Showing posts with label Drew Timme. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Drew Timme. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2022

2022 NCAA Tournament Pool - Sweet Sixteen/Day 1

 


Down Goes Frazier!!!  Down Goes Frazier!!!  And no, I didn't repeat myself, as we lost not 1, but 2 number 1 seeds last night as the number 1 overall seed Gonzaga lost to Arkansas, and the number 2 overall seed Arizona fell to Houston.  This had tremendous implications for our pool as Gonzaga was selected by a large plurality of our entrants.  And, the most common finals matchup was Gonzaga and Arizona.  With both of those teams now sitting at home, a lot of entries with other champions now can be excited about a possible win.  Entrants like ...

OUR NEW LEADER, Day Yi 1 of Forest Hills, New York.  Day, who eschewed the number 1 seeds to select Duke over Villanova is sitting pretty atop the stands, IF his selections keep winning.  Conversely, Day Yi 2 sits at the very bottom of the pool.  However, Dawn Lamb (Quarter) of Delray Beach, Florida sits just above him in 140th place, and can amass a grand total of ZERO more points.  So, the fight for last place will be over tonight.  If either Providence or UCLA wins, Dawn Lamb (Quarter) will receive her money back as the 141st place finisher.  If both of those teams lose, Day Yi 2 will finish in last place, and Day himself will seek the unprecedented bookend double.

Not only did Gonzaga and Arizona lose, but Duke beat a game Texas Tech squad so in four games we lost 3 champions.  That means we only have 3 remaining, with Kansas in action tonight.  Our remaining  champions are: Auburn, Arizona, Baylor, DUKE, GonzagaIllinois, KANSAS, Kentucky, Tennessee, Texas Tech, VILLANOVA, Virginia Tech, Wisconsin.

Most of the games were very close last night as Arkansas and Gonzaga went close to the wire, with the Razorbacks pulling out the 74-68 win, all while their best player had a horrible shooting night from the field.  Michigan used its tremendous size advantage over Villanova to make several good runs, but the Wildcats took Juwan Howard's team's best punch and pulled away 63-55.  Texas Tech held a lead in a back-and-forth game with Duke, before the Blue Devils clinched it 78-73.  Houston just out-athleted Arizona to win 72-60.

In our pool, yesterday's most common selection was Villanova, followed by Duke.  Even 13 entries thought that Houston would return to the Elite 8 for the second consecutive year.  But, only 2 prescient souls thought that the Arkansas Razorbacks would be playing this weekend, and so the Selection of the Day Award goes to Guy Hughes of Lexington, Kentucky, and Braeden Helland 3 of Jacksonville, Florida.  Congratulations gentlemen.

This reminds me of one of my favorite teams to watch from back-in-the-day, the 1994/1995 Arkansas Razorbacks teams. 

Arkansas entered the SEC in 1992, and made its mark immediately, winning the regular season conference championship in 1992 and 1994.  The 1994 team was led by athletic win Scotty Thurman and big man Corliss "Big Nasty" Williamson.  They also received key contributions from Corey Beck, Dwight Stewart, with shooter Alex Dillard contributing off the bench.  

In the NCAA Tournament, Arkansas earned a 1 seed, and defeated North Carolina A&T 94-79 in the first round behind 24 from Williams, 19 from Thurman, and Dillard chipping in 13 off the bench.  In the second round, the Razorbacks dispatched the Othella Harrington-led Georgetown Hoyas 85-73, with Williamson scoring 21 and Dwight Stewart scoring 16 off then bench.  In the Sweet Sixteen, Arkansas trucked Tulsa 103-84, despite Gary Collier scoring 35 in 29 minutes for the Golden Hurricane.  Williamson and Thurman each scored 21, with Williamson grabbing 9 rebounds.  In the Elite 8, the Michgan Wolverines of Juwan Howard, Jalen Rose, Jimmy King and Ray Jackson were waiting (sans Chris Webber), and despite a battle, Arkansas prevailed 76-68.  Juwan Howard scored a game-high 30, but it was not enough to defeat a balanced Arkansas attack, led by Scotty Thruman's 20, and 3 other players in double digits.  A shootout followed in the Final Four as Arizona, led by Damon Stoudamire and Khalid Reeves, put up 82, only to lose to Arkansas by 9 as the Razorbacks scored 91.  Corliss Williamson had a monster game with 29 points and 13 rebounds.  Scotty Thurman contributed 14 as Arkansas proceeded to the final game against the Grant Hill-led Duke Blue Devils.  Duke had a balanced scoring attack among its starters as Antonio Lang, Cherokee Parks, Jeff Capel, Grant Hill and Chris Collins all scored in double figures (15,14,14,12,12 respectively).  However, the Blue Devils only played 2 players off the bench, and eventually succumbed to Arkansas 76-72.  Corliss Williamson, the Most Outstanding Player, scored 23 and had 8 rebounds.  Scotty Thurman and Corey Beck each scored 15.  One big key, however, was Arkansas' depth, as the Razorbacks' bench scored 17 points compared to 5 for Duke's bench.  Arkansas was NATIONAL CHAMPION!!!

In 1995, the Razorbacks returned hoping to defend their title.  Virtually the entire team returned to go 28-6 and the NCAA rewarded Arkansas with a 2 seed in the tournament.  Arkansas, starting Williamson, Thurman, Beck, Clint McDaniel and Darnell Robinson, with Stewart and Dillard again playing key roles for the squad.  The first-round game against Texas Southern was close, as Arkansas eeked out a 79-78 win.  Stewart scored 21 off the bench and Williamson scored 19 to advance to the second round.  Arkansas had another tough battle in the second round as John Wallace and Lawrence Moten scored 29 and 27 respectively for the Syracuse Orangemen.  Arkansas survived 96-94 on 27 points from Scotty Thurman (on 5-8 shooting from three) and 25 points and 10 rebounds from Corliss Williamson.  Arkansas won another tough battle in the Sweet Sixteen defeating Memphis 96-91behind Williamson's 27 points and 13 rebounds and Alex Dillard's 19 off the bench (4-8 from three point range.)  A much lower scoring battle in the Elite 8 resulted in an Arkansas 68-62 victory over the Virginia Cavaliers.  Williamson again led the way with 21 points and 9 rebounds to send Arkansas back to the Final Four.

In the Final Four in Seattle, Washington, Arkansas won its semi-final game over North Carlina 75-68.  North Carolina had stars Jerry Stackhouse and Rasheed Wallace, but Corliss Williams 21 points and 10 rebounds led the way, with Dwight Stewart adding 15 off the bench to send Arkansas to its second consecutive championship game.  It is here where Arkansas' 11 tournament game winning streak comes to an end, as the UCLA Bruins, led by Ed O'Bannon and Toby Bailey (and helped by Tyus Edney's coast-to-coast last second layup in 4.8 seconds to defeat Missouri), coasted to the championship 89-78.   Clint McDaniel led the Razorbacks in scoring with 16, while Corliss Williamson only scored 12 on 3-16 shooting.

