League tournaments set to impact who gets high NCAA seeds
Conference tournaments are likely to carry significant implications when it comes to seeding for the NCAA Tournament.
The Atlantic Coast Conference becomes the first of the five power conferences to open tournament play Tuesday, while the Big Ten, Southeastern, American Athletic and Atlantic-10 conferences will go all the way to Selection Sunday before crowning their champion.
Here are some of the top storylines to watch this week for AP Top 25 teams: BIG 12 No. 1 Kansas is playing like the nation’s best team in a year with plenty of uncertainty at the top. A run through the Big 12 Tournament in Kansas City, Missouri, could put the Jayhawks in position to claim the No. 1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament.
Kansas (28-3, 17-1) has won at least a share of the Big 12 regularseason title in 19 of 24 years, and is going for its 12th tournament ti
tle. That path could include a third matchup with fifthranked Baylor (26-4, 15-3), which split the regular-season series.
Kansas has won 16 straight games since that Jan. 11 loss to the Bears and has a national-best 12 wins in Quadrant 1 games to top its NCAA resume, along with playing the nation’s top-ranked nonconference strength of schedule.
The Bears, who spent five weeks at No. 1 in the AP Top 25, have lost three of five. But they are second to Kansas with 11 Quadrant 1 wins and could eliminate any question of whether they should get a No. 1 regional seed by winning the tournament. ACC Fourth-ranked Florida State won its first ACC regular-season championship. The question is how high of a seed can the Seminoles earn if they pair that with the league tournament title.
FSU joins No. 10 Duke, No. 15 Louisville and No. 17 Virginia in earning byes into Thursday’s quarterfinals in Greensboro, North Carolina. The Seminoles (26-5, 16-4) are pursuing their second tournament championship, the other coming in 2012.
FSU was solidly on the 2-line in seeding on BracketMatrix.com’s average of 122 tournament projections as of Monday afternoon, and it’s unclear if the Seminoles would be able to climb to a No. 1 seed without losses by highly ranked teams like Dayton or Baylor. BIG TEN The Big Ten is the nation’s top-ranked conference in KenPom’s efficiency metrics, far ahead of the Big 12 and the Big East, though the league has offered no dominant team.
The Big Ten Tournament, starting Wednesday in Indianapolis, will give those teams one more chance to make their case as the league’s best.
Ninth-ranked Michigan State, No. 12 Maryland and No. 18 Wisconsin tied for the regular-season title, though the Badgers will have the top seed for a field featuring a nationalbest six ranked teams.
Every Big Ten school has at least seven losses, with the Spartans and Terrapins the highest of that group in BracketMatrix as No. 3 seeds while the league flirts with around 10 tournament bids. But it’s possible the Big Ten might have zero No. 1 or No. 2 seeds, which has happened just once dating to the 2008 bracket (in 2017). BIG EAST No. 16 Seton Hall squandered two chances to win the Big East regular-season outright. The Pirates ended up sharing the title with No. 7 Creighton and No. 11 Villanova.