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By Mike Miller
College basketball editor

March 31 | 1:15 p.m. PT

The readers weigh in

Now that I’ve solved the recent mailbag problems (sorry to those sending e-mails; feel free to collect your thoughts, muster up a good insult or two and send away), today’s a good day to post reader responses. Nothing else going on, right?

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But first, a quick treat: It wouldn’t be the Final Four without a shot of John Wooden. The legendary UCLA coach gave a lengthy interview to NPR recently. Click here for the story and a link to the audio. Yes, Wooden’s 96-years-old. I hope I sound that good when I’m 56.

Anyway, onto the mail.

The best father-son coaches:

As an African American student at GU during the '70's for undergrad and early '80's for law school, I was greatly influenced by "Big John" Thompson and his philosophies. The things he said floated around our community and often prompted us to think deeper. Pride is not a sufficient word to describe what many African American students felt about Thompson.We also had the priveledge to see his sons at games and were again proud that the "world could see" a Black man was a family man. At this time, the campus had not adjusted to a "Black" presence and racism was not hidden. My expereince at GU was enriched by John Thompson. As a mother, I am now sharing my GU expereince with my sons and daughter as we watch Big John and John III. I can't help but think, maybe one of them may become a Hoya too...
— B.J. Jones

Good read. I always marvel at the depth of character of men in hard times and wonder where they got it. I could not help noting "Pops" is a II and it would be interesting to see how much he was motivated by a Mr. John Thompson I.
— Don Love, Mt. Aukum, Calif.

I'm not sick of hearing about John and his son. See there are some black dads that raise that black son right. All black men don't go to jail.
— William O'Neal, East Chicago, Ind.

Come on! What about the Drew's of Valparaiso and Baylor?
— William Oakley, Jenks, Okla.

Are you serious about Eddie Sutton not being in John Thompson II's league? Thompson did win a national championship, but outside of the Ewing era, how successful was he in the tournament? His three Final Fours were consecutive with the same players. Sutton made it to three Final Fours in three different decades. Also, Thompson was forced to resign because the program was faltering. Sutton resigned because of issues off the court. He had great teams his last couple of years as a college coach. I am not going to say that Sutton was the better coach, but they are definitely in the same league.
— Wes Turybury, St. Paul, Minn.

Good article, save it a few years you might have missed the boat on Bennett.
— Brian

Your paragraph on Dick and Tony Bennett is disgusting and demeaning. You are a basketball wannabe that couldn't shine Dick Bennett's shoes. Having a laptop should be a crime in your case. Because you measure how significant a coach is on the high profile games, you miss the all important fact that building programs and giving kids that wouldn't be recruited by these big dog schools and coaches is what has made the game as competitive as it is today. Nobody and I mean nobody has done that better than Dick Bennett. He is a freakin' basketball god. You are a goof.
— Sincerely, Jane L Stroede, Wisconsin Dells, Wis.

Ideal Kentucky coach?

The perfect coach for UK would be Billy Donovan. He was an assistant coach with Rick Pitino at UK (the best modern day coack UK has had). He plays a style of basketball that is both fun for the players and entertaining for the fans. He knows how to coach and he can recruit. He would be the best of all the coaches as I also like his temperment with the players and fans.
— Ed Shanks, Concord, N.C.

Top contender next season?

Mike, Before you crown KU for next year's NCAA tourney you might want to look at Georgetown's roster — they have only two seniors and neither of them got on the floor against UNC the other night. [Patrick] Ewing, [Jeff] Green, [Roy] Hibbert and [Jonathan] Wallace are juniors; [Jessie] Sapp and [DaJaun] Summers are underclassmen. This means that if none of the Gtown players pull an Iverson and leave Gtown early, they have all their starters and their first 3 off the bench back next year... Hoya Saxa...
— Richard Ferri, Ulster Park, N.Y.

Did North Carolina choke or Georgetown rally?

What an incredible choke by UNC. I am a UNC fan and i really had a hard time with this one. I've never seen this team settle so much for jumpshots in the last 3 minutes. The final shot that [Wayne] Ellington missed to win was a bad shot on any coaches sheet. The score was tied and there were 4 seconds left. Why heave up a three? You only need a foul shot. Georgetown had been fuling UNC all game and that is supposed to pay off down the stretch. The fact that they did not attack the basket in the last three minutes cost them the game and allowed the lid to go onto the basket. Bottom line, you can't settle for jumpshots at the end in a tie game.
Charlie, Brooklyn, N.Y.

This is not the time to hammer on the North Carolina kids. You could learn a thing about class from Roy Williams. These kids have gone thru a lot this weekend and they have my prayers. If this is the only way that you can get people to read your garbage, find something else to do. I am a Kentucky Wildcat fan who respects the class of the Tarheel Program.
— Ted Martin, Corbin, Ky.

If the players were missing close shot after close shot, I must wonder why you would think it was an incredible rally. There is no question but that the Georgetown players created the frenzied environment for UNC to play...near the end. But it was more "choke" than "huge rally." UNC had seasoned players...who should have responded to this critical time...in a critical game...but they didn't. AND...the Hoyas were given easy shots...close in shots...no defense from UNC...and simply took advantage of the swing in statistics and odds...that is, for a team of the caliber of UNC to go cold...while the Hoyas went red hot, but moreso, given those easy baskets...with few misses. That is my read...of those last few minutes of a game UNC should have won in regulation. But..in the final analysis...it was probably a bit of both...choke...and...rally.
— Jack McConnell, Portland, Ore.

March 30 | 5:30 p.m. PT

Fathers and sons

I know, you’re sick of all the John Thompson(s) stories.

But here are two more worth your time, courtesy of the Washington Post.

Michael Wilbon’s damn fine column illustrates how JT III and Pops are different, both as coaches and as reflections of their times. Pops had to deal with social issues; JT III can focus on coaching. The other is a feature from Camille Powell about how the Hoyas are a reflection of JT III’s calm demeanor. Give ’em a read.

Wilbon closes with this nugget:

“One can only hope John III can recruit and teach and coach with minimal cultural aggravation and without the weight of the world coming down on him. And if he can exist with that relative luxury, and simply have to negotiate the normal difficulties of his chosen profession, John III probably will be a better coach than his father, who helped make it so.”

JT III has a mighty tall mountain to climb to be a better coach than his dad. Pops is a Hall of Famer who reached three Final Fours, won a title in 1984 and whose 596 career wins is among the top 50 all-time, regardless of classification. He’s one of the game larger-than-life figures, because of his record and off-court influence.

JT III is among the game’s premier current coaches:140-71 in seven seasons at Georgetown and Princeton, and 72-29 in three seasons with the Hoyas, including a Sweet 16 and a Final Four. Not too shabby, but he’ll need a few more seasons to match dad.