With a championship and a runner-up finish in consecutive years, these Arkansas Razorback teams were GOOD, and Corliss Williamson and Scotty Thurman were exciting to watch!

Now back to yesterday's action.

Players of the Day

5.  Jamal Shead, Houston - Socred 21 points with 4 rebounds and 6 assists as Houston cruised past Arizona.

4.  Drew Timme, Gonzaga - Scored 25 points with 7 rebounds, and would have been higher had Gonzaga actually won.

3.  Jermaine Samuels, Villanova - 22 points and 7 rebounds in a victory over Michigan.

2.  JD Notae, Arkansas - Scored 21 points, grabbed 6 rebounds and 6 assists in an upset win over Gonzaga.

1.  Paolo Banchero, Duke - Probably the best individual player remaining (with apologies to Jaden Ivey), scored 22 points, and added 4 rebounds and 4 assists in Duke's win over Texas Tech.

Stats of the Day

3.  Bennedict Mathuri, Arizona - Arizona's best player shot 4-14 from the field.  That is not going to get it done, and subsequently, Arizona lost to Houston.

2.  JD Notae, Arkansas - Notae scored 21 points in spite of shooting 2-12 from three-point range.  He is going to have to be more accurate tomorrow against Duke.

1.  Jamal Shead, Houston - Shead shot 9-10 from the free throw line, which is how teams advance in this tournament.

Best Social Media Posts

I was at bar trivia, so I didn't actually pay attention to social media during the games.

Onto the standings, and remember, please double-check your scores, and let me know if you think I made a mistake.

1.  Day Yi 1 - 85 - DUKE/ VILLANOVA

2.  Javier Rodriguez 2 - 79 - Gonzaga/Arizona

3.  George Fox 1 - 76 - Gonzaga/Iowa

4.  Bill Ganoe 3 - 75 - Arizona/Gonzaga

5.  Colonel Kareem Montague - 73 - Arizona/Gonzaga
     Jeremy Spuhler - 73 - DUKE/Auburn

7.  Scott Bieterman 1 - 72 - Gonzaga/Arizona
     Scott Kroesen - 72 - Arizona/Gonzaga
     Dawn Lamb (Keith) - 72 - KANSAS/DUKE
     Jeff Plamondon 1 - 72 - KANSAS/Kentucky

11.  Silas Nichols - 70 - Gonzaga/Arizona

12.  John Hopps - 68 - Baylor/KANSAS

13.  Kline Kroesen - 67 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
       Sean McInerney 2 - 67 - Arizona/Kentucky
       Brian McMahon - 67 - Kentucky/Tennessee
       Allison Parker - 67 - Gonzaga/KANSAS
       George Walks 1 - 67 - Arizona/PURDUE

18.  Justine Frank - 66 - Gonzaga/Wisconsin
       Jonathan Wasserman - 66 - Arizona/Kentucky
       Justin Yung - 66 - DUKE/Auburn

21.  Josh Zdrowak - 65 - Arizona/Baylor

22.  Brian Hinaman - 64 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Alyssa Hopps - 64 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Mike Wolff - 64 - Gonzaga/Arizona

25.  Bill Ganoe 1 - 63 - Baylor/Arizona
       Dave Piasecki 1 - 63 - VILLANOVA/Gonzaga
       Biscuit Zdrowak - 63 - Gonzaga/Tennessee

28.  Bill Ganoe 2 - 62 - Gonzaga/Auburn
       Edith Pecan - 62 - VIrginia Tech/LSU
       Ryan Rodriguez - 62 - Baylor/Auburn
       Steven Usma 1 - 62 - Arizona/Gonzaga

32.  Brent Bellinger 2 - 61 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
       Mac Kroesen - 61 - Arizona/Gonzaga

34.  Scott Bieterman 2 - 60 - Arizona/PURDUE
       Guy Hughes - 60 - Arizona/Kentucky
       Blake Jackson - 60 - Kentucky/VILLANOVA
       Adam Jorgensen - 60 - Gonzaga/Iowa
       George Walks 2 - 60 - Arizona/Gonzaga

39.  Sean McInerney 1 - 59 - Gonzga/KANSAS
       Barkley Sosa - 59 - Gonzaga/Tennessee

41.  Brent Bellinger 1 - 58 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Braeden Helland 3 - 58 - KANSAS/Alabama
       Matt Hopps - 58 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Javier Rodriguez - 58 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Rich Samuels 1 - 58 - VILLANOVA/Gonzaga

46.  Rachel Bornn - 57 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
       Eric Inge - 57 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Chris Kroesen - 57 - KANSAS/Gonzaga
       Pepe Sosa 1 - 57 - Kentucky/Auburn
       Ron Stewart - 57 - KANSAS/Gonzaga
       Steven Usma 3 - Gonzaga/VILLANOVA

52.  Paul Cummings 1 - 56 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Larry Green - 56 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Arlene Amo Hopps - 56 - VILLANOVA/PURDUE
       Kevin Kroesen - 56 - Gonzaga/Auburn
       Jessica Samuels - 56 - DUKE/Auburn
       Hannah Sosa - 56 - Auburn/Baylor
       Amanda Staudt - 56 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Steven Usma 2 - 56 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Amy Zdrowak - 56 - Auburn/DUKE
       Keith Zdrowak - 56 - Arizona/Baylor

62.  Jim Coleman - 55 - Arizona/Kentucky
       Carolyn Fowler & Jane Reynolds - 55 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Jacey Fowler 1 -55 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
       Glen Merchant - 55 - Arizona/PURDUE
       Javier Rodriguez 1 - 55 - Kentucky/Tennessee
       Bubba Zdrowak - 55 - KANSAS/Texas

68.  Jen Armstrong - 53 - Wisconsin/Kentucky
       Jonathan Cox - 53 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
       Braeden Helland 2 - 53 - Kentucky/Tennessee
       Dawn Lamb (Colbie) - 53 - KANSAS/Texas Tech
       Dave Marzouca 2 - 53 - Gonzaga/Auburn
       Brandon Satterwhite - 53 - KANSAS/Kentucky
       Jamie Toole - 53 - Arizona/Baylor

75.  Jenna Finkelstein - 52 - Auburn/Texas Tech
       Martha Kroesen - 52 - Gonzaga/Wisconsin
       Philip Kroesen - 52 - Illinois/Gonzaga
       Annette Pritchard - 52 - KANSAS/Gonzaga
       Rich Samuels 3 - 52 - Tennessee/Gonzaga
       Chris Simmons - 52 - KANSAS/Gonzaga

81. James Davis - 51 - Gonzaga/Arizona
      Carolyn Fowler - 51 - Arizona/Gonzaga
      Marcus Jackson - 51 - Gonzaga/VILLANOVA
      Quinn Jackson - 51 - Gonzaga/VILLANOVA
      Dawn Lamb - 51 - KANSAS/Gonzaga
      Kisha Marzouca 1 - 51 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
      Sean McInerney 3 - 51 - KANSAS/Kentucky
      Jane Reynolds - 51 - Auburn/Baylor
      Pepe Sosa 2 - 51 - Gonzaga/Arizona
      Steven Usma 4 - 51 - KANSAS/DUKE

