The East region of the NCAA tournament is home to the most unlikely number 1 seed, the Villanova Wildcats. Villanova wasn’t thought of to be one of the elite teams at the beginning of the year. Nova wasn’t even in the preseason top 10. Once the season kicked off though, the Wildcats asserted dominance over the Big East. The Wildcats won the regular season and the conference tournament by impressive margins. Proving that last season’s 29-5 record wasn’t a fluke, Villanova finished this season 32-2.
Villanova is a 1 seed in a bracket with a team many people thought deserved to be a 1 seed, the ACC regular season champion Virginia Cavaliers. The rise of both programs the last two years seems like an Elite 8 game would be kismet. Virginia produces the flat out best defense in the country. They also feature a style that is not exactly crowd pleasing. When your team is playing against them, there is nothing more annoying than some of the tactics Virginia uses to shave seconds off the game. The worst is the waiting forever to pick up the ball to inbound. It’s something that once you notice it, it’ll drive you crazy. Style or not, you don’t get to 29-3 without being great.
The rest of the region is chalk full of teams that would love, and are getting, an opportunity to prove themselves. Oklahoma has a great defense of their own, but were largely overlooked in Big 12 play with most of the eyes focusing on Kansas and Iowa State. Louisville struggled with it’s consistency on offense once Chris Jones was kicked off the team. Even with Jones, the Cardinals sputtered to a 5-5 finish. Northern Iowa has to feel underseed down on the 5 line. Some have talked them up as a team that could crash the Final Four.
Here are how the teams stack up in the key efficiency stats. The numbers we will be using are efficiency, effective field goal percentage (weighs 3s), turnover percentage and offensive rebound percentage. Normally the team that controls these numbers wins the game. It’s almost like scoring efficiently, shooting well, winning the boards and the turnover battle are good things.
How They Got Here
1) Villanova Wildcats – Big East Tournament champions
2) Virginia Cavaliers – At large
3) Oklahoma Sooners – At large
4) Louisville Cardinals – At large
5) Northern Iowa Panthers – Missouri Valley Tournament champions
6) Providence Friars – At large
7) Michigan State Spartans – At large
8) North Carolina State Wolfpack – At large
9) LSU Tigers – At large
10) Georgia Bulldogs – At large
11) Dayton Flyers – At large
11) Boise State Broncos – At large
12) Wyoming Cowboys – Mountain West Tournament champions
13) UC Irvine Anteaters – Big West Tournament champions
14) Albany Great Danes – America East Tournament champions
15) Belmont Bruins – Ohio Valley Tournament champions
16) Lafayette Leopards – Patriot League Tournament champions
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Offensive Efficiency
- 120.8 – Villanova 4
- 114.1 – Michigan St 14
- 113.8 – Northern Iowa 15
- 112.2 – Virginia 27
- 111.5 – NC State 30
- 110.7 – Providence 38
- 110.3 – Lafayette 40
- 109.4 – Boise St 48
- 109.3 – Oklahoma 50
- 107.9 – Belmont 64
- 107.2 – Dayton 73
- 107 – Georgia 74
- 106.8 – LSU 75
- 105.9 – Louisville 95
- 104.1 – Albany – 119
- 103.9 – UC Irvine