But it made me wonder: Are they the best father-son coaching pair in college hoops history? Are they even the best with son currently coaching? After all, there are plenty of sons with famous coaching dads right now.

Washington State’s Tony Bennett, 37, took over for his dad, Dick, and was named AP coach of the year in his first season (only Indiana State’s Bill Hodges has done that, and he had Larry Bird). Despite the honor, I’d take JT III over Bennett, since JT III’s a proven commodity by now. Bennett may be a one-year wonder. And his dad, Dick, was good but nowhere near Big John.

Eddie Sutton won 798 games in stops at Creighton, Arkansas, Kentucky and Oklahoma State, but never won a title (though he went to 3 Final Fours with two different teams). His sons, Sean (22-13 this season at Oklahoma State) is still feeling his way, while Scott (144-102 in eight seasons at Oral Roberts) has made two straight trips to the Big Dance. More wins, but not as good in March.

Jeff Capel III doesn’t career record over .500 (95-96) but showed signs of promise at Oklahoma this season. His dad won 201 games at North Carolina A&T and Old Dominion and had 3 NCAA tourney appearances. Good, not great.

Providence coach Tim Welsh hasn’t been consistent with the Friars (145-126 in 9 seasons, but more than 200 overall), and his dad, Jerry, won more than 500 in his career at Potsdam State and Iona, but that’s about it.

Murray Bartow has won 179 games at UAB and his current stop, East Tennessee State, but hasn’t approached the success of his dad, Gene, who was 647-353 at Memphis, UCLA and UAB. Two Final Fours for dad (like Sutton, with two different teams), including a title-game appearance, but no title. Both Thompsons prevail in this one.

A couple of minor mentions here: Tom Davis just retired at Drake, two wins shy of 600 and no Final Four appearances. His son, Keno, takes over next season. Ex-Minnesota and Gonzaga coach Dan Monson is looking for a job. His dad, Don, won 216 games at Idaho. Neither are close.

For dads who thrived, but their sons struggled (with rules), we have these two: Butch Van Breda Kolff won 482 games and rode Bill Bradley to the 1965 Final Four. His son Jan is persona non grata at St. Bonaventure, though he says he did nothing wrong. Ray Meyer’s DePaul program was legendary (good for 724 wins), but was a classic underachiever in March. His son Joey was forced to resign at the school.

Frankly, the Thompsons’ only real competition comes from the Ibas.

Ex-Oklahoma A&M coach Hank was 764-339 in 41 years (also spent time at Northwest Missouri State and Colorado) and won back-to-back NCAA Tournament titles in 1945 and ’46, the first coach to do so. He, along with John Thompson II, is one of the game’s legends. He coached three U.S. Olympic teams and had one of the first dominant big men in Bob Kurland. If there’s anyone that can compete with Pops, Hank Iba’s the guy. But I’d take Thompson because of his success in college basketball’s more competitive era and for building one of the game’s premier programs, particularly in terms of recognition.

And besides, JT III’s Final Four berth, makes him an easy choice over Iba’s son, Moe. Moe was a two-time Big 8 coach of the year at Nebraska and won 239 games at Memphis and TCU. His lone NCAA Tournament was the 1986 Cornhusker squad that lost to Western Kentucky.

I’m not sure how many more stories can be written about the Thompsons. Comparing teams from father and son won’t work for much longer because of JT III’s success. And soon, we won’t have to keep comparing styles — which are exceedingly different.

So what’s left? Merely this: No matter who you compare them to, the Thompsons have to be considered the best father and son coaches in NCAA history. And the way JT III is going, there won’t even be any other contenders soon.

March 29 | 9 p.m. PT

Getting a hoops fix

The Final Four press conferences aren’t until tomorrow, which means there’ll be a glut of stories and new features on Friday. We’ll have those here.

From previous days, stories on Oden vs. Hibbert, Arron Afflalo’s quest for revenge, Florida’s multitude of NBA-caliber players and the pressure on the Gators, or Thad Matta’s greatness, were available pretty much everywhere.

Friday should bring different storylines. Or at least new quotes.

Until then, enjoy these links.

Anytime Chuck Klosterman writes something, it’s a must-read. (If you haven’t already, go get “Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs.”)

After you’re done with that, check out their fabulous story on the ’83 Final Four game between Louisville and Houston. Phi Slamma Jamma vs. the Doctors of Dunk. This was a game that certainly lived up to the hype. SI.com’s Grant Wahl offers his best from the last 10 years.

How Hoya Paranoia changed college basketball (Or, how Georgetown used to be the scariest team in America).

Ohio State has been to 10 Final Fours. The question is, should it be more?

An argument that Billy Donovan has allowed the Kentucky job rumors to be a distraction. A fair argument when it’s all Billy, all the time. (Whoa. Tom Izzo isn’t good enough?)

Is Joakim Noah too talkative?

Watched the first half of the McDonald’s All-American game last night and came away with the usual impression: these kids can jump, but who knows how good they really are? Also, even with Josh McRoberts leaving, this year’s class will give Duke 7 McDonald’s guys next season. No more talk about how little talent Duke has.

Baron Davis wishes UCLA had more black students. Seems reasonable when less than 100 of 4,700 incoming students are black.

Finally, a little something for the hometown crowd: Wyoming’s women are in the NIT title game, but that may not be as impressive as selling out 15,000 tickets for Saturday. The record crowd before March 22? 5,025. Population of Laramie? 26,956.

March 28 | 10:10 a.m. PT

Living up to the hype

For hype, nothing beats the two weeks leading up to the Super Bowl. One week of rehashing the AFC and NFC title games, player features, stories on coaches, etc., then another week that stems off Super Bowl media day. Hype machine in overdrive.

This week is close — how many features can one do on Georgetown then and now or on Florida’s repeat quest? — but doesn't have the overwhelming media crush of the Super Bowl.

But it did make think: How often do the Final Four games ever live up to that hype?

Most of the memorable final weekend moments are from the title game when players either hit the big shots — Indiana’s Keith Smart and UNC’s Michael Jordan with those baseline jumpers or Louisville’s Pervis Ellisons and Michigan’s Rumeal Robinson sinking last-second free throws — or when a player falters, like Michigan’s Chris Webber calling a timeout he didn’t have or Duke’s Trajan Langdon dribbling off his foot.

Those are replayed moments because they involve titles, but they’re also some of the better games we’ve seen in the last 25 years during Final Four weekend. The Saturday games usually stink.

The odds of someone getting blown out this weekend aren’t good — Florida vs. UCLA, Georgetown vs. Ohio State are predicted to be close games on kenpom.com — but recent history tells us otherwise. I don’t know if it’s the pressure, one team getting hot or the other team just unable to hang with a superior opponent.

