The Best 2010 NCAAB Championship Game Debate… There Should Be a First Time for Everything

March 29, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Sports Geek.

Duke and Michigan State have made the Final Four… yawn!

In no way are my comments intended to diminish the impressive accomplishment that both schools have made. But let’s be honest – it is nothing new. And in this March Madness tournament, where the unprecedented has become the only precedent, there just is not any room on my wish list for programs and coaches who visit the Final Four with the same seeming regularity as my weekly trips to the grocery store.

Their counterparts, however, in the collection of 2010 NCAA Tournament Regional Champions are about to experience something altogether new.

It has been more than 50 years since the West Virginia Mountaineers last reached the Final Four with a shot to compete for the national championship, and 2010 marks the first time since the Calvin Coolidge administration that the Butler Bulldogs are in consideration for the nation’s top basketball prize. In this tournament of firsts, it only seems fitting that the championship matchup should pit two teams against each other that are competing for their first ever tournament title.

More important is the fact that both West Virginia and Butler are more deserving of the crown than Duke and Michigan State.

To begin with, neither of these teams should be a surprise as Final Four participants. Although Butler is coming out of the mid-major Horizon League Conference, they are the owners of the longest active winning streak in the country with their last loss coming at the hands of UAB BEFORE Christmas last year! Throughout the season they faced off against (and defeated) some of the top teams in the country, including victories over Ohio State and Xavier, both of whom were Sweet Sixteen teams.

As for West Virginia, the Mountaineers simply have too much talent on the floor to be stopped. In a year where much of the talent within the “usual” Big East powerhouses would be lacking (I TOLD YOU SO!), the combination of Da’Sean Butler, Devin Ebanks, and Joe Mazzulla was more than enough to carry the Big East banner deep into the 2010 tournament. Behind their seemingly re-invented head coach, Bob Huggins, this Mountaineers team has played like a team of destiny all season long.

Next, when comparing the tournament roads that each of the respective regional champions took to get to the Final Four, Butler and West Virginia have clearly faced off against the tougher competition, and both have survived intact. Butler had to take on and defeat both of the top two teams within their region (Syracuse and Kansas State) in order to continue the nation’s longest active win-streak. West Virginia was handed the task of beating the Kentucky Wildcats, a team which led the rankings as the nation’s top program for much of the 2009-2010 season (at least when Kansas wasn’t).

Compare that to Duke, who coasted into the Final Four as the beneficiaries of the weakest regional draw in the tournament, or to Michigan State, who played lesser-ranked teams in both of their Sweet Sixteen (against ninth-seeded Northern Iowa) and Elite Eight (versus sixth-seeded Tennessee) matchups.

While Butler and West Virginia were busy taking care of the so-called best teams in the country, Duke and Michigan State simply sat back and let other teams do all the hard work, while they just cleaned up the scraps.

Butler and West Virginia have already proven to be the best two teams remaining in the tournament, because they have both BEATEN the teams previously recognized as the best in the tournament. A championship game featuring these two teams would provide one of the most entertaining and dramatic tournament finals in memory.

If we have learned anything from the 2010 March Madness tournament, it is that the “establishment” needs to be shaken up a little bit. What was once considered gospel in the world of college basketball can no longer be counted on. The tried and true principles that we have assigned to the game of college hoops for years no longer seems viable, and we are now forced with redefining our criteria for recognizing the top teams in the country. It is time to see some new faces on top of the heap, and what better way to cap off this season of revolution than with a Butler-West Virginia national championship?.

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The 2000-2010 Best NCAAB Tournament Coach Debate… Living in the Wild Wild West

March 24, 2010

Read the opposing arguments from Loyal Homer and Sports Geek.

Oh, what a difference a weekend can make.

This time last week, basketball fans everywhere were filling out brackets. Basketball know-it-alls around the country were confidently making their can’t-miss picks for the tournaments. You could hear them at water-coolers everywhere:

“The Big East is the best conference going into the tournament! They have eight teams, and any one of them can make a run!”

“Kansas is far and away the favorite to take this tournament!”

“The Pac-10 teams are ALL down this year!”

Then the weekend happened. The only sound heard in living rooms and sports bars alike was that of brackets being busted.

Of the eight Big East “monsters” that were all seeded as favorites in their matchups, only four survived the first round, with two more falling before the Sweet Sixteen. Kansas, the number one seed overall, was bounced by mid-major Northern Iowa, and the Pac-10’s only two entrants. California and Washington turned in some very exciting performances with the 11th seeded Huskies reaching the Sweet Sixteen over top-ten ranked New Mexico.

NOBODY could have guessed the carnage that so many underdogs would have wreaked on the 2010 NCAA Basketball championships. In fact, ESPN.com reports that, out of the 4.78 million entries in their online bracket challenge, there were none (that’s ZERO) that had predicted all of the Sweet Sixteen teams (Editor’s note: One dude has a perfect bracket on CBS), and only four people out of the nearly five millions even picked 15 out of 16 correct (but there were more than 6,000 who went 0 for 16).

With the upheaval of the past weekend, the question must be re-asked: Which region of the 2010 March Madness Tournament is NOW the toughest to win?

In looking at the sixteen teams still alive and vying for the national crown, the four which pose the toughest collection of competition for each other live in the Wild West.

Each region claims strong teams, and each also boasts a great story, from Cornell’s run in the east to Northern Iowa’s toppling of the giant in the Midwest. The West, though, possesses the strongest collection of FOUR teams still remaining.

With all due respect to programs such as Northern Iowa, St. Mary’s, Cornell, or even Washington, their success has been surprising, and by all accounts should be short-lived. As much as I would love to see each of those teams advance deeper into this tournament, the EXPECTED result (although I will acknowledge that this tournament has provided anything BUT expected results) is that their 15 minutes is quickly drawing to a close now that they are facing progressively more talented competition.

Because of those EXPECTED outcomes, each of those double-digit seeded teams creates a seemingly weaker spot in the “Road to the Final Four.” Realistically, if I had to choose between Syracuse or St. Mary’s as my opponent, I would pick St. Mary’s.

Each of the regions in the March Madness tournament holds at least one of those double-digit seeded “weaker” team in it except for one – the West Region. The West may have two teams from mid-major conferences remaining (Xavier and Butler), but these teams are mid-major in name only. Both have proven all season long (and consistently over several seasons) that they are wolves in sheep’s clothing. Like Gonzaga and Memphis (at least while John Calipari was coaching on Beale Street), these two programs are worthy of power-conference status.

Occupying the remaining spots in this region are top-seeded Syracuse and second-seeded Kansas State.

Syracuse was the biggest surprise story of the regular season. They began their 2009-2010 campaign unranked before playing all the way up to the top spot in the country, ultimately finishing the season in the third spot behind Kentucky and Kansas. As for Kansas State, they probably would have been a number one seed in the tournament had it not been for three losses against Kansas (who are now out of the picture and no longer a threat to the Wildcats).

In a seed-by-seed comparison, the West poses the toughest overall road to the regional championship games. Along with the East, the West is the only region with both of their top two seeds still alive, and they are the ONLY region that does not include at least one double-digit seeded team. All four of the teams in the West finished 2010 ranked in the top-25, and all four of those teams have a LEGITIMATE shot at playing in Indianapolis.

While all 16 teams remaining deserve recognition for their accomplishments this season, the toughest challenge still lies ahead for the four teams playing in Salt Lake City this weekend!

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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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