NCAA Tournament: South Regional Preview

Scottie Reynolds is back for more after sending Villanova to the Final Four with a last-second shot a year ago. Wildcats are seeded second in the South Regional. (Photo courtesy of Sports Illustrated)

The last of our NCAA Tournament previews takes us to the South, where Duke is the top seed in the most wide-open of the four regionals in this year's tournament.

Teams & Seeds: (1) Duke, (2) Villanova, (3) Baylor, (4) Purdue, (5) Texas A&M, (6) Notre Dame, (7) Richmond, (8) California, (9) Louisville, (10) St. Mary's, (11) Old Dominion, (12) Utah State, (13) Siena, (14) Sam Houston State, (15) Robert Morris, (16) Play-in game winner (Arkansas-Pine Bluff or Winthrop)

Players to Watch: Jon Scheyer, (Duke) Kyle Singler, (Duke) Scottie Reynolds, (Villanova) Corey Fisher, (Villanova) LaceDarius Dunn, (Baylor) E'Twaun Moore, (Purdue) Luke Harangody (Notre Dame)

Highlight Matchup: Villanova vs. Baylor if both teams make the Sweet 16, as Baylor is the sleeper of many experts in this year's tournament.

Upset Special: Siena over Purdue. The Boilermakers are not the same team without Robbie Hummel, and the Saints, led by seniors Ronald Moore and Alex Franklin, have made the second round in each of the last two years.

Marquee Coaches: Mike Krzyzewski, (Duke) Jay Wright, (Villanova) Rick Pitino (Louisville)

Winner: Villanova. Despite Duke's easy road and the Baylor hype, Jay's kids go back to the Final Four against all odds.
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NCAA Tournament: East Regional Preview

The enigma that is John Wall makes his NCAA Tournament debut as No. 1 seed in the East regional Kentucky prepares for its first tournament game against East Tennessee State. (Photo courtesy of ESPN)

Memo to all of the other fifteen teams in the East regional: Get ready to see the John Wall dance. The freshman leads top seed Kentucky into the NCAA Tournament against East Tennessee State, and here's a preview of the regional.

Teams & Seeds: (1) Kentucky, (2) West Virginia, (3) New Mexico, (4) Wisconsin, (5) Temple, (6) Marquette, (7) Clemson, (8) Texas, (9) Wake Forest, (10) Missouri, (11) Washington, (12) Cornell, (13) Wofford, (14) Montana, (15) Morgan State, (16) East Tennessee State

Players to Watch: John Wall, (Kentucky) DeMarcus Cousins, (Kentucky) Patrick Patterson, (Kentucky) Da'Sean Butler, (West Virginia) Lazar Hayward, (Marquette)

Highlight Matchup: The potential Elite Eight meeting between Kentucky and West Virginia if both teams advance that far, where it will be Wall and Butler doing battle in crunch time.

Upset Special: Cornell over Temple. This game will be a long-distance shootout between Juan Fernandez of Temple and Cornell's Ryan Wittman in a game that the Big Red can not only win, but win convincingly.

Marquee Coaches: John Calipari, (Kentucky) Bob Huggins, (West Virginia) Bo Ryan, (Wisconsin) and Rick Barnes (Texas)

Winner: Kentucky. This is probably the easiest road for a 1 seed to the Final Four despite other beliefs, as the only team standing between the Wildcats and Indianapolis is really West Virginia.
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NCAA Tournament: West Regional Preview

Wesley Johnson has taken it to the rack many times for Syracuse since transferring from Iowa State, and has also propelled the Orange to the top seed in the West regional, the same regional they came out of in 2003 to win the national championship. (Photo courtesy of New York Daily News)

Continuing on with our preview of the NCAA Tournament, let's take a look at the West regional.