- 101.8 – Wyoming 176
eFG%
- 56.5 – Belmont 6
- 56.3 – Lafayette 7
- 56.2 – Northern Iowa 8
- 55.3 – Villanova 15
- 53.8 – Michigan St 27
- 53.5 – Boise St 32
- 52.8 – Dayton 45
- 52.1 – Wyoming 59
- 51.2 – Virginia 80
- 50.7 – UC Irvine 97
- 50.5 – LSU 101
- 50.1 – Albany 114
- 49.6 – NC State 144
- 49.4 – Oklahoma 150
- 48.9 – Georgia 184
- 48.6 – Providence 197
- 47.8 – Louisville 228
Turnover %
- 16.1 – Boise St 23
- 16.1 – Virginia 25
- 16.2 – NC State 27
- 16.6 – Villanova 41
- 16.9 – Lafayette 46
- 17.7 – Oklahoma 78
- 17.8 – Louisville 82
- 17.8 – Dayton 84
- 17.9 – Michigan St 91
- 17.9 – Providence 93
- 18 – Northern Iowa 97
- 18 – UC Irvine 99
- 18.7 – Wyoming 147
- 19 – Albany 168
- 19.3 – Georgia 184
- 20.3 – Belmont 259
- 20.5 – LSU 274
Offensive Rebound %
- 35.3 – Providence 39
- 35.1 – Louisville 46
- 34.6 – Michigan St 63
- 34.1 – NC State 75
- 34 – LSU 79
- 34 – Virginia 81
- 32.7 – Villanova 111
- 32.5 – Albany 116
- 32.3 – Georgia 118
- 30.9 – Oklahoma 172
- 29.8 – UC Irvine 218
- 29.2 – Belmont 240
- 27.6 – Lafayette 282
- 27.6 – Boise St 288
- 26.9 – Northern Iowa 302
- 24.2 – Dayton 330
- 22.1 – Wyoming 344
Defensive Efficiency
- 85.4 – Virginia 1
- 88.9 – Oklahoma 5
- 89.4 – Louisville 6
- 92.2 – Villanova 13
- 93.2 – Northern Iowa 16
- 93.9 – Georgia 28
- 94.7 – LSU 37
- 94.7 – Dayton 38
- 95.5 – Providence 48
- 96.1 – Michigan St 53
- 96.5 – Boise St 64
- 97 – Wyoming 67
- 98.2 – NC State 89
- 98.3 – UC Irvine 92
- 101.6 – Albany 151
- 106.5 – Belmont 259
- 113.1 – Lafayette 337
eFG%
- 41.7 – Virginia 3
- 43.4 – Louisville 8
- 43.7 – Oklahoma 11
- 44.2 – Georgia 14
- 44.6 – LSU 21
- 44.7 – UC Irvine 23
- 45.1 – Northern Iowa 32
- 45.5 – NC State 44
- 45.5 – Villanova 45
- 45.7 – Michigan St 48
- 46.7 – Wyoming 79
- 47.3 – Dayton 99
- 47.4 – Boise St 102
- 48.1 – Providence 132
- 49.6 – Albany 195
- 51.3 – Belmont 273
- 52.9 – Lafayette 311
Turnover %
- 27.8 – Louisville 29
- 21.7 – Villanova 31
- 21.1 – Dayton 60
- 20.3 – Albany 101
- 20.2 – Oklahoma 107
- 19.7 – Providence 137
- 19.4 – Boise St 149
- 19.3 – Northern Iowa 154
- 19.2 – LSU 159
- 18.7 – Belmont 197
- 18.1 – Virginia 242
- 18.1 – Wyoming 243
- 17.3 – UC Irvine 278
- 17 – Michigan St 293
- 16.9 – Lafayette 296
- 16.8 – Georgia 302
- 15.4 – NC State 341
Offensive Rebound %
- 24.3 – Virginia 5
- 25.5 – Albany 11
- 25.9 – Boise St 16
- 26 – Michigan St 17
- 26.9 – Wyoming 29
- 26.9 – Northern Iowa 30
- 28 -Dayton 47
- 28.9 – Georgia 75
- 29.5 – Belmont 101
- 29.5 – Providence 103
- 30.4 – NC State 132
- 30.7 – UC Irvine 148
- 30.9 – Louisville 163
- 31.1 – Villanova 171
- 31.5 – Oklahoma 194
- 33 – LSU 266
- 34.4 – Lafayette 316
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The Favorite – Villanova Wildcats
This region is almost a toss up between Villanova and Virginia, but I’m rolling with the Wildcats. Their path is aided by the fact that they are a 1 seed. That’s an advantce that one can’t discount. It’s going to be interesting to see the Wildcats go against teams with greater talent in the round of 32, like an LSU or NC State. Villanova is the better team on both ends, but it’s been a while since they have truly been challenged like that. It’s kind of easy, at least compared to the other 1 seeds, to talk yourself into an early exit for Villanova.
