Philadelphia, PA (Sports Network) -- The SEC's loss is the Mountain West's
gain.
During this college basketball season, up is down, Boise State is in and the
defending national champion Kentucky Wildcats are out.
That's just a taste at the state of the race with conference tournaments right
around the corner. And this race, normally weighed heavily towards the
powerful few, has suddenly turned wide open, with the mid-majors in the mix to
steal a larger-than-normal number of at-large bids.
And we aren't talking VCU, Butler and Gonzaga mid-majors, but the tried and
true little guys like Middle Tennessee, Akron, the aforementioned Broncos and
others.
Nothing is set in stone, but the SEC took a big step back since the last time
we spoke, while the Mountain West has thrown another of its teams into big-
time bubble discussion.
Let's assess those two leagues and the rest of the nation in Bubble
Breakdown's second act below. As the days go by, we can taste the madness.
The two key numbers next to each bubble member's record are the RPI (ratings
percentage index) and SOS (strength of schedule). The NCAA selection committee
uses both, particularly non-league SOS on the second number, as a barometer of
discussion. If a team makes the initial cut, its profile is dissected further.
We do both as we analyze each power league and the mid-major bubble boys
below:
ACC
IN: Duke, Miami
Welcome back Ryan Kelly. That was a virtuoso 36-point performance by Duke's
lead man on Saturday night in Cameron, which did nothing to dispel the notion
that the Blue Devils are a far better team with its senior forward in the
fold. The good news for the Hurricanes is that the league crown is still
theirs for the taking, but Miami and Duke are in a far more interesting tug-
of-war for NCAA seeding.
To the ACC tourney victor surely goes the spoils, but the loser may also stake
a strong case for a top seed depending on how the other conference tourneys
evolve. The rest of the league includes two teams all but guaranteed to make
the field, one with the most interesting at-large profile in the country and
another clinging to life support.
ON THE RIGHT SIDE
North Carolina (21-8, 11-5; RPI 19, SOS 16): Roy Williams' shift to a four-
guard lineup has resurrected UNC's season from the doldrums, and now the Heels
are winners of five straight with big-time confidence. A tough week ahead (at
Maryland, home versus Duke) gives them more room for seeding growth, and it's
hard to imagine a scenario that leaves the Heels home even if they lay an
unexpected goose egg.
North Carolina State (21-8, 10-6; RPI 23, SOS 24): Take care of business. The
Wolfpack can only do damage to their at-large profile from here on out (Wake
Forest, at Florida State). But even if they do, strong computer numbers and a
soft bubble should catch their fall.
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
Virginia (20-9, 10-6; RPI 65, SOS 127): With equal parts elation and
heartache, the Cavs have taken us on of the state's biggest and best
roller coasters this season. Defeat Duke, storm the court, put yourself in the
field one day, then lose by one in gut-wrenching fashion at Boston College two
days later. I don't think the Cavs can lose again until the ACC tournament, as
each deflating loss reminds the committee of the off-putting setbacks to CAA
bottom dwellers back in non-conference play.
ON THE WRONG SIDE
Maryland (20-9, 8-8; RPI 69, SOS 118): Maryland needs to beat North Carolina
this week. The Terrapins also need to win at Virginia in what could be a
crucial game for both teams. Then, Maryland must hang around until at least
the ACC semifinals. It's a tall order, but the task is its for the taking.
BIG EAST
IN: Georgetown, Louisville, Marquette, Syracuse, Pittsburgh
Georgetown has played itself into No. 1 seed contention, while Syracuse has
played itself into a fight for its protected-seed life. Think we're kidding?
The Orange are 4-6 in their last 10 games, and what happens if they beat
DePaul, lose at Georgetown and bow out early in New York? A precipitous free-
fall could be in order.
Pittsburgh moved off the bubble and punched its ticket with a 2-0 week, which
included the OT rally past bubble-sitter Villanova.
ON THE RIGHT SIDE
Notre Dame (23-7, 11-6; RPI 46, SOS 76): No more messing around. A tough
finale at Louisville is on the horizon. The profile should hold on a weak
bubble even with a loss, but why leave it up to luck (of the Irish)?