Florida crushed George Mason and UCLA whipped LSU last season. Illinois and UNC both had easy times with Michigan State and Louisville. Kansas and Syracuse rolled in 2003. Indiana and Maryland had easier times in 2002 than the final scores would indicate. It goes on.

By my recokoning, only the 2004 games (UConn edged Duke in a game most people figured for the defacto championships and Georgira Tech held off Kansas) and Duke’ 22-point rally past Maryland in 2001 have been the only three games this decade that lived up to expectations.

The ’90s closed with a flourish (every game in ’99 — UConn over Ohio State, Duke beating Michigan State — and ’98 — Kentucky needed OT vs. Stanford and Utah topped UNC — were great) and started strong with Duke’ remarkable win over UNLV in the ’91 Final Four, while Kansas stunned Carolina.

Even caught Michigan’s 1989 win over Illinois in the Final FOur on ESPN Classic on Tuesday. Great game that featured future NBA players like Glen Rice, Nick Anderson, Kendall Gill, Loy Vaught, Terry Mills and Kenny Battle.

(That’s what I’m hoping for this weekend: Games that showcase the future NBA talent. Let’s hope Roy Hibbert vs. Greg Oden turns into something special. Arron Afflalo trying to reddem himself against Corey Brewer could be great.)

But those are just a few of the games that stick out to me. What are your prevailing memories on the Final Four? Does the title game always overshadow the Saturday games because it’s usually the better game? Send an e-mail and we’ll post them Saturday.

March 26 | 8:20 p.m. PT

What are the odds?

Final Four trivia and odd coincidence time.

Florida’s got a rematch with UCLA in the Final Four, a rematch of last year’s title game. It seems like it shouldn’t happen, but has been pretty frequent in past NCAA Tournaments.

(This post doesn’t include the early-round games. Villanova beat Florida in a 2005 second-round game, and the Gators beat the Wildcats in the Elite Eight last season. Those happen quite a bit.)

Cal and Cincinnati played each other in ’59 and ’60 Final Fours, Cal winning both. Ohio State and Cincy played in back-to-back title games in ’61 and ’62, Bearcats won both. UCLA topples Houston in ’67 and ’68 Final Fours. Duke beat Kansas in ’96, Kansas beat Duke in ’88; Kansas tops UNC in ’91, UNC wins in ’93 (not exactly rematches, but close enough).

And the closest to this year’s version, UNLV whips Duke in the 1990 title game and the Devils beat UNLV in their 1991 Final Four rematch. I’m not here to make a prediction, though. (My bracket is a debacle — not a single Final Four team! — and I learned after that first weekend to stop picking against Florida. So no more predictions this season.)

So here’s my favorite tidbit from this year’s tourney:

Florida, Georgetown and Ohio State all played in the same half of the Minneapolis (Midwest) Regional last season. The No. 7 Hoyas KO’d No. 2 Ohio State in the second round, then No. 3 Florida beat Georgetown. Three teams from the same region end up in the next year’s Final Four? That should be a rare occurrence — except it’s happened twice before.

In 1997, No. 1 Kentucky beat No. 2 Utah in the West Regional final. Utah was coming off a win over No. 6 Stanford. All three ended up in the 1998 Final Four (Where the Wildcats beat the Utes for the crown).

In 1994, Arkansas, UCLA and Oklahoma State were in the Midwest Regional, but didn’t play each other (Bruins upset by No. 12 Tulsa, which also beat No. 4 Oklahoma State, but lost to the No. 1 Hogs).

Anyway, it’s kind of a worthless tidbit — it relies on good teams coincidently landing in the same region and winning out the next season — but pretty fun. As a guy who loves Trivial Pursuit, its gold.

For those who have tried to e-mail lately with the mailbag, my apologies. Technial errors prevented anyone from using it. Anyway, for those Kentucky fans who wanted to e-mail coaches candidates, fire away. Any other criticisms, send those too. Responses coming later this week. Promise.

March 25 | 8:30 p.m. PT

There are painful losses, then there’s UNC loss to Georgetown

It wouldn’t be the NCAA Tournament without a few comebacks. Heck, it wouldn’t be the Elite Eight without a few comebacks.

Illinois trailed by 15 with four minutes to play against Arizona in 2005. The same day, Louisville overcame 20-point deficit to West Virginia. Kentucky rallied from 18 down to beat Duke in the 1998 South Regional Finals. (Do any of those compare to Duke overcoming a 22-point deficit to Maryland in the 2001 Final Four?)

So Georgetown was in good company staging its 11-point rally to force overtime before beating UNC for the East Regional championship. (Odd that UNC had a big rally of its own to beat USC in the East semis.)

But the question is out there: Did the Hoyas make the plays or did the Heels simply choke? After all, UNC missed 22 of its last 23 field-goal attempts.

Watching my Jayhawks miss close shot after close shot vs. UCLA was bad enough. Yet UNC’s finish was downright painful, unless you’re a Hoyas fan (Or had Georgetown in your bracket; neither for me). Just watching a team miss shot after shot induces cringe after cringe. How does that happen? What causes that lid to go on the basket?

So how do we remember this game? Choke job or incredible rally? My guess is by rally. Final Four teams are lodged in our NCAA Tournament memories. The losers simply internalize the emotions as motivation for the next season. (Well, and the fans agonize over what went wrong.)

After all, for the next five days we’ll be talking about Georgetown and its chance at a title, not UNC and its finish.

OK, so we’ll also be talking about Florida and its repeat quest. I just assume that’s a given.

March 25 | 1:30 p.m. PT

Two of four

The difference between winning and losing? Missing 21 lay-ups and dunks.

Don’t get me wrong, UCLA earned its way into the Final Four with its 68-55 win over Kansas. The Bruins’ fabulous perimeter defense that stifled Kansas’ guards ended any discussion about the NCAA’s best defense (even if KU still in the top spot on kenpom.com). Russell Robinson, Mario Chalmers and Sherron Collins (hindered by a bum left knee) combined for 13 points on 5-of-21 shooting. That trio averages nearly 29 a game, but couldn’t even match Darren Collison’s output, let alone Arron Afflalo.

The Bruins also beat the Jayhawks on the boards (31-28) and kept KU from capitalizing on 17 steals by getting 15 of their own, usually right after a KU steal.

UCLA also made the big plays when it needed to, like the three 3-pointers as the shot-clock expired (two by Afflalo, one ridiculous step-back, across-the-body heave by Collison) and another just before half by Josh Shipp.

