Monday, March 05, 2007

NCAA Tournament Projections – Version 8.0

(Editor’s Note: In order to adjust for personal bias, I have not allowed myself to project a team over another in a one-bid unless they are within one game of first place.)

This week, North Carolina is back in the top 4, knocking out Wisconsin, who needed a late three-pointer by Kammron Taylor to overcome Michigan State at home. The Heels hopped Kansas, who had a big win versus Texas, but only started their comeback following a brief injury to phenom Kevin Durant.

The big shock (to me) is Virginia Tech as a 4 seed. In my opinion, they have nowhere to go but down following their defeat at home to Clemson. They’re riding on their 6-2 record against the top 6 teams (not including them) in the ACC. If they do not impress in Tampa next weekend, they can easily fall to a 7 or 8 seed. In fact, the quality margin between 16 and 28 overall is razor-thin.

In the Valley, Creighton overcame two regular season losses to Southern Illinois by defeating them to take the automatic bid. In the CAA, craziness set forth as George Mason has beaten Hofstra and at-large candidate Old Dominion. Tonight, they seek to complete an improbable sweep of the conference’s top three teams after being 0-5 against these teams in the regular season. The theme of retribution resurfaces as they face off against rival Virginia Commonwealth in Richmond.

One of the most shocking yet little-spoken upsets of the weekend was Arkansas’ victory at Vanderbilt. It catapulted the Razorbacks to the final spot in the field. Clemson and Florida St. also had good weeks, which puts them within reach of an at-large bid. Meanwhile, Drexel remains in the field due to their strong road/neutral court record as well as their quality wins. Losing to VCU in Richmond is no small crime, but Drexel will likely become victim to teams on the outside who surge their way into the tournament.

For your information, the teams in bold represent automatic bids and the parentheses surrounding the regions indicate the overall seed of the top team in that region. The teams who are officially in the tournament are in bold italics. As always, if you have any comments or questions, drop a line in the comment box.

Seed

East (4)

South (3)

Midwest (2)

West (1)

1

North Carolina

Florida

Ohio St.

UCLA

2

Kansas

Wisconsin

Texas A&M

Georgetown

3

Washington St.

Maryland

Memphis

Southern Illinois

4

Pittsburgh

Oregon

Tennessee

Virginia Tech

5

Arizona

Marquette

Duke

Vanderbilt

6

UNLV

Nevada

Virginia

Texas

7

Georgia Tech

Louisville

BYU

Kentucky

8

Indiana

Texas Tech

Creighton

Villanova

9

Butler

Xavier

Notre Dame

Michigan St.

10

Winthrop

Air Force

USC

Boston College

11

Syracuse

Missouri St.

Old Dominion

Stanford

12

Virginia Commonwealth

Davidson

Akron

Gonzaga

13

Arkansas

Purdue

Holy Cross

Drexel

14

Pennsylvania

Vermont

Oral Roberts

Long Beach St.

15

Texas A&M - CC

Siena

Belmont

Western Kentucky

16

Weber St.

Jackson St./Central Connecticut St.

Eastern Kentucky

Delaware St.

In: Virginia Commonwealth, Purdue, Arkansas, Texas A&M-CC, Siena, Belmont (in), Eastern Kentucky (in)
Out: Illinois, Georgia, Appalachian St., Sam Houston St., Marist, E. Tennesee St., Austin Peay

Seedings
1s: UCLA, Ohio St., Florida, North Carolina
2s: Kansas, Wisconsin, Texas A&M, Georgetown
3s: Southern Illinois, Memphis, Maryland, Washington St.
4s: Pittsburgh, Oregon, Tennessee, Virginia Tech
5s: Duke, Arizona, Marquette, Vanderbilt
6s: UNLV, Nevada, Texas, Virginia
7s: Kentucky, BYU, Louisville, Georgia Tech
8s: Indiana, Creighton, Texas Tech, Villanova
9s: Notre Dame, Michigan St., Xavier, Butler
10s: USC, Winthrop, Air Force, Boston College
11s: Syracuse, Stanford, Missouri St., Old Dominion
12s: Virginia Commonwealth, Gonzaga, Davidson, Akron
13s: Purdue, Drexel, Holy Cross, Arkansas
14s: Penn, Oral Roberts, Long Beach St., Vermont
15s: Western Kentucky, Siena, Texas A&M –CC, Belmont
16s: Eastern Kentucky, Weber St., Delaware St., Central Connecticut St., Jackson St.

Last Four In: Old Dominion, Purdue, Drexel, Arkansas
Last Four Out: Florida St., UMass, Clemson, Illinois
Next Four Out: Bradley, Georgia, Kansas St., West Virginia

Summary
ACC: 7
Big East: 7
PAC-10: 6
Big Ten: 5
SEC: 5
Big 12: 4
Missouri Valley: 3
Mountain West: 3
Colonial: 3

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

How many wins will Florida St. need to get an at-large?

Anonymous said...

Florida St. should be in over Drexel. No matter which way you bend it, they're a 4th place team in a 13th place conference. They had their chance this weekend and they're done.

FSU didn't have Douglas for a few games and now he's back.

Dan Holmes said...

Kansas as a second seed, even below Florida? We will see after the Big 12 tournament.

Paymon said...

Florida St./Clemson is an elimination game on Thursday. FSU may have work to do dependent upon the results of other conference tournaments. A second win will certainly get them in.

Drexel has a slightly better resume than FSU as we speak. That may change.

Great question on Kansas v. UF.
Florida has a higher RPI, SOS, more RPI top 50, a better win % against RPI top 50 teams. Kansas is a better road team, but many of those wins have been racked up in a relatively weak Big XII, and they didn't play Texas or A&M on the road in conference. Kansas is also 9-1 in their last 10 compared to 7-3. Of course, we know that the Jayhawks defeated a healthy Florida team on a neutral court back in November, but Florida had the impressive win overall by stomping on Ohio State. Overall, the nod goes to Florida.

Anonymous said...

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -In a March 3 story about the Texas-Kansas basketball game, The Associated Press reported erroneously that Kansas' 24-7 run to take a 59-58 lead coincided with an injury to Texas' Kevin Durant. Kansas led 71-65 when Durant left the game and was up 81-72 when he returned.

Durant scored 2 points in 9min. before the injury, lets be fair!

Paymon said...

Color me misinformed by the AP.

UNC's body of work is still more impressive than that of Kansas at the moment, albeit by a small margin.