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
Cincinnati (20-10, 8-9; RPI 48, SOS 18): Let's walk through the Bearcats
profile. Assuming a regular-season-closing win against South Florida (which is
a must to even play the game), Cincinnati will have an RPI around 50 with
three solid neutral court wins (Oregon, Iowa State, Xavier) and a true road W
at Pittsburgh. The bad losses aren't too bad, and actually the overall profile
isn't either upon further inspection. If the Bearcats finish. 500 in
conference and win a game or two in New York, they will be set.
Villanova (18-12, 9-8; RPI 55, SOS 32): Ah, the fluidity of the bubble.
Villanova missed a golden opportunity at Pittsburgh last week, yet still moved
from the wrong side of the bubble to firmly on it. What gives? From the End of
the Bench took another look at the overall body of work (committee speak) and
deemed its four BIG wins are more than many can offer this time of year.
However, those wins are weighed heavily towards the home court, so the
committee may think 'Nova can't play away from Philadelphia. True or not,
doing nothing to dispel that thought (downing Georgetown at home on Wednesday)
would actually help the Wildcats.
BIG TEN
IN: Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Ohio State
The Big Ten is pretty much drama-free from here on out, although the race for
a No. 1 seed still includes the Hoosiers, Wolverines and even Spartans if they
navigate their way to the conference tournament title. Indiana did a little
damage to its geographic placement with a Senior Night loss to suddenly
streaking Ohio State on Tuesday.
ON THE RIGHT SIDE
Minnesota (20-9, 8-8; RPI 15, SOS 2): So, I see "good" or "November" Minnesota
has re-entered the building. A victory over Indiana and a pounding of Penn
State pretty much sealed the Gophers' bid. Unless they end with two losses
and a first-round exit in the conference tournament, the quality wins and
computer numbers are too strong to overlook.
Illinois (21-10, 8-9; RPI 30, SOS 8): See Minnesota. The computer numbers are
sound, the quality wins are better than most, and without a complete fall on
their quality face, the Illini will dance. Let's just hope that free-fall we
speak of didn't start Tuesday night in Iowa City.
Note: We are keeping our eye on Iowa after beating Illinois on Tuesday night
and will reassess a late Hawkeyes' surge next week.
BIG 12
IN: Kansas, Kansas State, Oklahoma State
Oklahoma State joins the Jayhawks and Wildcats in the lock category. Twelve
conference wins, including a victory at Kansas, is more than enough to
solidify its inclusion. The Jayhawks are still eying a No. 1 seed come March,
which says a lot considering their three-game skid back in February.
ON THE RIGHT SIDE
Oklahoma (19-9, 10-6; RPI 22, SOS 9): The Sooners handled their business in
decisive fashion against Iowa State, now all that's left between them and 12
conference victories are West Virginia and TCU. Even though Baylor is
Oklahoma's best win outside Kansas, 12 conference W's and great computer
numbers (see discussion on schedule manipulation last week) should be enough.
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
Iowa State (19-10, 9-7; RPI 53, SOS 63): The Cyclones are living on the edge.
No true great wins (two near misses, including one caused by bad officiating
against Kansas) except for a barrel of other bubble victims and two not-so-
great losses at Texas and Texas Tech. Now comes a Wednesday home date with
Oklahoma State and with it one last chance to add a signature win they may
need when all shakes out.
ON THE WRONG SIDE
Baylor (17-13, 8-9; RPI 64, SOS 27): Is Baylor that team with an eye-popping
number of losses that storms its way into the NCAA's? Likely not, but From the
End of the Bench will wait until after the Kansas game to kick the Bears off
the bubble. The Rodney McGruder dagger at the buzzer last weekend epitomized
Baylor's late-season skid.
PAC-12
IN: Arizona, UCLA, Oregon
UCLA jumped into lock territory after completing a season sweep of Arizona
last weekend. Oregon also earned an invite in our eyes with the return of
Dominic Artis and a victory over in-state rival Oregon State. Yes, the Ducks'
computer numbers are very average, but the true road wins at UNLV and Arizona
and 12 conference wins at a minimum should be enough.
ON THE RIGHT SIDE
California (20-9, 12-5; 41, SOS 35): California is the team no one is really
talking about, winners of seven straight as those hoop-heads on the East are
sleeping. Alan Crabbe may be known as the shovee at the hands of his head
coach, but the guard is positioned to win the league's Player of the Year, yet
few even mention his name in All-America discussion. The Bears are that team
that makes the Sweet 16 to many people's surprise, but not our readers.
