The South Region of the NCAA Tournament bracket is one that has drawn the most scoffs. Duke was comfortably a number 1 seed, even though they were not the ACC regular season or tournament champions. On top of that, they were placed in a region with the weakest 4 seed in Georgetown and a 5 seed many think is an upset risk with Utah. Duke finished out of the top 5 in the (outdated) RPI and are currently 7th on Ken Pom. The Blue Devils aren’t even considered the Ken Pom projection favorite.
With all of that being said, there is almost no one like Duke when the Blue Devils are rolling. They look like the best chance someone has at beating Kentucky. They look like the best team in the nation period at times. With Jahlil Okafor able to do whatever he wants in the middle, it opens the floor for Duke’s guards. Tyus Jones has taken over games late, Quinn Cook is a dead eye shooter, Justise Winslow adds a bit of it all. There is the dark side to this squad, namely on defense. If you watched Notre Dame dissect them in the ACC tournament, you know exactly what I’m talking about.
If Duke isn’t the computer favorite, who is? The answer are the Gonzaga Bulldogs. This is the most balanced team Mark Few has ever coached. A Gonzaga team that plays defense is something we haven’t really seen in recent years. All the hype surround the offense, which it should because the offense is great. Gonzaga shoots the ball just about as well as anyone. We could have a tremendous game if the Bulldogs meet up with Iowa State in the Sweet 16.
The Cyclones are an interesting bunch. They are team dramatic. There isn’t a game that goes by that doesn’t see them fall into a hole. Most of the time, Iowa State comes flying out of it with a chainsaw on their arm like Ash and use it to rip the other team apart with a huge run. There can’t be another team that is scarier when your favorite teams is up 15 points.
Georgetown is seemingly given no shot at advancing deep in the tournament. They were overseeded, which is not their fault. The Hoyas run of NCAA tournament futility since the 2007 Final Four is noted by everyone. The last five times they have made the tournament, Georgetown has lost to a double digit seed. There is a chance they could play two of them this weekend.
If any other team closed as uninspiring as Utah did, I would not pick them to go far. The Utes scuffled badly to a 5-5 record to close the regular season with some bad performances. The only bad loss was at Washington. Utah lost to Oregon twice and Arizona as well, but didn’t look good in wins at Oregon State or Washington State. The second half domination of Stanford gives some hope that his team can get back to what they were a month ago. There is a question of if they peaked too soon.
http://gty.im/463467232
How They Got Here
1) Duke Blue Devils – At large
2) Gonzaga Bulldogs – WCC Tournament champions
3) Iowa State Cyclones – Big 12 Tournament champions
4) Georgetown Hoyas – At large
5) Utah Utes – At large
6) SMU Mustangs – AAC Tournament champions
7) Iowa Hawkeyes – At large
8) San Diego State Aztecs – At large
9) St John’s Red Storm – At large
10) Davidson Wildcats – At large
11) UCLA Bruins – At large
12) Stephen F Austin Lumberjacks – Southland Tournament champions
13) Eastern Washington Eagles – Big Sky Tournament champions
14) UAB Blazers – Conference USA Tournament champions
15) North Dakota State JackRabbits – Summit Tournament champions
16) North Florida Osprey – Atlantic Sun Tournament champions
http://gty.im/465224318
Here are how the teams stack up according to the metrics. We will be using offensive and defensive efficiency, as well as three of the four factors: effective field goal percentage (weighs 3s), turnover percentage and offensive rebound percentage.