Teams & Seeds: (1) Syracuse, (2) Kansas State, (3) Pittsburgh, (4) Vanderbilt, (5) Butler, (6) Xavier, (7) BYU, (8) Gonzaga, (9) Florida State, (10) Florida, (11) Minnesota, (12) UTEP, (13) Murray State, (14) Oakland, (15) North Texas, (16) Vermont

Players to Watch: Wes Johnson, (Syracuse) Andy Rautins, (Syracuse) Jacob Pullen, (Kansas State) A.J. Ogilvy, (Vanderbilt) Matt Howard, (Butler) Matt Bouldin (Gonzaga)

Highlight Matchup: The first-round clash between Xavier and Minnesota. Tubby Smith has always had his teams ready to pounce in the big dance since his days at Georgia, and the Golden Gophers come in off an inspiring showing at the Big Ten tournament, which was in Indianapolis, site of the Final Four.

Upset Special: Minnesota over Xavier. Even though the A-10 was a pleasant surprise this year, something tells me Minnesota will get over the hump against the Musketeers.

Marquee Coaches: Jim Boeheim, (Syracuse) Billy Donovan (Florida) and Smith. (Minnesota) Don't forget about Jamie Dixon, (Pitt) Brad Stevens, (Butler) or Mark Few (Gonzaga) either.

Winner: Syracuse. Even if the Orange do not have big man Arinze Onuaku for the opening weekend of the tournament, their 2-3 zone should stifle any opponent in what is an easy regional to play in.
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NCAA Tournament: Midwest Regional Preview

Player of the Year candidate Evan Turner leads No. 2 seed Ohio State into action in the Midwest regional, starting against Cal-Santa Barbara. (Photo courtesy of The Sporting News)

As we ready ourselves for the 2010 edition of the NCAA Tournament, I'll be profiling each regional, as well as the highlight matchups and players to watch. We'll start with the Midwest, where overall No. 1 seed Kansas is the odds-on favorite to represent the regional in Indianapolis for the Final Four.

Teams & Seeds: (1) Kansas, (2) Ohio State, (3) Georgetown, (4) Maryland, (5) Michigan State, (6) Tennessee, (7) Oklahoma State (8) UNLV, (9) Northern Iowa, (10) Georgia Tech, (11) San Diego State, (12) New Mexico State, (13) Houston, (14) Ohio, (15) Cal-Santa Barbara, (16) Lehigh

Players to Watch: Sherron Collins, (Kansas) Cole Aldrich, (Kansas) Evan Turner, (Ohio State) Greg Monroe, (Georgetown) Greivis Vasquez, (Maryland) Kalin Lucas (Michigan State)

Highlight Matchup: The potential second-round clash between Maryland and Michigan State, which will feature the aforementioned Vasquez and Lucas in an intriguing battle of the point guards that will be fun to watch.

Upset Special: Georgia Tech over Oklahoma State. The Yellow Jackets have won several big games this season, and freshman Derrick Favors is has one of the best inside games in the nation.

Marquee Coach: Take your pick from Bill Self, (Kansas) Gary Williams, (Maryland) and Tom Izzo, (Michigan State) all of whom have won national championships. Steve Fisher (San Diego State) has also won a national title, while Thad Matta (Ohio State) and Paul Hewitt (Georgia Tech) have been to the national championship game in the past.

Winner: Ohio State. Kansas may be the most talented team, but the Elite Eight matchup out of this regional will come down to a last-second possession, and in that scenario, no one is better than Player of the Year frontrunner Evan Turner, who will lead the Buckeyes into Indy.
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'Hawks Rock Their Way To No. 1 Overall Seed

Led by Sherron Collins, Kansas enters NCAA Tournament as the #1 overall seed in the field of 65, and will play its first game against Lehigh in the Midwest Regional. (Photo courtesy of New York Daily News)

Two years removed from their first national championship since 1988, Kansas is once again the prohibitive favorite to cut down the nets on the first Monday in April, as the Jayhawks were installed as the top overall seed in this year's NCAA Tournament. Kansas was revealed as the first team in just over an hour ago on this "Selection Sunday," and will kick off the tournament against Patriot League champion Lehigh in their first-round matchup out of the Midwest regional. Kentucky, (East) Syracuse, (West) and Duke (South) are the other three top seeds, the Blue Devils receiving the last vote over Big East tournament champion West Virginia, the No. 2 seed in the East. The Mountaineers are one of eight Big East teams in the field of 65, once again the most of any conference participating in the tournament.

