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NCAA Tournament Bracket Predictions: NCAA Tournament 2011 Bracket, Schedule and Predictions

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

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NCAA Tournament Bracket Predictions: NCAA Tournament 2011 Bracket, Schedule and Predictions- Now you are right! The 2011 NCAA Tournament Bracket that is ready and printable is already available and announced today. The much awaited NCAA Tournament 2011 and its printable NCAA Tournament Bracket 2011 will compose of 68 teams that are divided into four different conferences, and that is the West, East, Southwest and Southeast. What is the NCAA Tournament 2011 in-stored to all the basketball fans out there.

The NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Championship is a single elimination tournament held each spring in the United States, featuring 68college basketball teams, both conference champions and at-large selections. The tournament, organized by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), was created in 1939 by the National Association of Basketball Coaches and was the brainchild of Kansas coach Phog Allen Held mostly in March, it is informally known as March Madness or the Big Dance; the tournament, and especially the national semi-finals and final (the Final Four), has become one of the nation’s most prominent sporting events.

The 2011 NCAA Tournament bracket has been released. For a printable bracket, click here. The play-in games begin on Tuesday, March 15. The first round starts on Thursday and runs through March 17-18. The second round runs through March 19-20. The Sweet 16 games will be played on March 24 and 25, while and Elite Eight games start on March 26 and conclude on March 27. The Final Four games will be played on April 2 and the national champions will cut down the nets on April 4.

Apparently, Duke, Kansas, Pittsburgh and Ohio State picked up the four one-seeds in this year’s tournament. This year, however, has severely lacked dominant teams, so the No. 1 seeds may be moot points.

In Texas’ bracket, where they received the four seed in the West region, they’ll have to go through the likes of No. 5 Arizona, No. 1 Duke and either No. 3 Connecticut or No. 2 San Diego State to reach the Final Four. This is barring upsets of course – which is something that is bound to happen.

Looking past the opening game against either UNC Asheville or Arkansas Little Rock, Pitt has a date with either Butler or Old Dominion. We all know about Butler – while they’re not as good as the Final Four team that reached the championship game last year, they’ve got some pretty good wins this year against Florida State and Stanford. Old Dominion is 27-6 and won its last nine games. They also beat George Mason, Clemson, Xavier, and Richmond, so they’re obviously a good team.

Meanwhile, the Kansas State Wildcats are a fifth seed and will play 12th Utah State in the first round while the winner of fourth seed Wisconsin and 13th seed Belmont awaits. The Missouri Tigers are the 11th seed and will play Cincinnati in round one and, if they win, await the winner of third seed UConn and 14th seed Bucknell.

he Big East conference sent 11 teams to the tournament, the most of any conference. Second most was the Big Ten. They sent seven. We plan to have previews up soon on all the Indiana region teams in the Big Dance, along with a breakdown of the Big Ten’s chances

Nevertheless, the tournament is televised on CBS, TBS, TNT, truTV in the United States as of 2011 and onward, with CBS televising the Elite Eight and Final Four until 2016 exclusively. Previously the whole tournament, except the play in game on ESPN, was televised on CBS.

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Rock-M-Tology: Selection Sunday – Rock M Nation

Monday, March 14th, 2011

It’s the first year of the 68-team field, and we quite possibly might have just nine conferences with multiple tourney bids.  Maybe the West Coast Conference gets a second … but that’s about it.  Probably not what the NCAA had in mind when they added three extra bids.

OR … it was exactly what they had in mind.

A couple of months ago, I started these Rock-M-tology pieces by drawing up what I would do if I were the NCAA Committee … what you see below is 100% what I think the committee will do.

Last 8 In

Illinois (19-13) – The Illini are 6-10 in their last 16 games, dropping them from “13-3 and possible Top Four Seed” to Last 8 In.  But they’re almost certainly still in thanks to the wins.  They knocked off North Carolina on November 30, back when it was much easier to do so, but it still counts.  Throw in wins over Wisconsin and three bubble teams (Penn State, Michigan State, Michigan), and I think they’re safe.  How are they ranked so high in Pomeroy’s rankings, by the way?  They are 2-8 in games decided by five points or less or in overtime.  Pomeroy’s rankings see a team that was very, very close to something like a 24-8 record and solid seed … and they could be a team with solid first round upset potential, assuming they actually make the field.