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The Dark Horse – Northern Iowa Panthers
Northern Iowa is a team with a start post player that can do pretty much anything in Seth Tuttle. The team has a ton of shooters and they play some very tough defense. The Panthers have a favorable matchup with Wyoming in round one and what looks like a favorable game against Louisville in round two. With how balanced Northern Iowa is on both side of the floord, they are the type of team that could give Villanova fits. Any team that shoots the three point shot as well as Northern Iowa always has a punchers shot at making a deep run.
The Upset Everyone is Picking – None really?
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This is the most chalk heavy region on both ESPN and Yahoo brackets. Even the 8-9 game of NC State against LSU swings towards the Wolfpack. There really isn’t a consenous upset pick to get on board with in the East.
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If no upsets stand out, where are the potential landmines for the top 4 seeds?
As mentioned earlier, Villanova is going to have some trouble being tested by what appear to be superior talent in either NC State or LSU in the round of 32.
Virginia has Belmont in the Cavaliers opening game. While it’s possible Belmont could go nuts from three in a low possession game, Virginia’s toughest early test looks like the team that bounced them last year, Michigan State. The Spartans are not as good as they were last season on the defensive end but given Virginia’s problems sustaining offense as of late, this one could be tricky. Michigan State was a 7 seed no one really wanted to play.
A Sweet 16 game with a team like Oklahoma that can defend very well would be a challenge. Speaking of the Sooners, their big landmine looks to be in the round of 32 as well in a potential game with Providence. The Friars have two great players that can really take over games in Kris Dunn and LaDontae Henton.
Louisville would face a huge threat in Northern Iowa in the round of 32 if both teams advanced. That game would really test the Louisville offense, which has not been great for a while now. No one doubts the intensity of the Cardinal defense, what is up for debate is if the team has enough offense to advance. Maybe the relief of not being in Kentucky’s region will help the Cardinals make a run.
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Is there a comically tall player in this region?
Madadou Ndiaye of UC Irvine stands 7 feet, 6 inches tall. Ndiaye’s stats on the whole don’t impress too much. He’ll get very easy buckets because he’s incredibly tall. Ndiaye hasn’t been a huge shot blocker, especially compared to his contributions last season, but he’s going to alter shots. How long he can stay on the court is a big question for Irvine. Ndiaye only played in 13 games this season, although he played at least 20 minutes in each of the last five games and 28 minutes in the overtime win over UC Santa Barbara.
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Is there an unfair homecourt advantage?
As you definitely know, Dayton plays Boise State Wednesday night in Dayton. The debate on if Dayton should be the last team in aside, this is a straight road game for Boise State. If the Flyers are able to advance, they would then play Providence in Columbus. Dayton fans barely have to travel to see the Flyers in the Big Dance.
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What team do I trust the least with the game in the balance?
LSU. Always LSU. Johnny Jones becoming the coach of my favorite team would be a nightmare.
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Who are the players to watch in the East region?
Here are the statistical leaders in the key stats from this top heavy region.
