Bracketology

2021-22 Preseason Bracket Forecast

Breaking down the Selections

The road starts here! The oldest season of College Basketball (by age of players) is set to commence. That’s right, many coaching staffs at all levels of College Basketball are finally paying attention. The recent national champions were built on older teams: Baylor, Virginia, Villanova. They are also teams coached by x’s and o’s geniuses and play fantastic defense. With the exception of a few select teams - Age, coaching, and defense have been a wonderful trifecta of a formula in the past decade for success.

Entering the 21-22 season, more staffs have scrapped the heavy recruiting model and loaded up on experienced transfers. The additional Covid season has amounted in a surplus in proven players looking for new homes. And they’ve found them. Outside of the top ten or so teams, parity is going to be strong and deeper this season. Sub Top-50 teams will be very capable of knocking off Top 25 teams on any given night. Leagues like the MAC and Sun Belt are going to be full of fierce battles. That will be outstanding to watch play out, but unfortunately cost those leagues in all likelihood a chance at two bids. We’ve spent the past few days breaking down all 32 conferences. Now let’s break down the bracket.

The road to New Orleans begins today!

The Bracketing Process in 2022

One of the many nuances of Bracketology is learning all of the bracketing rules and procedures. Nothing to worry about here, we have mastered those. However, each bracketing exercise creates its own unique challenges. In the first exercise of 2022, I found the following areas to be challenging:

  • Texas was sent to Fort Worth for the first two rounds. Should Kansas and Baylor finish higher on the seed list, they should in theory be the teams headed to Fort Worth. Conventional wisdom says that the committee may try to pull a fast one (as represented here) and send the Jayhawks to Milwaukee, in order to get the more regionalized Longhorns and Baylor to the DFW metroplex.

  • Blue Bloods galore in the South Region. Going through the process left me stuck in a situation where it was necessary to have Villanova, Kentucky, North Carolina, and Indiana all in the bottom half of the South Region, with Kansas leading the top half. A lot of these dilemmas don’t last throughout the year, but sometimes they do. We shall see if this continues to be a challenge.

  • The Oregon situation. Oregon has a great thing going for them with Portland hosting the opening two rounds. Out of all the forecasted teams, only Gonzaga prefers to play in Portland, leaving that second opening there for the taking. That would set the Ducks up well for a sweet 16 run. However, if they want to be in the West Region, they’ll likely need to finish higher than UCLA and highest in the Pac-12, otherwise, they will be sent elsewhere for regionals (we have them in Chicago).

  • Buffalo playing in Buffalo! The MAAC conference is the host, we see no rules against this as long as the Bulls can earn a 12-seed. If they were a 13-seed, then they would be sent elsewhere due to the opposing 4-seed being protected from a homecourt disadvantage. The 5-seed does not receive those privileges, and we have a Buffalo vs. Florida State first-round game forecasted to be played in Buffalo, part of the loaded South Region.

  • Some other natural slam-dunks for the committee to aim for:

    • Get UCLA to San Diego

    • Get Illinois to Milwaukee

    • If St. Bonaventure has the huge season, get them to Buffalo

    • Get West Virginia to Pittsburgh (didn’t work out here)

Bona would love to have their rabid fan base watch them play in the NCAA’s in nearby Buffalo.

Seed Review

The #1 Seeds - Gonzaga, Michigan, Kansas, Purdue
It was not an easy call after the first two teams. Kansas has a ton of weapons and really addressed the guard-play issues by adding Remy Martin and Joseph Yusefu in the offseason. And Purdue gets the nod. Boilers have a uniquely loaded younger team that is all about to hit their talent development climax it seems. Just a ridiculous front-line and plenty of scoring in West Lafayette.

Protected Seeds - I have full trust in this Houston program under Kelvin Sampson to repeat as AAC Champions and do well against a challenging non-conference schedule (probably the favorite to win the Maui Invitational). Memphis is the toughest team to project by a mile. A 4-seed is a bit of a hedge, they have the talent to get much higher. Duke and Kentucky look to rebound in a big way after a disastrous 2020-21 campaign. Both teams are entirely reloaded, and I felt safe for now projecting them as 3-seeds.

Middle Seeds - St. Bonaventure and San Diego State both landed in the 8 and 9-seed areas when the evaluation process concluded. The fact for the Bonnies is that they will need a 2020 Dayton-like season to reach the top-end seed area. Which requires a mostly flawless non-conference schedule. We will be watching the Bonnies closely, particularly their metrics to see if they are staying with the heavyweights. SDSU or the Mountain West winner should land around a 7 or 8-seed in all likelihood. Three really solid programs are entering the season, and the winner figures to have a shiny resume - we chose the Aztecs. Also in this area is Virginia Tech. The Hokies have a solid team and coach back on paper. However, it was tougher to put them in due to so many canceled games a year ago. It was really difficult to know how good they truly were. And there are several teams right behind them in the ACC ready to replace them.