Colorado (20-13) – We’ve all considered the Buffs safe since they beat Kansas State for a third time, but … their peripherals still really aren’t that strong.  RPI: 65th.  Pomeroy rank (which the committee obviously does not take into account): 49th.  In the end, their good wins (Texas, K-State x3, Mizzou) will likely get them in, though the fact that they lost to two other bubble teams (Harvard by 16, Georgia by 9, both on the road) and lost to San Francisco, Oklahoma and Iowa State to boot, still keeps them in the Last 8 In.

Virginia Tech (21-11) – Every time I think the Hokies are safe, they do something to almost change my mind.  Their ACC tourney showing, in which they beat Florida State, likely keeps them on the right side of the bubble for once, but their 4-8 record against teams either in the tourney or on the First 7 Out list makes it shaky.  (Their two losses to Virginia and 15-point loss at terrible Georgia Tech doesn’t help either.)  They beat Duke, knocked off Florida State twice and handled bubble team Penn State by 10 points … but they’re still not entirely safe, are they?

Georgia (21-11) – RPI: 48th.  Pomeroy rank: 57th.  Best wins according to RPI: Kentucky and … UAB.  Lost to bubble team Alabama twice.  Georgia will be a very interesting test case in terms of teams that have few great wins and no terrible losses versus teams that have plenty of both (i.e. USC).  If, earlier in the bracket, we see Mizzou (another team with little greatness and no terrible losses) end up with 10- or 11-seed, then Georgia’s screwed.  I like to reward teams for taking care of business against lesser teams, and UGa certainly did that … but if they’re out, they can blame that whole “3-11 versus potential tourney teams” thing.

Star-divide

Michigan State (18-14) – The NCAA committee typically rewards teams who challenge themselves in non-conference, and State certainly did that.  Their four non-con losses came to Duke, Texas, Syracuse and UConn, all likely 1-3 seeds.  They also beat Washington along the way.  But … is that enough to get the benefit of the doubt?  The rest of their non-conference schedule was easy enough to sink their RPI ranking to 45th, and their record against tourney/bubble teams* is 5-13.  The fact that they’ve played 18 games against such teams likely gets them in — as does the fact that they whipped Purdue in the Big Ten Tourney — but … yuck.  They’ve gone 7-9 in their last 16 games, and when they look bad, they look horrific.

* When I say “tourney/bubble teams,” I’m not counting those who won automatic bids from mid-major conferences. Only teams who would be in the tourney/bubble without an automatic bid. In other words, Michigan State’s win over Oakland doesn’t win them any bonus points.

Clemson (21-11) – Clemson is another team that is probably better than their record — they were 0-6 versus RPI Top 50 teams, but three of those losses (to UNC, UNC and Old Dominion) came by a total of eight points. In all, they are 2-6 in games decided by five points or less or in overtime, and if they come up short of an NCAA bid, it’s their own fault — 3-5 in such games would have probably done the deed.  (Especially since two of those games came against South Carolina and Virginia.)

USC (19-14) – I still have no idea where USC came from.  When I initially drew this up, they weren’t even among the First 8 Out.  But I know that Joe Lunardi has talked to enough committee members over the years that, if he says they’re potentially in, the committee is probably heavily considering them.  The Trojans have six — SIX — losses to teams ranked 105th or worse in RPI.  They lost to Rider and Oregon at home … they lost to Oregon, Oregon State and TCU on the road … they lost to Bradley — 12-20 BRADLEY!  But since they beat Texas, we’re supposed to forget all of that.  It really annoys me to put them in here, but if the committee values “big wins” (and ignores terrible losses) as much as Lunardi says, then I can’t see the committee putting in potentially more deserving teams like Harvard or VCU in over them.  Bleh.