As usual, the selection committee threw quite a few curves in this year's edition of the "Big Dance," namely making Villanova a 2 seed in the South regional despite the Wildcats losing six of their last ten games after starting 9-0 in Big East play. Also, the Big Ten has a legitimate gripe this year, with Purdue (ranked fifth in the country going into today) being relegated to a 4 seed in the South, and Michigan State (ranked 11th) a 5 in the star-studded Midwest. The Spartans face a potential second-round matchup with Maryland, not to mention Kansas and either Georgetown or Ohio State in the regionals should Tom Izzo's team advance that far.

The selection was also filled with surprise entries, namely former two-time national champion Florida, back in the field for the first time since repeating as champions in 2007. The Gators join Wake Forest as unlikely participants in the tournament, bursting the bubbles of teams such as Illinois and Mississippi State after those two teams made valiant efforts in their conference tournaments, the Bulldogs almost defeating Kentucky in this afternoon's SEC championship game. Virginia Tech is also on the outside looking in despite having a better record than fellow ACC schools Wake Forest and Clemson, both of whom are among the six ACC programs in the tournament.

Check back for detailed previews of each regional between now and tipoff of Tuesday night's play-in game between Arkansas-Pine Bluff and Winthrop, with the winner of that contest advancing to face Duke in the South regional.
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A Departure From The Norm

After a heartbreaking loss to Marquette in yesterday's second round Big East tournament matchup, Norm Roberts may be addressing the media one last time as the head coach at St. John's, as he is widely expected to be replaced in the offseason. (Photo courtesy of redstormsports.com)

Nice guys really do finish last, and in this instance, it is extremely unfortunate when you consider the story of a man who returned to his home area to restore a program that had been decimated by a scandal from which many believe it has yet to emerge. For six years, Norm Roberts had taken St. John's from what he personally described as "rock bottom playing in the best league in America," and rebuilt a scarred program that was once among the nation's elite.

Now, seven may not be lucky for Roberts, who is reported by the New York Post's Lenn Robbins as being out at St. John's, effectively ending a six-year tenure that saw Roberts guide the Johnnies to an 81-100 record, but simultaneously restoring dignity and a positive image to the once-mighty basketball power in Queens. Robbins also wrote that Roberts is expected to take a buyout of at least $700,000, as the 44-year-old coach still has three years left on his revolving five-year deal. Although the Red Storm (17-15) are eligible for the NIT, sources close to the program are not expecting the Johnnies to be part of that field, as there are four Big East teams that finished ahead of them, namely NCAA bubble teams South Florida and Seton Hall, as well as Cincinnati, who plays West Virginia tonight at Madison Square Garden in a Big East tournament quarterfinal game. Connecticut, who was soundly defeated by St. John's in the conference tournament on Tuesday, is also in the running for an NIT bid, but coach Jim Calhoun has said that the decision to accept would be made by athletic director Jeff Hathaway.

After St. John's came back from down 20 to beat DePaul on the road in triple overtime, followed by a dominating win over UConn, the Johnnies nearly stole one from Marquette after being down 14 in the first half. St. John's had one last chance to win at the buzzer yesterday, but were double-teamed in the backcourt. Once they recovered, Malik Boothe could only manage an air ball from half court, enabling Marquette to hold on by the final of 57-55. These last three games should be enough for Roberts to return, but St. John's president Rev. Donald Harrington and athletic director Chris Monasch may have other ideas, considering that St. John's will have nine seniors (barring any transfers) next season; and should Roberts return and not be successful, the case to dismiss him will only be exponentially magnified, and a new coach would have to fill nine scholarships just weeks after being introduced as the head man.

