Friday, March 27, 2009

The Revenge isn't missing -- it's moved

On the off chance that somebody out there is still checking this blog and wondering what happened as the Big East has been rolling through the NCAA tournament, I thought I should mention that I'm now blogging college hoops (as well as baseball, football and maybe some other stuff) for my new employer at this site here. Feel free to check in anytime.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Busted Already?

I mean, the President only got 11 out of 16 right on the first day, so I guess I don't feel too bad, getting only 10. But he didn't lose any second-round winners, whereas the day's biggest upset was of a team (Illinois) that I had picked into the Elite Eight.

Yikes.

Well, at least that's out of the way. Now I can enjoy the games without worrying about whether I need to get them right or not. I am cooked on day one.

Just two of the tournament's seven Big East teams played on day one. UConn looked terrifying and Villanova looked shaky. (Though anybody who watched that American team play should understand why those who call for the elimination of the mid-major auto-bids are dead wrong. That's what this tournament is all about -- a team like that playing good, solid, fun-to-watch basketball and putting themselves in position to really, truly, accurately believe that they have a chance to win an NCAA tournament game. The upsets and near-upsets in games like that are what this tournament is built on -- why it's the event it is every year. A tournament without the Americans and Cal State-Northridges wouldn't be as cool.)

My picks for today (or, "Teams You Should Run Right Out and Bet Against Now While You Still Have the Chance"):

Syracuse over Stephen F. Austin (though you know which way this blog is rooting)
Oklahoma State over Tennessee (coin flip)
Kansas over North Dakota State (but you have to think about it, right? It's Kansas.)
Utah State over Marquette (UPSET SPECIAL!!!)
Arizona State over Temple (Even though the Pac-10 didn't show much on day one)
Pitt over East Tennessee State (Has ETSU ever seen anyone like DaJuan Blair?)
West Virginia over Dayton (if the game were in Dayton, maybe. But it's in Minnesota)
Missouri over Cornell (to Andy Bernard's chagrin)
Utah over Arizona (too much Keith Van Horn? Oh wait...)
Louisville over Morehead State (MSU will always have this past Tuesday)
USC over Boston College (again with the Pac-10. Why???)
Xavier over Portland State (Xavier is another Elite Eight team -- can't lose two)
Siena over Ohio State (...)
Wake Forest over Cleveland State (though everybody likes the upset here...)
Michigan State over Robert Morris (MSU could get every rebound in the game)
Florida State over Wisconsin (ACC vs. Big Ten? Should be no contest. Should be.)

Syracuse game tips at 12:15. Bedtime looks like at least 12 hours later. Getcha popcorn ready, as a bizarre man once said.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Baylor 74, Georgetown 72 -- Requiem for a Lost Season

Honestly, you couldn't have scripted a more fitting end to this season. Blow a 10-point halftime lead, on the road, against a team full of seniors who stayed more focused and motivated throughout the game than you did. Fall asleep on defense over and over again and let that kid keep getting free on the baseline for those alley-oop dunks.

I hate watching my team in the NIT, because you never feel good about rooting for it. ("We're Number 66!!") But now at least that's all resolved. From what I saw, it certainly looks as if Greg Monroe could use more seasoning, so hopefully he stays away from that NBA draft and comes back to try and make up for what happened this year.

We could go over it and over it, but we already have, for the past few months. And besides, this is the best day of the year -- whether the Hoyas decided to join it or not.

The NCAA Tournament begins in earnest this afternoon. I'm in Florida, doing some spring training coverage, but the heavy early odds favor me blowing off this Phillies-Marlins game and finding a sports bar with about 110 TVs and parking there for the afternoon. Or going back down to Delray Beach and crashing on my in-laws' couch to watch one game on the TV and others on the laptop.

Briefly, my Final Four is Michigan State, Duke, Connecticut and Oklahoma, with Michigan State beating Duke for the title. I never win these things, and my performance (as detailed below) in this year's Conference Tournament Pool speaks to the success I expect to have in the big bracket as well. So while I have no reason to think you'd be using my picks as any kind of advice anyway, I can confidently advise you to stay away, and use them only to poke fun at me after the fact.

My winners today:

LSU over Butler
Memphis over Cal State-Northridge
BYU over Texas A&M
Purdue over Northern Iowa
North Carolina over Radford, easily, even with Ty Lawson tied behind their backs.
Cal over Maryland
UConn over Chattanooga
Washington over Mississippi State
Minnesota over Texas (Sure, drinking the Big Ten Kool-Aid. Why fight it?)
Clemson over Michigan (Too much Kool-Aid is bad for you)
Villanova over American
Akron over Gonzaga (UPSET SPECIAL -- GO ZIPS!!!)
Duke over Binghamton
Oklahoma over Morgan State
UCLA over VCU (though I see the President picked the upset here...)
Illinois over Western Kentucky

Let's tip off!!!!

Sunday, March 15, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Saturday recap, Final Day preview

Twelve more bids awarded Saturday, and only four more conference tournaments to be played. It is as tight as it gets at the top of the pool.

Chris Sabatino leads with 304 points. Right behind him are Rob Biro and Steve Politi, each with 303.

Chris also leads the race for most champions picked correctly, with 11 out of 26 so far, but Ed Price, Yohan Sengamalay, Sal Sabatino and Steve Politi each have picked 10.

So how does it shake out today? Well, Rob and Steve have Duke in the ACC final, which means each gets four more points if Duke wins. Chris would suffer here for having picked his alma mater’s archrival over alma mater herself, while Steve would be rewarded for doing the same.

Rob has Tennessee winning the SEC, so if that happens he gets a leg up on the other two in the overall points race.

Chris has Purdue in the Big Ten, so he gets help if they win.

Chris, Rob and Steve all have Stephen F. Austin in the Southland, so no blood there.

So, the way I figure it:

-If Duke and Tennessee both win, Rob wins the overall points title regardless of the Big Ten result.

-If Florida State and Mississippi State both win, Chris wins the overall points title regardless of the Big Ten result.

-If Duke, Mississippi State and Purdue all win, Chris wins the overall points title.

-If Duke, Mississippi State and Ohio State all win, Rob and Steve tie for the overall points title.

-If Florida State, Tennessee and Purdue all win, Chris wins the overall points title.

-If Florida State, Tennessee and Ohio State all win, Rob wins the overall points title.

I think that’s right. If it’s not, I’m sorry. Also, I think any combination of Chris, Rob, Steve and Ed can win and/or tie for the prize for most champions picked.

As a refresher, the overall points leader wins $15. The person with the second-most overall points gets $5. And the person who picks the most champions correctly gets $10. There are no tiebreakers. If you tie, you split the money.

Now, on to the daily roundup:

AMERICA EAST
The Binghamton Bearcats earned their first-ever trip to the NCAA tournament, beating UMBC 61-51 in the final of the America East tournament. Binghamton’s tournament title was correctly forecast by Dan and Steve, but Steve won the dollar with a score of 11 out of a possible 19 points. Steve is now up to $4.66 in winnings, almost the first guy to earn his entry fee back. Which is good, since he hasn’t paid it.

MEAC
It’s back to the Big Dance for Morgan State, which earned the MEAC’s bid with an 83-69 victory over Norfolk State. Morgan was the predicted tournament champion of Dan, Greg, Sal, Nino, Chris, Yohan, Mark and Rob, but this was Nino’s tournament all the way. Nino scored 20 out of a possible 21 points in the MEAC bracket, missing only with Howard’s loss to Florida A&M in the 8-9 game. Congrats to Nino, king of the MEAC.

BIG EAST
Louisville restores sanity and order to the universe, finally coming up with a way to stop Syracuse, 76-66 in the Big East tournament final. I have a hunch both of these teams will find their way into the tournament, but Louisville is now officially guaranteed. Nobody had Louisville winning, so the dollar goes to Mark Feinsand, who had the best overall Big East bracket with 21 out of a possible 37 points. Mark is the Beast of the Big East.

WAC
Another tournament in which the top seed actually wins! Utah State beats Nevada 72-62 for the WAC title and an automatic bid to the Big Dance. Sal, Nino, Chris, Yohan, Steve, Mark and Rob all had Utah State here, but Sal is the big winner with a PERFECT 19 out of 19 points!!! A perfect WAC bracket for Sal. Congrats, Sal, you are El Jefe Primo in the WAC.

MAC
Akron ends Buffalo’s dreams 65-53 in the finals of the Mid-American. Yohan was the only person to correctly pick Akron to win this tournament, and with 15 points out of a possible 22, Yohan wins the MAC’s one-dollar first prize. Yohan is…wait for it…the new Shaq of the MAC, supplanting Gary Trent.

ATLANTIC 10
Temple ends the Cinderella run of Duquesne with a 69-64 victory in the A-10 final, earning the league’s automatic bid. Mark and Yohan both picked Temple to win this tournament, but Yohan edged Mark by a point, 15-14, for the A-10 dollar. Had Mark picked Xavier over St. Louis in the quarterfinals, as everybody else did, he’d have won this. Instead, Yohan rules the A-10.

MOUNTAIN WEST
Utah nips San Diego State, 52-50 to earn its ticket to the dance as champion of the MWC. Mark, Rob, Nino, Yohan, Jim and Jon all had Utah here, and it’s Jim who takes home the dollar. Correctly forecasting both finalists helped Jim to a score of 16 out of a possible 19 points, and earns him the title of Lord of the Mountain West.

BIG 12
Missouri ends Baylor’s dream run with a 73-60 reality check in the Big 12 final. Nobody had Missouri. We all had a Kansas-Oklahoma final. The best score in the Big 12 was 7 out of a possible 22, which was posted by Ed, Sal, Jim, Greg and Jon, who each pocketed 20 cents. The Big 12 is ruled by a council.

CONFERENCE USA
Yes. Memphis. 64-39 over Tulsa in the foregone final. Correctly forecast by all 12 of us. But Sal, who didn’t miss a game after the first round, scored 19 out of 22 to earn the dollar and be crowned emperor of Conference USA.

SWAC
Top-seeded Alabama State takes out Jackson State in the final of the SWAC and advances to the Big Dance. Only Ed and Sal correctly picked Alabama State to win this tournament, and those two also tied for the win in the SWAC bracket with 10 points out of a possible 11. They can armwrestle for supreme control of the SWAC.

PAC-10
Sixth-seeded USC took out fourth-seeded Arizona State 66-63 in a very surprising Pac-10 final to earn an NCAA tournament bid. Nobody had USC winning this. Jim and Steve each scored 12 out of a possible 20 points in the Pac-10 bracket and each get 50 cents. Jim and Steve form the two-headed sultan of the Pac-10.

BIG WEST
Cal State-Northridge beat Pacific 71-66 in overtime to secure the Big West crown and advance to the NCAA Tournament. This title was correctly forecast by Chris, Ed and Steve, but Chris had the best overall Big West bracket, scoring 14 out of a possible 16 points. Chris wins the dollar as Duke of the Big West.

ACC
Florida State took out North Carolina, a result that was correctly forecast by only Dan and Steve, a self-loathing Tar Heel. Duke beat Maryland in the other semifinal, as correctly forecast by five people, including at least two Duke alumni. Duke will play Florida State today in the ACC final. Mark, Steve and Rob are tied for the pool lead with 12 out of a possible 18 points so far. But Mark had North Carolina winning this tournament, while Steve and Rob each picked Duke. So if Duke wins today, Steve and Rob will each get 50 cents. If Florida State wins, it remains a three-way tie, with Steve, Rob and Mark each getting 33 cents.