Penn State (19-13) – But at least USC played somebody.  Every year the committee seems to send a message to a major conference team (usually Virginia Tech) for not playing anybody in non-conference.  And to be sure … Penn State played nobody.  Their five toughest non-conference games: at RPI No. 61 Virginia Tech (L, 69-79), at No. 83 Ole Miss (L, 71-84), No. 97 Fairfield (W, 64-49), No. 98 Maryland (L, 39-62!!!), and No. 106 Duquesne (77-73).  They lost to three major conference opponents by an average of 15.3 points and lost to 15-15 MAINE (by 10 points at home) … and they’re a tourney team?  Seriously?  Again, I assume they’re in … and it kind of makes me sick.  Yes, they’ve done better recently, and yes, they’ve beaten five tourney/bubble teams (Wisconsin x2, Michigan State x2, Illinois).  Yes, that means they’re 3-1 versus “last in/first out” teams.  But … 62-39!  To Maryland!  7-4 against a terrible non-conference slate!  PLEASE do not reward this.

If Dayton beats Richmond in today’s Atlantic 10 finals (and it’s not currently looking too likely), I’m curious to see what happens.  In theory, the first team on the chopping block is Penn State … but the committee is lazy enough that I could see them putting Penn State in, win or lose, just so they don’t have to redraw the bracket.  (They’re probably not even going to end up in the First Four, honestly.)  But what that probably means is, if Dayton wins, either USC or Clemson is out.

I think it’s ridiculous that conferences are still allowed to play late enough on Sunday that the committee has to make some assumptions/guesses. (if you insist on playing your finals on Sunday, you should be forced to start your game no later than noon ET.)

First 8 7 Out

VCU (23-11) – How VCU fares in their quest for an at-large bid will probably be determined by how the committee views Old Dominion, George Mason and UCLA.  If UCLA gets a 6- or 7-seed, or if GMU or ODU get a 7- instead of an 8-10 … then VCU’s wins over the three of them might be impressive enough to get them in the field.  And again, if I were the committee, this is exactly the type of team I would attempt to reward — they killed Wake Forest (yes, so did every team in the ACC, but … it still would have been telling if they didn’t), barely lost to Tennessee and beat UCLA in an early-season tournament and were bold enough to play at Richmond and UAB (both losses).  Jerry Palm has them in the field, and I’d be totally okay with that … but in the end, the fact that they finished the season 5-6 (with losses to Northeastern, Drexel and James Madison) will probably do them in.  On February 9, they were 20-6 and 12-2 in the stellar Colonial, and they were probably safe.  But they just didn’t finish strong.

Harvard (21-6) – Man, would I love it if the committee rewarded Harvard as well.  They went 2-3 versus tourney/bubble teams (3-5 if you count Princeton as a tourney/bubble team) with wins over Boston College (by 9 on the road) and Colorado (16 at home!) and a tight road loss to Michigan (65-62).  Against teams ranked below 50th in the RPI, the Crimson went 20-1, with only a 1-point loss to chief rival Yale (a team that also beat Boston College).  As an Ivy League team, how can you possibly put together an at-large resume better than that?  But the fact that they’re an Ivy team (go ahead and try to find the last time the committee gave the Ivy an at-large bid) will probably do them in.

If I’m the committee, I’m putting VCU and Harvard in instead of USC and Penn State … but I assume the worst.

Alabama (21-11) – Like Penn State, Alabama played nobody — and beat nobody — in non-conference play.  Their five toughest non-conference opponents according to RPI: at No. 12 Purdue (L, 47-66), No. 62 Oklahoma State (L, 60-68), No. 92 St. Peter’s (L, 49-50), vs No. 102 Seton Hall (L, 78-83), No. 132 Lipscomb (W, 71-51).  Oh yeah, and they also lost to Providence and Iowa.  Their two most impressive non-con wins: Lipscomb and SE Louisiana.  That is disgusting.  They beat Georgia twice in the last week and ended up going 4-4 against tourney/bubble teams, but … I just can’t see the committee rewarding either that non-conference slate or that non-conference performance.

Boston College (20-12) – Knowing how the committee tends to overvalue performance in the Big East and ACC Tournaments (I have UConn as a 2-seed in the draw below because they won the Big East Tourney, and for no other reason — they should be a 3-4, but we know what’s coming), I have to figure their ridiculous, 23-point loss to Clemson on Friday might have eliminated them from the field.  In all, BC went 3-8 versus tourney/bubble teams — no better or worse than some teams on the “in” list — but the Clemson loss, combined with a gross-looking loss to Yale, potentially does them in.  Their sweep of Maryland would have helped them a lot, had Maryland not decided to eliminate themselves from the bubble by losing six of nine to finish the season.

