WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT
EVERY TEAM IN THE BRACKET
Now that the 2019 NCAA tournament field is set, you'll need
the right information to make the
right picks in your bracket. We're here to help with our annual
68-team preview. Here's a brief look at every team in the field:
Need some help filling out your Tournament Challenge
bracket? We've got a ton of facts and trends to get you excited for the NCAA
tournament.
1-SEEDS
DUKE BLUE
DEVILS
Zion
Williamson is the most dominant player in college basketball
since Anthony Davis led Kentucky to the national title in 2012. In the 17 games
in which he has played at least 30 minutes, the Blue Devils have lost just
twice (against Gonzaga in the Maui Invitational in November and versus Syracuse
in January, when Cam Reddish didn't
play because of illness and Tre Jones played
just six minutes after suffering a shoulder injury early in the first half).
This Duke squad has three potential top-five picks (Williamson, Reddish, RJ Barrett)
and a talented nucleus that has led the team to wins over Auburn, Texas Tech,
Florida State (twice), Louisville, Virginia (twice) and North Carolina. The
Blue Devils should be favored to be the last team standing in Minneapolis next
month.
GONZAGA
BULLDOGS
Many have pointed to the loss against rival Saint Mary's in
the West Coast Conference tournament title game as proof that the Bulldogs did
not deserve a top seed. But that's a shortsighted take on a Gonzaga squad that
has boasted the nation's most efficient offense for the bulk of the season.
Duke, Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, Michigan State? All below Gonzaga, a
squad that's led by a pair of potential All-Americans in Rui Hachimura and Brandon
Clarke. The Bulldogs are a scary, elite squad that could leave this
tournament with their school's first NCAA championship.
NORTH
CAROLINA TAR HEELS
Two years ago, North Carolina won a national title with big
bodies and paint production. This year's team still does its best stuff in the
post, but Roy Williams has a collection of fascinating athletes who can play
inside and outside. Cameron
Johnson stretches the floor with a 47 percent success rate from
the 3-point line. Luke Maye is
an effective free throw shooter who uses his big frame to get to the rim. Nassir Little and Coby White are
both legit NBA prospects. The Tar Heels, who own a win over Gonzaga, battled
Duke to the final seconds in the ACC tournament semifinals on Friday. They fly
around the court, but they've still managed to rank in the top 10 in offensive
and defensive efficiency this season.
VIRGINIA
CAVALIERS
It's really up to you. You can assume Virginia will follow
the same underwhelming path it has traveled in past NCAA tournaments under Tony
Bennett when the team has had a top seed, including last season's first-ever
loss to a 16-seed (UMBC). Or you can take a hard look at this year's squad, a
group that features a pair of NBA prospects in Ty Jerome and De'Andre Hunter. Kyle Guy is
one of the best guards in the country. The Cavaliers have one of the five most
efficient offenses and defenses in America. They've made nearly 41 percent of
their 3-pointers. Virginia has everything you'd want in a champion this season.
But Friday's loss to Florida State in the semifinals of the ACC tournament
conjured up memories of last year's (and previous years') early exit. Hard to
blame anyone who doubts this team.
2-SEEDS
KENTUCKY
WILDCATS
John Calipari doesn't get enough credit for molding his
young teams over the course of a season. But the Wildcats, who lost to Duke by
34 points in the Champions Classic in November, have matured as a team and
reached this point as the best version of themselves. They defeated Louisville,
North Carolina, Kansas and Tennessee. PJ Washington (14.7
PPG, 7.6 RPG) has made 42 percent of his 3-pointers. Tyler Herro has
evolved into a reliable contributor. Keldon
Johnson has averaged 13.4 PPG. And a post presence that
features Washington, Reid Travis, Nick Richards and EJ Montgomery has
more depth than any frontcourt in America.
MICHIGAN
WOLVERINES
John Beilein's squad possesses a collection of big wings who
can spread the floor with their shooting ability, while suppressing opposing
offenses with top-five defense. Heard this before? It's the same formula (and
largely the same personnel, with the swap of Mo Wagner for Ignas Brazdeikis)
the Wolverines used to reach the national title game last season. Charles Matthews (12.5 PPG, 1.1 SPG) recently missed three
games with an ankle injury, but he's back and ready to join Brazdeikis (15.0
PPG, 42 percent from the 3-point line) and Jordan Poole (12.9
PPG) for another shot at the title.
