The 2010 NCAA Tourney Toughest Region Debate Redux… The East is Still the Beast

March 24, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Bleacher Fan.

There are plenty of superficial reasons why the East region remains great for this season’s NCAA Tournament. The national sports writers will all point out that each remaining team is a conference champ, that Cornell is an Ivy League team, that Washington has no pressure and nothing to lose, that West Virginia should be on the lookout after winning an overrated conference, and that Kentucky has the heaviest expectations in the tournament now. But none of those obvious stories give real insight into why each of these games will be excellent… and why the East remains the toughest region.

While Northern Iowa’s upset has gutted a once proud Midwest region of its top talent, the West’s top-heavy bracket has gone to plan, and the South’s St. Mary’s has weakened that region, only one region remains stronger than the rest – the East. As I noted in my original argument last Friday, the primary reasons why I originally believed the East bracket is the entire tournament’s toughest grouping remain true.

Kentucky, the team that is now the number one overall seed in the tournament after Kansas’ ouster – and the team that should have been the number one seed all along – still heads the toughest group of teams in the tournament. West Virginia is still the best second seed, too. However, one fact about college basketball we all learned through the first two rounds of the tournament is that the Pac-10 is not as lousy the experts would have us believe.

Washington proves the value of the Pac-10. Sure the Huskies won the Pac-10 tournament, but they also began their NCAA Tournament experience with a very tough two-point win over Marquette. Shortly after the eleventh seeded Huskies dispatched Marquette they had to face the number three seeded New Mexico Lobos… and crushed them by 18 points. Washington is an interesting and particularly dangerous type of team during the tournament because they play a specific, up-tempo style of basketball that is very difficult to prepare for, unless a team has experienced it before.

Tomorrow is the highly anticipated matchup between the Huskies and the Big East champion West Virginia Mountaineers. While it SEEMS like West Virginia should win, the game is no easy out. First, the Big East has not exactly proven itself out as the top conference in college basketball. The entire conference plays a slower brand of deliberate basketball that a team like Washington is ideally equipped to disrupt. The Huskies like to run, and they love to shoot from beyond the three point arc. After connecting on 64 percent of three point attempts in round one of the tournament, Washington managed “just” 47 percent against New Mexico. The team excels on the fast break and, even though Quincy Pondexter is Washington’s clear offensive leader, several other players can score. Washington’s style and balance makes them a tough out. It also makes them the type of team that West Virginia has not seen much of this season.

While Kentucky’s shoulders are heavy with expectations, the Ivy League’s Cornell Big Red has flown under the radar this season. The Big Red played both Kansas and Syracuse on the road this season, taking number one Kansas to overtime before succumbing. The team’s impressive 13 point win over A-10 champion Temple was nice in the first round, but not an unsurprising 12 seed over five seed upset (unless you are me, in which case you were surprised at first but in retrospect realize you put too much emphasis on the A-10 in your bracket…). For me, the real surprise of the region was the way Cornell handled Wisconsin – by 18 – in a game that was not even close to being close. The Big Ten has thus far been impressive in the tournament with a record of 7-2 that helped put three teams in the Sweet Sixteen. In short, almost more than any other conference, the Big Ten has impressed in the postseason. Wisconsin was a balanced and tournament tested group that was completely dominated by Cornell.

Now, however, Cornell, with a squad laced with seniors, must face an inexperienced group from Kentucky. Sure the Wildcats are an excellent team and deserve recognition as the top seed in the tournament. But they are young, with the two most prominent and important players on the team – point guard John Wall and forward DaMarcus Cousins – both freshman. As good as Kentucky is, they are not the perfect team.

What makes the East still so interesting is that though it still has the region’s top two seeds in contention – a trait only the West can match – its 11 and 12 seeds, Washington and Cornell respectively, do not play as though they were seeded properly. The East still has four conference winners, still has some of the tournament’s star players and personalities, and still promises the best basketball of any other region.

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The 2010 Best Sweet 16 Story Debate… Big Games from Big Red

March 22, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer/Bet Loser and Sports Geek.