St. Mary’s (23-8) – If St. Mary’s ends up out, they only have themselves to blame.  A month ago, they were totally safe.  They were 22-4, 10-1 in the WCC, and a likely 8-9 seed.  Then they lost to San Diego, Utah State, and Gonzaga twice.  The loss to 6-24 San Diego was the worst loss of any tourney/bubble team.  The 15-point loss at Portland didn’t help. Their record against tourney/bubble teams (2-6) really shouldn’t put them below teams like Georgia or Clemson … but a) four of those losses were by double digits, and b) San Diego!  If I were a one-man NCAA Committee, I would always try to give mid-majors the benefit of the doubt compared to unimpressive major conference teams like the ones above, but … San Diego!  San Diego.

UAB (22-8) – UAB is another team that really only has themselves to blame.  They lost to Memphis twice by four points or less, they lost to Georgia by two, they lost to Southern Miss by four, they lost to East Carolina by five (in overtime), and they lost to Arizona State by three.  Of course, they also won eight games by five points or less, so the problem here might just be that they were not a good enough team to take care of business by a comfortable margin.  In all, they’re just 1-4 versus tourney/bubble teams, and that’s probably not going to get the job done.

Missouri State (25-8) – SMS played one tourney/bubble team and lost, by four at Tennessee.  Their main problem is not that they have a bad resume … it’s that they don’t have a resume at all.  Their losses are mostly semi-respectable — at Tennessee, at Oklahoma State, at Valpo, at Tulsa, at Indiana State, at Evansville (okay, that’s not at all semi-respectable), Northern Iowa, and in the MVC finals to Indiana State, but with a schedule this weak, SMS had no margin for error … and they lost to Tennessee.  SMS may be the Post-Dispatch’s new favorite team, but … no.

By Conference

11 – Big East7 – Big Ten6 – Big 125 – ACC, SEC4 – Pac-103 – Mountain West, Atlantic 102 – Colonial

The Bracket

FIRST FOUR (in Dayton)

Clemson (21-11) vs Penn State (19-13)Michigan State (18-14) vs USC (19-14)

UA-Little Rock (17-16) vs Alabama State (15-17)Hampton (23-8) vs UT-San Antonio (16-13)

SOUTHWEST REGIONAL (in San Antonio)

1 Kansas (32-2) vs 16 UALR / Alabama State8 George Mason (26-6) vs 9 Villanova (21-11)in Tulsa

5 Vanderbilt (23-10) vs 12 Virginia Tech (21-11)4 Wisconsin vs 13 Memphis (25-9)in Tucson

6 Cincinnati (25-8) vs 11 Michigan (19-13)3 Florida (26-6) vs 14 St. Peter’s (20-13)in Tampa

7 Xavier (24-7) vs 10 Florida State (21-10)2 UConn (26-9) vs 15 Wofford (21-12)in Washington, DC

WEST REGIONAL (in Anaheim)

1 Duke (29-4) vs 16 UC-Santa Barbara (16-13)8 Temple (25-7) vs 9 Missouri (22-10)in Charlotte

5 Arizona (27-7) vs 12 Clemson / Penn State4 Louisville (25-9) vs 13 Bucknell (25-8)in Tulsa

6 Washington (23-10) vs 11 Illinois (19-13)3 BYU (29-4) vs 14 Long Island (27-5)in Denver

7 Kansas State (21-10) vs 10 Tennessee (19-14)2 Notre Dame (26-6) vs UNC-Asheville (16-13)in Chicago

SOUTHEAST REGIONAL (in New Orleans)

1 Ohio State (31-2) vs 16 Hampton / UT-San Antonio8 Utah State (29-3) vs 9 Gonzaga (23-9)in Cleveland

5 St. John’s (21-11) vs 12 Michigan State / USC4 Kentucky (24-8) vs 13 Princeton (24-6)in Tampa

6 UNLV (24-8) vs 11 Colorado (20-13)3 Syracuse (26-7) vs 14 Indiana State (19-13)in Cleveland

7 West Virginia (20-11) vs 10 Richmond (26-7)2 North Carolina (26-6) vs 15 Northern Colorado (19-10)in Charlotte

EAST REGIONAL (in Newark)