SEC
Mississippi State took out top-seeded LSU in the SEC semis, throwing many SEC brackets into chaos. Tennessee beat Auburn in the other semi and will face MSU in today’s final. Sal leads with 12 out of a possible 18 points so far, but he picked LSU to win, so his only hope is a Mississippi State victory today. If MSU wins, Sal gets the buck. But if Tennessee wins, Rob and Jim (each of whom picked Tennessee to win the tournament) will move past Sal and tie for the pool title with 14 points apiece, each getting 50 cents.

BIG TEN
The top seed went out in the Big Ten as well, with Michigan State getting basically smoked by Ohio State in its semifinal game. Michigan State was the pick of eight of the 12 of us, and so it’s a big loss. Purdue beat Illinois in the other semifinal, which is big for Chris and Jim, each of whom had Purdue winning this tournament. Nino currently leads with 13 points, and if Mississippi State wins, Nino will get a buck. But if Purdue wins, Jim will win the dollar with a score of 15 out of a possible 22 points.

SOUTHLAND
Top-seeded Stephen F. Austin takes on sixth-seeded Texas-San Antonio in this afternoon’s Southland final. Currently, seven people are tied for first place in the Southland with 5 out of a possible 8 points so far. Of those seven, five picked Stephen F. Austin to win the tournament. (The other two had Sam Houston State and Nicholls State.) So if Austin wins, Dan, Rob, Steve, Ed and Jon will split the dollar five ways. If San Antonio wins, Dan, Rob, Steve, Ed, Jon, Nino and Jim will split the dollar seven ways. Either way, Dan will finally win some money. WHOOOOOOO-HOOOOOOOOO!!!!

TOTAL POINTS THROUGH MARCH 14
Chris Sabatino: 304
Rob Biro: 303
Steve Politi: 303
Sal Sabatino: 292
Paul “Nino” Canino: 285
Greg Lester: 283
Yohan Sengamalay: 283
Ed Price: 279
Mark Feinsand: 279
Jim Graziano: 269
Dan Graziano: 260
Jon Graziano: 259

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY (out of a possible 26)
Chris Sabatino: 11
Ed Price: 10
Yohan Sengamalay: 10
Sal Sabatino: 10
Steve Politi: 10
Rob Biro: 9
Paul “Nino” Canino: 9
Mark Feinsand: 8
Jon Graziano: 7
Greg Lester: 7
Dan Graziano: 4
Jim Graziano: 4

PRIZE MONEY SO FAR
Steve Politi: $4.66
Sal Sabatino: $4.36
Yohan Sengamalay: $4.16
Ed Price: $3.36
Paul “Nino” Canino: $2.66
Mark Feinsand: $2.50
Jim Graziano: $1.70
Chris Sabatino: $1.50
Greg Lester: $0.70
Jon Graziano: $0.20
Rob Biro: $0.16
Dan Graziano: NOTHING!!!!

Enjoy today’s title games, and the selection show, boys. I’ll be back tomorrow with a final recap.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool --- Friday Recap, Saturday Preview

Oh, we got a race, boys.

On a day that saw 16 tournaments play, one champion crowned and another slew of top seeds hit the bricks, Rob Biro moved into first place in the overall points standings of The Conference Tournament Pool.

But it’s tight behind him. Chris Sabatino is two points back, Steve Politi just three out of the lead, and Sal Sabatino and Greg Lester are each within nine points of the top spot.

Today is a big day, with 15 tournaments in action and 12 of them holding their title games. By the end of today, with only four games on the schedule tomorrow, we should have some idea of who’s going to win.

I’d like to thank all of you for the work you put in on your picks. There are no more picks to make, which I’m sure comes as a relief. I hope you’ve enjoyed this as much as I have.

Now, onto the daily summary:

PATRIOT
The Patriot League tournament played three rounds over 10 days, and it ended early Friday evening when top-seeded American beat Holy Cross 73-57 to earn the title and the league’s automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Nino, Chris, Yohan, Rob, Jim, Ed, Mark and Steve all had American winning, but Mark and Steve had the best brackets, with 10 out of a possible 11 points. (Both missed only with Lehigh in the first round.) Mark and Steve therefore each pocket and additional 50 cents. Congrats, Mark and Bracket Boy.

AMERICA EAST
I always feel like it’s a cool day when the sports I want to watch start playing before noon. Today is such a day, as top-seeded Binghamton and sixth-seeded UMBC meet in the final of the America East tournament. If you’d forgotten about this tournament, you can be forgiven. The semifinals were six days ago.
To refresh: Jim leads with 10 out of a possible 15 points so far, but he cannot score any more, since he had Vermont winning the tournament. Nobody had UMBC, and Dan and Steve had Binghamton. Dan is hopelessly behind, but Steve has seven points and would get four more if Binghamton won the final, passing Jim and winning the dollar. So if Bingy wins, Steve gets a buck. If UMBC pulls the upset, Jim gets the buck.
Game is on ESPN2 at 11 am EST.

MEAC
Top-seeded Morgan State advanced to the final with a 75-67 victory over Coppin State, and Norfolk State took out South Carolina State in the other semifinal. These results give the MEAC dollar to Nino regardless of the outcome of today’s final. Nino leads with 16 points out of a so-far possible 17 and has Morgan State winning the tournament. Jim has Norfolk State winning the tournament, but he only has 11 points, and the final is worth four. So while Jim would still get credit for a champion pick if Norfolk State wins, he’d only get to 15 points and would not catch Nino. So Nino wins this $1. Congrats, Meat Sticks.
Norfolk State takes on Morgan State in the MEAC final tonight at 7 pm in Winston-Salem, N.C.

BIG EAST
I keep thinking of that Vince Vaughn line at the end of Anchorman, where he’s holding the ladder and threatening to push Will Ferrell back into the bear pit, going on and on about how much he hates him and then he finally says, “But goddamn it, I respect you!” This is how I’m starting to feel about Syracuse, and in particular the kid Jonny Flynn.
A night after playing six overtimes to take out the No. 4 team in the country, Syracuse needed another overtime to take out West Virginia in the Big East semifinals. Louisville whipped Villanova in the other and will face the Orange tonight, as Syracuse attempts to become only the third team (and the second Syracuse team) ever to win four games in four days to win the Big East tournament. (Incidentally, I looked it up – neither of those other two teams played a six-overtime game in their tournaments. True story.)
Mark Feinsand correctly predicted this final, and has 21 out of a possible 32 points so far to lead the pool. He also picked Syracuse to win, and nobody picked Louisville, so Mark has already wrapped up the Big East dollar. Congrats again to Mark, who’s making a strong late push to win back the entry fee he has yet to pay.
Syracuse faces Louisville tonight at 9 pm in the Big East final from Madison Square Garden. The winner does get an automatic bid, but I have a hunch the loser might sneak into the field too.

WAC
Second-seeded Nevada eliminated Louisiana Tech while top-seeded Utah State nipped New Mexico State 71-70 in the semifinals. The latter game was interesting for reasons outlined in the AP recap I’ve copied here:

Tai Wesley missed a short hook in the lane with 7 seconds left, but NMSU's Chris Gabriel swatted the ball out of bounds. During an ensuing time out, the Utah State mascot "Big Blue" the bull confronted the New Mexico State's cowboy mascot "Pistol Pete" -- both teams are Aggies -- and ripped off his fake mustache.
The cowboy then chased the bull to halfcourt, jumped on his back and tried to pull him to the floor before retreating to his end of the court.
After fans for both teams started booing, Wesley caught the inbounds pass at the top of the lane and passed to Tyler Newbold on the left wing. His 15-footer rolled off the rim, hit the backboard and rolled in.

The upshot, for our pool, is this: Both Jim and Sal have perfect WAC brackets so far, with 15 out of a possible 15 points. But only one will get to 19. Sal has Utah State winning the final, and if they do, he gets the dollar. Jim has Nevada winning the final, and if they do, he gets the dollar. Just watch out for that bull, Jim.
Utah State and Nevada meet in the WAC final tonight at 10 pm in Reno, Nev. The game is on ESPN2. The winner goes dancing.

MAC
Akron and Buffalo are the semifinal winners, setting up a 3-vs.-4 matchup in the finals of the Mid-American. Steve and Rob each have 13 out of a possible 18 points so far, but Rob picked Miami to win this and is therefore done scoring. Steve picked Buffalo, and if Buffalo wins, Steve pockets the MAC dollar. However, Yohan picked Akron, and if the Zips pull it out, Yohan will pass Steve and win the dollar.
The MAC final pits Akron against Buffalo tonight at 8 pm EST in Cleveland and will be shown on ESPN2.

ATLANTIC 10
Carnage in Atlantic City, as fourth-seeded Temple knocked off top-seeded Xavier and seventh-seeded Duquesne took out fourth-seeded Dayton to make the A-10 final a bubble team’s worst nightmare. These results also torched almost everybody’s A-10 bracket, as seven of us had forecast a Xavier-Dayton final and nine of us had either Xavier or Dayton winning. Yohan and Mark picked Temple. Yohan and Ed each have 11 points to lead the pool, but only Yohan can get more. (Ed had Rhode Island winning.) If Temple wins, Yohan will have 15 points and get the dollar. But if Duquesne wins, Yohan and Ed will remain tied with 11 points and split the dollar.
Duquesne vs. Temple for the A-10 title and a trip to the tournament tonight at 6 pm on ESPN2, live from the boardwalk.

MOUNTAIN WEST
San Diego State upset top-seeded BYU to advance to a final-game matchup against second-seeded Utah. Jim Graziano was the only one in the pool to correctly forecast this final, and as a result he has already locked up the MWC dollar. Jim has 12 points out of a possible 15 so far and is one of six who picked Utah to win the tournament. Nobody picked San Diego State to win the tournament. Congrats to Jim, whose victory left his brothers as the only ones yet to win any money – until the next paragraph.
San Diego State vs. Utah in the MWC final tonight at 8 pm EST in Las Vegas. Winner dances.

BIG 12
Baylor continues its Cinderella run, taking out Texas in the semis and advancing to the finals. Missouri knocks off Oklahoma State, meaning three more points for Greg. Since everybody had either Kansas or Oklahoma winning this tournament, there are no more points to be scored, and the Big 12 pool ends in a seven-way tie between Greg, Ed, Jim, Jon and Sal. Each gets 20 cents, and Jon is on the board. Leaving only Dan with no money. Fitting. And we haven’t even talked about Wake Forest yet…
Baylor-Missouri for the Big 12 title tonight at 6 pm EST on ESPN, live from Oklahoma City. Would be a big win for Baylor.

CONFERENCE USA
Memphis won, of course, and so did second-seeded Tulsa. Dan, Sal and Yohan all correctly forecast this final, but Sal did better in the quarterfinals and has locked up the C-USA dollar. Sal leads with 15 out of a possible 18 points, one more than Dan and Mark. And since everybody has Memphis winning, Sal can’t be passed. Good work, Sal.
Memphis is scheduled to beat Tulsa like a bowl of eggs in the Conference USA title game starting this morning at 11:35 am EST on CBS, live from…well, Memphis, of course.

SWAC
Chalk in the SWAC, with Alabama State and Jackson State advancing to the final. Seven of us correctly forecast this final, and Rob currently leads with a perfect 8-of-8 points so far. Rob, like seven others, has Jackson State winning, and if they do, he’ll finish with a perfect score of 11 and win the SWAC dollar. But if Alabama State wins, Ed and Sal will pass Rob and finish in a tie for first with 10 points, each getting 50 cents.
SWAC final between Alabama State and Jackson State is tonight at 9 pm EST in Birmingham on ESPNU.