But I’ll always remember how hard it was for Kansas to simply hit a shot. KU made 8 of its first 13 shots. Then midway through the first half, starting with a swooping Brandon Rush drive to the basket, a lid — also called UCLA defensive pressure — was put on the basket. The Jayhawks missed 28 of their last 43 shots. End of story.

(Last Kansas thought for this tournament: Does KU become the team to beat next year? At this point, every player is likely returning. If Florida, Ohio State, UNC and UCLA lose guys like Noah, Horford, Oden, Wright and Afflalo, KU will have the most talent around. Of course, it arguably had the most this season...)

So the Bruins make their record 17th Final Four appearance. At this rate, it seems like Ben Howland has taken last year’s run to the title game, improved the defense and made his team tougher. If Afflalo maintains that shooting touch and UCLA’s interior defense doesn’t fall apart, there’s no reason it shouldn’t play for the national title.

Of course, it’ll be interesting to see what happens once the Bruins leave the state of California. In 13 games out of the state this season, the Bruins are 9-4.

As for Ohio State and Memphis, I guess it was only a matter of time before Greg Oden decided to shut everyone up.

Has the big guy been holding back? Did we all expect too much? Or does he just care about the bottom line, i.e. winning?

I’m going with C.

In 24 minutes vs. Memphis, Oden scored 17 points on 7-of-8 shooting and had nine rebounds. He doesn’t force the issue, intimidates anyone even going near the hoop and is the most efficient offensive player around (that jump hook gets better every day).

OK, enough Oden fawning. Time to gush about Mike Conley.

He and the rest of the Buckeye freshmen were fabulous Saturday, but the only surprise was that David Lighty and Daequan Cook were good. They’d been struggling lately while Conley gets better and better. He’s quick, smart and spots the open man.

Frankly, for as good as Oden is, Conley will be the driving force behind a potential Ohio State title.

March 23 | 9:30 p.m. PT

Clash of the titans

Love the movie and the matchups on Saturday. My only question: Who’s Medusa and who’s the Kraken? (Because I’m casting my Jayhawks as Perseus.)

It’s just like the seeding committee intended with No. 1 Kansas vs. No. 2 UCLA in the West Regional final and No. 1 Ohio State vs. No. 2 Memphis in the South Regional final. Combined records this season: 128-15. If the Sweet 16 games were any indication, we’re headed for a couple of tight games that should come down to the wire.

(The last time we had a day like this was 2002 when it was No. 1 Maryland vs. No. 2 UConn and No. 1 KU vs. No. 2 Oregon. For what it’s worth, only Maryland-UConn was close.)

Kansas vs. UCLA is the marquee matchup (according to me and the TV times) largely because of the teams’ tradition. The Bruins, with their 11 NCAA titles, are March’s premier team, while the Jayhawks are one of a handful of schools with two titles and have the fifth most Final Four appearances.

It also should be the lower scoring of the day’s games because it features the two superior defensive teams.

Everyone’s seen what UCLA has done in its three tourney wins (Pitt scores 55, Indiana 49 and Weber State 42), but Kansas actually leads everyone in adjusted defensive efficiency (82.0 to 84.4 points allowed per 100 possessions on a neutral floor against an average opponent). The Jayhawks aren’t as physical when it comes to their man-to-man defense, but shouldn’t be seen as an offense-only team. (Though they do that well, too.)

My key player for the game? UCLA’s Josh Shipp. He’s been the third wheel in that Bruins offense most of the year (behind Arron Afflalo and Darren Collison) but Afflalo’s shot has been garbage lately and he’ll have to provide more scoring punch than usual. He’ll likely be guarded by Brandon Rush, who is the same size, but not as explosive.

One last thing to watch: Kansas has shoot over 50 percent from the field and is over 60 is effective FG% in its three tournament wins. That surely can’t last against UCLA, but if KU did it vs. Southern Illinois, nothing’s off the table. For its part, UCLA was more efficient in beating Pitt.

Ohio State vs. Memphis? Well, it’s not exactly chopped liver.

The have the two longest winning streaks going (25 for Memphis, 20 for OSU) and are both coming off 1-point Sweet 16 wins. Memphis plays the “no respect” card, while the Buckeyes have been playing with fire.

Then there’s the Greg Oden-Joey Dorsey matchup. Dorsey’s already proclaimed himself “Goliath” and Oden “the little man.” Not so sure it’s smart to antagonize a guy four inches taller, but that’s Dorsey’s business.

Stat-wise, Ohio State is more balanced between offense and defense, but isn’t as deep as the Tigers, who go eight deep. They’re also better defensively.

What to expect here? Mike Conley must be on his game, breaking down the Memphis defense and the Tigers have to hit their 3s. They were shaky vs. Texas A&M and that outside shooting was the only thing that kept Memphis from last year’s Final Four.

Big day. Sunday is nice (No. 1 Florida vs. No. 3 Oregon and No. 1 UNC vs. No. 2 Georgetown would be dynamite any other year; it’s also the first time four top seeds and 3 No. 2 seeds are playing in the regional semis), but this is the day.

At least until next Saturday...four No. 1 seeds in Final Four?

March 22 | 10:15 p.m. PT

Oregon gets its shot

Spent most of the season a non-believer in Oregon. I still wouldn’t call myself a convert — but every day the Ducks look a bit better. But are they good enough to get to the Final Four?

On the surface, the Ducks seem similar to last year’s Florida team. Oregon had the fast start (won 18 of first 19 games), had a nasty stretch during conference play (lost 4 of 6, five of which were on the road), then caught fire late in the season. The Ducks have won eight straight, including a Pac-10 tourney title where they smoked USC.

In the NCAA Tournament, Oregon held off N o. 14 Miami (Ohio), then whipped No. 11 Winthrop and now face No. 7 UNLV with an Elite Eight berth on the line.

Last season, Florida won its first 17, lost five of 11, then closed fast with an SEC title and a clubbed No. 14 South Alabama, No. 11 UW-Milwaukee and No. 7 Georgetown to start its tourney run.

Then again, that’s where the similarities end.

Florida’s big men (Joakim Noah and Al Horford) can rule the game, while defensive stopped Corey Brewer usually frustrates the opponent’s top scorer.

Oregon is the opposite. The Ducks are a good offensive team with a guard-heavy offense loves shoots the 3-pointer — and they swear it won’t be a problem in St. Louis’ Edward Jones Dome. It better not be.

All but one of the Ducks’ starters shoots better than 40 percent from beyond the arc. And it’s not like center Maarty Leunen is awful, making 39 percent of his 93 attempts this season. The big threats are even better thus far in the postseason, too. Guards Bryce Taylor (11 of 16, 69 percent), Tajuan Porter (18 of 33, 55 percent) and Aaron Brooks (13 of 27, 48 percent); all three were around 43 percent in the regular season.