MICHIGAN
STATE SPARTANS
Tom Izzo is a national coach of the year candidate after a
difficult season that still featured a Big Ten championship. Joshua Langford suffered a season-ending foot injury
weeks into the regular season. Then, Nick Ward
missed five games in late February and early March with a fractured hand. The
Spartans showcased their depth, however, as Cassius Winston (18.9
PPG, 41 percent from beyond the arc) became one of the nation's top five
players. The resiliency of this Spartans squad is unrivaled. Izzo has a team
that's stacked with capable role players who've helped the squad navigate its
challenges.
TENNESSEE
VOLUNTEERS
Rick Barnes has one of the most complete teams in the
country and an impressive slate of victories: Louisville, Gonzaga and Kentucky
(twice). Grant
Williams (19.2 PPG, 7.6 RPG, 3.2 APG, 1.4 BPG, 1.2 SPG), the
back-to-back SEC Player of the Year, might finish second behind Zion Williamson
in the Wooden Award race. Admiral
Schofield (16.4 PPG, 41 percent from beyond the arc) might play
for an NBA team next season. The Vols, anchored by an eight-man rotation, had
the SEC's best offense and its No. 2 defense during the regular season.
3-SEEDS
HOUSTON
COUGARS
Kelvin Sampson's squad was consistent throughout the season,
losing just two games on its way to the American Athletic Conference tournament
title game. His team swept Cincinnati in the regular season and beat LSU, Utah
State and Oregon (with Bol Bol)
in the nonconference season. The Cougars have held their opponents below a 43
percent clip inside the arc. Corey Davis Jr. (16.8 PPG) and Armoni Brooks (13.6
PPG) are dependable leaders for this team.
LSU TIGERS
Tony Benford will lead the SEC champion, into the NCAA
tournament after coach Will Wade was indefinitely suspended earlier this month
for his alleged ties to a pay-for-play scheme that reportedly involved Javonte Smart.
With the return of Smart (11.5 PPG), who was sidelined for a game while the
school investigated him, LSU -- which has wins over Kentucky and Tennessee --
has one of the most talented rosters in the field. Naz Reid and Tremont
Waters lead a crew that's stacked with six former ESPN top-100
recruits.
PURDUE
BOILERMAKERS
Matt Painter emerged as a trendy national coach of the year
favorite as he steered a Purdue squad that had lost a talented senior class to
a slice of this season's title in the Big Ten, the consensus top conference in
the country. The Boilermakers led the Big Ten in 3-point shooting and Carsen
Edwards solidified himself as a Wooden Award candidate after
averaging 23.5 PPG. But Edwards' 11-for-48 clip in a pair of losses to
Minnesota in a recent 10-day stretch showcased Purdue's limits when its best
player struggles.
TEXAS TECH
RED RAIDERS
Texas Tech's list of achievements is long. A year after they
lost first-round pick Zhaire Smith to the NBA, the Red Raiders secured a slice
of the Big 12 championship. They played America's best defense, per ESPN
Analytics. Chris Beard moved to the top of the national coach of the year
lists. Jarrett
Culver (18.5 PPG, 6.3 RPG, 3.7 APG, 1.4 SPG) turned himself
into a lottery pick. Texas Tech will be tough for any opponent in the field.
The Red Raiders had won nine in a row before a loss to West Virginia in the
first round of the Big 12 tournament.
4-SEEDS
FLORIDA STATE
SEMINOLES
Leonard Hamilton's squad is blessed with a collection of
long athletes who anchored the ACC's best defense inside the arc (41.9 percent
mark allowed) and helped the team reach the ACC tournament title game after a
win over Virginia in the semifinals. Their résumé is boosted by wins over a
fleet of NCAA tournament teams: Florida, LSU, Purdue, Louisville and Virginia
Tech (twice). But FSU's dominant victory over Virginia (1.17 points per
possession against a top-five defense) on Friday demonstrated Florida State's
postseason promise.
KANSAS JAYHAWKS
Bill Self had one of his most turbulent seasons, only the
second of his tenure that ended without a Big 12 championship. The Streak ended
after Kansas lost Udoka
Azubuike to a season-ending injury as well as Lagerald Vick,
the team's best shooter (45.5 percent from the 3-point line), to a leave of
absence that ultimately extended through the rest of the season. But Dedric Lawson (19.2
PPG, 10.4 RPG, 1.1 BPG) is an All-American who is doing everything he can to
carry a Kansas squad that finished sixth in the Big 12 in adjusted offensive
efficiency on KenPom for the first time in 15 years.