My first thought for this debate was to argue The Ohio State Buckeyes, who won a very impressive game against Georgia Tech yesterday afternoon. However, Loyal Homer was practically BEGGING me to let him argue on behalf of his new favorite team, so I acquiesced. (Editor’s Note: Loyal Homer lost a bet to Bleacher Fan and had to write about the Buckeyes. Check it out! He makes a good case.)

I have also already discussed the talent and potential of the Xavier Musketeers who rolled into the Sweet Sixteen over the Pitt Panthers yesterday, making them another of the many hapless Big East teams to crumble under the pressures of this March Madness tournament.

But Xavier and Ohio State make up only two of the teams still remaining in contention for the 2010 NCAA Basketball national championship, and neither have been a part of the REAL story of this March Madness. The REAL story has been the increased (but not surprising) success of longshot underdogs and mid-majors against some of the so-called best teams in the country.

Davids like Northern Iowa, Old Dominion, Ohio, Murray State, and St. Mary’s have already slain Goliaths from the power conferences like Georgetown, Villanova, Notre Dame, Vanderbilt, and even the overall top-seeded Kansas Jayhawks. Because of these mighty minis, no office pool bracket survived the first weekend of competition unscathed.

No team, however, has captured the spirit of “The Little Engine That Could” more than the Cornell Big Red. Defying odds, stereotypes, and history, the Big Red have rolled into the Sweet Sixteen as the highest seed still standing. I learned a long time ago, though, that you should never judge a book by its cover. Especially not one that has earned the seal of approval from sage minds of staff from the likes of Harvard, Yale, and Princeton – those folks tend to know what they are talking about!

Teetering on the thin line between “mid” and “low” major, the Big Red received virtually no respect entering the tournament. As a member of the Ivy League, a conference known more for its prowess in the classroom than on the hardwood, Cornell cruised through their regular season to a 27-4 record en route to their conference championship. For all their effort, they were slotted in as a 12-seed in the 2010 tournament and were slated to face Temple (ranked 12th in the nation) during their first-round matchup.

The fact that Cornell was the nation’s best team from beyond the three-point arc got them a little recognition, and they quickly became a “sexy” upset pick against the A-10 champs. Still, most considered the group of “nerdy” Ivy-Leaguers a longshot to upset their much more battle-tested opponents.

At the end of the game, those who did believe Cornell had all the makings of a real tournament contender were repaid with a win, making them look like geniuses worthy of admission into Cornell’s own ivy-walled institution.

But the ride wasn’t over yet. Cornell could enjoy the reward for their stunning first-round victory only briefly, because a REAL test was looming on the horizon. Cornell would next face their first “power conference” foe, the fourth-seeded Wisconsin Badgers out of the Big Ten.

Wisconsin had already beaten several top-ten teams this season (Duke, Ohio State, Purdue, and Michigan State). By comparison Cornell should have been nothing more than a blip on the Badgers’ power conference radar. It seems once again that Cornell had other thoughts in their oversized minds.

When the hour was up and all the pencils were down, it was Cornell who took their more esteemed opposition to task, schooling them in every facet of the game. Wisconsin was out-shot, out-rebounded, and most importantly out-scored by Cornell, allowing more points in this game than they had all season.

The Big Red provided Wisconsin with a Master’s-level education in butt-whoopery (that is an official, Ivy League accredited term), soundly defeating them by a score of 87-69.

Cornell’s tournament play thus far has been nothing short of remarkable. Both their program and the conference that they represent have long suffered when in competition with other Division I programs. As a school, 2010 marks Cornell’s third consecutive appearance in the NCAA Tournament. It is only the fifth overall tournament appearance in the entire history of the school, with two other one-and-done appearances in 1954 and 1988. As far as the conference is concerned, the last time an Ivy League school won even a single tournament game was in 1998 when Princeton defeated UNLV.

Now Cornell is the first Ivy League member since 1979 to survive the first weekend of the NCAA Basketball Tournament. Whether they win or lose against the top-seeded Kentucky Wildcats on Thursday night during their Sweet Sixteen matchup, the Big Red have already proven to be biggest winners in a tournament loaded with mid-major magic!

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