But that’s also why it’s hard to embrace the Ducks. Teams that rely on the 3-pointer can go cold in a hurry, thus that mid-season skid for Oregon and the dome concerns.

Against UNLV, the Ducks’ lack of height won’t be a huge concern — neither team starts a player taller than 6-foot-9 — though UNLV coaches are confident its squad matches up favorably vs. the Ducks’ gunners.

If the Ducks’ perimeter defense maintains its form (opponents have shot 40 percent from the floor the last six games) they should be able to handle UNLV and advance to the Elite Eight where they’d likely play Florida.

And Florida would have serious matchup problems against the Ducks, making for one of the tournament’s most interesting games. The 6-11 Noah would likely guard Leunen, while the 6-9 Horford would be matched up against 6-6 Malik Hairston. Both Leunen and Hairston can play on the perimeter, which would bring both Florida defenders out of their comfort zone. (But unless Hairston and Leunen are hitting from the outside, it won’t do any good because Noah and Horford will kill those two in the paint.)

And if Brewer guards Taylor, Aaron Brooks and Tajuan Porter would both present problems for Taurean Green and Lee Humphrey.

But all that’s if the dome doesn’t mess with the Ducks’ shooting vs. UNLV. And right now, that’s a big if.

March 22 | 1:45 p.m. PT

Smith’s fast break

Just days ago, Tubby Smith said he’d be back at Kentucky. But then came a meeting with UK athletic director Mitch Barnhart.

And now, Smith is the new coach at Minnesota.

(Funny side note: my buddy WalkDog e-mailed me Tuesday and said Smith should take the Gophers job because he’d be a God compared to the flack he takes at Kentucky. I’m now asking WalkDog his picks to win the Final Four, World Series and NBA playoffs.)

To all this, I wish Tubby luck at Minnesota (where he’ll probably struggle for a few years, but eventually make the Gophers a Big Ten contender) and wonder who fills his role at Kentucky— because this is going to be a job with massive expectations.

The names who pop up right away include Marquette’s Tom Crean, Memphis’ John Calipari, Gonzaga’s Mark Few and Florida’s Billy Donovan, an ex-Kentucky assistant. (For what it’s worth, the early leader   on our message boards is Donovan.)

But it’ll be more than four names. This is one of college basketball’s premier jobs and there’s no reason Kentucky shouldn’t be able to get the exact candidate it wants. Early reports indicate Kentucky is likely to turn to a coach from a BCS school and avoid any mid-major guys.

Check back later for our analysis of the guys in the running and who has the inside track. For now, e-mail me who you think would make the perfect Kentucky coach. I’ll post the e-mails this weekend.

March 19 | 8 p.m. PT

Who needs the NBA?

Certainly not Tim Floyd, Lon Kruger and John Calipari. The Sweet 16 is the place to be in March, not fighting for that eighth playoff spot.

If you’re Floyd and Kruger, this year’s NCAA Tournament reaffirms your place as an astute basketball coach. And it cements Calipari as one of the best in the biz — if not giving him the (probably) unwanted title of best coach to never win a title.

So the question is, of the three Sweet 16 coaches who failed in their NBA tenures, which one would you want coaching your team?

(This discounts Louisville’s Rick Pitino, simply because his team isn’t still around. Pitino’s six wins shy of 500 career victories, has a title and five Final Four berths with three different teams to his credit. He’s one of the best ever, let alone from former NBA coaches.)

Calipari’s résumé is the most impressive: Best win percentage, a Final Four and two Elite Eights, plus a perennial power in Memphis, which is in the Sweet 16 for the second straight year. The Tigers are 65-6 in that time with just one C-USA loss and don’t figure to slack off anytime soon.

More compelling is that Calipari is a top-notch recruiter, does his part to connect with the fans and has become one of the more personable coaches around. (On ESPN’s Outside the Lines, he appeared with Texas A&M-Corpus Christi coach Ronnie Arrow and sang Arrow’s praises throughout, extolling Arrow’s JUCO national titles. He was a riot a few weeks earlier talking about the lack of accountability in the NBA, which means lots of people can get really rich. That’s what the big-time coaches do: entertain us knuckleheads in the media.)

But all of that gives Calipari baggage. Some say he runs a loose program at Memphis and UMass’ 1996 Final Four berth was vacated by the NCAA for Marcus Camby accepting $28,000 from agents. And an enraged John Chaney will forever be linked to Calipari.

Calipari wins, but his reputation isn’t squeaky clean.

Kruger actually has the most career wins and is one of five coaches to take four different schools to the NCAA Tournament (K-State, Florida, Illinois and UNLV). He’s got a Final Four berth (1994) and an Elite Eight appearance (1988) and few would dispute his coaching abilities.

  Coaching comparison
CoachOverallIn NCAAs
John Calipari373-13317-8
Tim Floyd285-1546-5
Lon Kruger382-26213-9
Kruger isn’t loud and boisterous. He doesn’t flaunt himself — though he probably should. The Rebels entered the NCAA Tournament 28-6 with a MWC tourney title and a top 10 RPI ranking. If he talks about his team a little more, as the Review-Journal’s Ed Graney writes, they probably wouldn’t be stuck with a No. 7 seed.

But you’re never sure if he’s ever going to stay in one place very long. He coached K-State for 4 years. He was at Florida for 6. Illinois for 4. It’s his third season at Vegas, but he’s already rumored to be a candidate for the Minnesota job.

So you never know what Kruger wants.

As for Floyd, few coaches have taken the beating he has. His disastrous tenure with the Bulls (49-190 in four seasons) nearly erased from people’s minds the job he did at Iowa State, where he guided the Cyclones to three straight NCAA Tournaments, which included wins each year and a Sweet 16 berth in 1997.

Once Floyd quit to take the Bulls job, he became an afterthought because of Larry Eustachy’s success with players primarily recruited by Floyd.

After two seasons at USC, Floyd already has made the Trojans a Pac-10 contender and has one of the country’s premier recruits next season, O.J. Mayo. (More on that in a second.) Probably because of the Bulls debacle, Floyd has talked openly about desire to turn USC into a national title contender, which should be a tall order because of the talent he already has in place and the facilities the school now has to attract players.

But what about Mayo? The star guard could be a huge problem next year. (For examples, click here and here.) Floyd has a huge challenge to ensure Mayo’s talent is all people talk about next season.

Still, out of the three, I’ll take Floyd. His recruiting is as good as the other three, plus he’s long been one of the game’s best X’s and O’s coaches. He’s the blend of Calipari and Kruger.

Now we’ll see if he can pull of his best coaching job by upstaging Roy Williams’ loaded Tar Heels. Well, maybe his second best job...