KANSAS STATE
WILDCATS
This is not the déjà vu Bruce Weber anticipated. A year
after reaching the Elite Eight without star Dean Wade,
another Wildcats team will enter the NCAA tournament with its veteran leader
nursing a foot injury that could impact his playing time. He missed the bulk of
last year's postseason with a foot injury, too. But the Big 12's co-champions,
who've played top-five defense this season, succeeded without him a year ago.
Still, Wildcats have averaged 106 points per 100 possessions and held opponents
to just 86 points per 100 possessions in the regular season with Wade on the
floor, numbers that dramatically changed for the worse when he was on the
bench.
VIRGINIA TECH
HOKIES
Buzz Williams' squad will enter the NCAA tournament ranked
within the top 10 in 3-point shooting. Justin Robinson's presence has helped boost that ranking, and
his expected return after missing 12 games to a foot injury could be big. Per
hooplens.com, the Hokies have made 42.2 percent of their 3 attempts with
Robinson available and 36.4 percent when he's on the bench. It's unclear how
much he'll contribute, but Kerry Blackshear (14.7 PPG, 7.4 RPG) is one of the
nation's most underrated talents, and Nickeil
Alexander-Walker is a serious NBA prospect.
5-SEEDS
AUBURN TIGERS
Jared Harper might
be the fastest guard in America. He's the maestro for an Auburn team that has
made 38 percent of its 3-pointers. After a 3-5 stretch that extended into
February, Auburn lost just one game (against Kentucky, 80-53 on Feb. 23) prior
to its SEC tournament title game matchup against Tennessee on Sunday. It has
forced more turnovers than any team in the country and has the offensive
firepower (Bryce Brown is
a 40.1 percent shooter from the 3-point line) to turn that skill into buckets
in transition. But it will be in trouble against any opponent if Chuma Okeke gets
into early foul trouble.
MARQUETTE
GOLDEN EAGLES
Markus Howard (25.1
PPG) is a prolific scorer who might put together a Kemba Walker-like stretch in
the NCAA tournament and lead Marquette on a run. But Sam Hauser (39.5
percent), Joey Hauser (44.4
percent) and Sacar Anim (39.1
percent) are all dangerous 3-point shooters who find space in part because
opponents adjust to corral Howard. The team finished second in defensive
efficiency in league play, but they're not always careful with the ball, proved
by the 63 turnovers the team committed in their last four regular-season games.
MISSISSIPPI
STATE BULLDOGS
The Bulldogs made 37 percent of their 3-pointers in SEC play
(third) and secured wins over Saint Mary's, Clemson, Cincinnati and Wofford before
finishing 10-8 in the SEC. However, Auburn is the best team they defeated in
league play. Quinndary
Weatherspoon (18.2 PPG) and his teammates have the talent to
advance beyond the first round, but this is also one of America's most
turnover-prone (46 in their past three losses) teams.
WISCONSIN
BADGERS
After withdrawing from the NBA draft last season, Ethan Happ put
together a rare stat line for a big man: 17.4 PPG, 10.3 RPG, 4.7 APG, 1.3 BPG,
1.1 SPG. The Badgers, not the Wolverines, played the best defense in Big Ten
play this season. With limited offensive options on offense beyond Happ,
however, Wisconsin finished 2-7 against the best teams on its schedule:
Virginia, Marquette, Michigan, Michigan State, Maryland and Purdue.
6-SEEDS
BUFFALO BULLS
How many teams will be waiting to steal Nate Oats from
Buffalo whenever his team exits the NCAA tournament? He's entering his second
consecutive NCAA tournament as one of the most coveted young coaches in the
country. The Bulls have carried the momentum from last season's upset of
Arizona in the NCAA tournament into this season, which started
with Massinburg 43-point effort in a win over West Virginia. Buffalo also
beat Syracuse. The Bulls will be a trendy upset pick once again.
IOWA STATE
CYCLONES
This is one of the nation's most perplexing groups, talented
and deep but not consistently effective or efficient. But the Cyclones, a
middle-of-the-pack defensive team in Big 12 play, impressed with their run to
the conference tournament title after a dominant win over Kansas. Marial Shayok (18.7
PPG) leads a team with four scorers who averaged double figures and employs key
reserves Tyrese
Haliburton and Nick
Weiler-Babb in a strong rotation that fueled wins over Kansas
(twice), Texas Tech and Kansas State (twice).