1 Pittsburgh (27-5) vs 16 Boston U. (21-13)8 UCLA (22-10) vs 9 Butler (22-9)in Washington, DC

5 Texas A&M (23-8) vs 12 Belmont (30-4)4 Purdue (25-7) vs 13 Oakland (24-9)in Chicago

6 Georgetown (21-10) vs 11 Georgia (21-11)3 Texas (27-7) vs 14 Morehead State (22-9)in Denver

7 Old Dominion (27-6) vs 10 Marquette (20-14)2 San Diego State (30-2) vs 15 Akron (22-12)in Tucson

My At-First-Glance Final Four

Florida, Duke, Ohio State, Pittsburgh

Second glance: Kansas, Louisville, North Carolina, BELMONT!!!

Missouri’s inevitable path to destiny (ahem)

Temple, Duke, Louisville, Notre Dame, Florida, Ohio State. Easy peasy.

Afternoon delight: Moulson’s hat trick leads Isles, Toews and Kane key Hawks to victory

Wednesday, March 9th, 2011

NY Islanders 5 – Florida 1

The Islanders stayed hot and delivered a gut punch to the playoff hopes of the Panthers thanks to Matt Moulson‘s hat trick. Moulson ran his goal total this season to 26 after his three goal blow up to sink the Panthers. The game saw Rule 48 come into play late in the first period when Panthers forward Stephen Weiss was called for an elbowing major after connecting to the head of Isles defenseman Radek Martinek. Weiss was kicked out of the game for the infraction while Martinek stayed in the game and scored a goal during the major penalty. Payback is more fun that way. Isles goalie Al Montoya had to stop just 20 shots to earn the win as Mike Santorelli was the lone Panther to get one by him. Tomas Vokoun‘s day was miserable allowing four goals and stopping 32 shots.

Chicago 5 – St. Louis 3

The Blackhawks were down fast in the this game, down 2-0 after the first period when Andy McDonald and Brad Boyes each notched goals for St. Louis. The intermission shook something loose for Chicago as they stormed out in the second period with three goals and never relinquished the lead on their way to an important win over the Blues. Patrick Kane, Jonathan Toews, and Marian Hossa each had a goal and an assist to help get the Blackhawks while Corey Crawford settled down after an awful first period to make 31 saves in the win. Ben Bishop‘s second straight start for St. Louis didn’t end the way he wanted, he was pulled after giving up the fourth goal to Chicago in the second period, a Toews power play goal at 12:40 of the period. Ty Conklin replaced him and stopped all seven shots he saw. For Chicago, the win gives them 68 points and pulls them into a five-way tie for seventh in the Western Conference.

Big East Basketball Tournament Bracket 2011 and Live Game Schedules

Monday, March 7th, 2011

Big East Basketball Tournament Bracket 2011 and Live Game Schedules thumbnail

Big East Basketball Tournament Bracket 2011 and Live Game Schedules - The basketball tournament of colleges is now set to their conference’s round-by-round matches. One of the most-watched conference is the Big East.

The Big East basketball tournament will be held on March 8-12, 2011 at Madison Square Garden. As what many predicted, Big East has many talented teams that it can send more than 10 teams to the NCAA Tournament. Who among them will get an automatic bid for the NCAA Basketball Tournament this year?

Pittsburgh tops the standings. Pitt gets two rounds of byes while West Virginia gets one. Here is the complete schedule of the game for the Big East basketball tournament. The following games of Big East basketball tournament will be aired live ESPN channels. Stay tuned here for more updates.