March 18 | 10 p.m. PT

Close, but no cigar

Here’s the question: Do you prefer close games or upsets?

After 48 games, we’ve seen three true upsets (a team seeded at least five spots higher wins, like when No. 7 UNLV beats No. 2 Wisconsin) and just two double-digit seeds win games (No. 11 seeds VCU and Winthrop).

But far, far more games that came down to the final minute or went to overtime. Seven first-round games were decided by five points or less, with six more in the second round. Saturday alone featured Butler’s 62-59 win over Maryland, a sloppy 54-49 UCLA win over Indiana, Texas A&M’s 72-69 win over Louisville and those amazing overtime games:

Sunday wasn’t nearly as dramatic, though most games were closer than the final score indicated.

Now, what will the Sweet 16 have in store for us?

Using kenpom.com’s expected win percentage and final score, only three of the eight Sweet 16 games will be that close — though none of them are expected to be blowouts.

Texas A&M and Memphis should be the best game of the bunch. It features two teams top 10 teams, both in the polls and in efficiency. A&M’s Acie Law will be the best player on the court, but he’ll be tested by Memphis’ depth, much the way he was by Louisville’s full-court man-to-man defense. Law got a huge boost from teammate Dominique Kirk, though. To hold off the Tigers, Kirk and shooting star Josh Carter will need to be on their game.

It shouldn’t be a surprise that UCLA and Pitt is projected to be close. That’s not so much because Pitt is UCLA’s equal, but because the Panthers and Bruins both focus on defense, which keeps the final score lower. If it stays close, I expect UCLA to have the edge — but only because it should have the home-court edge in San Jose.

Oregon has a slight edge over UNLV, the lowest rated team remaining in terms of efficiency. But this game will be close only if the Rebels’ defense can extend its perimeter defense. Few teams rely on the three-pointer the way Oregon does and if the Ducks are hitting, UNLV won’t be able to hang around. After all, Oregon is a far more difficult defensive challenge than Wisconsin without Brian Butch.

As to the rest, kenpom.com projects at with 78 percent certainly that the favored teams (UNC, Kansas, Georgetown, Florida and Ohio State) will win.

How close will they be? Most project to about eight points, but I think Ohio State and Georgetown will both come down to the final minute. (The Buckeyes because Tennessee should be able to run its offense without Greg Oden affecting it too much and the Hoyas because Vandy has the athletes to match up on defense.)

UNC and Kansas should be the only teams who win by comfortable margins.

And where does that leave Florida? For my pool, I’d love to see Butler win. Heck, in terms of seeking out a great Cinderella story or David taking down Goliath, it’d be great to see the Bulldogs win. But I’m done picking against Florida. Butler dictates the pace as well as any team in the tournament and has the guy in guard A.J. Graves who can make the clutch shot, if needed.

The odds of that happening, though...not in this year’s Cinderella-less Big Dance.

March 17 | 9:30 a.m. PT

That was the opening round?

Better let Harry Doyle express my thoughts.

OK, so there were actually two upsets (technically five, but a No. 9 seed beating an 8 doesn’t count) with No. 11 seeds, Winthrop and Virginia Commonwealth giving us at least a glimmer of what the NCAA Tournament is expected to be.

The good news? The last time this happened in 2000, things got better with the weekend games.

That tourney had no first-round wins by any 12, 13, 14, 15, or 16 seeds and just one 11 seed that won. But once the weekend hit, two top seeds (Arizona and Stanford), three No. 2 seeds (St. John’s, Temple and Cincy) and three No. 3 seeds (Oklahoma, Maryland and Ohio State) all lost. You thought last year was bad for your bracket? Think about that kind of bracket busting.

(That also was the season the Final Four featured two No. 8 seeds in UNC and Wisconsin, which, along with Florida and eventual champ Michigan State, made for the least-impressive Final Four in tourney history. Combined records for those four teams was 100-42. Last year’s was 120-23. Like I said, strange tourney.)

ANYWAY, as Billy Donovan would say, what happen last year doesn’t mean anything for this season. We probably won’t see 8 of the 12 top seeds lose on Saturday and Sunday.

Still, all of the top seeds have tough second-round opponents, while all of the two and three seeds should be in games that come down to the final five minutes. Even better is that we get to see all of the four vs. five games, which — theoretically — are the most evenly matched games among title contenders during the first weekend.

Even if we don’t have a bunch of upsets, at least we should be done with the blowouts. And that’s always good news for us Big Dance junkies.

March 16 | 4:30 p.m. PT

121 points!

OK, maybe I’m a little too focused on this Tennessee-Long Beach State game, but I can’t help it. Once the Vols hit 57 by half and 90 points with 10 minutes left, they automatically became the team that knew it was putting on a show for everyone and kept at it.

A big thanks to Bruce Pearl’s bunch on a day with only 1 upset (thus far).

So a big thanks also goes to Winthrop.

Winthrop was a trendy pick to beat Notre Dame and the Eagles look like a team that should at least make the Sweet 16, if not the Elite Eight. Those three guards (Terrell Martin, Chris Gaynor and Michael Jenkins) and a decent big man inside (Craig Bradshaw, who owned Luke Harangody) will make the Eagles capable of beating Oregon and the Wisconsin-UNLV winner.

Speaking of Wisconsin, it would’ve been easy call the Badgers dead-men walking after that 17-point first half, but kudes to Bo Ryan’s bunch for a 57-point second half. Who needs Brian Butch?

ANYWAY, back to the Vols’ track meet.

Bruce Pearl continues to cultivate a fan base (fans who like offense, at least) by refusing to allow Tennessee to slow the pace. Sure, Long Beach St. closed to 41-35 late in the first half, but that was an aberation. The Vols owned this game and didn’t even need that many possessions to do it.

They won 121-86 and needed just 77 possessions to do it. That’s because their PPWS was 1.39 (hitting 43 of 73 shots) with two guys, Chris Lofton and JaJuan Smith, over 1.60 PPWS. That kind of scoring output demands efficiency, and the Vols delivered.

(NCAA fact for the day: It was the most points in the opening round since Reggie Theus and UNLV torched San Francisco 121-95 in 1977’s opening round and the most from two teams since Loyola-Marymount out-ran Wyoming, 119-115, in 1988.

Personal NCAA fact for the day: I watched every minute of that Wyoming game, which came in the same season Fennis Dembo was on the cover of SI. Watching from my house in Cheyenne, Wyo., I thought Fennis & Co. would at least make the Sweet 16 again, but little did we know what Loyola-Marymount would become. Paul Westhead ... grrrrr.)

ANYWAY, now that the Vols showed off their offense, what can we expect for a second-round game vs. Virginia?