MARYLAND
TERRAPINS
There is a lot to like about Mark Turgeon's team. Maryland
point guard Anthony Cowan Jr. is averaging 16.0 PPG and 4.3
APG. Bruno
Fernando is an all-Big Ten first team selection who is averaging a
double-double (13.7 PPG, 10.4 RPG). And the Terps finished in the top five in
offensive and defensive efficiency in the Big Ten. But they also committed
turnovers on one-fifth of their possessions in league play. This is a 22-10
team that beat Wisconsin and Purdue but also lost in the first round of the Big
Ten tournament to Nebraska. Good luck figuring them out.
VILLANOVA
WILDCATS
A year after securing his team's second national title in
three years, Jay Wright's squad still managed to win the Big East
regular-season and tournament titles after losing three first-round picks and
Wooden Award winner Jalen Brunson. This team lacks last season's talent pool,
although Phil Booth (18.7
PPG) and Eric Paschall (16.5
PPG, 6.2 RPG), an NBA prospect, both cracked the all-Big East first team. This
is the time of year when the Wildcats do their best work. Bet against Wright at
your own peril.
7-SEEDS
CINCINNATI
BEARCATS
Mick Cronin has quietly molded the Bearcats into an imposing
team in a Purdue-like rapid rebuild. For the ninth consecutive season, the
Bearcats finished within the top 30 in KenPom's adjusted defensive efficiency
rankings. Wins over Ole Miss and UCF anchored their résumé prior to Sunday's
American Athletic Conference title matchup against Houston. It's clear
that Jarron Cumberland is an underrated guard who has averaged
18.4 PPG, 4.4 RPG, 3.7 APG and 1.2 SPG.
LOUISVILLE CARDINALS
The Cardinals are one 10-minute stretch (Duke overcame a
23-point deficit in a February loss) from being on a different seed line. That
matchup for Louisville was one of six games that it lost by five points or
fewer (three overtime games). The Duke loss highlighted the highs and lows of
Louisville. The Cardinals have an inconsistent offense and top-20
defense. Jordan Nwora (17.2
PPG, 7.5 RPG) has to be great to give Louisville a chance to make a run after
the Cardinals finished 4-7 in their last 11 games entering the NCAA tournament.
NEVADA WOLF
PACK
Eric Musselman's squad had a shot at the Elite Eight after
amassing a significant lead over Loyola Chicago in the Sweet 16 last season
before its then-porous defense betrayed the program. But this year's Wolf Pack
boosted its defense -- they're ranked in the 30s in efficiency -- and added
impactful players like Portland transfer Jazz Johnson (45.2
percent). But Jordan
Caroline (17.3 PPG) missed Nevada's Mountain West tournament
loss to San Diego State with an Achilles injury. He'd gone 6-for-29 from the
3-point line in seven games prior to that, a stretch that made both he and
Nevada look vulnerable.
WOFFORD
TERRIERS
Mike Young's squad played its way into the at-large
conversation with a 20-game winning streak that continued with a double-digit
win over UNC Greensboro in the Southern Conference tournament title game.
Wofford doesn't have the athletes some of the Power 5 schools possess. But the
Terriers have made 41.6 percent of their 3-pointers, ranking No. 2 in the
country. Four players on the roster have made more than 41 percent of their
attempts from beyond the arc this season, too.
8-SEEDS
OLE MISS
REBELS
Kermit Davis made immediate changes in his first season with
Ole Miss, a squad that beat Baylor in the nonconference season and swept Auburn
in SEC play. But the Rebels are 2-5 in their past seven games. They'll
need Breein Tyree (18.2
PPG, 39 percent from the 3-point line) to be Shabazz Napier to advance.
SYRACUSE
ORANGE
Syracuse's opponents in ACC play made just 33.4 percent of
their 3-point attempts against its zone. In last season's NCAA tournament, TCU,
Michigan State and Duke all shot under 22 percent from beyond the arc against
the Orange, which reached the Sweet 16 as an 11-seed. The formula remains for
Boeheim's team, which finished 4-7 in its past 11 games and will need another
breakout effort by Tyus Battle (17.2
PPG) -- who missed the ACC tournament with a back injury -- to launch another
shocking run.
UTAH STATE
AGGIES
Craig Smith's team was projected to finish ninth in his
first season at the school after making the move from South Dakota. Instead,
Utah State shared the Mountain West title with Nevada before defeating San
Diego State in the conference title game. Sam Merrill (21.2
PPG) is a star, and Utah State is a sleeper team you should know.
