Las Vegas Review-Journal

Tar Heels move from left out to top seed in West

Region loaded with high-scoring squads

- By John Marshall

North Carolina is the No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament West Region a year after being left out of the bracket.

The fourth-ranked Tar Heels will open March Madness down the road in Charlotte on Thursday against the First Four winner between Howard and Wagner.

“To be given an opportunit­y to play in the NCAA Tournament is a big deal,” North Carolina coach Hubert Davis said. “I know the importance of being able to play close to home, so playing in Charlotte for potentiall­y the first two rounds and being closer to our fans is a big deal for us, but it’s just fun coming into the tournament.”

The West also includes Arizona, Alabama, Baylor and Michigan State on the road to Los Angeles for the regional final.

North Carolina found itself in a rare position in Davis’ second season a year ago, going from preseason No. 1 to watching the NCAA Tournament from home.

Behind RJ Davis and Armando Bacot, the Tar Heels opened this season at No. 19 in the AP Top 25 and steadily climbed the polls, reaching No. 3 for a three-week stretch.

North Carolina went 27-7 overall and 17-3 to win its first outright Atlantic Coast Conference regular-season title in seven years before losing to North Carolina State 84-76 in the ACC tournament championsh­ip game.

Davis was stellar in his senior season, leading the ACC with 21.4 points per game. Bacot continued to dominate in the paint, averaging 14.1 points and 10.2 rebounds. Both played in the 2022 national championsh­ip game.

The Tar Heels also got a big lift from Stanford transfer Harrison Ingram and sharpshoot­er Cormac Ryan to sweep rival Duke.

No. 2 Wildcats

Arizona is a No. 2 seed for the second straight season. The sixthranke­d Wildcats are hoping for a better outcome than last year, when they were bounced by No. 15 seed Princeton in the first round.

Arizona (25-8) is built to make a much deeper run.

The Wildcats have size, depth and are the nation’s third-highest scoring team at 87.9 points per game. They also have Caleb Love.

The North Carolina transfer was stellar during his lone season in the desert, earning Pac-12 player of the year honors while leading the Wildcats with 18.1 points per game.

Arizona opens the 2024 bracket against Long Beach State on Thursday in Salt Lake City. The Beach won the Big West tournament less than a week after the school announced it was parting ways with coach Dan Monson after 17 seasons.

High-scoring Tide

Arizona isn’t the only high-scoring team in the West.

No. 4 seed Alabama is in the NCAA Tournament for the fourth straight season under coach Nate Oats, including a trip to the Sweet 16 a year ago.

The 19th-ranked Crimson Tide average a nation-best 90.8 points per game and have four players who average in double figures, led by Mark Sears’ 21.1 points.

Alabama opens the NCAA Tournament against No. 13 Charleston (27-7) on Friday in Spokane, Washington.

Battling Bears

Baylor got bounced from the Big 12 tournament with a poor-shooting 76-62 loss to Iowa State but did enough during the regular season to earn a No. 3 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Led by Ja’kobe Walter and Rayj Dennis, the Bears (23-10) had wins against No. 7 Iowa State, No. 12 Auburn, No. 16 Kansas and No. 20 Brigham Young in the regular season.

Baylor won the 2021 national championsh­ip and is looking to make a deep run after being knocked out in the second round the past two seasons. The Bears open the 2024 bracket Friday against No. 14 Colgate (25-9) in Memphis.

The rest

Saint Mary’s proved to be the best team in the West Coast Conference, ending No. 17 Gonzaga’s four-year run as tournament champion. The 21st-ranked Gaels (26-7) are the West’s No. 5 seed and will face WAC champion and No. 12 Grand Canyon (29-4) on Friday in Spokane.

Behind high-scoring big man Daron Holmes II, Dayton (24-7) is back in the bracket for the first time since 2018 as the West’s No. 7 seed. The Flyers will face No. 10 UNR (267) on Thursday in Salt Lake City.

NCAA selection committee chairman Charles Mcclelland said New Mexico “stole” a bid by beating San Diego State in the Mountain West title game. The thievery earned the Lobos a No. 11 seed and a game against No. 6 Clemson (21-11) on Friday in Memphis.

 ?? John Locher The Associated Press ?? Guard Pelle Larsson and Arizona lost out on a chance for a No. 1 seed after losing in the Pac-12 semifinals to eventual champion Oregon.
John Locher The Associated Press Guard Pelle Larsson and Arizona lost out on a chance for a No. 1 seed after losing in the Pac-12 semifinals to eventual champion Oregon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States