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
Colorado (19-9, 9-7; RPI 27, SOS 22): Colorado is one of those teams that
smiles when they hear "soft bubble" come out of an analyst's mouth. The
Buffaloes are riding at-large worthy computer numbers and a few good non-
league wins (they are important!) against Baylor, Colorado State and Murray
State.
SEC
IN: Florida, Missouri
With each loss, the injury-plagued Gators scramble for a few more frequent
flyer miles. Florida will still be in the 2-3 discussion come seeding time,
but there aren't many locations in Gainesville's vicinity, so it could be a
long trip hopping multiple time zones.
Unlike other bubble columns, we are also locking Missouri into the field. The
Tigers' profile isn't noticeably different from other teams still sitting on
the outside looking in, but Missouri is the SEC's second-best team and a power
conference isn't getting just one bid. It just isn't.
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
Kentucky (20-9, 11-5; RPI 51, SOS 67): The committee wanted Kentucky to show
it something last Saturday, and boy did it ever. The Wildcats didn't look the
at-large part at Arkansas, a loss made even more damaging when you consider
the committee really must judge the Wildcats' merit post-Nerlens Noel. So what
happens if the Wildcats' split their final two games at Georgia and against
Florida? Do they need the game against the Gators? Could the committee really
leave a 21-win Kentucky team out of the tournament? We will try to answer
those questions a week from now.
Tennessee (17-11, 9-7; RPI 56, SOS 38): Two wins later, Tennessee will be
trending toward a bid as the conference tournament begins. Anything less and a
once-rolling locomotive will need to rev up the engine in Nashville.
Mississippi (22-8, 11-6; RPI 58, SOS 136): Like the other SEC bubble clubs,
Ole Miss needs to rely on inventory at this point. Even one last conference W,
giving the Rebels 12 in league play, might not be enough save for a deep
conference tourney run. The loss last week to rival Mississippi State was that
damaging.
Alabama (19-11, 11-6; RPI 60, SOS 88): The Crimson Tide will need to
differentiate themselves from the Rebels in the SEC tournament after losing a
tight bout to Ole Miss on Tuesday night. The profiles are very similar, but
the Rebels have a leg up after the victory.
MOUNTAIN WEST
IN: New Mexico, UNLV
For loyal readers of this space, my love of the Mountain West is no surprise.
The players, the coaches, the storylines, and the quality late night hoops --
what's not to love? The Lobos are a sleeper pick for a No. 2 seed, and the
push-and-shove behind them is full of quality.
UNLV joined lock territory after rallying past Boise State on Tuesday night.
The Rebels have the talent for a deep tournament run.
RIGHT SIDE OF THE BUBBLE
Colorado State (22-7, 9-5; RPI 17, SOS 27): Lets not talk about the Rams'
profile, as they are likely fine. Instead, let's point out that Boise State's
Derrick Marks was the latest evidence of a disturbing trend. Colorado State
can't stay in front of athletic perimeter players. Marks scored 33 points in
the SECOND half in Boise State's victory over Colorado State last weekend.
Keep this fact in mind for March Madness: the Rams can't stay with athletic,
perimeter-oriented teams.
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
San Diego State (20-8, 8-6; RPI 32, SOS 29): There's nothing wrong with
falling at the Pit, but that just ramps up the pressure this week against Air
Force and at Boise State. The computer numbers suggest the Aztecs may not need
both, but a loss in Boise followed by a MWC quarterfinal loss (perhaps to the
Broncos again) could put them on the tightrope.
Boise State (20-9, 8-7; RPI 40, SOS 65): Boise State was one of the few teams
that actually handled its business last week. A 2-0 week, including the win
over Colorado State, moves the Broncos squarely onto the bubble. Where they go
from here depends on them (once again). They let a bid-clinching opportunity
vanish in the second half in Las Vegas, but they get one more chance against
San Diego State. A win and the Broncos are likely in; a loss and a trip to the
MWC semis may be warranted.
ATLANTIC 10
IN: Saint Louis, VCU, Butler
So, that's how you make a statement. VCU's "Havoc" defense caused plenty of it
in a throttling of Butler, moving the Rams from the bubble's edge to a
tournament lock. Despite the embarrassment, Butler's profile (wins over
Indiana, Marquette, North Carolina and Gonzaga) is too good to leave the
Bulldogs in doubt.
In other news, the Billikens just keep winning, and they can claim the league
outright with wins at Xavier and home against La Salle.
