Las Vegas Review-Journal

Defending champs at top of bracket

Conference upsets throw tournament into major disarray

- By Eddie Pells

Even before the brackets came out Sunday, March Madness was a muddled mess.

About the closest thing to a sure thing: Uconn.

The defending champion Huskies earned the top seed in the NCAA Tournament, joined by Houston,purdue and North Carolina as No. 1 seeds in a bracket that started going haywire even before the pairings were announced Sunday evening.

Of those top teams, only Uconn heads into the tournament coming off a win. The others lost in their conference tournament­s, yet those were hardly the only surprises over the final weekend of hoops before the sport’s main event hits center stage.

Unexpected titles placed teams like Oregon, North Carolina State and even Duquesne, none of whom were projected to make the tournament, into the field of 68 via the automatic bids that go to conference champions. The teams they beat gobbled up a handful of the 34 atlarge bids, thus shrinking the number of spots available to teams on the so-called bubble.

“It was one of the most difficult that I’ve been involved in,” Charles Mcclelland, the chairman of the selection committee, said of the process that had everyone up until 2:30 a.m. the night before. “And I talked to some of the staff that’s been in that room for the last 20 years, and they said this is probably the most difficult selection process that they’ve been a part of.”

It showed in a bracket that had its share of head-scratchers:

Two of the last four teams in — Boise State and Colorado State — weren’t even considered on the bubble by most bracketolo­gists.

“A little surprised to be honest,” Boise State coach Leon Rice said of his team’s No. 10 seed.

Some of the teams left out — St. John’s and Oklahoma — were thought to be safely in as late as Saturday. St. John’s decided not to even play in the NIT.

“How is St. John’s so far off the cutline?” said Uconn coach Dan Hurley, who was surprised only three Big East teams made it.

Florida Atlantic and Texas A&M were considered bubble teams but ended up with 8 and 9 seeds, respective­ly. All of this could be fodder for the growing conversati­on about expanding the bracket to 76, maybe 80 teams. Under that scenario, bubble teams like Pittsburgh, Seton Hall and even Indiana State would almost certainly be in.

The tournament starts Tuesday with two First Four games, including a matchup between Virginia and Colorado State. The 32 first-round games take place Thursday and Friday. The Final Four is set for April 6-8 in Glendale, Arizona.

Uconn, which opens Friday against Stetson, is trying to become the first repeat champion since Florida in 2006-07. The Huskies (313) are on a seven-game win streak and are tied with James Madison for most wins in the nation.

For all its excellence this season, Uconn ended up in an East region with two of last year’s Final Four teams (San Diego State and Florida Atlantic) along with Iowa State, which is coming off a 69-41 win over Houston and was thought, for a minute, to be top-seed material.

“If we’re able to get to our identity … and then we play harder than you, we keep ourselves from being vulnerable that way,” Hurley said.

Both the SEC and Big 12 placed eight teams in the field, while the Big Ten and Mountain West each had six.

Michigan State extended its nation-leading streak to 26 straight years in the tournament. The ninth-seeded Spartans will play Mississipp­i State on Thursday, the same day No. 5 seed Gonzaga plays No. 12 Mcneese. In February, the Zags were considered a bubble team, but a stretch of nine wins in 10 games changed that, and coach Mark Few’s team made the field for the 25th consecutiv­e year.

 ?? Frank Franklin II The Associated Press ?? Coach Dan Hurley and his Connecticu­t Huskies are the only one of the four No. 1 seeds that survived their own conference tournament­s.
Frank Franklin II The Associated Press Coach Dan Hurley and his Connecticu­t Huskies are the only one of the four No. 1 seeds that survived their own conference tournament­s.

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