91.  Chris LaForte 1 - 50 - Tennessee/Gonzaga
       Dawn Lamb (Mitch) - 50 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Steph Stewart - 50 - VILLANOVA/Kentucky

94.  Mark Holbert - 49 - KANSAS/Kentucky
       Katie Kollmeyer - 49 - Gonzaga/Auburn
       Dan Laishley - 49 - Gonzaga/KANSAS
       Ty Leatherman - 49 - DUKE/Arizona
       Sasha Moon - 49 - Gonzaga/Arizona
       Matt Nieman - 49 - Arizona/Gonzaga
       Ashley Poer 2 - 49 - Kentucky/Arizona
       George Walks 4 - 49 - Gonzaga/Arizona

102.  George Fox 2 - 48 - Gonzaga/VILLANOVA
         Alvaro Gonzalez - 48 - Gonzaga/KANSAS
         Jeff Kroesen - 48 - Gonzaga/Auburn
         Hilary Kroesen - 48 - VILLANOVA/Gonzaga
         Dave Piasecki 2 - 48 - Tennessee/Gonzaga

107.  Paul Cummings 2 - 47 - Gonzaga/Arizona
         Miles Jackson - 47 - Tennessee/Gonzaga
         Chris LaForte - 47 - Michigan State/Tennessee
         Emily Lawson - 2 - Gonzaga/Arizona
         Brittany Sosa - 47 - Gonzaga/Iowa

112.  Daniel Barsky - 45 - Arizona/Gonzaga
         George Fox 3 - 45 - Tennessee/Gonzaga
         Dave Marzouca 1 - 45 - Texas Tech/Auburn
         Rich Samuels 2 - 45 - Kentucky/Iowa
         Rich Samuels 4 - 45 - Gonzaga/VILLANOVA

117.  Dave Marzouca 3 - 44 - Arizona/Kentucky
         Jeff Plamondon 2 - 44 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
         Annette Pritchard 2 - 44 - Baylor/KANSAS
         Carl Walker - 44 - Gonzaga/Auburn
         George Walks 3 - KANSAS/Gonzaga

122.  ShaneDog Millionaire Jernigan 2 - 43 - Gonzaga/Tennessee
         Gracie Kroesen - 43 - KANSAS/Gonzaga
         William Pujals - 43 - Gonzaga/KANSAS
         Katie Zdrowak - 43 - DUKE/KANSAS

126.  Kisha Marzouca 2 - 42 - Baylor/Auburn
         Kisha Marzouca 3 - 42 - Gonzaga/KANSAS

128.  James Garvin - 41 - DUKE/Arizona
         Braeden Helland 1 - 41 - Tennessee/Baylor
         ShaneDog Millionaire - 41 - Arizona/Texas Tech

131.  Scott Bieterman 3 - 39 - Gonzaga/Arizona
         Kingfish Parham - 39 - Gonzaga/Arizona

133.  Jacey Fowler - 38 - Gonzaga/Arizona
         Emily Lawson 1 - 38 - Gonzaga/KANSAS

135.  Nancy McInerney - 37 - VILLANOVA/Gonzaga
         Jason Spuhler - 37 - DUKE/Auburn

137.  Emily Lawson 3 - 36 - Arizona/Gonzaga

138.  Randy Pacheco - 34 - Gonzaga/Arizona

139.  Ashley Poer 1 - 33 - Gonzaga/Iowa

140.  Dawn Lamb (Quarter) - 30 - Texas Tech/Iowa

141.  Day Yi 2 - 28 - Gonzaga/Auburn

Sunday, March 20, 2022

2022 NCAA Tournament Pool - Round 2/Day 1


The second round started off with a BANG, a weird, crazy likely never-before-seen BANG!  And I missed it as I was watching my beloved Marlins open their home Spring Training schedule off with a 10-2 victory over a bunch of people masquerading as the Houston Astros.  The Marlins with three home runs from Avisail Garcia, Brian Anderson and Jerar Encarnacion.  So, even though the Marlins started off with 3 bangs, they couldn't hold a candle to what happened in the North Carolina - Baylor game.   North Carolina soars out to a 25-point lead with 10:08 remaining in the second half, when Brady Manek is ejected with a flagrant 2 elbow to the face of Jeremy Sochan.  And yes, it WAS a flagrant 2.  By definition, AND by intent.  (If only we had a basketball referee in the pool that could chime in with his thoughts, right Larry Green of Palm City, Florida?)  Manek had scored 25 points to that point, and there is no way Baylor was going to advance.  But, bye-bye Manek, and a few minutes later point guard Caleb Love fouls out, and Baylor begins its full-court pressure and then all of a sudden we go to overtime.  Baylor, however, ran out of gas, and North Carolina' Dontrez Styles banks a three-pointer and North Carolina wins 93-86.  With that win, we lost a champion, Baylor.

We also lost a second champion yesterday when the 11th seeded Michigan Wolverines defeated the Tennessee Volunteers.  Tennessee, who was probably playing the best in the country entering the tourney, just could not withstand the punches delivered by the Juwan Howard-led Wolverines (see what I did there?), and Michigan advances to the Sweet Sixteen.  

Gonzaga and Kansas also withstood some serious challenges from Memphis and Creighton, respectively, to avoid the same upset at the number 1 seed that befell Baylor.

Joining North Carolina and Michigan as lower seeds to crash the Sweet Sixteen is St. Peter's.  The Peacocks defeated the Murray State Racers to win only their second NCAA Tournament game ever, the first being Thursday night.  This loss also deprives me of my story on the history of great tournament rebounding by Murray State, which I had queued up in my mind in case of a Murray State victory.  But, St. Peter's victory also leaves me to hold a possible Shaheen Holloway story from his playing days for future use.

Arkansas also escaped with a close victory over New Mexico State, who just couldn't keep up with Arkansas' relentless defense which stymied leading scorer Teddy Allen, who could only score 12 after his round-one leading 27 on Thursday.

As far as the pool goes, nobody selected St. Peter's, but we did have two other games eligible for bonus points, North Carolina and Michigan, and we had plenty of people capitalize.  A total of 11 people picked North Carolina to defeat defending-champion Baylor (so no repeat this year), and 10 people selected Michigan to defeat Tennessee (plus Dave Marzouca of Boynton Beach, Florida who selected Michigan to defeat Longwood - not bonusable, but still impressive to have a correct 11 in the Sweet Sixteen.)  But, only one single entry - Jeremy Spuhler of St. Petersburg, Florida - selected both North Carolina AND Michigan.  For that, he is awarded our "Selection of the Day" award, and also shoots up the leaderboard.

The antithesis of Jeremy is Dawn Lamb (Quarter), of Delray Beach, Florida, who managed to receive 0 points yesterday, and conversely shot down the leaderboard.

