Skip to main content

Random Tournament Thoughts

Admit it, you've sneaked a look at the brackets already today. Face it, is your boss really going to buy into your plan that you suddenly got the flu at 12:03PM this Thursday? Can Butler make the Sweet 16... or can Old Dominion? It's tournament time, and it's a magical time when everyone's bracket is still correct, everyone in the nation is having fun speculating who to pick in their office pools, and Office Depot's stock goes through the roof as companies desperately look for printing supplies and copier toner.

Some random thoughts to whet your appetite for the tournament.

* I don't know about you, but every year I enter every contest that I can think of. Not only the office pool, but I submit everything I can find on the internet for men's brackets on CBS Sportsline, ESPN, and others. Irrational? Probably. But it's like this: if I (for some reason) ever pick the perfect bracket that nobody can beat, brother, I'm going to be ready.

* Of course, this doesn't explain my brackets for the NCAA Women's tournament and the NIT. I think in gambling parlance the existence of these brackets are commonly called "hedging one's bets". More accurately, when three of my final four get eliminated by dinnertime on Sunday, I'll still be rooting for the Lady Huskies the next weekend.

* It's funny how some of the teams seem like old friends you see once a year. Butler. Gonzaga. Long Beach State. Seriously, I'm a nut for NCAA football and the NCAA tournament, and I only hear about these schools once a year, when the brackets are announced - and after that, I study up on all of them looking for strengths and weaknesses. (If only I could have channeled this energy to, say, my schoolwork. I coulda been a Rhodes Scholar.)

* Seriously, aren't you surprised nobody has done a study for heart attack rates during the television broadcasts of the NCAA tournament? You have to believe when George Mason upset UConn last year to make the Final Four, cardiac arrest rates had to have hit some sort of record - not only in Connecticut and the D.C. suburbs, but in Las Vegas as well as punters who sunk their life savings into UConn as a "sure thing" started to turn a shade of shamrock green.

* My friend Ray always had the best line during the tournament - at the moment when his NCAA pool was officially finished. "That's it - I'm going to root for who I want to win!"
The best was when this happened on Saturday in Round 2 - a treasured memory.

* The best thing about Syracuse not being selected for the tournament is that it's one less maddening team you have to pick that has the talent to reach the Elite 8 or get eliminated by (say) Central Connecticut State. In the day, I used to call this the "Temple problem" - every year, you'd pick Temple to lose to (say) Princeton in the first round in a 6-11 game, and somehow they'd be playing North Carolina for the Final Four. But if you pick them, all of a sudden the guards would forget how to shoot and a team like Providence would knock them out easily.

I attribute any loss of hair I have to Temple's basketball team in the 80s and 90s, though there are other great candidates - Syracuse, Arizona, even (lately) Duke. If you lived through it, you know what I mean.

* Speaking of Providence, whatever happened to God Shamggod? Still playing in China? Isn't that proof that the Big Guy Up Above has a great sense of humor?

* Exactly why are all the writers and pundits saying that the mid-majors aren't going to make the same type of push to the Final Four that George Mason did a year ago? Sure, the NCAA did their best to stiff deserving mid-major at-large teams. But that has all the whiff of bluster and being out-of-touch. Have Southern Illinois, Wright State, Creighton, Virginia Commonwealth, Old Dominion, and Gonzaga all of a sudden become terrible? I'm betting not. The trend has been the "mid-majors" have all gotten better, and I see no reason to doubt that this isn't still true.

* I really don't know why, but whenever I see Winthrop in the NCAA tournament, I have to fight the urge to say, "I picked Winthrop when it wasn't cool to pick Winthrop!" If their 1998 game had ended after about ten minutes of play I would have had a chance when #16 Winthrop was ahead of #1 Auburn. I don't know why I remember that so well. Maybe picking a #16 to beat a #1 is kind of like hang-gliding or tasting your first beer - memorable, but for all the wrong reasons. (80 reasons to 41 reasons.)

* I hate #3 seeds. It seems like their only purpose is to tease you to pick them for the final four, while you watch them on Thursday afternoon lose to a team like Manhattan and thereby eliminating your pool from contention. When you combine this with the fact that the 14 seed YOU picked gets drilled by Kentucky, it makes you want to tear your hair out even more.

* It's awfully easy to pick the favorites to advance (and it's probably better for your pool too), but nothing comes close to the rush of adrenaline you get when you pick the correct upsets, especially in the 13-14-15 range. I still remember Siena upending Stanford, Richmond upending Syracuse, and (my favorite) Bucknell over Kansas. I can't remember the title game two years ago, but I remember that Kansas hook shot clanging off the iron very, very well.

* And, yes, I had picked the Patriot League winner for a while to advance out of the first round, because I wanted to be able to say that I picked it when it happened. (Well, at least since 2001.)

Comments

Anonymous said…
Chuck - you are beginning to sound like the mad ravings of Larry King!!!

Popular posts from this blog

How The Ivy League Is Able To Break the NCAA's Scholarship Limits and Still Consider Themselves FCS

By now you've seen the results.  In 2018, the Ivy League has taken the FCS by storm. Perhaps it was Penn's 30-10 defeat of Lehigh a couple of weeks ago .  Or maybe it was Princeton's 50-9 drubbing of another team that made the FCS Playoffs last year, Monmouth.  Or maybe it was Yale's shockingly dominant 35-14 win over nationally-ranked Maine last weekend. The Ivy League has gone an astounding 12-4 so far in out-of-conference play, many of those wins coming against the Patriot League. But it's not just against the Patriot League where the Ivy League has excelled.  Every Ivy League school has at least one out-of-conference victory, which is remarkable since it is only three games into their football season.  The four losses - Rhode Island over Harvard, Holy Cross over Yale, Delaware over Cornell, and Cal Poly over Brown - were either close losses that could have gone either way or expected blowouts of teams picked to be at the bottom of the Ivy League. W

Made-Up Midseason Grades for Lehigh Football

 We are now officially midway through the 2023 Lehigh football season.  The Mountain Hawks sit at 1-5 overall, and 0-1 in the Patriot League. I thought I'd go ahead and make up some midseason grades, and set some "fan goals" for the second half. The 2023 Mountain Hawks were picked to finish fifth in the seven team Patriot League.  In order to meet or exceed that expectation, they'll probably have to go at least 3-2 the rest of the way in conference play.  Their remaining games are vs. Georgetown, at Bucknell, vs. Holy Cross, at Colgate, and vs. Lafayette in The Rivalry. Can they do it? Culture Changing: B+ .  I was there in the Bronx last week after the tough 38-35 defeat to Fordham, and there wasn't a single player emerging from the locker room that looked like they didn't care.  Every face was glum.  They didn't even seem sad.  More frustrated and angry. That may seem normal, considering the agonizing way the Mountain Hawks lost, but it was a marked chan

Fifteen Guys Who Might be Lehigh's Next Football Coach (and Five More)

If you've been following my Twitter account, you might have caught some "possibilities" as Lehigh's next head football coach like Lou Holtz, Brett Favre and Bo Pelini .  The chance that any of those three guys actually are offered and accept the Lehigh head coaching position are somewhere between zero and zero.  (The full list of my Twitter "possibilities" are all on this thread on the Lehigh Sports Forum .) However the actual Lehigh head football coaching search is well underway, with real names and real possibilities. I've come up with a list of fifteen possible names, some which I've heard whispered as candidates, others which might be good fits at Lehigh for a variety of reasons. UPDATE: I have found five more names of possible head coaches that I am adding to this list below. Who are the twenty people?  Here they are, in alphabetical order.