After all, the Cavs were nearly as efficient (1.30 PPWS) in their win over Albany, with J.R. Reynolds (28 points, 1.77 PPWS) and Sean Singletary (23 points, 1.32 PPWS) leading the way. Somehow I doubt both teams will top 100 points — maybe the high 80s...

March 16 | 1 p.m. PT

Rooting for the little guy and offense

Memphis and UNLV held on and Virginia embarrassed and over-seeded Albany in the early games Friday. But right now, No. 11 Winthrop is crushing No. 6 Notre Dame, No. 15 Texas A&M-Corpus Christi has held No. 2 Wisconsin to single digits (5 points!) for the first 10 minutes and No. 10 Creighton is trying to make a run against No. 7 Nevada.

Yet, the game I’m loving right now? No. 5 Tennessee leads No. 12 Long Beach State 57-45 at halftime. Keep in mind, Michigan State’s win over Marquette Thursday night was 61-49.

Even better? The 49ers are actually more efficient on offense than the Vols, with a 1.48 PPWS at halftime (63 percent from the field, 17-of-27). Tennessee simply forces more turnovers (though its 1.29 PPWS is pretty damn good).

Can the Vols hit 120 points? It’d be the first NCAA tourney game to do so since Loyola-Marymount put up 149 on Michigan in 1990. Keep on runnin’!

March 15 | 10:30 p.m. PT

Shooting up the charts

Stephen Curry’s huge day in the loss to Maryland should cement him as one of the top 10 players in the country next season. You score 30 points on D.J. Strawberry and that’s good for preseason All-America talk.

The Davidson freshman was somewhat of a known commodity to before he came into the game, but not before his freshman season. It’s been written about how the ACC was stupid for not recruiting him, (Virginia Tech asked him to be a non-scholarship, practice-only player) and about how prolific his shooting was entering the opening-round NCAA Tournament game.

But after Thursday’s game, it’s clear Curry is forever more than just Del’s kid. Like a guy who can elevate Davidson to mid-major status that Butler, Nevada and Air Force has this season.

If the NBA draft gets the group of underclassmen expected to declare (Greg Oden, Kevin Durant, Jeff Green, Julian Wright, etc.), the returning players on the shortlist for All-America honors will include UCLA’s Darren Collison, UNC’s Tyler Hansbrough, USC’s Gabe Pruitt, Michigan State’s Drew Neitzel, Alabama’s Ronald Steele and an good crop of freshmen like O.J. Mayo, Eric Gordon and Derrick Rose.

Other tournament thoughts?

Who knew one pass would seal Oral Roberts’ downfall?

The only embarrassing teams? Stanford and George Washington.

Indiana should give it to D.J. White more.

Thursday’s most efficient team? North Carolina’s 1.38 PPWS in its 86-65 win over Eastern Kentucky crushes the field of Georgetown (1.28 PPWS), Pitt (1.28), Boston College (1.25 PPWS), Michigan State (1.27) and Ohio State (1.24 PPWS).

March 14 | 5 p.m. PT

The perfect bracket

Is a longshot. Mathforum.org calculates the odds at picking a perfect NCAA Tournament bracket at 9,223,372,036,854,775,808 to 1. Odds of winning that monster MegaMillions jackpot were 360 billion to 1. Just something to keep in mind.

That said, I think I got a pretty good one here. I’ve made picks for every game and detail some with a little more info when needed. I considered seedings, records, RPI, scoring margin, efficiency and odds to win, but let’s not kid — in the end, all of that only changed my mind on a few games. My Final Four has two No. 1 seeds, a No. 3 and a No. 4 and I have a No. 1 and a 2 seed losing on the first weekend, so there’s something for everyone.

East Region
First-round winners
: No. 1 North Carolina, No. 9 Michigan State (Tom Crean hasn’t won a Big Dance game without Dwyane Wade), No. 5 USC (barely), No. 4 Texas, No. 6 Vanderbilt, No. 14 Oral Roberts (Caleb Green and Ken Tutt need to combine for about 45, but it should happen.), No. 7 Boston College (Jared Duley is better than Jarrius Jackson) and No. 2 Georgetown.

Second-round winners: No. 1 UNC (pulls away in final 5 minutes), No. 4 Texas, No. 6 Vandy (midnight for Cinderella) and No. 2 Georgetown.

Sweet 16 winners: No. 1 UNC (too deep, though the Heels don’t have anyone who can guard Kevin Durant. This game’s won because Ty Lawson emerges as a true point guard and the ’Horns won’t be able to contain Brandan Wright and Tyler Hansbrough.) and No. 2 Georgetown (who has yet to be tested).

Regional winner: North Carolina. The Heels have too much depth for the Hoyas, who are disciplined and bigger, but Jeff Green can only guard so many Heels at once.

South Region
First-round winners
: No. 1 Ohio State, No. 8 BYU, No. 5 Tennessee (wheeeee!), No. 4 Virginia (nice gift for the Cavs), No. 6 Louisville (had to flip a coin on this one; I love the Cardinal big men, but wonder if their guard can handle the pressure), No. 3 Texas A&M, No. 10 Creighton (Wolf Pack favored by one, but guard Kyle Shiloh may not play and the Jays rate better in efficiency and the inside-outside combo of Anthony Tolliver and Nate Funk may actually be better than Nick Fazekas and Marcellus Kemp. Maybe. Tough call here.) and No. 2 Memphis.

Second-round winners: No. 1 OSU (the only top seed who got an easy second-round game), No. 5 Tennessee (Cavs’ guards not as good as Vols’ Chris Lofton and JaJuan Smith), No. 3 A&M and No. 2 Memphis (should get a test, but pull away).

Sweet 16 winners: No. 1 OSU (Buckeyes won regular-season game thanks to Oden and a late 3-pointer. This game could go either way, but Oden’s better now than in Jan.) and No. 3 A&M (love Acie Law and the Tigers haven’t a defense like this all season).

Regional winner: A&M. Like I said, I love Acie Law, even over a fab frosh like Mike Conley. The Aggies have the firepower to counter the Buckeyes, but man ... do they have enough big men to throw at Oden and get him into foul trouble? This game comes down to the hotter 3-point shooter: A&M’s Josh Carter or OSU’s Jamar Butler (or Ron Lewis; Daequan Cook has been worthless lately).

Midwest Region
First-round winners
: No. 1 Florida, No. 8 Arizona (talent has to pull through), No. 12 Old Dominion (tough call, but Butler isn’t the same team that won the Preseason NIT; it split the regular-season crown with Wright State and lost the tourney title game), No. 4 Maryland (the biggest game in my bracket; Terps could lose — love Davidson, but why seed them here? Why not against Virginia? — but too much talent and Gary Williams must be tired of not playing in the Big Dance the last two years), No. 11 Winthrop (another danger pick; Irish win they could end up in the Final Four), No. Oregon, NO. 7 UNLV and No. 2 Wisconsin.

