Imperial Valley Press

March Madness moves on to the Sweet 16

- BY JOHN MARSHALL AP Basketball Writer THE TEAMS TOP PLAYERS

The opening weekend of the NCAA Tournament was not madness. It was straight bonkers.

A No. 16 seed knocked off a No. 1 for the first time in 136 tries. Two No. 1s failed to get through to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2004 and the fourth time overall.

Defending national champion North Carolina, gone. Loyola-Chicago and it super scout nun, Sister Jean, in.

And that was just the beginning.

The regional round is up next. Whatever’s crazier than bonkers, that’s what we can probably expect.

Here’s what to look for: Villanova. The No. 1 Wildcats have that look, the one they had winning the 2016 title.

Kansas. The other No. 1 still left looks pretty good, too.

Duke. Blueblood Blue Devils are back in the Sweet 16.

Michigan. The highest seed left on the left side of the bracket, the No. 3 Wolverines are on a roll.

Gonzaga. Don’t count the Zags out for another Final Four trip — they’re playing that well and have confident freshman Zach Norvell Jr. on their side.

West Virginia. Getting through Press Virginia and Jevon Carter will take mettle.

Texas A&M. The Aggies’ up-and-down season is trending the right direction at the right time.

Kentucky. The youngest team in basketball is long, athletic and, as usually is the case with Coach Cal’s teams, playing its best basketball late in the season.

Texas Tech. The Red Raiders are in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2005 and may not be done.

Clemson. Shoot like they have so far, it’s going to be tough to stop these high-scoring Tigers.

Purdue. The Boilermake­rs found a way to beat Butler without Isaac Haas. Taking down Texas A&M might be a little more difficult if he can’t find a brace the NCAA is OK with.

Chicago-Loyola. The Ramblers wrecked brackets across the country and are rambling into the Sweet 16 with a 98-yearold nun on their side, so don’t count them out.

Nevada. Coach Eric Musselman has done a superb job his third season in Reno and could spoil the Ramblers’ run.

Syracuse. Those complaints about the Orange getting into the field of 68 dissipated quickly with wins over TCU and Michigan State.

Kansas State. The Wildcats crashed Maryland-Baltimore County’s dance party and have two NCAA Tournament wins despite playing without All-Big 12 forward Dean Wade (foot). He’s expected to return.

Florida State. Taking down No. 1 Xavier can’t be taken lightly and neither can the Seminoles.

Marvin Bagley III, Duke. A lottery pick next year, he could help the Blue Devils cut down the nets this year.

Jalen Brunson, Villanova. The national player of the year contender has teamed with Mikal Bridges to form an unstoppabl­e duo.

Devonte Graham, Kansas. Need a big bucket, scoring, defense — whatever it takes, the Jayhawks’ senior guard provides it.

Jevon Carter, West Virginia. Built like an NFL fullback, he can shut down whoever you put in front of him. The match-up with Villanova’s Brunson could be the best of the Sweet 16, if not the entire tournament.

Zach Norvell Jr., Gonzaga. The player known as “Snacks” has been feasting on NCAA Tournament opponents.

Keenan Evans, Texas Tech. He makes the Red Raiders go.

 ??  ?? In this Saturday photo, Duke’s Marvin Bagley III shoots against Rhode Island during the first half of a second-round game in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament in Pittsburgh. AP PHOTO/KEITH SRAKOCIC
In this Saturday photo, Duke’s Marvin Bagley III shoots against Rhode Island during the first half of a second-round game in the NCAA men’s college basketball tournament in Pittsburgh. AP PHOTO/KEITH SRAKOCIC

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