FINAL FOUR FIELD BOASTS TOUGH DEFENSES,
VETERAN LINEUPS
RALEIGH, N.C. -- The Final Four features tough defenses, a
surging team that hasn't lost in five weeks and one Hall of Fame coach.
Virginia, Michigan State, Texas Tech and Auburn earned their
trips to Minneapolis for this weekend's national semifinals by emerging from
regions filled with high seeds. The Cavaliers are the last top seed, while the
Spartans, Red Raiders and Tigers ousted the other No. 1s in the regional rounds.
HERE'S A LOOK AT EACH TEAM:
VIRGINIA
The Cavaliers were in the top six of the AP Top 25 all year
while winning a share of the Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season title.
WHY THEY'LL WIN
Their defense tests even the best offenses by clogging the
paint to turn away penetration. And while running a clock-controlling offense,
the Cavaliers are more efficient (123 points per 100 possessions, according to
KenPom) with their limited possessions than ever under Tony Bennett.
Veterans like Kyle Guy and Ty Jerome (or Mamadi
Diakite, judging by his overtime-forcing shot in the Elite Eight
against Purdue) can hit tough shots for a team that finally has its Final Four
breakthrough.
WHY THEY WON'T
If the Cavaliers struggle for stops, the pressure increases
on an offense prone to droughts, even on the best of nights.
They hit just enough outside shots to survive Purdue's Carsen
Edwards scoring 42 points Saturday. But in Virginia's loss to
Florida State in the ACC Tournament, the Cavaliers went six second-half minutes
without a basket and couldn't catch up as the hot-shooting Seminoles took
control.
MICHIGAN STATE
The Spartans, a No. 2 NCAA seed after winning the Big Ten
Tournament, pushed past No. 1 overall seed Duke in a tense regional final.
WHY THEY'LL WIN
The Spartans have veteran confidence from winning 14 of 15
games and join Virginia in the top 10 of KenPom's offensive and defensive
efficiency rankings.
Big Ten player of the year Cassius
Winston is a masterful floor leader (20 points, 10 assists
against Duke), and is complemented by Nick Ward and Xavier
Tillman (19 points against Duke) inside.
Michigan State also has the experience edge on the sideline,
too. This is Hall of Famer Tom Izzo's eighth Final Four compared to the other
three coaches making their debuts.
WHY THEY WON'T
While the Spartans took care of the ball in the regionals,
they ranked among the nation's worst in turnover margin this season.
Michigan State isn't particularly deep after several
injuries, notably losing guard Joshua
Langford (season-ending foot injury). And Ward has yet to crack
double figures since returning from a five-game absence following a hand
injury.
TEXAS TECH
The Red Raiders went from unranked in the preseason to
reaching their first Final Four as a No. 3 seed.
WHY THEY'LL WIN
Simply: Defense and Jarrett
Culver.
The Red Raiders, who have won 13 of 14, lead KenPom's
defensive efficiency rankings (84.1 points allowed per 100 possessions). They
were dominant against Northern Kentucky, Buffalo and Michigan in the
tournament, and then held top-seeded Gonzaga -- KenPom's No. 1 offense -- in
check.
Texas Tech is allowing 37 percent shooting while averaging
nearly 17 points off turnovers in the tournament.
As for Culver, the 6-foot-6 sophomore and Big 12 player of
the year is averaging 21.5 points and 6.8 rebounds in the tournament, exceeding
his season averages.
WHY THEY WON'T
Defenses will focus on Culver, who carries a big load by
taking 176 more shots and 93 more free throws than the next-closest teammates.
The Red Raiders also aren't great on the boards. They've
largely navigated around that problem after being outrebounded in nearly half
their games (17 of 36), though the problem surfaced in five of six losses.
AUBURN
The Tigers have had a wild ride from seventh nationally in
December to unranked and now surging to their first Final Four. They've also
had significant off-court issues, including a federal corruption case that led
to a guilty plea for former assistant Chuck Person and the suspension of
assistant Ira Bowman amid allegations he was involved in a bribery scheme
during his time at Penn.
WHY THEY'LL WIN
The fifth-seeded Tigers are playing with free-flowing
confidence after 12 straight wins, including against Tennessee (twice), Kansas,
North Carolina and Kentucky. And they can bury 3s in bunches behind
upperclassmen Bryce Brown (16.0
points) and Jared Harper (15.4).
The Tigers are at their best when harassing opponents into
mistakes, taking a 33-14 edge in points off turnovers in two regional wins.
WHY THEY WON'T
They lean on 3-pointers, with the romps against Kansas and
UNC coming on difficult-to-sustain efficiency (30 of 67, 44.8 percent) that
could make them particularly vulnerable on an off night.
Auburn also took a big hit with the loss of sophomore Chuma Okeke (12
points, 6.8 rebounds) to a serious knee injury. Okeke provided a lift by
sitting behind the team bench Sunday against Kentucky. His production will be difficult
to replace.
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