Second-round winners: No. 9 Arizona (here me out: Arizona’s offense is just as good as Florida’s and the ’Cats have just as much talent, plus the Gators tend to fall asleep on defense. Also, if Corey Brewer guards Marcus Williams, that leaves Chase Budinger free to torment Lee Humphrey and neither Al Horford or Joakim Noah can guard Ivan Radenovic on the perimeter. Most importantly, Mustafa Shakur is better then Taurean Green.), No. 4 Maryland, No. 3 Oregon (if Notre Dame’s 3s didn’t sink the Eagles, the Ducks’ will) and No. 2 Wisconsin.

Sweet 16 winners: No. 4 Maryland (odds of Arizona beating two efficient offensive and defensive teams? Slim.) and No. 3 Oregon (with Brian Butch, Badgers win. Without him, Ducks too good on offense to lose — but only if Aaron Brooks continues to let his teammates play.

Regional winner: Maryland. Terps have enough swing players to guard all those Ducks. Also, edge goes to Gary Williams over Ernie Kent.

West Region
First-round winners
: No. 1 Kansas, No. 8 Kentucky (Scottie Reynolds gassed and ’Nova can’t check Randolph Morris), No. 12 Illinois (Va. Tech gets hosed with this matchup; Illini better defensively and they get to play in Columbus, Ohio), No. 4 Southern Illinois, No. 6 Duke (Devils down, but not out), No. 3 Pitt, No. 7 Indiana (revenge!) and No. 2 UCLA.

Second-round winners: No. 1 Kansas (’Cats can’t shoot, thus score), No. 4 Southern Illinois (even better defensively than the Illini), No. 6 Duke (life is three things: death, taxes and Devils in Sweet 16) and No. 7 Indiana (point guard Darren Collison spraining his ankle was enough for me. Well, that and imagining the field day D.J. White should have inside against the Bruins. UCLA’s perimeter defense better be in shape for the Hoosiers’ guards).

Sweet 16 winners: No. 1 Kansas (all about defense so far) and No. 6 Duke (which makes me a little sick, but the Devils can handle White inside and that should be enough).

Regional winner: Kansas. This turned out to be a gimme region for the Jayhawks.

Final Four
Kansas beats Maryland (rematch of 2002, but this time Jayhawks have the superior personnel; they also have better defense and offense, so that helps...) and UNC beats A&M (my love affair with Acie Law only goes so far when you can’t counter UNC’s sheer numbers.

Champion: Kansas over UNC in a championship game that would be a ratings bonanza and one for the ages, with Julian Wright and Brandon Rush outplaying Brandan Wright and Tyler Hansbrough.

OK, so I’m a KU grad, but here’s why I go with Kansas: better guards (give me Sherron Collins, Mario Chalmers and Russell Robinson over freshmen Ty Lawson and Wayne Ellington, even with Bobby Frasor and Marcus Ginyard off the bench) and something you can’t give enough weight to — this team has lost in the first-round the last two years. One year would be something to shrug off. Two years weighs on you. Time for the Jayhawks to stop underachieving.

March 12 | 11:15 p.m. PT

Matchups to love

There’s always a handful of games to love as fans and writers for one reason or another. Here are 10 first-round games to watch and six more to hope for in later rounds.

The best first round game — and one few people have spotlighted thus far — should be No. 5 Tennessee vs. No. 12 Long Beach State in the South Region on Friday. And by best, I mean most entertaining and hopefully most exciting. Because I doubt there will be much defense played.

The last NCAA Tournament game that had both team score more than 100 points in regulation was a 2004 win by UAB over Washington. The Vols and 49ers should blow that away for a few reasons:

  • Tennessee averages 79.7 ppg, while LBS puts up 79.6. That ranks sixth and seventh among tourney teams. (Though neither one is that efficient. The Vols are 28th in adjusted offensive efficiency (115.1 per 40 minutes, 24th among tourney teams), while the 49ers go for 109.8 per 40 minutes (46th).
  • Furthermore, they both average more than 72 possessions per game. Only 3 teams have more a game.
  • Best of all? They have the two worst defenses in the tournament! At least by point allowed per game. Tennessee allows 74.4 ppg, worst in the field, while LBS is right behind at 73.8. (The Vols get a slight boost thanks to defensive efficiency — 93.0 per 40 minutes — while the 49ers have the 5th worst in the field at 105.0 per 40.)

Bottom line, I hope to see — heck, expect to see — a game that features nothing but offense and reaches triple digits on Friday afternoon. It’s just a shame it’s not Thursday to serve as Friday’s “Did you see that game?” water cooler/e-mail talk.

More first-round fun?

No. 8 Marquette vs. No. 9 Michigan State: This is the one most people have picked up on. Spartans coach Tom Izzo vs. his former assistant, Tom Crean. Beyond the coaching intrigue, it should be a defensive game — the Spartans don’t get enough credit for their defense, while the Eagles are tough along the perimeter — but a little lackluster unless Drew Neitzel comes through with a nice game.

• No. 4 Maryland vs. No. 13 Davidson should be called the Lefty Driesell game.

I’ve already written about how Tubby Smith shouldn’t be on the hotseat. Well, I’m not sure that stance reflects reality when Kentucky is an 8 seed. It’s even worse when the ’Cats face a dangerous Villanova team that has one of the game’s best freshmen in Scottie Reynolds. Tubby may be Kentucky’s “basketball coach,” but a loss isn’t going to do him any favors.

• No. 10 Texas Tech vs. No. 7 Boston College won’t be high scoring. But it will have two teams playing precise, pass-oriented offense. Purists, enjoy.

A twist on the coach showdown for the first round is No. 2 UCLA vs. No. 15 Weber State. Bruins coach Ben Howland graduated from Weber State in 1979 and led the Wildcats to two NCAA Tournament appearances. He was a defensive standout, which explains his coaching philosophy now. Fun tidbit aside, UCLA should stomp his alma mater.

Duke is down, and the Devils haven’t had a first-round loss since 1996. VCU has the shooters to make it happen.

Speaking of shooters, No. 6 Notre Dame has plenty. No. 11 Winthrop is downright stingy in its perimeter defense. I’ll enjoy seeing which prevails.

• No. 7 Indiana and No. 10 Gonzaga was a pretty sweet game last season despite Adam Morrison’s offensive struggles. It also ended the Mike Davis’ era at Indiana and set the stage for Kelvin Sampson