and it has been about three weeks since any opponent
even came within a single-digit margin of defeat against MSU. Still, it's
likely that an at-large will require a trip to the Ohio Valley Conference
championship game. Bubble Watch will even further stipulate that Belmont will
have to be the other team waiting there for the Racers, and that, no, losing a
close game to Austin Peay or Morehead State wouldn't do the trick. Instead,
it's probable that a Murray State team that's 1-4 against Quads 1 and 2 but an
immaculate 22-0 against Quads 3 and 4 will require the closest and most
impressive title-game loss to the Bruins to get an at-large. Or, alternately,
Matt McMahon's team could just win the game and earn the auto bid. That's a
smart plan, as well.
SAINT MARY'S
GAELS
Oh, what might have been. No, Bubble Watch doesn't mean the
69-55 loss to Gonzaga in Moraga, California. The Bulldogs are looking more and
more like a team of destiny, and Mark Few's guys running the table in the West
Coast Conference was never going to be a huge upset. Instead, think about the
four-point losses Saint Mary's recorded against Mississippi State and LSU in
November and December, respectively. Either one of those games moved under the
win column would make this a much stronger profile for the Gaels. As it is,
however, the single Quad 1 win coming on the road at New Mexico State might not
be sufficient to get SMC into the field of 68. That said Saint Mary's stays in
Bubble Watch due to its beautiful NET ranking and a collective and incorrigible
ignorance in the world outside the committee room concerning what exactly that
will mean in Year 1 of the new metric's reign.
FURMAN
PALADINS
It's a mark of how strong the Southern Conference is in 2019 that Furman can
lose at home to Wofford and, at 24-6 overall, 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.
Alas, that win (plus a sweet NET ranking in the 40s) might form the sum total
of the case for Furman on Selection Sunday. The Dins were done no particular
favors by the SoCon tournament pairings, which will offer up the "chock
full of Quad 1 goodness" Terriers only in a title game. By that point,
naturally, the at-large point is moot.
LIPSCOMB
BISONS
After a costly Quad 3 loss at Florida Gulf Coast, Lipscomb finished its regular
season with wins at home over NJIT and on the road over North Alabama. The
Bisons show two Quad 1 wins on their profile, at TCU and at Liberty, and their
NET ranking, even after the FGCU game, remained higher than those of teams like
St. John's, Seton Hall and Arizona State. Then again, that same ranking is also
a few spots lower than the ones carried by fellow bubbly aspirant Saint Mary's.
Perhaps most daunting, however, is the fact that Lipscomb's done with Quad 1
opportunities. Even another meeting with Liberty in the Atlantic Sun tournament
will take place, if it occurs, on the home floor of the top-seeded Bisons and
would thus qualify as Quad 2. Such a meeting, anyway, will take place in the
title game, so securing an auto bid by winning three home games appears more
likely on paper than does an at-large. Indeed, Lipscomb is already a third of
the way there, having won its first-round A-Sun tournament game against
Kennesaw State. (Updated: March 4)
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