Friday, February 16, 2007

Busting Up The Brackets, Part II

Here is a further breakdown of the major games, as well as a rating of how this could shake up the field of 64+1 if they should need to gain an at-large berth into the tournament. The event starts Friday, and concludes on Saturday night.

Appalachian State at Wichita State (Sat. 1PM ET, ESPNU)
Conference affiliations: Southern (Appalachian State), MVC (Wichita State)
At-large implications: Moderate
Breakdown: A matchup of two teams whose profiles have slightly faded in conference play. Wichita State (16-10, 8-8) was well-documented, climbing into the Top-10 at one point, after victories at George Mason, at LSU and at Syracuse, all of which seem hollow now after struggling in conference play. It would probably take them winning out (Applachian State, Missouri State, at Creighton) to get themselves back on the bubble. Similarly, Appalachian State (17-6, 12-3) got some huge victories over Virginia, Vanderbuilt and VCU prior to play in the Southern Conference, where they have dropped 3 conference games to 200+ RPI opponents. The winner keeps their long-shot at-large hopes alive, but both most likely will have to rely on winning their conference tournaments.
Players to Watch: Mountaineers point guard DJ Thompson has found his long range shooting stroke recently, hitting 20-of-42 3-point attempts over his last five games. The Shockers will need to defend the perimeter with guards PJ Couisnard and Sean Ogari to hold Thompson in check.

Northern Iowa at Nevada (Sat. 6PM ET, ESPN2)
Conference affiliations: MVC (Northern Iowa), WAC (Nevada)
At-large implications: Low
Breakdown: This is a battle of two teams on opposite ends of the spectrum. Nevada (22-2, 11-1) is already locked in for March once again and is merely trying to keep winning for seeding. Northern Iowa (15-11, 7-9) looked poised to make their 4th consecutive NCAA Tournament back in January when they sat at 12-2 overall and 4-0 in conference, but have since struggled, winning just 3 of their last 12 games to fall out of contention in the Missouri Valley. A victory by Northern Iowa won't heal their resume nor would it really bruise the at-large profile of the Wolfpack.
Players to Watch: The matchup to watch here is on the inside, where 3-year starters Eric Coleman and Grant Stout of Northern Iowa will battle National Player of the Year candidate Nick Fazekas. The duo has been somewhat inconsistent during UNI's recent skid and will need to neutralize Fazekas and hope they don't get burned by the underrated Marcelus Kemp on the perimeter.

Old Dominion at Toledo (Sat. 6PM ET, ESPN360)
Conference affiliations: CAA (Old Dominion), MAC (Toledo)
At-large implications: Moderate
Breakdown: Old Dominion (20-7, 13-3) comes into this contest streaking, winners of seven straight and fresh off of victories over fellow Colonial contenders VCU and Hofstra. They sit a game back of VCU in conference with two middle-tier CAA opponents on their schedule and a bubblicious RPI of 52. A victory here could go a long way in a few Sundays. For Toledo (14-10, 10-2), it appears the MAC is destined to be a 1-bid league once again (this league has continued to beat each other up and out of at-large spots this entire decade) and a conference tournament victory is eminent to be dancing in March. They boast a nice conference record, but the 4-8 non-conference season eliminates them from consideration.
Players to Watch: Lithuanian product and leading scorer Valdas Vasyllus is coming off a career-game in the Monarchs recent win over Hofstra. I look for Toledo to put Florentino Valencia on him, which should give ODU a noticeable size advantage on the interior.

Southern Illinois at Butler (Sat. 4PM ET, ESPN2)
Conference affiliations: MVC (Southern Illinois), Horizon (Butler)
At-large implications: Low
Breakdown: Just how far has Bracket Busters come since its inauguration in 2005? This year's marquee game tells that story - it has absolutely no barring on either of these teams making their NCAA cases. Why? They're both locks to make the tourney. This one is simply to beef the resume, fight for some seeding and gain some bragging rights for their respective conferences. SIU (21-5, 13-3) appears to be the RPI darling this year, sitting 8th with a hoard of good victories in-conference and a neutral site W over tournament-bound Virginia Tech. Butler (22-3, 11-2) took the mid-major world by storm early with in-state bragging rights over Notre Dame, Indiana and Purdue as well as victories over Gonzaga and Tennessee. They actually sit a game behind (tied in the loss column, however) with Wright State in conference play, but a solid resume and good computer numbers (RPI currently at 30) won't have them left in the cold come tournament time.
Players to Watch: This is a battle of two teams that can absolutely suffocate you defensively. Butler star guard AJ Graves has saved some of his best performances for the brightest lights, routinely topping his 17.6 scoring average in Butler's key games. Expect the dynamic backcourt trio of the Salukis of Bryan Mullins, Jamal Tatum and Tony Young to have an eye on Graves at all times. I look for someone else from the Bulldogs to step up if they want get a win here.


Enjoy the games, both big and mid conference, this weekend...

-- RK

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Northern Illinois is NIU, Northern Iowa is UNI damn it!!

Other than that, I agree that UNI is NIT-bound (to join possibly the other 3 Iowa schools), so they're probably not going to do much to harm Nevada. It wouldn't surprise me at all if they won, though.

Anonymous said...

Even tho you make cogent points, my blog is still better, dood.

Never forget, sonz!1!!11!

One Shining Moment Bloggers said...

Ah, shit, bd... I remember thinking something was weird when I typed that. I apologizze for the mistake... I blame my drinking deadlines closing in on me. Thanks (JH?) for fixing it.

- Kasko