Points
- 19.7 – LaDontae Henton, Providence
- 19.3 – Derrick Marks, Boise St
- 18.1 – Craig Bradshaw, Belmont
- 17.5 – Buddy Hield, Oklahoma
- 17.2 – Dan Trist, Lafayette
- 17.1 – Terry Rozier, Louisville
- 16.9 – Jarrell Martin, LSU
- 16.5 – Jordan Sibert, Dayton
- 16.1 – Larry Nance Jr, Wyoming
- 15.8 – Trevor Lacey, NC State
- 15.7 – Montrezl Harrell, Louisville
- 15.7 – Kris Dunn, Providence
- 15.5 – Jordan Mickey, LSU
- 15.3 – Seth Tuttle, Northern Iowa
- 14.8 – Travis Trice, Michigan St
- 14.5 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
- 14.3 – Evan Bradds, Belmont
- 14 – Darrun Hilliard, Villanova
- 14 – Sam Rowley, Albany
- 13.9 – Malcolm Brogdon, Virginia
- 13.6 – Keith Hornsby, LSU
- 13.6 – Peter Hooley, Albany
- 13.2 – Ralston Turner, NC State
- 13.1 – Josh Adams, Wyoming
- 13.1 – Seth Hinrichs, Lafayette
Field Goals Made
- 223 – LaDontae Henton, Providence
- 222 – Dan Trist, Lafayette
- 221 – Derrick Marks, Boise St
- 196 – Jarrell Martin, LSU
- 190 – Montrezl Harrell, Louisville
- 189 – Terry Rozier, Louisville
- 188 – Buddy Hield, Oklahoma
- 187 – Jordan Mickey, LSU
- 187 – Craig Bradshaw, Belmont
- 181 – Kris Dunn, Providence
- 179 – Larry Nance, Wyoming
- 178 – Will Davis, UC Irvine
- 175 – Seth Tuttle, Northern Iowa
- 174 – Trevor Lacey, NC State
- 172 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
Free Throws Made
- 145 – LaDontae Henton, Providence
- 141 – Charles Mann, Georgia
- 138 – Seth Tuttle, Northern Iowa
- 136 – Jarrell Martin, LSU
- 136 – Jordan Sibert, Dayton
- 133 – JayVaughn Pinkston, Villanova
- 125 – Terry Rozier, Louisville
- 119 – Sam Rowley, Albany
- 116 – Jordan Woodard, Oklahoma
- 116 – Kris Dunn, Providence
- 116 – Kendall Pollard, Dayton
- 112 – Larry Nance, Wyoming
- 110 – Josh Adams, Wyoming
- 108 – Malcolm Brogdon, Virginia
- 108 – Dan Trist, Lafayette
- 108 – Nick Linder, Lafayette
Free Throw % – min 40 attempts
- 93.9 – Riley Grabau, Wyoming
- 87.1 – Malcolm Brogdon, Virginia
- 85 – Nick Linder, Lafayette
- 84.5 – Seth Hinrichs, Lafayette
- 84.1 – Jordan Woodard, Oklahoma
- 83 – Amanze Egekeze, Belmont
- 82.9 – Ralston Turner, NC State
- 82.7 – JJ Frazier, Georgia
- 82.2 – Buddy Hield, Oklahoma
- 81.9 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
- 81.5 – Sam Rowley, Albany
- 81.4 – Evan Singletary, Albany
- 81.3 – Ryan Arcidiacono, Villanova
- 80.4 – Desmond Lee, NC State
- 79.4 – Justin Anderson, Virginia
- 79.4 – Larry Nance, Wyoming
3 Pointers Made
- 89 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
- 88 – Ralston Turner, NC State
- 86 – Buddy Hield, Oklahoma
- 83 – Taylor Barnette, Belmont
- 77 – Craig Bradshaw, Belmont
- 76 – Nick Duncan, Boise St
- 75 – Travis Trice, Michigan St
- 74 – Jordan Sibert, Dayton
- 73 – Darrun Hilliard, Villanova
- 72 – Trevor Lacey, NC State
- 72 – Joey Ptasinski, Lafayette
- 70 – Keith Hornsby, LSU
- 66 – Derrick Marks, Boise St
- 65 – Travis Souza, UC Irvine
- 61 – Bryn Forbes, Michigan St
3 Point % – min 40 attempts
- 48.4 – Jaron Martin, UC Irvine
- 46.9 – Justin Anderson, Virginia
- 46.8 – Josh Hart, Villanova
- 46.7 – Zach Rufer, Lafayette
- 46.4 – Travis Souza, UC Irvine
- 45.6 – Joey Ptasinski, Lafayette