ON THE BUBBLE
La Salle (20-7, 10-4; RPI 45, SOS 94): The Explorers picked up their
ceremonial 20th victory of the season last week and now look for more filler
against George Washington before taking a shot at league top dog Saint Louis.
Is that win needed? The wins over Butler and VCU are big, and the computer
numbers are manageable. If the Explorers finish 11-5 in the league, it may
only take one conference tournament win. It's a thin-line profile.
Temple (21-8, 9-5; RPI 42, SOS 51): The squeaker against Detroit shook North
Philly to its core, but the Owls are still breathing after that win and
another close one against Rhode Island. Like the rest of those firmly on the
bubble, the recipe is wins, which starts against Fordham and includes a
pivotal regular-season finale against VCU.
Note: Other bubble services are including Massachusetts in the discussion. We
aren't there yet. Beat Butler this week, Minutemen, and we can talk.
MISSOURI VALLEY
IN: Wichita State, Creighton
The league's hierarchy changed in just one week, as Wichita State lost TWICE
at home to finish the regular-season slate, including a setback to Creighton
which gave the Bluejays the league crown. Now, all that's left is the usually
wild Missouri Valley tournament, where a sleeper like Indiana State or
Northern Iowa could make some noise, give the league three bids and destroy a
bubble team's dream.
WEST COAST CONFERENCE
IN: Gonzaga
Congratulations to Gonzaga head coach Mark Few and the city of Spokane, as
both are basking in the glow of a first-ever No. 1 ranking this week. There is
little time for back patting, though, as the 'Zags are two wins away from
locking down a No.1 seed.
Saint Mary's, on the other hand, may still have to sweat a little. But as the
bubble gets softer, the Gaels' Bracket Busters victory over Creighton looks
more and more bid-clinching.
Right side of bubble
Saint Marys (25-5, 14-2; RPI 39, SOS 122): The Gaels are without a loss in
conference outside Gonzaga, and the win over Creighton now comes over the
Missouri Valley champions. If Saint Mary's wins its semifinal game, it will
likely get a third shot at the 'Zags with the auto bid on the line. A win
would be good news for other bubble teams, but what about a loss? For now, the
Gaels look good, but a lot can change in the next week-plus.
OTHER LEAGUES
Memphis has to be in, but the Tigers unfortunately can do very little to move
themselves from the 8-9 line unless those above falter. What about the best of
the rest?
RIGHT SIDE OF THE BUBBLE
Memphis (25-4, 14-0 C-USA; RPI 18; SOS 71): The Tigers are in, but this week,
From the End of the Bench is using this space to destroy the notion that
Conference USA could sneak another at-large into the party (see Southern
Mississippi). The Tigers are perfect in the league, but continue to do it no
justice with their non-league performance (see recent loss to Xavier).
RIGHT ON THE BUBBLE
Belmont (24-6, 14-2 OVC; RPI 26, SOS 95): The Bruins separated themselves by
winning the Ohio Valley by two games, but despite good computer numbers, a
loss in the conference tourney is not recommended. They are on an 11-12 line
WITH a tournament title, so it's hard to see them staying in the field unless
they lose one of those ESPN Instant Classics in the conference tourney final.
Middle Tennessee State (27-4, 19-1 Sun Belt; RPI 28, SOS 135): There is a
domino effect at play here. Belmont, Middle Tennessee State, Louisiana Tech
and Akron are all pulling for the others to win auto bids just in case it
needs an at-large. It's hard to see more than one of these teams claiming an
at-large, but we do think one will. Who? Again, depends on the conference
tournaments. The Blue Raiders won the Sun Belt by five games, have a good RPI
and bad SOS numbers. Remember the non-league win over Ole Miss. It could be
the dividing line between play-in game and NIT.
WRONG SIDE OF THE BUBBLE
Akron and Louisiana Tech (Akron -- 22-5, 13-1 MAC; RPI 47, SOS 142; La Tech --
26-3, 16-0 WAC; RPI 50, SOS 239): Akron blinked first, dropping a league game
to sub-200 RPI Buffalo. That's a killer. Louisiana Tech still hasn't blinked
and now sees an unblemished light at the end of the tunnel. Akron has the
better computer numbers and the best win of the two (over Middle Tennessee
State), while Louisiana Tech has the perfect conference record. From the End
of the Bench isn't sure who is above whom, but at this point both are below
the two teams above and will need a bunch of help if they don't get the auto
bid.
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