New York Post

TOUGH TO STOP

Gonzaga, Baylor still heavy favorites amid slew of upsets

- Zach Braziller zbraziller@nypost.com

THE talk of the tournament has revolved around all the upsets, the Pac-12’s dominance and the Big Ten’s failures. But for all the surprises and unexpected survivors, the first two rounds of March Madness has given us one narrative that dates back to January.

Gonzaga and Baylor are clearly the two best teams in the country, and there may not even be a close third.

The No. 1 Zags won their two tournament games by a combined 59 points. The No. 1 Bears won their two by 37. They both faced quality second-round opponents — Gonzaga drew No. 8 Oklahoma and Baylor drew No. 9 Wisconsin — who played well and still had very little chance of pulling the upset.

Gonzaga and Baylor are a combined 52-2 this season. Baylor’s two losses were at least in part due to the team having a threeweek COVID-19 pause.

It’s hard to see Gonzaga, which will meet No. 5 Creighton in the Sweet 16 followed by the No. 6 USC/No. 7 Oregon winner, losing before the Final Four. Baylor’s road is a bit more troublesom­e, with a potential Elite Eight matchup with No. 3 Arkansas.

It wouldn’t be a surprise to see both teams cruise into the final weekend without getting pushed to the wire.

Below are some other storylines to follow for the second weekend:

Yes, there are four double-digit seeds remaining, the most since 2011. But there is just one Cinder- ella: No. 15 Oral Roberts.

No. 11 Syracuse, No. 11 UCLA and No. 12 Oregon State are powerconfe­rence teams that have played very well the last few weeks, and are no cuddly underdogs. The Summit Conference champion, meanwhile, is the lone feel-good story left. It’s star, 6-foot-1 guard Max Abmas, was a two-star recruit who had just four Division I scholarshi­p offers, and leads the country in scoring. ORU is just the second 15-seed to reach the Sweet 16. It was the fourth seed in the Summit Conference Tournament.

One of the best storylines of the tournament has been the emergence of Buddy Boeheim. He was lights out in torching No. 6 San Diego State in the first round, and even better in the second half against No. 3 West Virginia two days later. Jim Boeheim’s son, who has gone from a 3-point specialist as a freshman to all-around game-changer torched the Mountainee­rs when the game was on the line after struggling early on. In two tournament games, he’s averaging 27.5 points per game and has made 13 of 23 3-point attempts.

Now comes an even greater test: No. 2 Houston and AAC Defensive Player of the Year DeJon Jarreau. The Cougars are ranked 11th in defensive efficiency and feature athletes with length that will test Buddy Boeheim.

I didn’t list Loyola Chicago as a Cinderella for a reason. That descriptio­n doesn’t fit. The Ramblers may come from the midmajor Missouri Valley Conference, but they hardly resemble a mid-major program. They have already overwhelme­d two high-major schools, beating No. 9 Georgia Tech by 11 in the opener

and outclassed No. 1 Illinois, one of the pre-tournament favorites, on Sunday. Sister Jean and Co. are here because they are incredibly well-coached, elite defensivel­y and experience­d, led by seniors Cameron Krutwig and Lucas Williamson, contributo­rs on the 2018 Final Four team. Porter Moser’s team is my favorite right now to reach the Final Four in the blown-open Midwest Region.

The Pac-12’s dominance was one of the stories of the opening weekend. The conference went a stunning 9-1, with only No. 5 Colorado bounced. It had just one team — USC — ranked in the final Associated Press poll of the regular season, and now has a tournament-high four teams in the Sweet 16. USC and Oregon meet in a West Region semifinal, so the conference will have at least one Elite Eight team. I wouldn’t bet on any more, though.

UCLA will have its hands full with Alabama, and Oregon State will be an underdog against Loyola Chicago. These are not good matchups for either team. The dream run may be coming to an end.

 ?? Getty Images (2) ?? CRUISE CONTROL: Though there have been lots of upsets in the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, Corey Kispert and Gonzaga, and MaCio Teague (left) and Baylor, still look like the clear front-runners.
Getty Images (2) CRUISE CONTROL: Though there have been lots of upsets in the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament, Corey Kispert and Gonzaga, and MaCio Teague (left) and Baylor, still look like the clear front-runners.
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