Monday, March 12, 2012

Jon Wilner on college basketball: Others fare worse than Cal and Saint Mary's in NCAA field

Cal was one of the last teams in the NCAA Tournament -- and should feel fortunate.

Saint Mary's is scheduled to meet Kansas in the Round of 32 --and should be excited.

The best college basketball teams in the Bay Area received good news on Selection Sunday, although they had to wait ... and wait ... to hear it.

The Bears could easily have been excluded from the field altogether due to their spotty resume (dearth of quality wins, losing record in road/neutral court games, double-digits losses to Colorado, etc.).

Instead, they received a No. 12 seed and will face South Florida in the First Four on Wednesday in Dayton. A victory would send the Bears to Nashville to face No. 5 Temple.

Neither matchup qualifies as daunting -- the Bears won't be overwhelmed athletically. And their travel logistics could have been much worse: Brigham Young, another First Four participant, will play in Dayton on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Saint Mary's was awarded a No. 7 seed -- perhaps a bit lower than hoped -- and has to play in Omaha instead of, say, Portland.

But No. 10 Purdue isn't a bad matchup for SMC, and the potential tangle with Kansas presents a delicious opportunity.

The Jayhawks under coach Bill Self are the greatest of all March underachievers, having lost to No. 11 Virginia Commonwealth last year and No. 9 Northern Iowa two years ago.

The Gaels have the patience and the perimeter moxie to hang with KU deep into the

second half, at which point memories of past tournament collapses could cause the Jayhawks to implode.

Put it this way: Saint Mary's has a better chance to reach the Sweet 16 by going through Kansas than any of the other No. 2 seeds.

Other winners and losers from Selection Sunday ...

Winner: West Coast Conference. Placed three teams in the tournament (Gonzaga, Saint Mary's and BYU) for just the second time in league history.

Loser: Gonzaga. The Bulldogs are a No. 7 seed in the East and will play No. 10 West Virginia ... in its backyard (Pttsburgh).

Winner: Pac-12. Avoided becoming the first power conference to be awarded one bid since the tournament expanded to 48 teams in 1980.

Loser: Pac-12. Duplicated its 2010 feat by earning just two bids, fewer than the Mountain West (four) and West Coast Conference (three) ? and just as many as the Metro-Atlantic.

Winner: The selection committee. One of the least-flawed brackets we've seen in years. The top seeds were placed where they should have been, and the teams that were excluded should have been excluded.

Loser: Washington. The Huskies missed the at-large field -- they weren't even close, in fact -- despite winning the Pac-12 regular-season title. Conference affiliation and regular-season titles don't matter in the selection process

Winner: Mid-majors. Eleven teams from outside the Big Six football-playing leagues made the at-large field.

Loser: Michigan State. The Spartans won the Big Ten title and, as a reward, get the toughest path to the Final Four with No. 2 Missouri, No. 3 Marquette and No. 4 Louisville standing in their way.

Winner: South region. A bevy of intriguing matchups, including Kentucky-Indiana in the Sweet 16 and Kentucky-Duke in the Elite Eight -- the 20th anniversary of Christian Laettner's epic buzzer beater.

Loser: New Mexico. The Lobos won the rugged Mountain West and drew Long Beach State, perhaps the most dangerous double-digit seed in the field.

Winner: Iona. The biggest at-large surprise made the field on the strength of its nonconference schedule.

Loser: Missouri. The Tigers (30-4) were the No. 8 overall seed due to poor nonconference schedule. The committee says it every year: Challenge yourself out of league or risk our wrath.

For more on college sports, see Jon Wilner's College Hotline at blogs.mercurynews.com/collegesports. Contact him at jwilner@mercurynews.com or 408-920-5716.

Source: http://www.contracostatimes.com/news/ci_20152749/jon-wilner-college-basketball-others-fare-worse-than?source=rss

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