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Archive for the tag “The Big Dance”

The Brackets Are Unveiled and the ACC is Well-Represented

Selection Sunday has come and gone, and the NCAA has revealed the 68 teams that will compete for the National Championship.  And the ACC is well-represented in this year’s Big Dance.

North Carolina was–as expected–given a #1 seed in the Midwest.  In fact, the Tar Heels received the #3 overall seed.  They will play the winner of a play-in game between Lamar and Vermont.  The looming 8-9 matchup for North Carolina is Creighton-Alabama.

In a move that was also expected, Duke was given a #2 seed.  The Blue Devils were assigned to the South region, where Kentucky is the #1 seed.  Duke will begin play against Lehigh.  The looming 7-10 matchup for Duke is a tough one–#7 Notre Dame vs. #10 Xavier.

On the strength of their run through the ACC tournament, Florida State was given a #3 seed in the East.  The #1 seed is Syracuse, while the #2 seed in the East is Ohio State.  The Seminoles will begin play against St. Bonaventure.  If they win that game, they will face the winner of the game between #6 Cincinnati and #11 Texas.

Virginia fell all the way to a #10 seed and was shipped out West.  They will play the #7 seed Florida, who may be a bit underseeded.  Even if Virginia wins, a very tough #2 seed in Missouri awaits.  Michigan State was the #1 seed in the West.

North Carolina State was given an 11 seed.  They will begin play against the #6 seed in the Midwest region, San Diego State.  If the Wolfpack wins, they will play the winner of #3 Georgetown and #14 Belmont.

As noted above, Syracuse was the #1 seed in the East.  They will begin play against #16 seed North Carolina-Ashville.  If they take care of business there, the #8-#9 matchup features Kansas State and Southern Mississippi.

Obviously, this means that Miami did not make the cut.  While the general consensus is that Iona was the only questionable addition to the field, the greater focus is on the exclusion of Drexel.  Like all bubble teams, Miami had its chances and fell short.  The NIT certainly awaits though.

Latest Mock Brackets–North Carolina State and Miami Still Nervous

With only one game left involving ACC teams, and few games left overall, the mock brackets are increasingly relevant.  For Miami and North Carolina State, there will be no exhaling until they see good news when the brackets are announced.  In the meantime, all anyone can do is look at what the experts are predicting.

ESPN bracketologist Joe Lunardi has North Carolina State in the field, but Miami on the outside.  This is unchanged.  Overall, Lunardi considers the bubble to be 17 teams fighting for 9 spots.  And, really, it is not clear that Seton Hall’s profile is that much better than Miami’s.  The tournament committee may very well conclude that 9 Big East teams are plenty and allow Miami to take that spot.

Also at ESPN, Bubble Watch had this to say about the ACC, North Carolina State, and Miami:

After NC State’s close loss to rival North Carolina on Saturday, the remaining ACC bubble teams have officially bowed out of the conference postseason. So where do they stand? Miami is in trouble after Friday’s loss to Florida State, but not totally out of the picture, depending on how much weight the committee gives to that marquee win at Duke. NC State, meanwhile, has to feel more confident about its bid. If the committee saw Saturday’s loss (preceded by a win over Virginia), they saw a team play one of the nation’s best close for all 40 minutes — the last eight of which came without its best player, C.J. Leslie, who fouled out on a massive mistake by the NCSU coaching staff — and one that received the worst end of a universally bad officiating performance by the ACC referees. (When Pack fans complain that Duke and UNC get all the calls, Kendall Marshall’s apparent game-winning charge is what they mean.) In any case, the committee was no doubt in front of the TV, and even without the win, NC State’s effort seems likely to be rewarded.

North Carolina State [22-12 (9-7), RPI: 47, SOS: 30] Mark Gottfried’s team entered the day as one of Joe Lunardi’s last four teams in the tournament, which is a pretty good spot to be in when your worst-case scenario is a loss to putative No. 1 seed North Carolina. An uncompetitive blowout loss might have changed this status for the worse, but what NC State did — playing UNC close to the final buzzer, and getting the wrong end of a couple of key calls (the refs were bad for both teams, but there’s little question that NC State felt the lion’s share of the pain) — certainly can’t hurt their chances, can it? The Pack is far from a lock, of course (there’s that pesky 1-8 record against the top 50), but they’re in much better shape than when they arrived in Atlanta. That much is for sure.

Miami (FL) [19-12 (9-7), RPI: 58, SOS: 51] Can the Hurricanes still get in the tournament? To do so, they’ll need some help, some confluence of bubble losses around them that pave the way, because after Friday night’s loss to Florida State, Jim Larranaga’s team finds itself most likely outside the bubble (as per Joe Lunardi) — and without another game to boost its credentials with less than 48 hours until the bracket is revealed. After Friday’s loss, Miami is 2-8 against the RPI top 50, with a good win over Florida State and a great win at Duke but only one other victory — and three more losses (or 3-11 overall) — in the top 100. The near-60 RPI isn’t necessarily prohibitive, but it ain’t pretty. Taken as a whole with the rest of this profile, there’s just not as much here as you’d like. Miami’s fate is in the committee’s hands, and if we had to guess, we’d say the Canes aren’t going to like what they hear Sunday. But hey, it’s March. You never know.

Not exactly painting the ACC referees with a positive picture.  In any event, the commentary regarding the resumes of both teams is accurate enough for both teams to expect to sweat it out tomorrow.

One other very interesting thing was the report that the tournament committee has already selected the at-large teams.  All that is left is seeding.  It makes some sense given the absence of bubble teams still playing.  But it is surprising that someone would go so far as to say it.  If you are a bubble team, you are hoping that due consideration was given to your resume.

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