VCU RAMS
A first-round loss to Rhode Island in the Atlantic 10
tournament didn't ruin VCU's NCAA tournament dreams. Wins over Temple, Hofstra,
Texas and Wichita State (all top-100 teams in the NET rankings) and a 16-2
record in league play was enough to uphold its résumé.
9-SEEDS
BAYLOR BEARS
Scott Drew's team endured a multitude of injuries throughout
the season. Tristan Clark,
the top scorer on the team at 14.6 PPG, suffered a season-ending knee injury in
January. King McClure missed
five games with a knee injury, and Makai Mason,
tied with Clark at 14.6 PPG, has been hindered by a right toe injury. That all
contributed to the team's four-game losing streak prior to the NCAA tournament.
At their best, however, the Bears swept Iowa State during the regular season
and beat Texas Tech by double digits.
OKLAHOMA
SOONERS
Life without Trae Young has been different for Lon Kruger's
team this season. Only Oklahoma State was a worse offensive team in Big 12
play, but solid defense led to résumé-altering wins over Kansas, Wofford and
Florida. Christian
James led the team with 14.4 PPG.
UCF KNIGHTS
Tacko Fall is
averaging 10.9 PPG, 7.3 RPG and 2.5 BPG for Central Florida's squad, a team
that has defeated Cincinnati and Houston but has also lost to Florida Atlantic.
The Knights put up just 55 points in Friday's 24-point loss to Memphis in the
first round of the American Athletic Conference tournament. The Knights have
played top-40 defense but they've scored more than 70 points only twice in the
past seven games.
WASHINGTON
HUSKIES
The Pac-12 has been a mess all season. But Washington surged
to the top of the subpar conference. The Huskies will go as far as Matisse
Thybulle, the Pac-12 Defensive Player of the Year, takes them.
During the regular season, UW forced turnovers on 25 percent of its opponents'
possessions when he was on the floor.
10-SEEDS
FLORIDA
GATORS
Mike White has
found a future star in Andrew
Nembhard, who scored 20 points in a win over LSU in the SEC
tournament, a victory that sealed Florida's at-large status. KeVaughn
Allen & Co. endured two three-game losing streaks in SEC
play alone. But they also excelled late by limiting their own turnovers and
forcing an abundance of them in league play.
IOWA HAWKEYES
The Hawkeyes were the kings of clutch wins in the closing seconds
(three wins by two points or less). But Fran McCaffery's squad has been in a
free fall since mid-February, going 2-6 in its last eight games -- a byproduct
of a defense ranked 13th out of 14 Big Ten teams. Can Tyler Cook and Luka Garzare store a squad with wins over Oregon, Iowa State
and Michigan?
MINNESOTA
GOLDEN GOPHERS
No bubble team did more to eliminate its Selection Sunday
suspense than Minnesota, which defeated Purdue, the Big Ten co-champion with
Michigan State, twice in a 10-day stretch, including once in the conference
tournament on Friday. The Gophers have been up and down throughout the season,
which is why they were on the bubble late. But they're 12-3 when Amir Coffey scores
18 or more points.
SETON HALL
PIRATES
It has been an interesting ride for Kevin Willard's team.
The Pirates beat Kentucky, but then they started 3-5 in the Big East. They
possessed one of the worst defenses in the league, but they also finished the
year with a 3-1 record against Marquette and Villanova in the weeks prior to
the NCAA tournament. Myles Powell (22.9
PPG) leads a fascinating squad.
11-SEEDS
ARIZONA STATE
SUN DEVILS
The pros for Bobby Hurley's crew? Arizona State has Luguentz Dort,
the Pac-12's freshman of the year who averaged 16.1 PPG, 4.3 RPG, 2.3 APG and 1.6
SPG. The cons? The Sun Devils surrendered a 48 percent clip to their opponents
in the lukewarm (see: terrible) Pac-12, which is why the same squad that beat
Kansas and Utah State also has a 21-point loss to Washington State on its
résumé.
BELMONT
BRUINS
Rick Byrd doesn't get a lot of calls from Power 5 schools
seeking nonconference matchups against his team. But the Bruins secured an
at-large berth with an outstanding run in the Ohio Valley Conference that
included a win over Murray State on Jan. 24, when Ja Morant went
5-for-19.