PAC-10
The top two seeds in the Pac-10 go down, and so does almost everyone’s bracket. Eight people had UCLA winning the tournament and two had Washington, and both lost in the semis. Jim and Steve were the only ones to correctly forecast Arizona State’s semifinal win (nobody picked USC’s), and as a result they are tied for the pool lead with 12 out of a possible 16 points so far. Steve had UCLA winning, and cannot score any more. However, Jim picked Arizona State to win, and if they do, he’ll get another buck.
Arizona State against USC tonight at 6 pm EST on CBS, live from L.A.

BIG WEST
The finals are Cal State-Northridge against Pacific. Chris, Yohan, Jim and Greg all got this right. Yohan leads with 11 points, and he gets a buck if Pacific wins the final. If Northridge wins the final, Chris gets the dollar.
Pacific vs. Northridge in the Big West final tonight at midnight EST on ESPN2 from Anaheim. Winner gets a dance ticket.

ACC
The only quarterfinal upset was Maryland over Wake Forest. The only one who had Wake winning the tournament was (guess) Dan. So this is still a free-for-all. Mark, Rob and Sal are tied for the lead with 9 of 12 possible points so far.
Semifinal matchups today: North Carolina-Florida State, Duke-Maryland.

SEC
Ed Price correctly picked all four quarterfinal winners – LSU, Mississippi State, Tennessee and Auburn and therefore leads the pool with 10 out of a possible 12 points so far. Yohan and Steve (Florida) and Jon (South Carolina) saw their predicted champions bow out.
Semifinal games today: LSU-Mississippi State and Auburn-Tennessee.

BIG TEN
Bit of a dull day (big surprise) in the Big Ten. Michigan State, Ohio State, Illinois and Purdue all advance. Nobody’s champion eliminated. Greg has picked all eight games correctly so far and leads the Big Ten pool with 11 points.
Semifinal matchups today: Michigan State/Ohio State and Illinois/Purdue.

SOUTHLAND
Couple of nailbiters here, with sixth-seeded UT-San Antonio upsetting second-seeded Nicholls State and top-seeded Stephen F. Austin advancing over Texas A&M Corpus Christi in the semifinals of the hardest tournament to type. Dan, Nino, Rob, Steve, Ed, Jon and Jim all are tied with 5 out of a possible 8 points so far, but Nino (Sam Houston State) and Jim (Nicholls State) picked champions that have already been eliminated. So, if SF Austin wins the final, Dan, Rob, Steve, Ed and Jon would all tie and each win 20 cents. If San Antonio wins the final, it remains a seven-way tie, and each person in it would win 14 cents.
Stephen F. Austin and UT-San Antonio square off in the Southland final TOMORROW at 1 pm with a bid to the NCAA tournament on the line.

TOTAL POINTS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 13
Rob Biro: 281
Chris Sabatino: 279
Steve Politi: 278
Sal Sabtino: 274
Greg Lester: 272
Paul “Nino” Canino: 266
Ed Price: 265
Yohan Sengamalay: 259
Mark Feinsand: 256
Jim Graziano: 252
Jon Graziano: 251
Dan Graziano: 242 (come on, Auburn!!!)

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTY (of a possible 14)
Ed Price: 7
Chris Sabatino: 7
Sal Sabatino: 6
Steve Politi: 6
Jon Graziano: 5
Greg Lester: 5
Rob Biro: 5
Yohan Sengamalay: 4
Paul “Nino” Canino: 4
Mark Feinsand: 3
Jim Graziano: 2
Dan Graziano: 1 (thank you, North Dakota State!)

PRIZE MONEY SO FAR
Steve Politi: $3.16
Ed Price: $2.86
Sal Sabatino: $2.86
Paul “Nino” Canino: $2.66
Mark Feinsand: $2.50
Yohan Sengamalay: $2.16
Jim Graziano: $1.20
Greg Lester: $0.70
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Jon Graziano $0.20
Rob Biro: $0.16
Dan Graziano: NUTTIN

Friday, March 13, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Thursday Recap, Friday Look-Ahead

Wow.

WOW!!!!!

Wow.

There were 53 Division I NCAA college basketball tournament games played Thursday. A total of 15 tournaments saw action. Four were just beginning. No champions were crowned. One game went SIX FREAKING OVERTIMES!!!

You want madness? The top two seeds in the Big 12 tournament – the two teams that 11 of the 12 of us picked to meet in the finals and all 12 of us picked to win it – exited the tournament without winning a game. The 2-seed in the Big East went out without winning a game, and the 3-seed fell to Syracuse in one of the greatest basketball games of all time.

We had action and upsets all over the board, which is what this time of year is all about. Our pool has a new leader, as Ed Price had a brutal day and fell from first place all the way down to fifth.

And so on we go to the summary of the 15 tournaments that played Thursday – all of which continue play on this Friday the 13th – as well as one that will crown its champion today.

PATRIOT
Remember the Patriot League? You’d be easily forgiven if you didn’t. You picked this tournament nine days ago. It played its semifinals on Sunday but has waited until today to play the final. In that final, top-seeded American takes on second-seeded Holy Cross. Jon, Mark and Steve lead our Patriot pool, each with 7 points out of a possible 8 so far. But Jon has Holy Cross winning the final, while Steve and Mark picked American. So if American wins, Steve and Mark each get 50 cents. If Holy Cross wins, Jon gets a whole buck.

MEAC
Pretty close to straight chalk so far in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. The only game so far in which the higher seed beat the lower was fifth-seeded Coppin State’s 66-63 victory over fourth-seeded North Carolina A&T. But that was a tough loss for pool leader Ed Price, who had A&T winning not only this game but a semifinal game as well. Perhaps this is an opening for somebody?
So far, Dan and Jon Graziano each have picked all seven MEAC games correctly for a perfect score of 11 points. They have the same two winners today, but Dan has Morgan State winning the tournament while Jon picked South Carolina State. So somebody’s going to lose a game somewhere. History tells us it’s probably going to be Dan…
MEAC semifinal matchups today are Morgan State/Coppin State and SC State/Norfolk State. A Norfolk victory today would, I am pretty sure, give this dollar to Nino. But let’s jump off that bridge when we get there, shall we?

BIG EAST
Prior to Thursday night, I personally had never seen, heard of or believed in the possibility of a five-overtime basketball game. But then Connecticut and Syracuse changed all that.
They played six.
Eric Devendorf, a tattooed thug who should have been kicked off the team in January, came within a tenth of a second of winning this game for Syracuse in regulation. His three-pointer at the buzzer looked for several moments as if it had won the game. But a replay review correctly determined that the ball had still been in the thug’s hands when the clock ran out, and the officials ruled that the game was not over.
They couldn’t have known how right they were.
An hour and forty minutes later, the game ended, a 127-117 Syracuse victory in six overtimes.
Syracuse didn’t lead in any of the first five overtimes, but they put it away quickly in the sixth. The game took three hours and 47 minutes and ended at 1:23 am. Eight players fouled out. When it was over, the ESPN broadcast crew stood and applauded both teams.
Unbelievably great players showing unbelievable toughness and making play after play all through the night. I really think Jonny Flynn might have a bottomless supply of energy and toughness. I say this truthfully, even though I despise him, his team, his school and all it stands for. But facts are facts, and the guy was a complete bad-ass for four hours’ worth of basketball. He played 67 minutes, and of his 34 points, 17 were scored in overtime.
All of this overshadowed the thrilling finish in the Villanova-Marquette game and West Virginia’s upset of second-seeded Pitt. All of that together, combined with the epic nightcap, proved once again why the Big East Tournament is the best college basketball event other than The Big Dance itself.
Five people had Pitt winning this tournament. Five had Connecticut. Steve has Villanova and Mark has Syracuse. One of those two will win the Big East dollar, depending on how today’s games go.
Semifinals tonight at the Garden: Louisville-Villanova and West Virginia-Syracuse. What can they possibly have for an encore?

WAC
XXXXXXXXXXXXXX
If Nevada wins the tournament, Jim gets a dollar. If Utah State wins the tournament, Sal wins the dollar. If neither of those teams wins it, we’ll recalculate.
Semifinals today: Utah State/New Mexico State and Nevada/Louisiana Tech.

MAC
Bowling Green, Akron, Buffalo and (Eat My) Ball State all advance to the semifinals in the MAC. EMB State needed OT, and Buffalo had to hold off a second-half rally by Kent State, but that’s your semifinal setup for today in the Mid-American.
Currently, Dan, Greg, Steve and Rob each have 10 out of a possible 12 points, but sadly for Dan, the only MAC game he’s missed is this Kent State loss, and Kent State was his predicted champion. Just not Dan’s year, he guesses.
Greg, Sal, Ed and Jon all have Bowling Green winning this. Chris and Steve have Buffalo. Yohan has Akron. Everybody else’s champ is out.

ATLANTIC 10
The upset of the day in Atlantic City was seventh-seeded Duquesne’s victory over second-seeded Rhode Island, which is more bad news for pool leader Ed Price. Ed had URI winning the A-10, which they will now not do. Chris and Nino each have scored 10 out of 12 possible points so far, and each has Xavier winning it all.
Xavier takes on Temple in one of today’s semifinals, and Duquesne tries to extend its Cinderella run against Dayton in the other.

MOUNTAIN WEST
One big upset here – Wyoming over New Mexico. Only Feinsand picked that one, and Dan, Chris, Ed, Sal and Steve all had New Mexico winning the whole tournament.
Dan is the pool leader right now with seven points, since he’s only missed one game. But as mentioned, that one game cost him his predicted champion, so he is likely toast. For Dan to win this dollar, BYU and Wyoming have to win today and Wyoming has to win the tournament. Otherwise, somebody else wins. As usual.
Semifinal matchups today: BYU/San Diego State and Utah/Wyoming. Go Pokes, is all I can say.

BIG 12
Well, this is about as bloody as it gets.
Three of the 12 of us picked Kansas to win the Big 12 tournament. They lost their quarterfinal matchup Thursday afternoon to Baylor.
The other nine picked Oklahoma to win the Big 12 tournament. They lost their quarterfinal matchup Thursday night to Oklahoma State.
So there ain’t much left out there in terms of points. Greg actually had Missouri beating Oklahoma today in the semis, so he’ll pick up three points if they beat OSU. No one else can earn any more Big 12 points.
Right now, Ed, Sal, Jim and Jon each have finished with 7 out of a possible 22 Big 12 points, and will each get 25 cents if Oklahoma State wins its game today. But if Missouri wins, then Greg, who currently has four points, would get three more and make it a five-way tie. In that case, Ed, Sal, Jim, Jon and Greg would each get 20 cents.
Whoo-hoo!!!
(In the other semifinal, Baylor plays Texas. Nobody had either team winning that game.)

CONFERENCE USA
Well, Memphis won, which is cool, since all 12 of us picked them to win this tournament. They get Houston (an overtime winner over UTEP) in one semifinal while Tulsa and UAB do battle in the other for the right to get waxed in the title game.
Mark Feinsand leads the way here with 11 out of a possible 12 points so far, and if UAB wins today, Mark will win this pool’s dollar. However, if Tulsa wins today, Sal will win this pool’s dollar. All true, I promise.

SWAC
Sraight-up chalk in the SWAC, with all four top seeds advancing to the semis. Rob, Nino and Steve each picked all four quarterfinal games correctly, and only Jim lost a finalist (Southern). Nino and Steve all have the rest of the tournament picked the same, so if Arkansas-Pine Bluff beats Alabama State and Jackson State beats Prairie View A&M today, they’ll each get 50 cents. But Rob has Alabama State winning today, and Jim and Jon get right back into this if Prairie View wins, so stay tuned. I mean, if you want.

