Here's what I wrote last night. By the way, saying UConn shouldn't have gotten a 1-seed because it went 4-3 without Dyson, failing to note that the three losses came to Pittsburgh and Syracuse in six overtimes, is misleading.
Also I disagree that the committee is telling the mid-majors they don't want them. The mids simply weren't very good this year, and although I like seeing diverse fields, I'd rather see the 65 most deserving teams. And road wins are important (Arizona would've been a lock had it won a few more games on the road), but they can't substitute for
quality wins. When the best team you beat is an 11-seed in the Tournament, as is the case with both Creighton and St. Mary's, I don't care how many road wins you have, you shouldn't get in over a team that beat several high seeds in the Tournament, like Arizona did.
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The one I missed was Wisconsin getting in over San Diego State. The Badgers apparently got credit for playing one of the toughest schedules in the country, even though they didn't, you know, beat any of those good teams they faced.
Arizona did beat a few good teams, and the Wildcats played a remarkable 16 games against the RPI 1-50 (winning six), which allowed the committee to overlook their utter dearth of a quality road/neutral win. With the gauntlet Arizona ran, it's tough to deny the 'Cats a bid in favor of teams like Creighton and St. Mary's, who played around one quarter of Arizona's games apiece against the RPI 1-50.
I was also right (aren't I great) about Dayton not being that far from exclusion, as the Flyers were given only an 11-seed.
The theme for this field, and I think it's a positive one for college basketball, was: GO FREAKING PLAY SOMEONE IN THE NON-CONFERENCE. Penn State, despite its good wins in the Big Eleven, has no real leg to stand on when it comes to crying snub. Ed DeChellis understandably didn't think his team was going to be that great, so he assembled a bunch of cupcake opponents in the non-conference. The Nittany Lions still had a great year, but they have nobody to blame but themselves for being excluded.
This emphasis on non-conference work really helps combat the erroneous belief that nothing in college basketball matters until the calendar turns. Hell, maybe Maryland doesn't get in if it wasn't for the Terps' neutral court blowout of Michigan State in November. The emphasis also gives us college hoops nerds an extra justification for watching and chatting about games in late fall.
Overall, I think the committee did a very good job. I have a few quibbles, like how the hell does Utah get a 5-seed while Arizona State is a 6, and if Utah's that great, why does San Diego State (RPI: 35) not get in after taking the Utes to the final seconds on a neutral court in the MWC championship Saturday?
Still, I have no major issues with the bracket, and as always, it looks like a lot of fun. Tuesday is St. Patty's day and I'm not sure I'll be around Wednesday, so I'll try to deconstruct much of the matchups tomorrow.
And don't pay attention to anything anybody on ESPN says unless it's Jay Bilas or Doug Gottlieb. Other than those two, man does that network have a deep stable of dumbshit analysts. Especially Digger Phelps. God what a freaking useless, uninformative waste of space. I literally have never learned anything from anything he's said. Every explanation for why he likes a team is the same:
1. I like Team A.
2. Why. (Note, this is not a question, he says it like a statement.)
3. Player A, Player B, Player C.
The ****ing guy makes Dick Vitale look like Dr. Jack Ramsay.
Rant over. Go crazy hoops fans! It's the most funnest time of the year!
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