OHIO STATE
BUCKEYES
The Buckeyes soared in a surprising run in Chris Holtmann's
first season a year ago, but the follow-up did not feature that level of
success. The same squad that beat Cincinnati in the season opener lost six of
seven in January and never really found itself again. Kaleb Wesson,
the team's top scorer at 14.4 PPG, returned from a three-game suspension in
time to drop 17 points in a must-win game over Indiana in the Big Ten
tournament. His presence matters.
ST. JOHN'S RED STORM
Chris Mullin is still trying to find the answers for his
alma mater, a team with a 3-2 record combined against Marquette and Villanova
but a 9-12 finish after it won its first 12 games of the year. Shamorie
Ponds (19.5 PPG, 84 percent from the free throw line) is one of
the nation's most explosive scorers, but the Red Storm (sub-100 defense)
stumbled into the field of 68.
SAINT MARY'S GAELS
Some used Saint Mary's as Exhibit A for their argument
against Gonzaga capturing a top seed. But the Gaels have had one of America's
most explosive offenses (top 20, per ESPN Sports Analytics) this season. With
22 seconds to play, Saint Mary's was down by two against SEC champ LSU in
December after Jordan Ford (21.3
PPG) hit a clutch 3-pointer.
TEMPLE OWLS
Fran Dunphy's team squeezed into the field with an 8-4
finish in its final 12 conference games. Average in most areas, the Owls split
their two games with Houston but also lost to Penn and Tulsa by 25 points
combined.
12-SEEDS
LIBERTY
FLAMES
Ritchie McCay's team's win at UCLA in December pre-empted
the termination of Steve Alford. Today, Scottie James (13.1
PPG) leads a balanced group that knocked out Lipscomb in the Atlantic Sun
Conference tournament title game.
MURRAY STATE
RACERS
Ja Morant,
a projected top-three pick in this summer's NBA draft, exploded onto the
national scene with one of the most impressive stat lines in NCAA history: 24.6
PPG, 10.0 APG and 1.8 SPG, while making 81 percent of his free throws. He's the
reason Murray State has made more than 57 percent of its shots inside the arc and
hasn't lost since Jan. 31.
NEW MEXICO
STATE AGGIES
Chris Jans' squad has made 56.5 percent of its shots inside
the arc this (top-10 in America). But nearly half of their shot attempts come
from beyond the arc, where they've made about 34 percent of them. Overall,
however, this is one of the most efficient mid-major offenses in the country.
This is a balanced team, with no player averaging more than 11.3 PPG.
OREGON DUCKS
Of course Oregon is here, since the Pac-12 hasn't really
made any sense this year, so why not? Dana Altman lost Bol, a projected first-round pick, to a foot injury in
January. But the Ducks shed their bubble status with a win over Washington in
the Pac-12 tournament title game on Saturday night, extending an eight-game
winning streak for Altman's squad. Louis King,
the former five-star recruit, has averaged 19 points in his past three games.
13-SEEDS
NORTHEASTERN
HUSKIES
The Colonial Athletic Association tournament champion is
riding a seven-game winning streak into the NCAA tournament. Vasa Pusica (40.1
percent from beyond the arc) scored 20 points in his team's 16-point win over
Alabama in the nonconference season.
SAINT LOUIS
BILLIKENS
Despite finishing sixth in the Atlantic 10 standings, the
Billikens steamrolled Davidson in the semifinals of the A-10 tournament before
defeating St. Bonaventure in the title game. Javon Bess,
who scored 24 points in the upset over Davidson, is the player to watch for
Saint Louis.
UC IRVINE ANTEATERS
The Anteaters produced the most dominant performance in a
conference tournament this season by securing the Big West title via three wins
by a combined 55 points. Elston Jones (1.6
BPG) and Jonathan
Galloway (1.1 BPG) have been critical contributors for
America's top interior defense (40.6 percent clip inside the arc allowed).
VERMONT
CATAMOUNTS
The Catamounts played competitive matchups against
Louisville and Kansas long before they dominated the America East and won the
tournament title with a win over UMBC, the 16-seed that made history against
Virginia after beating Vermont in last year's conference tournament title game.
John Becker's squad has relied on Anthony Lamb (21.1
PPG) and his team's defense, which has held nine opponents under 60 points in
league play.