PAC-10
USC pulls the day’s upset in the Pac-10, costing seven of us a point and Yohan his predicted champion (Cal). Still wide open in the Pac 10, where eight have UCLA, Rob and Nino have Washington and Jim has Arizona State cutting down the nets.
Semifinals today: Washington/Arizona State and USC/UCLA.

BIG WEST
Everybody had Pacific, which beat UC-Davis, and seven people correctly picked UC-Santa Barbara’s victory over Fullerton. Sal leads here with a perfect six points so far, but this is the re-seeder tournament, which nobody has yet picked to its conclusion. We will do that today.
The semifinals today feature Long Beach State against Pacific and Cal State-Northridge against UC-Santa Barbara. You will receive your updated Big West brackets shortly. Please pick both semifinal games and then pick a winner from between your two finalists.

ACC
The big first-day upset here was Georgia Tech over Clemson, which only Rob picked, in a nod to one of his impressive alma maters. Rob did miss with Miami against Virginia Tech, though, so nobody got all four first-round ACC games right. Seven people had Clemson winning twice and will suffer for that, but this is still wide open.
Nine people have North Carolina and Ty Lawson’s swollen toe winning this tournament. Steve Politi, who is a UNC graduate, has the Tar Heels losing their first game, and he (along with Rob) picked Duke. Dan, ever the iconoclast, picked Wake, which all but guarantees a Maryland win today.
Quarterfinal matchups today: UNC/Virginia Tech, Florida State/Georgia Tech, Wake Forest/Maryland and Duke/Boston College in a war for Graziano Kid Brother bragging rights.

SEC
Nine people have Vanderbilt winning its first-round game. They did not. Alabama did. Otherwise, no real movement of significance on the first day in the SEC.
LSU is the hot pick here, with six of the 12 of us picking the Tigers. Rob and Jim picked Tennessee. Yohan and Steve have Florida. Jon has South Carolina, and Dan, ever the iconoclast, picked Auburn to win this.
(A note here: Dan did his picks first, before any others came in, and was alarmed that nobody else in the pool besides Ed has Auburn winning even a single game. All pool history tells us this is bad news for Ed.)
Quarterfinal matchups today: LSU/Kentucky, South Carolina/Mississippi State, Tennessee/Alabama and yes, that pivotal Auburn/Florida game. Guess we’ll see.

BIG TEN
Another just-getting started situation, with three first-round games. Eight of the 12 of us picked all three correctly, while Nino, Rob, Yohan and Jim all lost with Northwestern. But nobody lost a semifinal team, so the Big Ten remains wide open.
Eight of us have Michigan State to win it. Greg and Jon picked Illinois. Chris and Jim picked Purdue.
Quarterfinal matchups today: Michigan State/Minnesota, Wisconsin/Ohio State, Illinois/Michigan and Penn State/Purdue. How awesome would it be if those were football games?

SOUTHLAND
Surprising amount of movement in the Southland, mainly due to UT-San Antonio’s upset over Sam Houston State. Everybody had Sam Houston winning Thursday, 10 of us had them in the final, and Greg, Mark, Nino and Sal all had them winning. Yohan’s champion, UT-Arlington, also lost its first-round game.
The most popular pick for the tournament winner is Stephen F. Austin, which was picked by six of us. Jim, in a desperate attempt to make up ground, picked Nicholls State.
Semifinals today: Stephen F. Austin/Texas A&M Corpus Christi and Nicholls State/UT-San Antonio.

TOTAL POINTS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 12
Steve Politi: 233
Rob Biro: 229
Chris Sabatino: 228
Sal Sabatino: 227
Ed Price: 226
Greg Lester: 222
Paul “Nino” Canino: 216
Jon Graziano: 213
Yohan Sengamalay: 212
Mark Feinsand: 204
Jim Graziano: 203
Dan Graziano: 201

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY (of a possible 13)
Ed Price: 6
Chris Sabatino: 6
Sal Sabatino: 6
Jon Graziano: 5
Greg Lester: 5
Steve Politi: 5
Rob Biro: 4
Yohan Sengamalay: 3
Paul “Nino” Canino: 3
Mark Feinsand: 2
Jim Graziano: 1
Dan Graziano: 1

PRIZE MONEY WON THROUGH MARCH 12
Ed Price: $2.66
Steve Politi: $2.66
Yohan Sengamalay: $2.16
Sal Sabatino: $1.66
Paul “Nino” Canino: $1.66
Mark Feinsand: $1.00
Greg Lester: $0.50
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Rob Biro: $0.16
Jon Graziano: Zip
Jim Graziano: Zilch
Dan Graziano: Nada

That’s all I got. I need a morning nap…

Thursday, March 12, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Wednesday Recap/Thursday Preview

Seven more tournaments started Wednesday. In all, 11 saw action. Robert Morris and Portland State punched their tickets to the dance, bringing the total number of crowned conference champs to 13. Ed still leads in total points, but Rob, Chris and others are close enough that he can’t get comfy just yet.

Oh, it’s just getting good…

Strangely, there are no title games today. Fifteen tournaments in action, but none resolved.

Anyway, live from New York, it’s Saturday Night. Or, more accurately, your daily pool summary:

NORTHEAST
Tough to call it a “thriller,” but the Robert Morris-Mount St. Mary’s final in the NEC went down to the final 2.5 seconds. A game that was 19-19 at the half finished 48-46 in favor of Robert Morris, which is headed to the NCAA Tournament as NEC champ. Chris Steve, Rob and Jon all had Robert Morris winning, but Steve’s bracket was the best – 10 points out of a possible 11, missing only Long Island’s loss to Quinnipiac in the first round – and so Steve pockets another dollar. If this keeps up, Steve won’t even have to pay his entry fee. Which is good. Because he hasn’t.

BIG SKY
Portland State held off a very game Montana State squad to win the Big Sky and secure its spot in the Big Dance. As you may recall from yesterday’s update, nobody did anything worthwhile in this bracket, and the $1 prize is being split six ways between Sal, Steve, Nino, Rob, Ed and Yohan, each of whom got three points out of a possible nine. Nobody had Portland State winning the tournament.

MEAC
Bethune-Cookman wrapped up the MEAC first round with a widely predicted victory over Maryland-Eastern Shore, and there were also two second-round games in the MEAC on Wednesday. Morgan State, the title pick of eight of the 12 of us, had no trouble with Florida A&M. But the other second-round game was a big one in our pool. South Carolina State edged Hampton 57-56. This is a relief for Ed and Jon, who picked South Carolina State to win the MEAC, and the four others picked them to make the final. It is a major bummer for Steve, who picked Hampton to win it all, and Greg and Rob, who picked Hampton to make it to the final.
The MEAC’s other two second-round games are today, with North Carolina A&T taking on Coppin State and Bethune-Cookman facing Norfolk State. To this point, Dan and Jon each have picked all five games correctly for a perfect MEAC score of 7 out of 7 points.

BIG EAST
DePaul looked like it might make it an astounding two in a row before Providence asserted itself and advanced to a quarterfinal matchup with top-seeded Louisville. Other winners at a lackluster day at the Garden included Marquette easily over St. John’s, West Virginia over Notre Dame and the Orange Forces of Evil over Seton Hall. Quarterfinal matchups today include Louisville-Providence, Pitt-West Virginia, Marquette-Villanova and Connecticut-OFOE.
As noted in a separate e-mail each of you received, our Big East brackets are screwed up (completely my fault) and must be re-picked from this point on. I regret this very much, and I assure you that I feel much worse about it than any of you do.
So far, everybody’s champion is still alive and Greg, Chris and Rob each have scored 10 out of a possible 12 points.

WAC
The Western Athletic Conference took a day off and resumes today with its quarterfinals. Of the possible 19 points, 18 are still available in this one. Wide open.

MAC
Go back, look at everything I just wrote about the WAC, and apply it here. Except change the number “19” to “22.”

ATLANTIC 10
Chris, Nino and Greg picked all four winners in the first round of the A-10 tournament, but the only one who really got beaten up here was Yohan, who had UMass making it all the way to the final. Mass lost to Duquesne, and will not make the final. Top seeds Xavier, Rhode Island, Dayton and Temple join the field for today’s quarterfinal matchups.
Seven of us picked Xavier to win the A-10 tourney. Jim and Jon picked Dayton. Mark and Yohan picked Temple. Ed has Rhode Island.

MOUNTAIN WEST
There was only one game in the Mountain West on Wednesday. It was a play-in between Colorado State, which was 4-12 in the conference this year, and Air Force, which was 0-16. Of the 12 of us, 11 picked Colorado State. One picked Air Force, and you’re reading him. Small victories, people. Small victories. Comebacks have begun less impressively than this.
Or maybe they haven’t.
Anyway, the Falcons will go for two in a row against top-seeded BYU in one of four quarterfinal matchups today. Off we go….into the wild blue yonder….
Six people have Utah winning this tournament. Five have New Mexico. Greg picked BYU.

BIG 12
Rough day in this bracket, as a guy named Mike Singletary scored 43 points and willed Texas Tech to an upset victory over Texas A&M. Jon was the only one who picked this game correctly, and in fact four of us had A&M winning a second-round game, which now is not possible. Ed, Sal, Jim and Jon each got three of the four first-round games correct. Nobody got all four.
Oklahoma is the popular pick to win this, as nine of the 12 picked the Sooners. Dan, Greg and Steve all went with the defending national champs instead.

CONFERENCE USA
Rice beat Marshall 60-59, and all 12 of us got that game wrong. And I’m thinking, what a weird game to all agree on and all miss. It was a 7-10 game, so not a huge upset. What did we all see in Marshall? Was it the movie? Ian McShane in all those commercials for that new show, reminding us of his role in the Marshall movie? Possible.
Anyway, since nobody got all four first-round C-USA games right, Mark, Ed and Nino all lead with three. And this is the only conference in which we all picked the same champion – Memphis, which hasn’t lost a C-USA game in more than three years.

SWAC
Two first-round games Wednesday. Top-seeded Alabama State beat Alabama A&M, and second-seeded Jackson State took out Texas Southern. All 12 of us got both of those games right. The SWAC bracket is our collective bitch.
Jackson State is the pick of 8 of the 12 of us to win the SWAC. Ed and Sal picked Alabama State. Jim and Jon picked Prairie View A&M, leading to the question: Is there another tournament that has two A&Ms?
The other two first-round games are today – Southern vs. Arkansas-Pine Bluff and Prairie View A&M vs. Mississippi Valley State.

PAC 10
Stanford knocked out the President’s brother-in-law, and Washington State made it a bad all-around day in Oregon in the first round of the Pac-10. Today brings the top six teams in the league into the tournament. Eight of us have UCLA winning it all. Rob and Nino picked top-seeded Washington. Yohan has Cal and Jim has Arizona State.

BIG WEST
Eighth-seeded UC-Davis beat fifth-seeded UC-Irvine by a point, and jumps over to the other side of this weird bracket to face third-seeded Pacific in today’s second round. That means UC-Santa Barbara gets UC-Fullerton, which took out UC-Riverside yesterday.
Sal, Jim and Greg got both of these games right. Dan, Rob and Chris missed both.
You’ll all get your new Big West brackets this morning. And then we’ll have to do them again tomorrow morning, when they re-seed again. Silly, but nothing wrong with doing it a little differently, I guess.

The ACC, SEC, Big Ten and Southland conferences all begin tournament play today – the last of the 30 conference tournaments to tip off. We still await brackets from Jim and Jon for these tournaments, so I can’t tell you who everybody picked. More on that tomorrow.