So, although we lost 2 champions yesterday, we also gained a champion.  How so?  Well, I neglected to include Philip Kroesen of Southampton, New York's choice of Illinois.  Not sure how I missed that, as I have included his bracket in the scoring after each day, but perhaps I was just overlooking them, which is not what Houston is doing right now.  So, although I add Illinois now, they may be removed shortly!  The selected champions are:  AUBURN, ARIZONA, Baylor, DUKE, GONZAGA, ILLINOIS, KANSAS, Kentucky, Tennessee, TEXAS TECH, VILLANOVA, Virginia Tech, WISCONSIN.

Gonzaga is lucky to remain in bold as they held on to defeat Memphis 82-78.  Memphis, coached by its greatest basketball alumnus Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway, didn't look like they should even be in this tournament starting the season 9-8 with some really bad losses.  (Memphis most prominent alumni include Isaac Bruce, Dixie Carter, Wink Martindale, Fred Thompson and former Marlins great Dan Uggla.)  And although Hardaway looks a little rough managing his rotation when players have foul trouble and may need some seasoning with handling the clock and time outs, we cannot say that he cannot control his team.  Hardaway allowed Emoni Bates, one of his "star" freshmen to return home to Michigan to check out his injured back - an injury that the team and medical staff never reported as having occurred, and this also allowed the team to be rid of Bates' controlling father and entourage, which developed since Bates was heralded as "The Next Kevin Durant" at 14, and named Gatorade National Player of the Year his sophomore year.  Memphis then went 10-1 and made it to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.  Hardaway's handling of the Bates situation likely saved the school from having to fire its favorite son (or more likely, just putting him on the proverbial  hot seat.).  But, that has me wondering that if Penny Hardaway is Memphis' best basketball player (with Ja Morant quickly rising - literally), who else is there?  Ah, I remember.

So the Memphis Tigers made the NCAA Championship games in 1973 and 2008, the latter team led by Derrick Rose and falling to Kansas as mentioned yesterday.  [Ed. Note:  The NCAA vacated Memphis' 2008 run due to SAT test-taking issues surrounding Derrick Rose.]  But I remember vividly a player from Memphis' heyday, with four straight Sweet Sixteen or better appearances from 1982-1985, led by the incomparable Keith Lee!  Keith Lee is Memphis' leading scorer, having scored 2,408 points in his career, and being named to the AP All-America list four times (first team as a junior and senior).  In 1982, Lee's freshman year, Memphis defeated Wake Forest 56-55 before falling to Villanova 70-66 in the Sweet Sixteen.  The following year, Lee led the squad past Georgetown before falling to to the Akeem Olajuwon led Houston Cougars 78-71 in the Sweet Sixteen.  (Olajuwon spelled his name "Akeem" in college, changing it to "Hakeem" once he converted.).  The Cougars would ultimately lose in the finals on the Derrick Whittenberg missed-shot/rebound dunk by Lorenzo Charles which gave North Carolina State the victory.  Memphis lost to Houston again the following year in the Sweet Sixteen after beating Oral Robert and Houston.  But, it was the 1985 Final Four run in which Lee really made his mark.  [Ed. Note:  The NCAA vacated Memphis' 1982-1986 seasons.

In the opening round, Memphis played the Penn Quakers, defeating them 67-55.  Lee started off slowly, as he was saddled with foul trouble, finishing with only 8 points and 3 rebounds in only 20 minutes.  In the second round, Lee was electric scoring 28 points, with 6 rebounds, in a narrow overtime victory over UAB.  Lee again experienced foul trouble in the Sweet Sixteen against Boston College, and Memphis struggled to a 59-57 win.  Lee scored 8 points in 25 minutes. (Boston College was led by a then-uneard-of Michael Adams, who would go on to be one of the greatest three-point shooters in NBA history.) But, in the Elite 8, with a Final Four berth on the line, Lee scored 23, with 11 rebounds, as Memphis beat Wayman Tisdale's Oklahoma Sooners 63-61.

The Semi-Finals game against Villanova is a tough one to review from the point of statistics, as Villanova routinely held the ball for minutes at a time to slow down the game, and would ultimately win the championship over Patrick Ewing's Georgetown Hoyas, with Villanova winning 52-45.  Lee still finished with 10 points.

Lee finished the season averaging 19.7 points per game and 9.2 rebounds.  This followed a junior year averaging 18.4 and 10.8, and 18.7 and 10.8 his sophomore year.  Lee was even amazing his freshman year, scoring 18.3 points per game and gathering 11 rebounds per game.

Lee was ultimately selected 11th by the Cleveland Cavaliers in the 1985 NBA draft, playing 5 seasons in the NBA.

Back to the pool, Javier Rodriguez 2 of Coral Gables, Florida is in sole possession of first place.

 Players of the Day

5.  Arthur Kaluma, Creighton - 24 points and 12 rebounds in the loss to Kansas.

4.  KC Ndefo, St. Peter's - 17 points and 10 rebounds, 6 blocks, and by far the best player in the St. Peter's - Murray State game.

3.  Hunter Dickenson, Michigan - 27 points on 8/13 shooting, 11 rebounds, 4 assists in Michigan's victory over Tennessee.

2.  Brady Manek, North Carolina - Although R.J. Davis scored 30 for the victorious Tar Heels, Manek was THE story.  26 points, 5 rebounds and 2 assists in 28 minutes, and a really stupid Flagrant 2 ejection.

1.  Drew Timme, Gonzaga - 25 points, 14 rebounds and 4 assists.  Timme scored 20 of his 25 in the second half as Gonzaga outscored Memphis by 14 in the half to win 82-78.

Stats of the Day

3.  The entire bench for St. Mary's scored ZERO points in their 72-56 loss to UCLA.

2.  JD Notae of Arkansas fouled out against New Mexico State by committing 5 fouls in the second half, four of them charges!  Arkansas held on to win 53-48.

1.  KC Ndefo of St. Peter's shot 7-9 from the free throw line.  He is a 53% free throw shooter this year.

Best Social Media Posts

To be fair, I didn't really pay attention to social media yesterday.

Anyway, on to the standings.  Let me know if you think I made a mistake.  

1.  Javier Rodriguez 2 - 65

2.  Day Yi 1 - 63

3.  Scott Bieterman 1 - 60

4.  Bill Ganoe 3 - 59

5.  Goerge Fox 1 - 58

6.  Brian McMahon - 57
     Jeff Plamondon - 57
     Jeremy Spuhler - 57

9.  Silas Nichols - 56

10.  Bill Ganoe 2 - 54
       George Walks 1 - 54
       Justin Yung - 54

13.  Brent Bellinger 2 - 53
       Colonel Kareem Montague - 53

15.  Scott Bieterman 2 - 52

16.  Allison Parker - 51
       Barkley Sosa - 51

18.  John Hopps - 50
       Jonathan Wasserman - 50

20.  Kline Kroesen - 49
       Scott Kroesen - 49
       Dawn Lamb (Keith) - 49

23.  Brent Bellinger 1 - 48
       Justine Frank - 48
       Braeden Helland 3 - 48
       Alyssa Hopps - 48
       Matt Hopps - 48
       Adam Jorgensen - 48
       Sean McInerney 2 - 48
       Josh Zdrowak - 48