14-SEEDS
GEORGIA STATE PANTHERS
For the second season in a row, Georgia State led the Sun
Belt by connecting on at least 39 percent of its 3-point attempts. But the
Panthers will need D'Marcus Simonds, who is 19-for-64 in the last five games, to
shake his slump to have a shot in the opening round
NORTHERN KENTUCKY NORSE
Jalen Tate has
registered at least 14 points in seven of his team's past nine games. Plus,
John Brannen's squad was the Horizon League's best 3-point shooting team (37.3
percent).
OLD DOMINION
MONARCHS
The Monarchs, who defeated Western Kentucky in the
Conference USA tournament title game on Saturday, hovered around the 50s in
defensive efficiency this season. That's the foundation of a program with an
unreliable offense (64.7 percent from the charity stripe in league play) but
victories over Syracuse and VCU.
YALE BULLDOGS
The Bulldogs shared the Ivy League regular-season crown with
Harvard before defeating the Crimson in the conference tournament title game.
When Yale lost to Duke earlier this season, Mike Krzyzewski said the
Bulldogs' Miye Oni (17.6
PPG) "will be a first-round pick." High praise for an Ivy League
star.
15-SEEDS
ABILENE
CHRISTIAN WILDCATS
Six years into its Division I transition, Abilene Christian,
the Southland Conference's best defensive team, will participate in the NCAA
tournament for the first time. Jaren Lewis scored
20 points in his team's win over New Orleans on Saturday and kept the season
alive for a squad that has made 38.4 percent of its 3-pointers this season.
BRADLEY
BRAVES
Brian Wardle has led his team to its first NCAA tournament
appearance in 13 years, a significant moment for the Bradley brand. If you're
wondering why Loyola-Chicago and Sister Jean aren't coming to this year's NCAA
tournament, it's because Bradley (wins over SMU, Penn State) made 39 percent of
its 3-pointers and eliminated the Ramblers in the semifinals of the MVC
tournament.
COLGATE
RAIDERS
Matt Langel has led this group to its first NCAA tournament
appearance since 1996 via its victory over Bucknell in the Patriot League title
game. Like some of the other mid-majors on this list, Colgate finished in the
top 20 in 3-point shooting this season (39.1 percent), a mark led by Rapolas
Ivanauskas (16.4 PPG, 43 percent from the 3-point line).
MONTANA
GRIZZLIES
Travis DeCuire has led his alma mater to its second
consecutive NCAA tournament appearance after defeating Eastern Washington in
Saturday's Big Sky Conference tournament championship game. The Grizzlies have
made nearly 38 percent of their 3-point attempts this season and advanced to
the NCAA tournament despite missing leading scorer Jamar Akoh,
who has been injured since mid-February.
16-SEEDS
FAIRLEIGH
DICKINSON KNIGHTS
If you're looking for a team that probably can't get stops
against a high seed in the opening round but might keep its dream alive with a
hot hand, then you might want to check out Fairleigh Dickinson, a team that
made 41 percent of its 3-pointers, a top-10 mark nationally. Darnell Edge (16.4
PPG) is one of five players on the roster who have averaged in double figures.
GARDNER-WEBB BULLDOGS
Tim Craft's team finished seventh and fifth, respectively,
in offensive and defensive efficiency during league play. But Gardner-Webb,
which scored nonconference, wins over ACC reps Wake Forest and Georgia Tech,
connected on 61 percent of its shots inside the arc on its run to its league's
tournament championship.
IONA GAELS
Nearly four of every 10 shots for Iona are 3-pointers. And
that can make things tricky for a Tim Cluess-led team that shoots about 35
percent from beyond the arc. But E.J. Crawford (17.9
PPG, 39 percent from the 3-point line) and his teammates are fun to watch.
NORTH
CAROLINA CENTRAL EAGLES
LeVelle Moton has led his alma mater, which was a Division I
independent seven years ago as it transitioned from Division II, to four NCAA
tournament appearances in six seasons. Raasean Davis is
averaging 14.4 PPG, 8.8 RPG and 1.2 BPG for a team that led the MEAC in
offensive rebounding percentage.
NORTH DAKOTA
STATE BISON
The Bison avoided rival South Dakota State in the Summit
League tournament, but they also won two games by double digits on their way to
the title. Vinnie Shahid (12.8
PPG) & Co. got hot at the right time.
PRAIRIE VIEW A&M PANTHERS
The SWAC regular season and conference tournament champions
have lost just one game in 2019 (at Texas Southern on Feb. 9). Gary
Blackston dropped 18 points in a loss to Baylor in November.
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