First Four - USC, Nevada, Providence, Richmond
Due to Oklahoma State being banned - the Spiders crawled their way into the field. By the way, we have Oklahoma State at #28 entering the season, for those wondering. I do firmly believe the A-10 will get at least two teams into the field. So the decision was not difficult to include Richmond. Nevada getting in as the third MWC team had a little more scrutiny. In the end, it felt very realistic that the third team of the MWC trio would be sent to the First Four (also could go to WCC). We like Providence to be a strong team late in the season after Coach Cooley gets a full three or four months with his Friars. If it doesn’t happen the door is open for Butler and Xavier to jump up. And USC should have enough to get back to the dance despite losing a generational talent in Evan Mobley.

Auto Bids - The big news is a forecast that calls for Northern Iowa to cut down the nets in Arch Madness. Drake was already evaluated as an at-large team, so this gets two teams in from the Valley and takes a bid away from the at-large pool. As covered in the One-Bid League Preview - we have a handful of other surprise tournament winners (Stephen F. Austin, North Dakota State, Weber State, Clevland State, Charleston, Wofford, and Texas State are the headliners).

Bracket projections are based on the 2021-22 NCAA Committee Principles and Selection Process. Projected Conference Champions are based on projected Auto-Bid winners.

Projected At-Large Bids Stolen: 1 (Northern Iowa, the annual average is 2.4 per season)

The 2022 Preseason Bracket.

Selection Sunday - AM Bracket

BRACKET NOTES
Teams are selected, seeded, and bracketed as if today is Selection Sunday.


Selection Sunday is here! It is a special day for many in the College Basketball world. After not making it this far last season, I am feeling extra appreciative overall that the 2020-21 season was able to be played in some capacity. It has not been a smooth ride for anyone involved. Great sacrifices were made by thousands of people to get these games played and several stumbles certainly occured. I truly hope next season is a much improved experience and we can have teams play an entire regular season safely and with a more authentic experience for the players and staffs. In the mean time, we are close to the finish line here in 2021. So let’s review whats left for the committee to do.

- Most of the major decisions on seeding (top four seeds) should be wrapped up now. I have Houston getting that final 2-seed today, with a contingency that they drop the Cougars to the final 3-seed with a loss to Cincinnati. Speaking of the Bearcats, they hold all of the cards today. If Cincy can pull up off the major upset over Houston, another bid is gone - and that likely spells doom for Wichita State’s hopes of inclusion. Other decisions in the middle of the seed list and bottom of the seed list were likely deliberated all evening long last night. I will conitinue to evaluate these decisions myself leading up to the 6PM EST deadline.

- Bubble picture: I think there is an argument to made for three teams for the final spot. I believe those three teams are Wichita State, Syracuse and Ole Miss. The Shockers are getting destroyed in a couple of the listed predictive metrics (BPI-96, POM-74) on the team sheet, however they do have solid resume metrics (KPI -33, SOR -42). The Shockers also boast a regular season championship and an attractive 6-3 Away/Neutral record. Syracuse has solid metrics across the board, which makes the Orange very tempting to include. However, Syracuse only has one top 100 road win and an Away/Neutral record of just 3-8. Based on all factors, I think Wichita State would be the more favorable choice for the committee. Ole Miss is a wildcard in play here. Rebels do have four losses in Quad 2B and below (including to Wichita State) hurting them. In contrast, the Rebels have the best collection of road wins and the strongest road win (at Mizzou) of the bubble contenders. So, you can make a case for any of the three here. I am going with the Shockers for now. For Colorado State, unfortunately I do not see a path for selection any longer.

- More work to do in 13-16 seed area is ahead for me. A lot of new faces emerged and some deeper comparisons are going to be done today. Look for some tweaks potentially later this afternoon.

Bracket projections are based on 2020-21 NCAA Committee Principles and Selection Process. Projected Conference Champions are based on projected Auto-Bid winners.

Projected At-Large Bids Stolen: 2 (Georgetown - BIG EAST, Oregon State - PAC-12)

Bracketology 03.14.21.jpg

NCAA ALTERNATE TEAMS: Syracuse, Ole Miss, Colorado State, Saint Louis
NEXT TEAMS OUT: Xavier, Seton Hall
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER: @roccomiller8

Bracketology 03.13.21

BRACKET NOTES
Teams are selected, seeded, and bracketed as if today is Selection Sunday.