31.  Edith Pecan - 47
       Dave Piasecki 1 - 47
       Pepe Sosa 1 - 47

34.  Blake Jackson - 46
       Mike Wolff - 46
       Amy Zdrowak - 46

37.  Rachel Bornn - 45
       Jim Coleman - 45
       Mac Kroesen - 45
       Sean McInerney 1 - 45

41.  Braeden Helland 2 - 44
       Guy Hughes - 44
       Javier Rodriguez 3 - 44
       Ryan Rodriguez - 44
       Amanda Staudt - 44

46.  Bill Ganoe 1 - 43
       Brian Hinaman - 43
       Eric Inge - 43
       Bubba Zdrowak - 43
    
50.  Chris LaForte 1 - 42
       Rich Samuels 3 - 42
       Hannah Sosa - 42
       Steven Usma 1 - 42
       Steven Usma 2 - 42

55.  Jacey Fowler 1 - 41
       Chris Kroesen - 41
       Chris LaForte 2 - 41
       Dave Marzouca 2 - 41
       Sean McInerney 3 - 41
       Ashley Poer 2 - 41
       Jane Reynolds - 41
       Javier Rodriguez 1 - 41
       Brandon Satterwhite - 41
       Ron Stewart - 41
       George Walks 4 - 41

66.  Jonathan Cox - 40
       Paul Cummings 1 - 40
       Jenna Finkelstein - 40
       Larry Green - 40
       Dawn Lamb (Colbie) - 40
       Keith Zdrowak - 40

72.  Daniel Barsky - 39
       Carolyn Fowler and Jane Reynolds - 39
       Marcus Jackson - 39
       Dan Laishley - 39
       Dave Marzouca 1 - 39
       William Pujals - 39
       Brittany Sosa - 39
       Pepe Sosa 2 - 39

80.  Philip Kroesen - 38
       Dawn Lamb (Mitch) - 38
       Dave Piasecki 2 - 38
       Annette Pritchard 1 - 38
       Jessica Samules - 38

85.  Jen Armstrong - 37
       James Davis - 37
       Emily Lawson 2 - 37
       Kisha Marzouca 1 - 37
       Matt Nieman - 37

90.  Carolyn Fowler - 36
       Alvaro Gonzalez - 36
       Arlene Hopps - 36
       Kevin Kroesen - 36
       Martha Kroesen - 36
       Dave Marzouca 3 - 36
       Chris Simmons - 36
       Biscuit Zdrowak - 36

98.  Mark Holbert - 35
       ShaneDog Millionaire Jernigan - 35
       Katie Kollmeyer - 35
       Glen Merchant - 35
       Rich Samuels 2 - 35

103.  George Fox 2 - 34
         Hilary Kroesen - 34
         Rich Samuels 1 - 34
         Jamie Toole - 34
         Steven Usma 3 - 34
         Carl Walker - 34
         George Walks 3 - 34

110.  Scott Bieterman 3 - 33
         Paul Cummings 2 - 33
         Quinn Jackson - 33
         Ty Leatherman - 33
         Sasha Moon - 33
         Kingfish Parham - 33
         George Walks 2 - 33

117.  George Fox 3 - 32
         Jeff Kroesen - 32
         Dawn Lamb - 32
         Jeff Plamondon 2 - 32
         Annette Pritchard 2 - 32
         Steph Stewart - 32
         Katie Zdrowak - 32

124.  Jacey Fowler 2 - 30

125.  Miles Jackson - 29
         Jason Spuhler - 29

127.  Emily Lawson 3 - 28
         Steven Usma 4 - 28

129.  James Garvin - 27
         Braeden Helland 1 - 27

131.  Nancy McInerney - 27
         Rich Samuels 4 - 27

133.  ShaneDog Millionaire Jernigan - 26
         Dawn Lamb (Quarter) - 26
         Kisha Marzouca 2 - 26
         Kisha Marzouca 3 - 26
         Day Yi 2 - 26

138.  Gracie Kroesen - 25

139.  Emily Lawson 1 - 24
         Randy Pacheco - 24

141.  Ashley Poer 1 - 21
123.  

Friday, March 18, 2022

2022 NCAA Tournament Pool - Round 1/Day 1


Welcome Tournament Players to the Road to New Orleans 2022.  And a true road it is this year, as no more "bubble" like last year's Indianapolis tournament, and as those of you that read the rules and instructions, Your Tournament Host will be making a sojourn to check out the Final Four.

I am not going to lie.  Your Tournament Host is struggling today with the loss of his favorite team, the Kentucky Wildcats.  I am not sure how I am going to address it here - and I HAVE to address it here as it was THE story from yesterday, but I am sure that it will have something to do with some not-so-subtle digs at Syracuse, who knows.

Before I begin, I do want to say thank you to Martha Kroesen, of West Palm Beach, Florida, who purchased this lovely dry-erase bracket board for me oh so long time ago when I ran the office pool for where we worked.  Although a bit worn, and scratched, it is still in use!


A hearty welcome to our three reigning prize winners, Edith Pecan, of West Palm Beach, Florida, Steven Usma of Miami, Florida, and Brian Hinaman of Parrish, Florida.  Our reigning last-place "winner", Sean McInerney of Jacksonville Beach, Florida, is also returning.  It looks like you are going to have a lot of stiff competition, since no less than 18 of you submitted e-mails to me with the "Winning Bracket."  Now, I am not great at math, but I don't think that is possible.  I guess we shall see!!!

We have 140 entries in the pool, from near and far.  For the first time that I can remember, we have expanded the pool to a second country!!!  Welcome to Ron Stewart from Toronto, Ontario, Canada!  Although most of our entrants are bipedal, we do have a handful of 4-legged entrants, including the return of our first ever (non-Florida) gator, Bubba Zdrowak from Orlando, Florida.  Interestingly, he did not pick the actual Florida Gators, mostly because they are not in the tournament.

I also want to thank the 78% of you that followed the instructions.  The rest of you 22%, I don't know.  I do want to specifically mention Day Yi of Forest Hills, New York, who forgot to put any identifying information on his bracket.  Since he turned it in relatively early, I knew to whom the brackets belonged. But, after the tourney started, Day wrote to me apologizing for forgetting, replacing his old brackets with ones containing his name (and no other changes), and offering the possibility that I remove him from the pool.  Well, a lot of you are going to wish I actually did (more on Day later).

For the second year in a row, I want to give credit to Arlene Amo Hopps of Quincy, Massachusetts for having the best penmanship.  I note this because some of you should seriously work on your writing.  One entrant seemed to have selected "Provolone" to win yesterday, but context clues let me know he meant "Providence".  

We have 11 different champions among our brackets, listed here.  The teams will remain capitalized in bold so long as they remain in the tournament.  The selected champions are:  AUBURN, ARIZONA, BAYLOR, DUKE, GONZAGA, KANSAS, Kentucky, TENNESSEE, TEXAS TECH, VILLANOVA, WISCONSIN

Yes, that means a number of participants have already lost their champion.  On DAY 1!  And yes, I'll admit, Your Tournament Host is one of them.  But all of us were hurt by the Kentucky loss to some extent, as it was one of the two games for which our pool was unanimous.  Everybody had Kentucky to defeat St. Peter's, and everybody selected Kansas over Texas Southern.  Good luck tomorrow to the 2 entrants that selected Murray State OVER Kentucky in the second round.  If that occurs, you are sure to receive a mention here!