Roberts does not deserve this fate. As the play-by-play announcer for St. John's basketball from 2007-2009 on WSJU Radio, the student radio station at St. John's, I had gotten to know Roberts quite well, and can tell you from personal experience that he is truly one of the nice guys of the industry, a class act that knows how to conduct himself on and off the court. Roberts also never hid from the truth during his time in Queens, and always put the other team over in postgame press conferences regardless of the end result. Many a time I would be at the St. John's media room waiting for Roberts to walk in, and his first words would usually be "Give (insert team name here) a lot of credit."

One would no doubt expect Roberts to say the same regarding his successor, who could be Virginia Tech's Seth Greenberg, a native of Long Island and two-time ACC coach of the year that is atop the Johnnies' hypothetical wish list. Hofstra's Tom Pecora is also an intriguing possibility, as is Siena's Fran McCaffery. Ask the St. John's players, however, and almost all will tell you unequivocally that they want none other than Roberts leading them out of the locker room in the 2010-11 season. "Once you've got a family going like this, it would be kind of dumb to break the family up," said junior forward D.J. Kennedy, the Johnnies' leading scorer, who feels that Roberts should return, "especially with all these veterans coming back."

No matter what happens, or who is at the helm of the Red Storm next season, only one thing can be said for what has transpired in Queens over the last six years, and how far the program has come since that infamous night in Pittsburgh during the 2003-04 season that cost then-coach Mike Jarvis his job.

Give Norm Roberts a lot of credit.
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Gonzo, Pirates Look For Buried Treasure At Garden

After fellow New York metro area programs Rutgers and St. John's were eliminated in Big East tournament, it's up to Bobby Gonzalez and Seton Hall to give the Big Apple something to pump their fists over as the Pirates face Notre Dame in what amounts to a play-in game for Seton Hall's NCAA Tournament chances. (Photo courtesy of Sports Illustrated)

Say what you want about Bobby Gonzalez's disposition and on-court antics, but don't discredit the Seton Hall head man's talent or the players that have now made it into the second round of the Big East tournament.

After nearly blowing a 29-point lead at Madison Square Garden against Providence last night only to survive the Friars by the final of 109-106, Seton Hall now faces Notre Dame in tonight's second round in just a matter of minutes in a game that will, for better or worse, dictate the Pirates' immediate future. Some believe that Seton Hall (19-12, 9-9 in the Big East) has already done enough to lock up an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, with big wins over Pittsburgh, Louisville and the Irish team that they square off against at the "World's Most Famous Arena" tonight, but many experts and fans alike feel that the Pirates need one more victory to cement their status as a participant in this year's edition of the "Big Dance."

"We have 19 wins and we have no bad losses," said Gonzalez during last night's postgame press conference when asked to surmise his team's chances to be one of the 65 that contends for the national championship. "We beat Notre Dame at our place (February 11th at the Prudential Center by the final of 90-87) and a lot of people say they are in."

The Pirates are usually a bubble team, but not by choice, as they have just so happened to have faced the top teams in the Big East during the early portion of the conference season in each of the last two seasons. However, Seton Hall has held it together thanks in large part to the play of junior guard Jeremy Hazell, the conference's second-leading scorer; as well as transfers Jeff Robinson and Herb Pope, the latter posting 27 points and 11 rebounds in last night's victory over Providence before fouling out late in the second half.

With Rutgers being eliminated last night by Cincinnati, coupled with St. John's heartbreaking loss earlier today against Marquette, the Pirates are the last New York-area team remaining in the Big East tournament, something that is sure to bring a smile to Gonzalez's face, as he has taken great pride in being the top program in the New York metropolitan area. In fact, his team went 3-0 against the Scarlet Knights and Red Storm during the regular season.

However, Gonzalez, who took Manhattan into the second round of the NCAA tournament in 2004, has intentions of expanding his success, and a victory against Notre Dame tonight will go a long way in determining just how far Seton Hall has come since the 46-year-old took over the reins of the Pirates from Louis Orr in 2006.
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