Tuesday, March 8

No.9 Connecticut vs. No.16 DePaul, 12:00 PMNo.12 Seton Hall vs. No.13 Rutgers, 2:00 PMNo.10 Villanova vs. No.15 South Florida, 7:00 PMNo.11 Marquette vs. No.14 Providence, 9:00 PM

Wednesday, March 9

Connecticut/DePaul vs. No.8 Georgetown, 12:00 PMSeton Hall/Rutgers vs. No.5 St. John’s, 2:00 PMVillanova/South Florida vs. No.7 Cincinnati, 7:00 PMMarquette/Providence vs. No.6 West Virginia, 9:00 PM

Thursday, March 10

Connecticut/DePaul/Georgetown vs. No.1 Pitt, 12:00 PMSeton Hall/Rutgers/St. Johns vs. No.4 Syracuse, 2:00 PMVillanova/South Florida/Cincinnati vs. No.2 Notre Dame, 7:00 PMMarquette/Providence/West Virginia vs. No.3 Louisville, 9:00 PM

Friday, March 11

Winner of Pitt game vs. winner of Syracuse game, 7:00 PMWinner of Notre Dame game vs. winner of Louisville game, 9:00 PM

Saturday, March 12

Big East championship, 9:00 PM

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Craigslist congressman and wife trying to work things out

Monday, March 7th, 2011

The “humiliated” wife of shamed Craigslist Congressman Christopher Lee has rushed to his side and is “hoping to work things out” with him at an ultra-private Florida enclave, sources close to the family said.

Michele Lee, 44, bolted the couple’s Buffalo home Thursday and flew to Florida, where she and Lee, 46, are holed up inside the gates of Key Largo’s exclusive Ocean Reef Club, where Lee’s dad, Patrick, owns a $4 million home, insiders told The Post.

“She’s crushed — this was supposed to be her prince charming,” a friend of Michele said yesterday.

A WOMAN 'PORNED': Disgraced Congressman Christopher Lee and wife Michele are holed up in Florida.

AP

A WOMAN ‘PORNED’: Disgraced Congressman Christopher Lee and wife Michele are holed up in Florida.

Michele had been concerned about the upstate lawmaker’s extended solo stays in Washington, and had tried to get him to spend more time in Buffalo, said another source.

Revelations that Lee had trawled Craigslist for trysts — and even sent one would-be paramour a cheesy shirtless picture of himself — are a particularly harsh blow for Michele, whose first marriage to a high-school sweetheart ended after he cheated on her.

“She picked a bad boy twice, which is a shame, because she’s a smart woman without a mean bone in her body. She’s absolutely humiliated,” said a friend. “She was so proud of him and what he’d accomplished.”

Lee’s dad, wealthy businessman Patrick Lee, is also apoplectic over his son’s spectacular career flameout, friends said.

The respected, straight-laced Patrick had previously warned his son about his philandering, and was “particularly enraged” over the “sloppiness of the situation” and the photo, a source noted.

“Patrick is mortified, [and] pushed his son to resign immediately to curtail any extended embarrassment for the family,” the source said. “He said, ‘End it quick.’ “

In Washington yesterday, GOPers were also hoping for a quick end, but that was out of the question as media scrutiny of Republican sex lives ratcheted up.

House Speaker John Boehner has had at least two meetings warning congressmen to keep their pants zipped and their partying under control, sources said.

selim.algar@nypost.com

SEC Basketball Tournament 2011: Who Is Destined to Cut Down the Nets? – Bleacher Report

Sunday, March 6th, 2011

107092413_crop_340x234Al Messerschmidt/Getty Images

SEC Basketball Tournament 2011 Is Coming Up, But Who Are the Favorites to Win the Whole Thing?

It’s conference tournament time and the SEC is gearing up for its big end-of-year showdown. While the conference hasn’t been a major factor at the top of the national picture this year, there is one team that looks poised to make a deep run at the conference championship.

That team is the Florida Gators. While the program hasn’t been at the heights it saw when it won back-to-back national championships, the Gators have had a strong season and look better than the rest of the field in the SEC.

It won’t be an easy run, but the Gators certainly have the talent to make it happen. A team like Vanderbilt will certainly make it difficult on Florida, but with Billy Donovan—who knows what it takes to win in March—calling the shots, the Gators will have poise in the crucial moments in these big games.

When it comes down to it, that’s what it takes to win in March. You just have to be able to execute in the biggest moments of the biggest games. If Florida can do that, it won’t just win the SEC tournament, but make a deep run in the NCAA tournament.

While the SEC isn’t exactly the cream of the crop in terms of the power conferences, it certainly has teams that can contend—and the team that has the best chance to do that is the Gators.

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