This means that Gonzaga and Baylor were not unanimous.  Dawn Lamb - Quarter of Delray Beach, Florida selected Georgia State over Gonzaga, and our defending champion Edith Pecan of West Palm Beach, selected Norfolk State over Baylor.  The other near-unanimous selection was Tennessee, as only one entrant selected Longwood!  These selections were, let's say, not the best of the Day.

The Best Selection(s) of the Day will be discussed later.

Onto the games.  The day started off strong, with an 11-6 upset in our very first game; Michigan defeating Colorado State.  However, according to our pool this wasn't much of an upset as most entries selected Michigan, and a good number even had that as the guarantee.  This was the first of four upsets on the day, including New Mexico State defeating Connecticut, Richmond defeating Iowa (both 12-5), and of course, the talk of the day, St. Peter's beating the vaunted Kentucky Wildcats, only the 10th time a 15 seed has defeated a 2 seed in the first round of the tournament.

This reminds me .....

The Richmond Spiders have a history of upsets in the NCAA Tournament.  In 1984, as a 12 seed, they defeated the Auburn Tigers 72-71.  Auburn had a player named Charles Barkley, but still could not overcome the Spiders.  Four years later, Richmond earned a 13 seed, but defeated the Indiana Hoosiers, at the time the defending champion on Keith Smart's jumper to beat the Syracuse Orangemen in 1987 for the title.  Richmond followed that up with a win over the 5 seed Georgia Tech to advance to the Sweet Sixteen.  The Spiders also reached the Sweet Sixteen in 2011 as a 12 seed, upsetting the 5-seed Vanderbilt in the first round.  However, Richmond's most memorable tournament win came in 1991 as a 15 seed.

Staying in the east, the Richmond Spiders had to play the 2nd seeded Syracuse Orangemen in the storied Cole Field House in College Park, Maryland.  That Syracuse team was loaded, paced by Billy Owens, LeRon Ellis and Adrian Autry, were favored.  Billy Owens, playing all 40 minutes, scoring 22 points with 7 rebounds.  He led 4 players in double figures as Dave Johnson (13), Michael Edwards (12) and LeRon Ellis (12) joined Owens on the scoresheet.  Syracuse's problem was a lack of depth, as only 3 players came off the bench to play 25 total minutes and scored a total of 3 points.

Contrarily, a deeper Richmond team had 4 bench players play a total of 65 minutes, led by Terry Connolly with 14 points in 30 minutes, and Jim Springer and Chris Fleming each contributing 8 points.  But the story was Curtis Blair, who scored a team-high 18 with 7 assists, including 7 free throws in 8 attempts to seal the 73-69 victory, and to become the first 15 seed to defeat a 2 seed!!!

[Editor's Note:  For the history section, I was torn between mentioning this NCAA Tournament story or discussing St. Peter's coach, Shaheen Holloway playing career in the tournament, but ultimately chose this story for three reasons:  (1) St. Peter's is still in play, so I might be able to use this for Sunday's update; (2) This story ties into BOTH the St. Peter's win (a 15 over a 2) and Richmond's win from yesterday; and (3) to bust the chops of one Silas Nichols of Washington, D.C.]

Back to yesterday's action, we had some great performances from players notably Gonzaga's Drew Timme scoring 32 points with 13 rebounds, leading scorer Teddy Allen of New Mexico State scoring 37 points in defeating Connecticut, and Kentucky's Oscar Tshiebwe, the odds-on NCAA player of the year, scoring 30 points with 16 rebounds in a losing effort.  Also in a losing effort, Jamaree Bouyea from the University of San Francisco - Bill Russell's alma mater - scored 36 points against Murray State.  But, the star of the day was St. Peter's Daryl Banks, who scored St. Peter's first 8 points, and finished with 27 as the St. Peter's Peacocks defeated the Kentucky Wildcats.  If NBC owned the rights to the tournament rather than CBS, I would claim the fix was in, but alas, St. Peter's earned it.

A special mention to University of San Francisco substitute Volodymyr Markovelskyy, whose father is a policeman in Truskovets, Ukraine.

Another special mention to Amy Barron, who became only the second woman to officiate a men's NCAA Tournament game.

Stats of the Day:

5.  South Dakota State is number 1 in the NCAA in team three-point shooting precentage at 44.9%.  They have seven - 7! - players that shoot 39% or greater from three point range.  Providence held them to 7-23 from range yesterday.

4.  On ESPN's NCAA tournament pool section, nearly the same amount of entries (4.1%) had Kentucky AND Iowa in the Final Four, as had St. Peter's (4.6%) winning one game.

3.  Richmond won its 9th NCAA Tournament game as a 12 seed or higher.  Nobody else has more than 4.

2.  Kentucky was up six points with 2:57 to play in regulation against St. Peter's.

1.  St. Peter's won its first ever NCAA Tournament game.

Best Social Media Posts

3.  From everywhere ....  the Indiana cheerleader retrieving the ball from the top of the basket.  Seriously, it is everywhere.  I would not have even been acknowledged had that game been anything even remotely close to adequate.

3.  From Ja Morant on Twitter:


2.  This beauty from the NCCA's March Madness Twitter Feed:  "I didn't know Zorro was San Francisco's mascot. 


1.  From Everyone on Twitter:  Some version of:  "Happy St. Peter's Day!

Now, back to the pool.  As stated earlier, a lot, and I mean a lot, of entrants selected Michigan, and none had St. Peter's.  Approximately 20 selected New Mexico State, with 7 selecting the Aggies as their guarantee.  We also had about 17 choose Richmond, with 6 guaranteeing a Spiders victory.  However, the Best Selection(s) of the Day have to go to the aforementioned Day Yi of Forest Hills, New York, for picking Michigan, New Mexico State, AND Richmond, and selecting Richmond as his guaranty.  Those 20 points have Day in the lead.  Day's might be my least favorite bracket, given that he has Yale winning today and he has Duke winning the championship!  Ugh!!!