As I write this today, we are less than 32 hours away from the Selection Show. Can you believe it? In many ways this week has been long. The individual days of Thursday and Friday provided us with over 14 hours each of non-stop critical basketball games. They are long days. However, this week still always amazes me how fast it seems upon reflection. I feel that feeling again today as we are down to just a few semifinals and championship games left. The majority of programs have wrapped up their work for the year. The moral here I think, is to treasure each game of Championship Week - it disappears quickly.

- Virginia and Kansas both had to withdraw from their respective conference tournaments dur to Covid-19 issues. By the end of the day yesterday, both had said they still fully plan to field a team in next week’s NCAA Tournament. The NCAA has two deadlines coming up for such teams. The first is tonight to allow the committee enough notice to withdraw (unlikely to occur now). The next deadline will be on Tuesday at 6PM EST. Should the Jayhawks, Cavs, or any other team collect further positive tests - we would likely see one of the alternate teams taking their place in the bracket. Certainly hoping to see the best tournament possible, so let’s hope KU and UVA are able to field a team and compete.

- In the protected seed area, Oklahoma State vaulted all the way up to the final two-seed today after one of the best performances all season in the sport - handling Baylor by nine on a neutral court. The Cowboys are not a slam dunk yet for a two-seed. They have to play Texas today for the tournament title, a win helps solidify it. Oklahoma State is in competition with Houston and Arkansas who are also still fighting in their tournaments. I believe the committee will make their final call on this tonight, so it is Oklahoma State’s to lose. The final three-seed is difficult. I still prefer West Virginia’s body of work compared to Kansas. The two teams split head-to-head, I like WV’s edge in the quadrant breakdown - I think its favorable. KU’s win over Baylor makes it interesting, but that did lose just a tad of luster with Baylor’s second loss yesterday.

- Colorado beat USC for the third time last night, despite a feverish rally late from the Trojans. CU and USC have comparable resumes, with the Buffs having some outliers for losses. But with three head-to-head wins now, I feel comfortable leaving Colorado above USC until were done tomorrow. Should the Buffs win the Pac-12 Tournament today, there is a good chance they will take the last five-seed. For today, CU/USC are both on the six-line

- Loyola-Chicago continues to benefit in seeding discussions for that seven-seed they so desperately want. The Ramblers may have the largest range of possibilities on Sunday. Resume-wise the committee could slot them down to a 10 or even 11 seed. But the metrics are completely behind the Ramblers in a big way. It is not apples to apples, but Wofford had very strong metrics in 2019 and landed as a seven-seed. In this hour, that’s where I have Loyola.

- The most fascinating story today is the bubble of course. Hopefully you’ve seen my bid thief board updates on Twitter as Championship Week has progressed. Georgetown and Oregon State each have the opportunity to take away bids with a win today. Utah State has the chance to “leave no doubt” with a win today. And in the AAC, both Memphis and Cincinnati are inching closer to stealing a bid. The teams right on the cut-line: Syracuse, Colorado State, Ole Miss and Saint Louis are currently in debates over two spots. Well, all of them could be doomed with those precious last two spots eaten by outsiders like the Hoyas and Beavers. If we remain in the same position, I have CSU penciled into last team in position. I still see the case for Ole Miss and Saint Louis (unique circumstances could warrant first four opportunity).

- I have more work to do in the 13-16 seed area. A lot of new faces emerged and some deeper comparisons are going to be done today. Look for some tweaks potentially by tomorrow.


New Conference leaders today represented below as Automatic Bids:
Big Sky - Eastern Washington
MAAC - Fairfield
MAC - Buffalo
Southland - Abilene Christian

Bracket projections are based on 2020-21 NCAA Committee Principles and Selection Process. Projected Conference Champions are based on projected Auto-Bid winners.

Projected At-Large Bids Stolen: 0 (Highly unlikely, annual average is 2.4 per season)

Bracketology 03.13.21.jpg

NCAA ALTERNATE TEAMS: Ole Miss, Saint Louis, Boise State, Xavier
NEXT THREE TEAMS OUT: Seton Hall, Memphis, St. John’s
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER: @roccomiller8

Bracketology 03.12.21

Bracket projections are based on 2020-21 NCAA Committee Principles and Selection Process. Projected Conference Champions are based on projected Auto-Bid winners.

Projected At-Large Bids Stolen: 0 (Unlikely, annual average is 2.4 per season)

Bracketology 03.12.21.jpg

NCAA ALTERNATE TEAMS: Utah State, Saint Louis, Boise State, Xavier
NEXT FOUR TEAMS OUT: Seton Hall, St. John's, Memphis, SMU
FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER: @roccomiller8