Chattanooga Times Free Press

Things to know about March Madness

- BY STEPHEN HAWKINS

There are 67 games to be played over the next three weeks to determine the next national champion, a magical time known as the NCAA tournament.

So what’s in store in 2017? Is there any way to top the madness of last year’s tournament filled with double-digit upsets and an incredible ending?

Kris Jenkins’ buzzer-beating 3-pointer gave Villanova its first championsh­ip since 1985 after North Carolina tied the game on Marcus Paige’s double-clutch 3-pointer with 4.7 seconds left.

Anyone up for a rematch in the April 3 title game in Phoenix? It’s possible with the defending national champion Wildcats and North Carolina, a five-time champ, are No. 1 seeds on opposite sides of this year’s bracket.

Here are a few things to watch with the NCAA Tournament about to get underway:

› STILL NO. 1’s: Kansas (284) and North Carolina (27-7) kept their expected No. 1 seeds after losses in their conference tournament­s.

The Jayhawks, who won their 13th consecutiv­e Big 12 regular-season title, lost their only Big 12 tournament game 85-82 to TCU in Kansas City, where they could play again in the Sweet 16 if they win a couple of NCAA tournament games. ACC

regular-season champion North Carolina fell to Duke 93-83 in the league tournament semifinals.

Defending national champion Villanova (31-3), the overall No. 1 seed, swept the Big East regular-season and conference titles, as did Gonzaga (32-1) in the West Coast Conference.

› DOUBLE DOWN: A record 10 double-digit seeds won first-round games in last year’s NCAA tournament. Four of those winners are back in the field this year, three of them double-digit seeds again.

Gonzaga, which made it to

the Sweet 16 as a No. 11 seed last year, is a No. 1 this time.

Middle Tennessee State pulled off the biggest shocker as a No. 15 seed last year with a 90-81 win over Michigan State, which went into that tournament as trendy pick to win a national title. The Blue Raiders are now a No. 12 seed against Minnesota.

Virginia Commonweal­th is a No. 10 seed again, this time against Saint Mary’s after winning its opener over Oregon State last March.

› ON THE WRONG SIDE: Baylor, a No. 3 seed again this season and playing New Mexico State, has lost to double-digit seeds in its opener in the last two NCAA tournament­s.

The Big 12 Bears lost to 12th-seeded Yale last year after 14th-seed Georgia State pulled off a first-round upset in 2015 on R.J. Hunter’s 3-pointer with 2.7 seconds left.

› REGULAR ATTENDERS: Tom Izzo is in his 20th straight NCAA tournament as Michigan State’s coach. Bill Self is making his 19th consecutiv­e appearance — 14th with Big 12 champion Kansas (half of the Jayhawks’ record 28 consecutiv­e NCAA appearance­s) after trips with Tulsa and Illinois.

There’s no chance of Izzo and Self both getting to the Sweet 16. The Spartans and Jayhawks, both with a national title under their coaches, could meet in a second-round game Sunday in the Midwest Regional at Tulsa, Oklahoma.

› PRINCETON MEMORIES: The last time Princeton won an NCAA tournament game, Mitch Henderson was a guard who scored 19 points against UNLV in a first-round game in 1998. That was two years after he was also part of an opening-round win over defending champion UCLA in coach Pete Carril’s last season with the Tigers.

Henderson is now Princeton’s coach, and the Ivy League champions are in their first NCAA since 2011, as a 12th seed that will play Notre Dame.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Villanova’s Kris Jenkins (2) celebrates after the Wildcats’ championsh­ip win against Creighton in the final of the Big East men’s tournament Saturday in New York. Villanova won 74-60.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Villanova’s Kris Jenkins (2) celebrates after the Wildcats’ championsh­ip win against Creighton in the final of the Big East men’s tournament Saturday in New York. Villanova won 74-60.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States