- 45.4 – Isaiah Cousins, Oklahoma
- 45.2 – Deon Mitchell, Northern Iowa
- 45 – Phil Booth, Villanova
- 44 – Derrick Marks, Boise St
- 43.8 – Darrell Davis, Dayton
- 42.9 – Seth Tuttle, Northern Iowa
- 42.4 – Bryn Forbes, Michigan St
- 42 – James Webb III, Boise St
- 41.8 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
Rebounds
- 295 – Montrezl Harrell, Louisville
- 294 – Jarrell Martin, LSU
- 294 – Jordan Mickey, LSU
- 285 – Daniel Ochefu, Villanova
- 274 – Branden Dawson, Michigan St
- 271 -Dyshawn Pierre, Dayton
- 256 – Ryan Spangler, Oklahoma
- 245 – Sam Rowley, Albany
- 244 – James Webb III, Boise St
- 231 – Will Davis, UC Irvine
- 230 – Evan Bradds, Belmont
- 224 – Seth Tuttle, Northern Iowa
- 217 – Larry Nance, Wyoming
- 216 – Marcus Thornton, Georgia
- 213 – Dan Trist, Lafayette
Offensive Rebounds
- 103 – Montrezl Harrell, Louisville
- 96 – Anthony Gill, Virginia
- 96 – Jarrell Martin, LSU
- 96 – Jordan Mickey, LSU
- 90 – Daniel Ochefu, Villanova
- 90 – Branden Dawson, Michigan St
- 79 – Will Davis, UC Irvine
- 79 – Sam Rowley, Albany
- 76 – Ryan Spangler, Oklahoma
- 75 – Ben Bentil, Providence
- 74 – Dyshawn Pierre, Dayton
- 71 – Matt Costello, Michigan St
- 71 – Dan Trist, Lafayette
- 69 – Mangok Mathiang, Louisville
- 69 – Marvin Singleton, Northern Iowa
Assists
- 243 – Kris Dunn, Providence
- 194 – Reece Chamberlain, Belmont
- 176 – Travis Trice, Michigan St
- 461 – Nick Linder, Lafayette
- 149 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
- 143 – London Perrantes, Virginia
- 126 – Jordan Woodard, Oklahoma
- 126 – Tim Quarterman, LSU
- 125 – Scoochie Smith, Dayton
- 122 – Cat Barber, NC State
- 120 – Josh Adams, Wyoming
- 119 – Ryan Arcidiacono, Villanova
- 118 – Dylan Ennis, Villanova
- 118 – Josh Gray, LSU
- 118 – Charles Mann, Georgia
Turnovers
- 131 – Kris Dunn, Providence
- 104 – Charles Mann, Georgia
- 98 – Jordan Mickey, LSU
- 92 – Seth Tuttle, Northern Iowa
- 91 – Jarrell Martin, LSU
- 91 – Craig Bradshaw, Belmont
- 87 – Josh Adams, Wyoming
- 85 – Denzel Valentine, Michigan St
- 84 – Sam Rowley, Albany
- 81 – Reece Chamberlain, Belmont
- 80 – Josh Gray, LSU
- 80 – Evan Bradds, Belmont
- 78 – Tim Quarterman, LSU
- 76 – Kendall Pollard, Dayton
- 74 – Dan Trist, Lafayette
Steals
- 89 – Kris Dunn, Providence
- 65 – Terry Rozier, Louisville
- 59 – Darrun Hilliard, Villanova
- 59 – Jordan Sibert, Dayton
- 56 – Derrick Marks, Boise St
- 52 – Reece Chamberlain, Belmont
- 49 – Jordan Woodard, Oklahoma
- 48 – Scoochie Smith, Dayton
- 48 – Craig Bradshaw, Belmont
- 47 – Josh Adams, Wyoming
- 45 – Buddy Hield, Oklahoma
- 45 – LaDontae Henton, Providence
- 45 – Tim Quarterman, LSU
- 45 – Ray Sanders, Albany
- 44 – Kyle Davis, Dayton
Blocks
- 106 – Jordan Mickey, LSU
- 87 – BeeJay Anya, NC State
- 79 – Carson Desrosiers, Providence
- 46 – Daniel Ocefu, Villanova
- 45 – TaShawn Thomas, Oklahoma
- 45 – Branden Dawson, Michigan St
- 44 – Matt Costello, Michigan St
- 44 – Yante Maten, Georgia
- 42 – Chinanu Onuaku, Louisville
- 39 – Mangok Mathiang, Louisville
- 38 – Montrezl Harrell, Louisville
- 37 – Ryan Spangler, Oklahoma
- 37 – Kyle Washington, NC State
- 35 – Marcus Thornton, Georgia
- 35 – Larry Nance, Wyoming