Meantime, your steaming-hot standings:

TOTAL POINTS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 11
Ed Price: 174
Rob Biro: 166
Chris Sabatino: 166
Steve Politi: 164
Greg Lester: 164
Yohan Sengamalay: 162
Sal Sabatino: 162
Paul “Nino” Canino: 161
Jon Graziano: 158
Mark Feinsand: 145
Jim Graziano: 140
Dan Graziano: 139

MOST CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY (of a possible 13 so far)
Ed Price: 6
Chris Sabatino: 6
Sal Sabatino: 6
Jon Graziano: 5
Greg Lester: 5
Steve Politi: 5
Rob Biro: 4
Yohan Sengamalay: 3
Paul “Nino” Canino: 3
Mark Feinsand: 2
Jim Graziano: 1
Dan Graziano: 1

PRIZE MONEY SO FAR
Ed Price: $2.66
Steve Politi: $2.66
Yohan Sengamalay: $2.16
Sal Sabatino: $1.66
Paul “Nino” Canino: $1.66
Mark Feinsand: $1.00
Greg Lester: $0.50
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Rob Biro: $0.16

My quick count says there are 53 conference tournament games today. Is this heaven? No, it’s Iowa. Wait. It can’t be Iowa. Iowa’s the 10-seed in the Big Ten. Nobody picked them. I’m so confused…

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Tuesday Recap, Wednesday Preview

Three more tickets punched -- North Dakota State, Western Kentucky and Cleveland Freaking State are going dancing. Also, things got started in the Big East, which is the conference that my blog was about before it was hijacked by this all-conference insanity. Maybe for that reason we'll spend a little extra time on the Big East in these updates. You know. For the fans.

At this writing, we are still inexplicably waiting for Jon to pick the tournaments that begin today. But we push on anyway, because why should those who are timely with their picks be punished because one person is so consistently right up against his deadlines?

Eight tournaments played Tuesday, including three that crowned champions and four that were just getting started. Three of those eight play today, as do eight others. Two more champions will be crowned. Seven tournaments play their first rounds today. Without further ado, here's your tourney-by-tourney rundown.

HORIZON
This was it. This was Dan's dollar. He may be bringing up the rear overall, but doggone it, his Horizon bracket was PERFECT through the semifinals. All he needed was a win by top-seeded and host Butler in the final, and he was getting this dollar.
But Cleveland State won. And Sal Sabatino, the only one who picked Cleveland State to win the Horizon, won the dollar with a score of 17 out of a possible 18 points. Dan drifted off into an angry sleep. The only good thing about this game was that they showed the highlight of Cleveland State's three-quarter-court buzzer beater against Syracuse from earlier in the year. And that's a thing you just can't see enough.

SUN BELT
Top-seeded Western Kentucky held off a furious second-half run and defeated South Alabama to win the Sun Belt title and secure an NCAA berth. Eight people picked Western Kentucky to win this tournament (including Jim, for whom it was his first champion picked correctly), but Yohan Sengamalay had the best overall bracket with 20 out of a possible 23 Sun Belt points. A dollar for Yohan.

NORTHEAST
After two days off, the NEC will play its final tonight. Top-seeded Robert Morris faces second-seeded Mount St. Mary's in a game that will determine the league's bid and our pool's dollar. Jim and Greg both have perfect NEC brackets so far, and both picked Mount St. Mary's to win. So if the Mount wins, Jim and Greg split the buck. But if Robert Morris wins, Steve will win the buck all by himself.

BIG SKY
This one's a real mess. Montana State continues to rampage through the Big Sky bracket, knocking off top seed Weber State and setting up a finals matchup against second-seeded Portland State. Everybody in our pool had either Montana or Weber State winning, and now that both have lost to Montana State, this one is over. Sal, Steve, Nino, Rob, Ed and Yohan all have scored 3 of a possible 9 points in the Big Sky bracket and will split the $1 prize six ways. Each will receive 16 cents. That leaves four cents left over, which will be applied toward postage for the purpose of mailing out a bunch of $2 and $3 checks.

SUMMIT
North Dakota State wins a thriller of a final over Oakland, earning its first trip to the NCAA tournament (in its first year of eligibility). Dan, Sal, Chris, Steve, Rob and Ed all picked ND State (Dan's first correct champion!), but Steve and Ed had the best brackets, with scores of 10 out of a possible 11 points. So Steve and Ed split this dollar. Just two ways.

MEAC
There were two first-round MEAC games Tuesday. Florida A&M beat Howard, and Hampton beat Delaware State. Dan, Steve, Rob and Jon all picked both of those games correctly, though the second result may be largest for Steve, who has Hampton winning this tournament. The MEAC continues today with a first-round game between Bethune-Cookman and Maryland-Eastern Shore as well as two second-round games: FAMU/Morgan State and Hampton/South Carolina State. The other two second-round games are tomorrow. Strange tournament. Anyway, eight of us have Morgan State winning this. Ed and Jon picked South Carolina State. Jim has Norfolk State, and Steve, as mentioned, has Hampton.

BIG EAST
So DePaul goes 0-18 in the regular season, even suffering the ignominy of a loss to Georgetown to close it out Saturday, then shows up at the Garden for the first day of the tournament and beats Cincinnati. Kind of handily. Guess this is what they were saving it for.
Nobody picked that game correctly, and only two people had the foresight to predict St. John's's second victory in a week over the nation's most disappointing team. So the Big East brackets aren't too super so far. Steve and Mark each picked three of the four first-round games correctly. Eight others picked two, Ed got one and Jim went an impressive 0-for-4. But he can make up ground if Providence makes a run.
Pitt is the most popular pick to win this, as five people picked them. Four picked Connecticut. Sal picked Louisville, Steve picked Villanova and Feinsand picked....I can't even say it.
Big East second round games are today, with Marquette, Syracuse, Providence and West Virginia joining the field.

WAC
Just the play-in game yesterday, with Fresno State taking out Hawaii. Sal, Nino, Jim, Steve and Jon all nailed that one. For the overall WAC champ, seven people have Utah State and five have Nevada. I'll let you know if/when this one gets interesting. WAC second round game isn't until tomorrow.

MAC
Couple of first-round thrillers in the MAC. Akron, which is Yohan's pick to win it all, needed a buzzer-beating three by Anthony "Humpty" Hitchens to send the game into overtime and then another buzzer-beater at the end of OT to win by a point. And Kent State, which is Dan, Mark, Nino and Jim's pick to win it all, came from way back in the second half to beat Northern Illinois. Dan, Greg, Nino, Yohan, Ed, Steve and Rob all went 4-for-4 in the MAC first round, but it wasn't easy. Four people have Bowling Green winning this one. Four have Kent State, as previously mentioned. Chris and Steve picked Buffalo. Yohan has Akron, and Rob picked Miami, Oh. The MAC also takes a day off and picks up with its quarterfinals tomorrow.

The Atlantic 10, Mountain West, Big 12, Conference USA, SWAC, Pac-10 and Big West tournaments all begin today. I'd give previews, but again...Jon is slacking. So I can't say who everybody picked. We'll go over this tomorrow in what's sure to be the most lengthy post yet.

Meantime, some standings:

TOTAL POINTS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 10
Ed Price: 152
Yohan Sengamalay: 142
Steve Politi: 142
Rob Biro: 141
Greg Lester: 139
Chris Sabatino: 139
Sal Sabatino: 139
Paul "Nino" Canino: 136
Jon Graziano: 133
Mark Feinsand: 125
Jim Graziano: 121
Dan Graziano: 117

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY (of a possible 11)
Ed Price: 6
Sal Sabatino: 6
Greg Lester: 5
Chris Sabatino: 5
Jon Graziano: 4
Steve Politi: 4
Yohan Sengamalay: 3
Rob Biro: 3
Paul "Nino" Canino: 3
Mark Feinsand: 2
Dan Graziano: 1
Jim Graziano: 1

PRIZE MONEY
Ed Price: $2.66
Yohan Sengamalay: $2.16
Sal Sabatino: $1.66
Paul "Nino" Canino: $1.66
Steve Politi: $1.66
Mark Feinsand: $1.00
Greg Lester: $0.50
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Rob Biro: $0.16

Okay. Time to go watch the Hoyas........No. No, it's not.....

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Monday Recap, Tuesday Preview

Four more dancers got their tickets Monday night, gentlemen. Chattanooga, VCU, Siena and Gonzaga all are going to the NCAA Tournament. Ed Price, Yohan Sengamalay, Paul Canino and Greg Lester are making very small amounts of money because of it.

Six tournaments saw action Monday. Eight will play Tuesday, including three title games and four sets of first-round games. Ed Price is currently leading everything -- total points, most champs and total prize money -- but there's a loooong way to go. Only eight of the 30 champs have been crowned, and 15 of the 30 tournaments have yet to tip off.

Let's get right to the rundown:

HORIZON
After two days off, the Horizon League plays its final Tuesday night, with top-seeded Butler hosting third-seeded Cleveland State. Dan Graziano, who is so far 0-for-8 picking champions in this pool (making it feel like the college bowl pool all over again), has a perfect score of 14 points so far in the Horizon bracket. If Butler wins, that'll give Dan a perfect score of 18 and the $1 prize. However, should Cleveland State win, Sal Sabatino would get the $1 with a score of 17, since he is the only one who picked Cleveland State to win this tournament.

SUN BELT
Western Kentucky took out North Texas and South Alabama upset Arkansas-Little Rock to set up Tuesday night's final between the top seed and the No. 6. Steve Politi and Yohan Sengamalay each have scored 16 out of a possible 19 points so far. (Yohan just caught Steve by picking the South Alabama upset of UALR.) Yohan is one of eight people who have Western Kentucky winning this tournament. Steve was one of two who picked Little Rock. So, if Western Kentucky wins the final, Yohan will get four more points and Steve will not, and Yohan will get the $1 Sun Belt prize. If South Alabama wins the final, nobody will get any points, and Steve and Yohan will split the $1 prize.

COLONIAL
VCU wallops George Mason in the final. Nino, Ed and Greg all picked VCU to win the tournament. But thanks to Georgia State's victory over Delaware in the first round, Nino scored 19 out of a possible 22 points while Ed and Greg scored only 18. Thus, Nino wins a picture of George Washington. Good on ya, Nino.

MAAC
The instant-classic double-overtime semifinal victory over Rider appeared to catch up with the gutty Purple Eagles of Niagara, who ran out of gas and lost to host Siena in the MAAC final Monday night. Sal, Chris, Ed, Yohan and Greg all had Siena winning the tournament, but Yohan had the best overall bracket with 18 points to Ed's 17. Fairfield's quarterfinal victory over Manhattan was the difference. Yohan gets $1.

SOUTHERN
Chattanooga is dancing, having beaten Charleston in the suprisingly Davidson-free Southern Conference final. Ed Price was the only one to pick Chattanooga to win this tournament, and he will be rewarded with a shiny new dollar, having scored 13 out of 22 points in a bracket where nobody really distinguished himself. Especially Stehpen Curry.

WEST COAST
Boooooo-ring. Gonzaga wins again. Patty Mills played one-handed and had no chance. Ten people picked Gonzaga to win, but only Greg Lester and Paul "Nino" Canino had perfect WCC brackets, correctly picking all seven games for a perfect score of 16. Greg and Nino each get 50 cents for their outstanding efforts on this front.

BIG SKY
Yeah, you may have forgotten about the Big Sky, which kicked off in the middle of the night Saturday and then took two days off. It resumes Tuesday night with semifinal matchups between (1) Weber State/(4) Idaho State and (2) Portland State/(6) Montana State. Nine people have Weber State winning this. Yohan has Portland State. Chris and Greg had Montana, which lost in the first round. There remains a chance of a five-way split of the Big Sky prize money -- if Weber State and Portland State win in the semis, and Weber wins the title, Sal, Steve, Nino, Rob and Ed would each get 20 cents. You have to be rooting for that, right? I mean, unless you're Yohan, who gets the whole buck if Idaho State beats Weber in the semis or if Portland State wins the whole thing.

