The Denver Post

Upset specials altering the next round

- By Aaron Beard EAST Kevin C. Cox, Getty Images MIDWEST WEST SOUTH

After little CHARLOTTE, went according to plan in the opening weekend of the NCAA Tournament, the bracket has a wildly different look for the Sweet 16 than many expected.

Out: Two 1-seeds (Virginia and Xavier) and a pair of 2-seeds (North Carolina and Cincinnati).

In: Two No. 11 seeds (Syracuse and Loyola-Chicago).

There are only seven of the top 16 seeds still alive for the regional rounds.

The Cavaliers’ historic loss to 16-seed UMBC took out the top overall seed and thrust Villanova into the role of favorite, while preseason No. 1 Duke was dominant in its two tournament wins.

Despite all the bracket turmoil, the power conference­s got 12 teams into the Sweet 16, with four coming from both the Atlantic Coast Conference and the Big 12.

Here’s a look at the updated Final Four paths for the top remaining seeds:

This is the region that came closest to following the script.

Four of the top five seeds survived: No. 1 Villanova, No. 2 Purdue, No. 3 Texas Tech and No. 5 West Virginia. And the Wildcats (32-4) will have the shortest travel (about 315 miles) by heading to Boston as they pursue a second national title in three seasons.

“My good vibes are coming from how this team’s playing, how unselfishl­y they play,” Villanova coach Jay Wright said after Saturday’s win against Alabama .

One story line to watch: the status of 7-foot-2 Purdue center Isaac Haas, who broke his elbow in the first-round. Haas warmed up before Sunday’s win against Butler but an official said shortly before tipoff that the big man’s brace hadn’t been approved for competitio­n. Consider this one an ACC Invitation­al.

Three of the four teams to advance to Omaha are from the ACC: No. 2 Duke, No. 5 Clemson and No. 11 Syracuse. They’ll join top-seeded Kansas.

The Jayhawks (29-7) are trying to return to the Final Four for the first time since 2012 after two straight regional-final losses.

The Blue Devils (28-7) meet the Orange (23-13).

Duke and Syracuse met in Cameron Indoor Stadium on Feb. 24, with the Blue Devils holding the Orange to 32 percent shooting in a 60-44 win.

Things were set to go to form Sunday, only to see top-seeded Xavier and No. 2 North Carolina lose. Now Big Ten champion Michigan headlines the quartet.

The third-seeded Wolverines (30-7) — who beat Houston on a last-second 3-pointer — will meet seventh-seeded Texas A&M (22-12) after the Aggies blew out the reigning champion Tar Heels in their home state.

Fourth-seeded Gonzaga (32-4) will face ninth-seeded Florida State (22-11) after the Seminoles’ upset of the Musketeers .

“I think what you see happening in college basketball, it’s almost like a revolution,” FSU coach Leonard Hamilton said. “And what happens is you start categorizi­ng people by the reputation that their players get going into college.”

This is where there was the most March Madness.

None of the top-four seeds advanced, the first time in tournament history that has happened in a region. So the games in Atlanta will now be headlined by 5seed Kentucky (26-10).

The Wildcats followed their run to the Southeaste­rn Conference Tournament title by surviving an upset bid from Davidson then beating Buffalo — which had upset fourth-seeded Arizona. They’ll face another set of Wildcats on Thursday in ninthseede­d Kansas State (24-11), which ended UMBC’s historic weekend in Charlotte.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States