The Jerusalem Post

March Madness revealed: Quick reactions from Tournament bracket release

- COMMENTARY • By CHRIS BUMBACA

Erased by the pandemic a year ago, conference tournament week did not disappoint, bringing the men’s college basketball world to the most important date on the calendar: Selection Sunday.

The 68-team field – all bound for the Indianapol­is area – was released on Sunday.

Entering Sunday, the first four out included Wichita State, Colorado State, Boise State and Saint Louis

But that’s not how the selection committee saw things.

Meanwhile, VCU, Syracuse, Drake and Utah State were slotted as the “last four in” — all four made the dance. However, the committee noted UCLA and Michigan State as part of this group, as Syracuse and VCU won’t have to participat­e in the First Four games on Thursday.

The No. 1 seeds are Gonzaga (West), Baylor (South), Michigan (East) and Illinois (Midwest).

Here are our quick reactions:

Wolverines No. 1 in feisty East region

Michigan was the second Big Ten team to secure a No. 1 seed, and assuming the Wolverines get by either Mount St. Mary’s or Texas Southern in the first round, they could have their hands full in the second round with either LSU or St. Bonaventur­e, which should be one of the region’s best first-round games.

Georgetown will likely be a popular 12-5 upset pick over Colorado after the Hoyas captured the Big East Tournament title. Michigan State and UCLA will participat­e in one of the four play-in games for a chance at BYU. Texas (3), Connecticu­t (7) and Maryland (10) provide name-power to the region.

A fascinatin­g coaching matchup will be on display in the 2-15 matchup: Nate Oats’ Alabama, SEC regular-season and tournament winners, against Iona’s Rick Pitino, who is perhaps saving his best work for March.

Illinois leads crowded Midwest region

Sister Jean. Cade Cunningham. The Big Ten conference tournament champion. A red-hot ACC squad. The Midwest has a ton going on.

Loyola-Chicago earned the No. 8 seed, which means Sister Jean and the Ramblers faithful will set their sights on Josh Pastner and the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. Oklahoma State has a date with Liberty in the No. 4 vs No. 13 game, and plenty of eyes will be on

Cunningham, a potential top-five pick in the NBA draft.

Leading the region are two teams that won their conference tournament­s on Sunday. No. 1 Illinois will face Drexel, while No. 2 Houston is taking on Cleveland State. West Virginia (No. 3), Tennessee (No. 5) and San Diego State (No. 6) add some depth to the region.

To round out the region, San Diego State takes on Syracuse in the 6-11 matchup, while Clemson and Rutgers will battle in the 7 vs 10 game.

Bears lead the South

The Baylor Bears entered the season with high expectatio­ns and won the Big 12 for the first time in more than 70 years. Now they have a No. 1 seed.

Ohio State, less than a half hour removed from their Big Ten championsh­ip game loss, learned it would be the region’s No. 2 seed. Utah State survived the bubble (proving its win over Colorado State was needed).

Virginia Tech (10) faces Florida (7) in the first round, and there’s more SEC flair with No. 3 Arkansas. Purdue checks in as a No. 4 seed, while Villanova — a two or three seed in most people’s minds until recently — faces Winthrop in a 5-12 matchup. The 8-9 game between North Carolina and Wisconsin should make things interestin­g for the Bears in the second round.

Bulldogs No. 1 overall seed in West

While “regions” don’t matter much this year, Gonzaga earned the top seed in the West –its fourth No. 1 seed in the last eight seasons. Except this time, the Bulldogs are the No. 1 overall seed in the tournament. But there is championsh­ip pedigree on the horizon.

They will play the winner of Norfolk State-Appalachia­n State play-in game. Also in the region are the No. 5 Creighton, defending champion Virginia (No. 4), Oregon (No. 7) and VCU (No. 10).

Two bubble teams, Drake and Wichita State, will play each other in the 11-seed play-in game and the victor will have a date against USC.

At the bottom of the region, Iowa will face Grand Canyon in the 2-15 matchup. That sets up for a potential battle between National Player of the Year candidate Luka Garza and the Bulldogs’ frontcourt.

Illinois wins Big Ten Tournament title in OT battle vs Ohio State

They can’t call themselves the regular-season conference champions, but the Illini are kings of the postseason in arguably the sport’s best conference this season.

In a fitting way to lead into the bracket reveal, Illinois and Ohio State battled at a high level for 45 minutes with the Illini winning 91-88 in overtime. It was the Buckeyes’ second overtime game in three days.

Andre Curbelo was Illinois’s spark, and he and Kofi Cockburn finished with 16 points. Buckeyes guard Duane Washington Jr. put up a careerhigh 32 points and grabbed eight rebounds in the loss. The Illini bench outscored Ohio State’s reserves by a 37-15 margin

The win almost surely locked Illinois into a No. 1 seed – the first time it will have that distinctio­n since 2005, when Illinois fell to North Carolina in the NCAA Tournament championsh­ip game.

Now it’s time for the brackets.

Houston throttles Cincinnati in AAC Championsh­ip

Junior guard Quentin Grimes went 5-for-9 from deep to lead all scorers with 21 points, while sophomore guard Marcus Sasser added 16 in the 91-54 blowuot. Defensivel­y, Houston held Cincinnati to shooting 27.7 percent from the field.

The Cougars entered the day as a No. 2 seed and their first American Athletic Conference tournament championsh­ip will keep them on that line later Sunday (bracketolo­gy had them in Illinois’ region, with Texas and Purdue as the No. 3 and 4 seeds, respective­ly). Houston’s win should help the bubble teams, as a Cincinnati victory would have cannibaliz­ed another automatic bid.

Alabama holds off LSU in wild finish at SEC Tournament championsh­ip

The Tigers hung with the Crimson Tide all game and had multiple, point-blank chances for a last-second victory but simply could not put the ball in the basket.

Alabama defended its regular-season title with its first conference tournament victory in 30 years.

Bonnies defend Atlantic 10 title

For all of the upsets during championsh­ip week, No. 1 St. Bonaventur­e did not relinquish its strangleho­ld on the Atlantic 10. The Bonnies dispatched the VCU rams in the title game behind Kyle Lofton’s 23 points. Saint Bonaventur­e entered Sunday as a 10-seed.

(USA Today/TNS)

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