SUMMIT
North Dakota State and Oakland coasted into the Summit League final Monday night and will face off Tuesday for the league's automatic bid. If North Dakota State wins, Ed and Steve split the money. If Oakland wins, Mark and Greg split it. If Oral Roberts can somehow convince God to award the title to his team even though it lost to South Dakota State in the first round, I think Yohan gets the money. But if that happens, we've all got bigger problems.

MEAC
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference begins its tournament Tuesday with two of its three first-round games -- Hampton/Delaware State and Howard/Florida A&M. The other first-round game will be held Wednesday, which is also the day the quarterfinals start. No idea why that makes any sense. Anyway, still awaiting picks from Rob and Jon for this tournament at this writing, so I'm not saying who everybody picked, but it suffices to say that top-seeded Morgan State is well regarded.

WAC
Hawaii and Fresno State face off in the play-in game of the Western Athletic Conference tournament Tuesday. The winner gets to play top-seeded Utah State when the quarterfinals begin Thursday. Again, still awaiting two sets of picks here.

MAC
Four first-round games Tuesday in the Mid-American Conference tournament: (5)Akron/(12)Toledo, (6)Kent State/(7)Northern Illinois, (7)Central Michigan/(10)Eastern Michigan (directional rivalries rule!) and (8)Western Michigan/(9)Ohio. Winners join the top four seeds in Thursday's quarterfinals.

BIG EAST
The granddaddy of them all, baby. A 16-team steel cage match tips off this afternoon with four first-round games. Remember, the teams playing today at Madison Square Garden, if they are to win this tournament, must win five games in a five-day span. Good luck, suckers. Sure am glad I didn't go to one of those schools. Oh wait...
(9) Cincinnati vs. (16) DePaul
(10) Notre Dame vs. (15) Rutgers
(11) Seton Hall vs. (14) South Florida
(12) Georgetown vs. (13) St. John's
Still can't say who picked whom to win, with Rob and Jon still delinquent, but know that of the 10 brackets I've received so far, there are five different predicted champions. Nothing like the Big East, fellas.

OVERALL POINTS STANDINGS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 9
Ed Price: 141
Yohan Sengamalay: 129
Greg Lester: 128
Steve Politi: 127
Chris Sabatino: 127
Rob Biro: 124
Paul "Nino" Canino: 122
Jon Graziano: 121
Sal Sabatino: 119
Mark Feinsand: 118
Jim Graziano: 113
Dan Graziano: 106

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY (of a possible 8 so far)
Ed Price: 5
Greg Lester: 4
Jon Graziano: 3
Chris Sabatino: 3
Sal Sabatino: 3
Steve Politi: 3
Mark Feinsand: 2
Yohan Sengamalay: 2
Paul "Nino" Canino: 2
Rob Biro: 1
Jim Graziano: 0
Dan Graziano: 0

PRIZE MONEY SO FAR
Ed Price: $2
Paul "Nino" Canino: $1.50
Mark Feinsand: $1
Steve Politi: $1
Yohan Sengamalay: $1
Greg Lester: $0.50
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Sal Sabatino: $0.50

Happy Holidays, y'all. If I can get through this day without slipping into a coma, we should be okay. Of course, SEVEN tournaments tip Wednesday, so no promises.

Monday, March 9, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Sunday Recap and Monday Preview

We had overtime to decide the MVC champ. We had double overtime in a pivotal MAAC semifinal. The most popular pick in the whole pool so far went down in a semifinal upset in the Southern Conference. And people, we're not even halfway through with this pool.

Madness, they say. Madness.

Ten tournaments saw action Sunday, and six of those will play again Monday, when four will crown their champions. Let's get right to the recaps.

PATRIOT
The top two seeds advance to the title game. No. 1 American barely got by Army 61-60, and Holy Cross took out Colgate with no trouble. The Patriot League final, which won't be held until Friday, will determine who gets the $1 prize in our pool. If American wins, Mark Feinsand and Steve Politi will each have scored 10 out of a possible 11 points and will each get 50 cents. If Holy Cross wins, Jon Graziano will have 10 out of 11 and will get the whole dollar. I'll remind you all of this Thursday night/Friday morning, as I'm sure you'll have forgotten by then.

SUN BELT
Just one upset in the Sun Belt, but it was a big one, with No. 6 South Alabama knocking off No. 3 Troy 78-75 to advance to the semifinals. Nine people had Troy winning this game, seven had Troy advancing to the final and Dan and Mark both picked the Trojans to cut down the nets in Hot Springs. Instead, it'll be South Alabama taking on second-seeded Arkansas-Little Rock in one semifinal Monday while top-seeded Western Kentucky faces North Texas in the other. Eight people have Western Kentucky to win this tournament. Steve and Ed have Little Rock. It's up for grabs, but so far Steve has a perfect 13 points out of a possible 13, having picked all nine Sun Belt games correctly. There's something for Bracket Boy to crow about in his first column.

MISSOURI VALLEY
All anybody really noticed about this final was that it went into overtime, which delayed CBS' ability to show Duke-North Carolina to a country that really wanted to see it. Northern Iowa beat Illinois State 60-57 in OT to claim the MVC's automatic bid to the Big Dance. Ed, Jon and Greg all picked Northern Iowa to win this tournament, but Ed Price wins the $1 thanks to a bracket that scored 19 out of a possible 20 points. Indiana State's first-round win over Drake was the only thing that kept AOL Sports' new baseball writer from perfect.

NORTHEAST
Chalk here, as top-seeded Robert Morris handled Quinnipiac 75-48 in one semifinal and No. 2 Mount St. Mary's took out Sacred Heart, 68-63, in the other. Yohan had Quinnipiac winning it all, and Dan, Ed, Mark and Nino had Sacred Heart, so they're all in trouble. The championship game will be played Wednesday. If Robert Morris wins it, Steve Politi will pocket $1 with a score of 10 out of a possible 11. If Mount St. Mary's wins it, Jim Graziano and Greg Lester will each have a perfect 11-point bracket and will split the $1.

AMERICA EAST
Sixth-seeded UMBC took out Albany in Albany and will face top-seeded Binghamton in an America East final that won't take place until Saturday. This bracket is a mess, as only two people had Binghamton winning and nobody picked UMBC. Jim Graziano leads with 10 out of a possible 15 points so far, and if UMBC pulls the upset Saturday, Jim will pocket the $1. But if Binghamton wins, Steve Politi will win this one too, with a score of 11 out of a possible 19.

COLONIAL
Top seed VCU takes out Old Dominion, and second-seeded George Mason ends Towson's Cinderella run, so the top two seeds in the CAA will play for the title and the bid. Chris Sabatino and Rob Biro each had 15 out of a possible 18 points in this bracket so far, and each picked George Mason. So if Mason wins Monday's final, Chris and Rob will split the $1. But if VCU wins, those two and everybody else will be passed by Paul "Nino" Canino, who would pocket the whole dollar himself.

MAAC
Can I tell you guys how psyched I am that the Rider-Niagara semifinal was on one of the local MSG channels here? What a game. Niagara banks in a three-pointer with 1.7 seconds left to force overtime. They miss five free throws and blow a six-point lead in the final minutes of the first overtime. Then, with 1.7 seconds left in double-overtime, a guy named Bilal Benn, who had 21 points and 19 rebounds (11 offensive!) in the game steals the ball from Rider's Ryan Thompson and seals the win with a couple of free throws at the other end. Fantastic game, and very important to our pool. Everybody correctly forecast Siena's semifinal win over Fairfield, but this Rider-Niagara matchup saw a big split. Five had Niagara winning it and seven had Rider. Of those seven, five also had Rider beating Siena in Monday's final. Dan Graziano and Mark Feinsand have Niagara beating Siena in Monday's final, and if that happens, Dan will pocket the $1 first prize from this tournament with a score of 17 out of a possible 20. If Siena wins, Yohan Sengamalay will win the $1 with a score of 18 out of 20. Final is at 9 pm on ESPN2.

SOUTHERN
Yeah, Charleston took out Davidson in a 59-52 barnburner, which turned a lot of things red on the Southern Conference bracket, as 10 of the 12 of us had Davidson winning this tournament. Ed Price picked Chattanooga to win this tournament, and they could, as they beat Samford and will play Charleston in Monday's final. (Nobody had Charleston winning.) Yohan is the current leader here with 12 out of a possible 18 points so far, and if Charleston wins the tournament, Yohan gets $1. But if Chattanooga wins, Ed will have 13 points and pass Yohan to win the prize.

WEST COAST
The top two seeds also advanced to the final in the WCC, as Gonzaga whipped Santa Clara and St. Mary's pulled away from Portland late. To this point, Greg Lester and Paul "Nino" Canino each have picked all six WCC games correctly for a perfect score of 12 out of 12. Each also has Gonzaga winning Monday night's final, which means if that happens, Greg and Nino will split the buck. But if St. Mary's wins tonight's game, Dan Graziano will collect the buck with a score of 13 out of a possible 16, because he is one of two people who picked St. Mary's to win this tournament. And because, frankly, he could use a break on this stuff right about now.

SUMMIT
The Summit League completed its first round with a pair of games Southern Utah took out IUPUI and Oakland knocked off IPFW, making it a bad all-around day for initials. Steve, Ed and Yohan each have three out of a possible four points so far, and nine of the 12 of us still have our champions in it. Monday's semifinals pit top-seeded North Dakota State against Southern Utah and fourth-seeded South Dakota State against Oakland. Six people have ND State winning this thing, three have Oakland, and three had Oral Roberts, which lost is first-round game Saturday to SD State.

TOTAL POINTS STANDINGS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 8

Ed Price: 118
Steve Politi: 116
Greg Lester: 113
Rob Biro: 113
Yohan Sengamalay: 113
Jon Graziano: 112
Chris Sabatino: 112
Jim Graziano: 110
Paul "Nino" Canino: 109
Mark Feinsand: 107
Sal Sabatino: 104
Dan Graziano: 99

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY SO FAR (out of a possible four)
Steve Politi: 2 (Radford, East Tennessee State)
Jon Graziano: 2 (East Tennessee State, Northern Iowa)
Mark Feinsand: 1 (Radford)
Ed Price: 1 (Northern Iowa)
Greg Lester: 1 (Northern Iowa)
Chris Sabatino: 1 (Radford)
Sal Sabatino: 1 (East Tennesse State)

PRIZE MONEY
Steve Politi: $1
Mark Feinsand: $1
Ed Price: $1
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Sal Sabatino: $0.50

Enjoy the games tonight, and please remember to send in your Big East, MAC, WAC and MEAC picks by NOON EST on Tuesday.

Thanks y'all.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Saturday Recap and Sunday Preview

Sorry if this is a little late, but like most of you, I was up watching the incredible double-overtime final in the OVC, then flipped over to catch the end of Louisville-West Virginia, then over to a very entertaining Horizon semifinal between Cleveland State and Green Bay, then to the last 10 minutes of the Rider-St. Peter's MAAC quarterfinal game. Big day. Real nice Saturday, actually. Going to go to Home Depot. And then, if there's time, maybe Bed Bath and Beyond...oh wait. Sorry.

There were 12 tournaments in action Saturday, three of which crowned their champions. (Congratulations, Radford, Morehead State and East Tennessee State!!!!)

Seven of those 12, along with three others that didn't play Saturday, have games scheduled today. There will be one more NCAA bid awarded today, and we may give away some more prize money.