On to the standings .... If you think there is a discrepancy between your listed score and the score you believe you earned, just send me an e-mail and I will be more than happy to re-visit and re-score your sheet. I do make mistakes and I will be happy to correct them.  Just know that if in re-scoring your sheet I find an error, no matter which direction, I will use the appropriate score - so there is the possibility of moving backward.  On to the standings (ties listed alphabetically):

1.  Day Yi - 30

2.  Braden Helland 3 - 29
     Colonel Kareem Montague - 29

4.  Javier Rodriguez 2 - 28

5.  Alyssa Hopps - 27
     Matt Hopps - 27
     Blake Jackson - 27
     Mac Kroesen - 27
     Dawn Lamb (Keith) - 27
     Jeff Plamondon - 27

11.  George Fox - 26

12.  Kline Kroesen - 25
       Edith Pecan - 25

14.  Bill Ganoe 2 - 24
       Jane Reynolds - 24
       Jeremy Spuhler - 24

17.  Brent Bellinger 1 - 23
       Scott Bieterman 1 - 23
       Bill Ganoe 3 - 23
       Chris Kroesen - 23
       Silas Nichols - 23
       Javier Rodriguez 3 - 23

23.  Brent Bellinger 2 - 22
       John Hopps - 22
       Marcus Jackson - 22
       Philip Kroesen - 22
       Brian McMahon - 22
       Ryan Rodriguez - 22
       Pepe Sosa 1 - 22
       Steven Usma 1 - 22
       Josh Zdrowak - 22

32.  Scott Bieterman 2 - 21
       Rachel Bornn - 21
       Jacey Fowler 1 - 21
       Dave Marzouca 1 - 21
       Dave Piasecki 1 - 21
       William Pujals - 21
       Javier Rodriguez 1 - 21
       Brittany Sosa - 21
       Ron Stewart - 21
       George Walks 1 - 21
       George Walks 4 - 21

43.  Jonathan Cox - 20
       Carolyn Fowler & Jane Reynolds - 20
       Braeden Helland 2 - 20
       Adam Jorgensen - 20
       Kevin Kroesen - 20
       Chris LaForte 1 - 20
       Chris LaForte 2 - 20
       Brandon Satterwhite - 20
       Pepe Sosa 2 - 20
       Steven Usma 2 - 20

53.  Paul Cummings 2 - 18
       Larry Green - 18
       Mark Holbert - 18

56.  Jenna Finkelstein - 17
       Justine Frank - 17
       Bill Ganoe 1 - 17
       Guy Hughes - 17
       Ty Leatherman - 17
       Dave Marzouca 2 - 17
       Kisha Marzouca 1 - 17
       Sean McInerney 1 - 17
       Annette Pritchard 1 - 17
       Rich Samuels 2 - 17
       Jonathan Wasserman - 17
       Justin Yung - 17

68.  Jen Armstrong - 16
       Jim Coleman - 16
       Arlene Amo Hopps - 16
       Hilary Kroesen - 16
       Martha Kroesen - 16
       Scott Kroesen - 16
       Emily Lawson 2 - 16
       Matt Nieman - 16
       Kingfish Parham - 16
       Dave Piasecki 2 - 16
       Ashley Poer 2 - 16
       Rich Samuels 3 - 16
       Chris Simmons - 16
       Hannah Sosa - 16
       Amanda Staudt - 16
       Steven Usma 3 - 16
       Keith Zdrowak - 16

85.  Daniel Barsky - 15
       Carolyn Fowler - 15
       Brian Hinaman - 15
       Eric Inge - 15
       Jeff Kroesen - 15
       Dawn Lamb (Colbie) - 15
       Dawn Lamb (Mitch) - 15
       Glen Merchant - 15
       Sasha Moon - 15
       Allison Parker - 15
       Jeff Plamondon 2 - 15
       Rich Samuels 1 - 15
       Steph Stewart - 15
       Mike Wolff - 15
       Amy Zdrowak - 15

100.  Quinn Jackson - 14
         Katie Kollmeyer - 14
         Dan Laishley - 14
         Dave Marzouca 3 - 14
         Biscuit Zdrowak - 14

105.  Dawn Lamb (Quarter) - 13
         Barkley Sosa - 13

107.  Jamie Toole - 12

108.  Jacey Fowler 2 - 11
         Alvaro Gonzalez - 11
         Emily Lawson 1 - 11
         Kisha Marzouca 2 - 11
         Nancy McInerney - 11
         Carl Walker - 11
         George Walks 2 - 11
         George Walks 3 - 11
         Bubba Zdrowak - 11

117.  George Fox 2 - 10
         James Garvin - 10
         Miles Jackson - 10
         Emily Lawson 3 - 10
         Kisha Marzouca 3 - 10
         Sean McInerney 2 - 10 
         Sean McInerney 3 - 10
         Annette Pritchard 2 - 10
         Jessica Samuels - 10
         Jason Spuhler - 10
         Steven Usma 4 - 10

128.  Scott Bieterman - 9
         James Davis - 9
         George Fox 3 - 9
         Gracie Kroesen - 9
         Randy Pacheco - 9
         Rich Samuels 4 - 9
         Day Yi 2 - 9
         Katie Zdrowak - 9

136.  Dawn Lamb - 8
         Ashley Poer 1 - 8

138.  ShaneDog Millionaire Jernigan 2 - 7
         Braeden Helland 1 - 7

140. - ShaneDog Millionaire Jernigan 1 - 6

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

NCAA Tournament Pool - Round 2/Day 2

 


Guess who's back?  Back again!  Well, not Shady, but Your Tournament Host fresh from posting Sunday's analysis.  Now, we are back to being on time, as this post covers yesterday's on-court and in-pool action.

So, based upon yesterday's action here is what we know: (1) Gonzaga is going to be hard to beat; (2) Florida State can DUNK; and (3) the Pac-12 must be really underrated, as they have 4 teams remaining.

That includes Oregon, that ran roughshod over 2nd seeded Iowa.  And, they will face-off with fellow conference member USC, who started strong against Kansas and then coasted to victory, guaranteeing at least one Pac-12 member in the Elite Eight.  UCLA ended Abilene Christian's run, and they will face-off against Alabama who defeated Maryland.  Creighton rounds out the Elite Eight in the left half of the bracket.

Several entries had UCLA making the Sweet Sixteen, but unfortuantely for the pool, Abilene Christian did not qualify as an upset.  The only game that qualified as an upset was Oregon over Iowa, and 16 entries picked the Ducks to win.  Only one of those entrants, Max Macon 3 of Jupiter, Florida, chose the second round matchup as his guarantee.  Congratulations to Max on his 10 bonus points, and on your "Pick of the Day" award.

After Sunday's action, 8 of our 13 champions remained in the NCAA Tournament, but after Monday's games, only 6 made it to the Sweet 16.  Our champions (with remaining teams in bold) are:  Alabama, Baylor, Florida, Florida State, Gonzaga, Houston, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State and Virginia.

Today's tournament history springs from yesterday's (well, actually earlier today's) mention of the 1968 Game of the Century between Houston and UCLA, with the Cougars upsetting the top-ranked and undefeated Bruins.  UCLA's progression into the Sweet Sixteen makes it easy to re-visit that 1968 Championship team.

UCLA, the top-seed in the West region, defeated New Mexico State 58-49, after the Aggies beat Weber State.  UCLA clinched their spot in the Final Four by beating Santa Clara 87-68.  The West All-Region Team included three Bruins, Lew Alcindor, Lucius Allen and Mike Warren (more on him later). 