Here follows a conference-by-conference recap of all tournaments that played/play Saturday and/or Sunday. At the bottom of the recap, you'll find updated points and other standings. Enjoy.

BIG SOUTH
Radford played it at VMI's pace and whipped 'em anyway, taking the Big South title 108-94 and earning the conference's automatic bid. Radford's title was correctly forecast by Chris Sabatino, Mark Feinsand and Steve Politi, though Feinsand's overall bracket wasn't as strong as the other two. Chris and Steve each scored 10 out of a possible 11 points in the Big South bracket, and since they picked the same champion, they will split the $1 prize and each take home a pair of quarters for their efforts. Mark's pick of Radford does help him in the race for Most Champions Picked Correctly, which carries a $10 prize.

HORIZON
Top-seeded Butler knocked off Wright State, and Cleveland State came back in the second half to beat second-seeded Green Bay, setting up a Butler/Cleveland State final that for some reason doesn't happen until Tuesday. Thus far, your humble commissioner has picked all eight Horizon League games correctly for a perfect score of 14 out of 14 so far. I also picked Butler to win the tournament, so if they do, I'll get the $1 for this tournament. (Which is cool, since a look at the standings indicates this is the only tournament in which I've demonstrated a clue.) HOWEVER, Sal Sabatino is right behind with 13 points and is the only one who picked Cleveland State to win this tournament. So if the Vikings win, Sal will take home the $1 Horizon League prize. See you Tuesday on this one.

OHIO VALLEY
Just an absolute classic in the OVC final, with Morehead State beating Austin Peay in double-overtime. If you didn't see it, that's a shame. It's kind of what this pool is all about. Morehead State heads to the tournament and Mark Feinsand, who scored 7 out of a possible 11 points in the OVC bracket, takes home the $1. None of the 12 of us picked Morehead State as champion. Mark basically won this because he was the only one who picked them to make the finals. Good job, Mark. EMB.

ATLANTIC SUN
East Tennessee State whipped top-seeded Jacksonville 85-68 to take the A-Sun title and claim a spot in the NCAA Tournament. ETSU's title was correctly forecast by Steve Politi, Sal Sabatino and Jon Graziano. Steve and Sal each picked all six A-Sun games correctly for a total of 10 out of a possible 10 points. Jon missed only one game -- Campbell's first-round loss -- and therefore scored nine. So Steve and Sal, since they picked the same champion, split the $1 first prize and each win 50 cents.

PATRIOT
The Patriot League tournament resumes today after a three-day break with semifinals featuring (1)American vs. (4)Army and (2)Holy Cross vs. (6)Colgate. Pretty much everybody's still in this one except Dan (who had (3)Navy) and Sal (who had (5)Lehigh). So enjoy. Today's winners play in the final on Friday night. Yeah, that's right. Three days off between the first two rounds and four days off between the second and third. Not into the nonstop excitement, so much, in the Patriot League.

SUN BELT
The Sun Belt tournament also has had three days off, but it picks up in earnest today in Hot Springs with four quarterfinal games: (1)Western Kentucky/(9)FIU, (2)Arkansas-Little Rock/(7)Denver, (3)Troy/(6)South Alabama and (4)North Texas/(5)Middle Tennessee State. Everybody's champ is still alive here and everybody's still in it. This one's just getting started, but at least it plays its semifinals tomorrow and its final the day after that, like a real tournament. Freaking Patriot League...

MISSOURI VALLEY
Nine of the 12 of us had Creighton winning this tournament. Creighton lost to Illinois State by 24 points in Saturday's semifinals. Creighton will not be winning this tournament. Ed Price, who has missed only one MVC game so far and has 15 out of a possible 16 points, will win the MVC portion (and attendant $1 prize) of our pool. He has Northern Iowa winning the tournament, along with two other people. Nobody picked Illinois State. Ed and Jon Graziano were the only two to correctly forecast this final, but Jon is two points behind Ed because he missed on the second-round game between Creighton and Wichita State. So no matter who wins today's MVC final, Ed will have the most points. Nice job, Ed. EMB.

NORTHEAST
This one picks up after two days off with semifinal matchups: (1)Robert Morris/(5)Quinnipiac and (2)Mount St. Mary's/(3)Sacred Heart. Ed, Chris, Rob, Jim and Greg are all working on perfect NEC brackets, having picked all four quarterfinals correctly on Thursday. I'd tell you who everybody has winning it all, but Jon still hasn't made a pick. Come on, Jon. What the hell?

AMERICA EAST
Big overtime upsets by Albany (over Vermont) and UMBC (over Boston U) have thrown this bracket into chaos. Jim Graziano, who was one of three people to correctly pick Hartford in the play-in game and (more importantly) the only person to pick UMBC to win any games, is in the lead with seven points. But like seven others, Jim had Vermont winning the tournament, so he's just about maxed out. Jim, Steve, Ed and Jon can all still win this one. Today's semifinals pit (1) Binghamton against (4) New Hampshire and (6) UMBC against (7) Albany.

COLONIAL
Cinderella in the house, fellas! And no, that has nothing to do with Cinderfella Dana Dane, which is something totally different. We're talking about 11th-seeded Towson, which came into the CAA tournament with a 9-21 overall and a 5-13 mark in the conference but beat 6th-seeded Drexel in the first round and then, Saturday night, knocked off third-seeded Northeastern in the quarterfinals. They'll try to continue the run against second-seeded George Mason in today's semifinals, while Virginia Commonwealth and Old Dominion square off in the other. Steve, Chris, Nino and Rob each have scored 9 out of a possible 12 points so far. Steve's pulling for Old Dominion, Nino for VCU while Rob and Chris each picked George Mason to win. Jon picked Northeastern. Sorry, Jon. Looks like you get a straw hat while they get Kangols.

MAAC
Let's see...no real damage here so far, Jim and Greg each have 9 out of a possible 10 points, everybody's champ is alive, and there's some variety in the picks yet. Wide open, is the MAAC. Siena/Fairfield and Niagara/Rider today in the semis. The Niagara/Rider game will sort a few things out, I think.

SOUTHERN
Samford upsets Citadel in the quarters, which is kind of a big one since eight people had Citadel in the final and one (Nino!) had them winning it all. Remember, 10 of us had Davidson winning this thing, so it's not super-interesting. Ed Price has Chattanooga winning it all, so if that happens, obviously he'll take home a picture of George Washington. If Chattanooga beats Samford today and doesn't win the tournament, Yohan will win this pool. And if Samford wins today, Jim wins this pool. Don't ask. Just trust me. I'm spending a lot of time on this right now.

WEST COAST
Santa Clara beat San Diego and Portland killed Pepperdine in Saturday's second-round games. Steve, Nino, Ed and Greg all have perfect 6-point WCC brackets so far. But it all comes down to what happens now that Gonzaga and St. Mary's get in. Gonzaga plays Santa Clara and St. Mary's plays Portland in today's semis. If Portland wins today, Steve and Ed will split the WCC dollar. If St. Mary's wins the tournament, I will get the dollar. And if Gonzaga beats St. Mary's in the final, Nino and Greg split the dollar. I'm telling you, these spreadsheets...you should see them.

BIG SKY
I mean, ugly. Everybody had Montana winning the first-round game, and they lost to Montana State. Eight people had Idaho State winning the other game Saturday, and so they each picked up a point. But Montana, jeez. Six people had them making the final and Chris and Greg had them winning the whole thing. Letdown. Weber State faces Idaho State and Portland State takes on Montana State in the semis, which aren't until Tuesday. A quick look at my sheet makes me think either Yohan will win this thing (he picked PSU over ISU in the final) or it's going to be split about five ways (20 cents apiece!). We'll continue to monitor this and report back to you.

SUMMIT
Just two first-round games Saturday. Everybody was right on North Dakota State and everybody was wrong on Oral Roberts, which lost in OT to South Dakota State. A more painful loss for some than others, though, as Jim, Jon and Yohan all had Oral Roberts cutting down the nets in Sioux Falls. The other two first-round Summit games are today, with Oakland playing IPFW and IUPUI playing Southern Utah. Lots of initials today.

OVERALL POINTS STANDINGS THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 7
Steve Politi: 86
Jon Graziano: 83
Ed Price: 81
Rob Biro: 79
Yohan Sengamalay: 79
Chris Sabatino: 79
Jim Graziano: 78
Paul "Nino" Canino: 77
Sal Sabatino: 76
Greg Lester: 76
Mark Feinsand: 75
Dan Graziano, the world's most generous pool commissioner: 67

PRIZE MONEY TO DATE
Mark Feinsand: $1
Ed Price: $1
Steve Politi: $1
Chris Sabatino: $0.50
Sal Sabatino: $0.50

CHAMPIONS PICKED CORRECTLY (out of a possible 3)
Steve Politi: 2
Jon Graziano: 1
Mark Feinsand: 1
Chris Sabatino: 1
Sal Sabatino: 1

Enjoy the late sunset, everybody.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Friday Recap and Saturday Preview, All Rolled Into One Huge Post

Today is the first magic day, people. Of the 12 tournaments that see action today, three will crown champions. That means three teams -- one each from the Ohio Valley, Big South and Atlantic Sun Conferences -- will qualify for the NCAA Tournament.

(So far, the only team in is Cornell, which plays in the Ivy League, which does not have a conference tournament and is therefore dead to us.)


First, some housekeeping. We continue to await three sets of brackets for tournaments that tip off tonight -- the Big Sky and Summit League. Jim, Jon and Greg must submit these brackets by 8 pm EST tonight, or they will receive no points for these tournaments.

Second, due to a miscalculation (and those damned Ivies), it turns out there are only 30 conference tournaments, not the 31 I said there were in my initial posts. So the prize money will break down more neatly -- I just added $1 to the prize for picking the most correct champions, which is now $10 instead of $9.

Third (and this is tied into the second point), it has come to my attention that nobody has yet paid their entry fee. If you still need the address to which to send your $5, please let me know.

Now, onto the action. We will offer a short breakdown on each of the 12 tournaments that played/play yesterday and/or today, and what they all mean for our pool. At the bottom of this very long post/e-mail is a look at the overall points standings through Friday. But first, the breakdown by conference.

BIG SOUTH
The Big South did not play Friday. Its final is scheduled for today at 4 pm, with No. 2 seed VMI taking on No. 1 seed and host Radford in Radford, Va. Jon is our current Big South leader, with eight out of a possible eight points so far. (That's right -- Jon has an unblemished Big South bracket.) If VMI (Jon's pick for champion) wins the game, Jon will earn the $1 Big South prize with a perfect score of 11. However, if Radford wins the game, Chris and Steve will tie for first with 10 points and each take home 50 cents.

HORIZON
Second-round action Friday in the Horizon League saw No. 3 seed Cleveland State nip Illinois-Chicago and No. 4 seed Wright State take out UW-Milwaukee. The Horizon semifinals are today, with Cleveland State facing No. 2 Green Bay and Wright State taking on No. 1 Butler. As of now, Dan, Nino and Steve all have perfect Horizon brackets and eight out of a possible eight points. But that will change today, as they all have different winners. Dan has Cleveland State and Butler winning today. Nino is going with Green Bay and Butler. And Steve is picking Green Bay and a Wright State upset of the top seed. Oh, and Sal can still win this, if Cleveland State goes all the way and cuts down the nets Tuesday night at Hinkle Field House in Indianapolis.

OHIO VALLEY
Apparently, the old adage "You don't bet against the Racers in March" needs to be amended to read, ", unless it's March 2009." Murray State was horrendous against the Austin Peay defense and lost by 17 in their OVC semifinal. So 2-seed Austin Peay takes on 4-seed Morehead State (which upset top-seeded Tennessee-Martin) in tonight's final in Nashville (8 pm, ESPN2). HOWEVER, our pool's OVC champ has already been crowned. Mark Feinsand has seven out of a possible eight points so far to lead our OVC pool and cannot be passed. He has Peay in the final tonight, and nobody picked Morehead State, so Mark has already clinched the $1 prize for the OVC portion of our competition. Congratulations to Mark, the first of what I hope is a great many prizewinners this year.

ATLANTIC SUN

The blood rivalry that is Lipscomb-Belmont will not be renewed in this year's A-Sun final, as both of those teams lost semifinals Friday. Instead, top-seeded Jacksonville will play No. 2 seed East Tennessee State for the A-Sun's bid to the Big Dance. Sal and Steve each have seven out of a possible seven points -- perfect Atlantic Sun brackets so far -- and have picked East Tennessee State to win the final. So if ETSU wins tonight's final (also in Nashville, and also on ESPN2, but at 6 pm), Steve and Sal will split the $1 A-Sun prize. However, if Jacksonville wins, Jim and Mark will move ahead of Steve and Sal with eight points apiece, and Jim and Mark would split the $1.

MISSOURI VALLEY
Nine of the 12 people in this pool picked Creighton to win the MVC. So it was a good thing they beat the buzzer and eked out a 63-62 second-round victory over Wichita State. Creighton will take on Illinois State and Northern Iowa will play Bradley in today's MVC semifinals. Nino is our MVC leader, having correctly picked all six games so far for a total of 10 points. But a number of people can still win this, especially Ed, if Illinois State can take out Creighton in tonight's second semifinal. Of the nine who didn't pick Creighton, all three have Northern Iowa winning the MVC.

AMERICA EAST
In the America East's play-in game, Hartford snapped a 14-game losing streak to beat Maine 65-56. This result was correctly forecast by Sal, Rob, Jim and Greg, each of whom has one point in the A-East standings to show for it. The America East tournament begins in earnest today with four quarterfinal matchups: Binghamton/Hartford, Vermont/Albany, BostonU/UMBC and New Hampshire/Stony Brook. Eight people have Vermont winning this thing. Two picked top seed Binghamton. Ed went with Albany (since that's where the tournament is). And Mark picked his alma mater, the Fightin' Terriers of BU.

COLONIAL
Well, everybody had Drexel, and they lost to Towson, so nobody has a perfect CAA bracket after Day One. Dan, Steve, Chris, Nino and Rob all managed to get the other three games right, but Dan and Rob had Drexel advancing one more round, so that's kind of a rough loss for them. The top four seeds join for today's quarterfinal matchups: VCU/Georgia State, George Mason/James Madison, Northeastern/Towson and Old Dominion/Hofstra. Watch that Northeastern team, which may have got a break with the Towson upset. Jon has Northeastern winning this whole thing. Seven others picked George Mason, three picked top seed VCU and Bracket Boy went with Old Dominion.

MAAC
Only two first-round games in the MAAC on Friday. Canisius beat Loyola, earning a point each for Dan and Ed, and Marist beat Iona, earning a point each for Nino, Jim and Greg. No long-term damage, really, as the quarterfinal matchups today will go much further toward shaping this bracket: Siena/Canisius, Niagara/Marist, Rider/St. Peter's and Manhattan/Fairfield. Five people picked Siena to win this tournament, five somewhat surprisingly picked Rider and two picked Niagara.

SOUTHERN
The big upset in the Southern Conference on Friday was apparently Elon's 62-55 victory over Wofford. Not only did 10 of the 12 of us have Wofford winning this game, six of us had Wofford then going on to upset Chattanooga in the quarterfinals. Not gonna happen, thanks to Elon. Jim and Jon each got all four games correct Friday in the Southern conference, which plays its quarterfinals today: Davidson/Appalachian State, Chattanooga/Elon, Samford/Citadel and Western Carolina/Charleston. Ten of us have Davidson winning this thing. Ed has Chattanooga, and Nino went with The Citadel.

WEST COAST

San Diego takes out Loyola-Marymount and Pepperdine beats San Francisco, resulting in two points for everybody but Jim and Yohan (who had the Dons in the nightcap). In today's second round, San Diego faces Santa Clara while Pepperdine matches up with Portland. All the while, top seeds Gonzaga and St. Mary's just bide their time, awaiting their opponents for tomorrow's semifinal games. Ten of the 12 picked Gonzaga to win this tournament. Dan and Jim each have St. Mary's.

BIG SKY
The Big Sky tournament kicks off tonight in Montana and Idaho with two first-round matchups -- Idaho State vs. Northern Colorado and the knockdown/drag-out border war that is Montana vs. Montana State. I'd tell you who everybody picked in this one, but as I said earlier, we're still waiting for three people to pick it.

SUMMIT
The Summit League is just dipping its toe in the water yet. Two of the league's four first-round games take place tonight in Sioux Falls. Top seed North Dakota State faces Centenary, and No. 2 Oral Roberts takes on South Dakota State, which should pack the place with fans. The other two first-round games take place tomorrow.

As always, if anybody has any questions about any of this, you know how to reach me. I'll almost certainly be watching basketball.

OVERALL POINTS STANDINGS THROUGH GAMES OF MARCH 6
Steve Politi: 52
Sal Sabatino: 48
Rob Biro: 48
Jon Graziano: 47
Greg Lester: 47
Paul "Nino" Canino: 47
Jim Graziano: 46
Ed Price: 46
Yohan Sengamalay: 45
Chris Sabatino: 44
Dan Graziano: 42
Mark Feinsand: 42

(as you can see, I'm as awesome at this as I was at the football. yee-haw.)

Friday, March 6, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Thursday Recap, Standings and Friday Look-Ahead

Because of ESPNU, which is more or less the greatest thing ever, I actually got to watch the frantic final minutes of the Radford-UNC Ashville semifinal in the Big South. Radford hung on to earn a finals matchup with VMI, which walloped Liberty earlier in the day, and thus the first of our brackets comes into focus.

The Big South final is scheduled for Sunday. If VMI wins it, Jon (who has picked all six Big South games correctly so far) would max out with 11 points and be our Big South winner. Sal, Nino, Yohan, Ed and Greg also picked VMI and would get credit toward the prize for most champions picked correctly, but Jon would have the most total Big South points and win the first $1 prize.

If Radford wins Sunday, Chris and Steve would each have 10 points and would split the $1 prize. Mark also picked Radford, but would only have seven points because of his fondness for first-round loser Coastal Carolina.

Elsewhere on Friday, we saw first-round action in the Atlantic Sun (where Belmont nipped Mercer at the buzzer and Lipscomb walloped Campbell by 30), the Missouri Valley (where Indiana State took out a Drake team that eight people had picked to win the game and Jim had picked all the way to the final, and Wichita State took care of business against Missouri State as all 12 of us predicted) and the Northeast Conference (where the winners were the 1, 2, 3 and 5 seeds and therefore there is no need to re-seed -- Ed, Chris, Rob, Jim and Greg correctly picked all four first-round winners in the NEC).

The overall points standings, through Thursday, March 5, are as follows:

Steve Politi: 30
Sal Sabatino: 28
Chris Sabatino: 27
Jon: Graziano: 27
Greg Lester: 27
Ed Price: 27
Yohan Sengamalay: 26
Rob Biro: 25
Paul "Nino" Canino: 23
Dan Graziano: 23
Jim Graziano: 23
Mark Feinsand: 21

Today, we have a ton of action.

We have first-round games in the America East, Colonial, Metro Atlantic, Southern and West Coast Conferences (Jon and Greg, get your picks in by noon!).

We have second round-action in the Missouri Valley:
(1) Northern Iowa vs. (9) Indiana State
(2) Creighton vs. (7) Wichita State
(3) Illinois State vs. (6) Evansville
(4) Bradley vs. (5) Southern Illinois

We have second-round action in the Horizon:
(3) Cleveland State vs. (7) Illinois-Chicago
(4) Wright State vs. (5) Wisconsin-Milwaukee

We have semifinals in the Ohio Valley:
(1) UT-Martin vs. (4) Morehead State
(2) Austin Peay vs. (3) Murray State

And we have semifinals in the Atlantic Sun:
(1) Jacksonville vs. (4) Lipscomb
(2) East Tennessee State vs. (3) Belmont

Lots and lots and lots of points on the board, and if you think that's something, wait till tomorrow, when we have TWELVE tournaments in action including finals in the Big South, A-Sun and OVC.

Oh, baby.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

The Conference Tournament Pool -- NEC First Round Preview

All four quarterfinal games in the Northeast Conference tip at 7 pm EST. They are:

(1) Robert Morris vs (8) St. Francis NY
(2) Mount St. Mary's vs. (7) Wagner
(3) Sacred Heart vs. (6) Central Connecticut State
(4) Long Island vs. (5) Quinnipiac

TONIGHT'S PICKS


Dan: Robert Morris, LIU, Wager, Sacred Heart
Sal: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, MSM, CCSU
Ed: Robert Morrris, Quinnipiac, MSM, Sacred Heart
Mark: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, Wagner, Sacred Heart
Chris: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, MSM, Sacred Heart
Steve: Robert Morris, LIU, MSM, Sacred Heart
Rob: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, MSM, SacredHeart
Jim: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, MSM, Sacred Heart
Jon: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, MSM, CCSU
Nino: Robert Morris, LIU, MSM, Sacred Heart
Yohan: Robert Morris, LIU, MSM, CCSU
Greg: Robert Morris, Quinnipiac, MSM, Sacred Heart

This tournament re-seeds after the first round, with the highest remaining seeds playing the lowest, etc. The semifinals are scheduled for Sunday. You will receive new brackets by then that reflect the first-round winners and re-seeding.

The Conference Tournament Pool -- MVC First Round Preview

The Missouri Valley Conference tournament begins tonight with two first-round games:

(8) Drake vs. (9) Indiana State, 7:05 pm EST
(7) Wichita Sate vs. (10) Missouri State, 9:35 pm EST

In the first game, Ed, Mark, Steve, Rob, Jim, Jon, Yohan and Greg all picked Drake. Dan, Sal, Chris and Nino all picked Indiana State.

In the second game, everybody in the pool picked Wichita State. No love whatsoever for the MSU Bears.

The rest of the MVC Tournament (called "Arch Madness" because it's played in St. Louis -- get it?) gets underway when the top six seeds join the party.

CHAMPION PICKS

Creighton: Dan, Sal, Mark, Chris, Steve, Rob, Jim, Nino, Yohan.
Northern Iowa: Ed, Jon, Greg

As you can see, Creighton is kind of the hot pick here.

The Conference Tournament Pool -- Big South Semifinals Preview

The Big South semifinals begin tonight at 6 pm EST at the Dedmon Center in Radford, Va. In the first game, with No. 2 seed VMI taking on No. 3 seed Liberty. In the second game, No. 1 seed and tournament host Radford takes on No. 4 seed UNC-Ashville.

The picks for these games are as follows:

VMI: Sal, Nino, Chris, Ed, Yohan, Jon, Steve, Greg.
Liberty: Dan, Rob, Jim.
Coastal Carolina (eliminated first round): Mark.

Radford: Nino, Rob, Chris, Ed, Mark, Jon, Steve, Greg.
Ashville: Sal, Yohan.
Winthrop (eliminated first round): Dan, Jim.

Everybody's championship pick is still alive, as six people picked VMI, three picked Radford and three picked Liberty.

These are two-point games. The three-point final, between tonight's winners, will be held Saturday at 4 pm EST, also at Radford.