In the Final Four, UCLA was able to extract some revenge over Houston by annihilating the Cougars 101-69.  All five starters scored in double digits, led by Lew Alcindor, Lucius Allen and Mike Lynn's 19, with Alcindor grabbing 18 rebounds as well and Lucius Allen handing out 12 assists.  Lynn Shackelford added 17 points, and Mike Warren scored 14 with 9 assists.  UCLA won the championship by beating North Carolina 78-55, with Lew Alcindor absolutely dominating the game scoring 34 points and grabbing 16 rebounds.  The Most Outstanding Player was Lew Alcindor, who was joined on the All-Tournament Team by teammates Lucius Allen, Lynn Shackelford and Mike Warren, as well as Larry Miller from North Carolina.

Lew Alcindor, of course, would go on to become Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, one of the all-time greatest NBA players and its all-time leading scorer, as well as someone who busts his buns every night dragging Walton and Lanier up and down the court for 48 minutes.

Mike Warren would go on to become an actor as well, including his starring role as Officer Bobby Hill on Hill Street Blues.

Stats of the Day

3.  The Oregon-Iowa game was the first game with 100 combined points in a half since 2008 in a first round matchup between North Carolina and Mount St. Mary's.

2.  Speaking of North Carolina, this is the first year North Carolina, Duke, Kentucky and Kansas are all absent from the Sweet Sixteen since the NCAA Tournament went to 64 teams in 1985.

1.  The combined number of seeds remaining in the Sweet Sixteen is 94, the highest number ever topping the 89 from 1986.

Players of the Day (Losing Team Edition)

4.  Austin Reaves, Oklahoma.  Reaves scored 27 points, and was the only Oklahoma player that truly looked comfortable against Gonzaga.

3.  Aaron Wiggins, Maryland.  Wiggins also scored 27 points, but also aded 6 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 steals.

2.  Javonte Smart, LSU.  Smart scored 27 points, had 9 rebounds and 6 assists.

1.  Luka Garza, Iowa.  The first team All-American ended his collegiate career with a 36 point, 9 rebound effort.

Players of the Day (Winning Team Edition)

5.  Johnny Juzang, UCLA.  Juzang, the Kentucky transfer, scored a game-high 17 points.

4.  Eli Brooks, Michigan.  Brooks scored 21, grabbed 4 rebounds and dished 7 assists.

3.  Anthony Polite, FSU.  Polite scored 22 points.  His previous career high was only 15.

2.  Chris Duarte, Oregon.  Duarte scored 23 points and had 7 rebounds in Oregon's win over Iowa.

1.  Drew Timme, Gonzaga.  Timme scored 30 points on 9-12 shooting from the field, and 12-14 shooting from the free throw line.  He also had 13 rebounds.

Now, on to the scoring.  Please double check and let me know if you think there is a problem.  I will be glad to double-check your bracket.  Later this week I will update the standings to add winners/finalists for the entrants and maybe some other information.

1.  Nancy McInerney - 67

2.  Silas Nichols 2 - 65
     Jeff Plamondon - 65

4.  Colleen Hamilton 4 - 63

5.  Matt Hopps - 62
     Steven Usma 4 - 62

7.  William Pujals - 61

8.   Kingfish Parham - 60

9.  George Walks 2 - 58
     Day Yi 1 - 58
     Justin Yung - 58

12. Brent Bellinger 2 - 57
      Dave Marzouca 1 - 57
      Silas Nichols 1 - 57

15.  Javier Rodriguez - 56
       Steven Usma 1 - 56

17.  Chris Igtiben 1 -  55

18.  Brent Bellinger 1 - 54
       Braeden Helland 3 - 54
       Edy Pecan - 54
       Measha WIlliams - 54

22.  Ashley Poer 1 - 53
       Ashley Poer 3 - 53
       Measha Williams 3 - 53

25.  Pepe Sosa - 52
       Amy Zdrowak - 52

27. Jacey Fowler-Reynolds 2 - 51
      Chris Igtiben 2 - 51
      Karen Katz - 51
      Katie Kollmeyer - 51
      Brittany Sosa - 51
      George Walks 3 - 51

33.  Ty Leatherman - 50
       Brandon Satterwhite - 50

35.  Liz Carew - 49
       Jacey Fowler-Reynolds 1 - 49
       Carey Taylor - 49

38.  Jenna Finkelstein - 48
       Arlene Amo Hopps - 48
       Colonel Kareem Montague - 48
       Rich Samuels 1 - 48

42.  Max Macon 4 - 47
       Steven Usma 2 - 47
       Katie Zdrowak - 47
       Keith Zdrowak - 47

46.  Scott Bieterman - 46
       Steven Usma 3 - 46

48.  Larry Green - 45
       Stephanie Henderson - 45
       Skip Laforte - 45
       Max Macon 2 - 45

52.  Colleen Hamilton 2 - 44
       Eric Inge - 44
       Dan Laishley - 44
       Max Macon 3 - 44
       Kisha Marzouca 2 - 44
       Measha Williams 3 - 44

58.  Braeden Helland - 43
       Guy Hughes - 43
       Joshua Ward - 43
       Ken Ward - 43

62.  Paul Cummings - 42
       Ashley Poer 2 - 42
       Jeremy Spuhler - 42
       Amanda Staudt - 42
       Jonathan Wasaserman - 42

67.  Braeden Helland 2 - 41
       Cheryl Spuhler - 41
       Measha Williams 1 - 41

70.  Colleen Hamilton 1 - 40
       Colleen Hamilton 3 - 40
       Adam Jorgensen 1 - 40
       Greg Lieberman - 40
       Kisha Marzouca 1 - 40
       Sasha Moon - 40
       Jason Spuhler - 40

77.  Adam Jorgensen 2 - 39
       Adam Jorgensen 3 - 39
       Martha Kroesen - 39
       Max Macon 1 - 39

81.  Rachel Bornn - 38
       Carolyn Fowler - 38
       Braeden Helland 4 - 38
       Emily Lawson 2 - 38

85.  Dan Barsky 1 - 37
       Kyle Henderson 1 - 37
       Brian Hinaman - 37
       Marcus Jackson - 37
       Mac Kroesen - 37
       Michael McNally - 37
       Barkley Sosa - 37
       George Walks 1 - 37
       George Walks 4 - 37

94.  Kyle Henderson 2 - 36
       Miles Jackson - 36
       Shane Dogmillionaire Jernigan - 36
       Emily Lawson 1 - 36
       Jane Reynolds - 36
       Rich Samuels 2 - 36
       Hannah Sosa - 36

101.  Quinn Jackson - 35
         Chris Laforte - 35
         Wes Wiggins - 35
         Day Yi - 35
         Biscuit Zdrowak - 35

106.  Luis Briones - 34
         Rich Samuels 3 - 34

108.  Carolyn Fowler & Jane Reynolds - 33
         Dave Marzouca 2 - 33
         Joshua Zdrowak - 33

111.  James Garvin - 32
         Blake Jackson - 32

113.  Dan Barsky 2 - 31
         Sean McInerney - 31
         Brian McMahon - 31
         Jessica Samuels - 31

117.  Alvaro Gonzalez - 30
         Justin Hallack - 30

119.  Shane Dogmillionaire Jernigan - 29

120.  Bubba Zdrowak - 27