Offensive Efficiency
- 121.9 – Duke 2
- 119.4 – Gonzaga 6
- 118.9 – Iowa State 7
- 118.7 – Davidson 8
- 113.1 – Utah 20
- 112.9 – Stephen F. Austin 22
- 112.3 – SMU 25
- 111 – Iowa 36
- 110.3 – Georgetown 41
- 110.2 – UCLA 43
- 109.9 – Eastern Washington 47
- 108.1 – St John’s 62
- 105.6 – North Florida 98
- 103.7 – UAB 132
- 102.4 – San Diego State 165
- 101 – North Dakota State 194
eFG%
- 58.4 – Gonzaga 2
- 56.9 – Duke 4
- 56.2 – Stephen F. Austin 9
- 56 – Davidson 11
- 55.6 – Utah 13
- 55.4 – Eastern Washington 14
- 54.7 – Iowa State 16
- 53.6 – North Florida 32
- 52.4 – SMU 50
- 50.9 – Georgetown 85
- 49.4 – UCLA 155
- 49.3 – St John’s 159
- 49.2 – North Dakota State 167
- 47.8 – Iowa 228
- 47.8 – UAB 229
- 46.7 – San Diego State 271
Turnover %
- 14.3 – Davidson 2
- 15.7 – St John’s 12
- 15.8 – Iowa State 16
- 15.9 – North Dakota State 17
- 16 – Eastern Washington 19
- 16.3 – Gonzaga 31
- 16.8 – Duke 45
- 17.4 – Iowa 70
- 17.5 – UCLA 72
- 17.8 – Utah 87
- 18 – North Florida 103
- 18.6 – San Diego State 136
- 19.2 – Georgetown 184
- 19.7 – SMU 215
- 20.3 – Stephen F. Austin 256
- 20.4 – UAB 266
Offensive Rebound %
- 37.7 – Stephen F. Austin 13
- 37.4 – Duke 16
- 37 – SMU 19
- 35.9 – San Diego State 31
- 35.8 – Iowa 33
- 34.3 – Georgetown 70
- 34 – UAB 82
- 33.9 – Gonzaga 86
- 33.8 – UCLA 87
- 31.3 – Utah 163
- 29.8 – Davidson 215
- 29.4 – Eastern Washington 235
- 28.9 – North Florida 254
- 28.5 – Iowa State 264
- 27.8 – St John’s 279
- 26.5 – North Dakota State 309
Defensive Efficiency
- 88.3 – San Diego State 4
- 90.6 – Utah 8
- 92.5 – Gonzaga 21
- 93.7 – Georgetown 25
- 95 – SMU 42
- 95 – Iowa 43
- 95.7 – St John’s 51
- 96.2 – Duke 56
- 97.4 – UCLA 75
- 97.7 – Iowa State 82
- 99.3 – Stephen F. Austin 104
- 100.1 – North Dakota State 122
- 100.3 – UAB 127
- 102.8 – North Florida 173
- 103.1 – Davidson 181
- 107.7 – Eastern Washington 282
eFG %
- 42.7 – Utah 5
- 42.7 – San Diego State 6
- 43.6 – Gonzaga 9
- 45.1 – Iowa 31
- 45.5 – SMU 41
- 46.1 – St John’s 61
- 46.6 – Georgetown 71
- 47.2 – UAB 95
- 47.4 – Duke 98
- 47.8 – North Dakota State 113
- 47.9 – North Florida 119
- 47.9 – Iowa State 121
- 48.7 – UCLA 160
- 48.8 – Stephen F. Austin 162
- 49.1 – Davidson 168
- 52 – Eastern Washington 290
Turnover %
- 24.3 – Stephen F. Austin 5
- 21.5 – San Diego State 38
- 20.6 – Georgetown 83
- 20 – SMU 118
- 19.8 – UAB 130
- 19.5 – St John’s 143
- 19.3 – Iowa 156
- 18.7 – Duke 192
- 18.5 – Iowa State 212
- 18.5 – UCLA 214
- 18.3 – Utah 228
- 18.2 – North Florida 230
- 17.7 – Eastern Washington 260
- 17.6 – Gonzaga 264
- 17.3 – Davidson 276
- 16.6 – North Dakota State 309
Offensive Rebound %
- 23.4 – North Dakota State 2
- 28.1 – UCLA 50
- 28.1 – Utah 51
- 28.6 – Gonzaga 69
- 29.2 – Iowa State 85
- 29.3 – SMU 92
- 29.9 – Stephen F. Austin 116
- 30.1 – Duke 122
- 30.1 – Davidson 123
- 30.2 – San Diego State 125
- 30.5 – Iowa 147
- 30.6 – Eastern Washington 148
- 31.3 – Georgetown 182
- 32 – North Florida 226
- 33.1 – UAB 267
- 35.4 – St John’s 331
http://gty.im/466225906
The favorite – Duke Blue Devils
Yes, the computer likes Gonzaga more than Duke but I can’t go along. The Blue Devils do get the actual teams in the region who play defense on their side of the bracket. Duke is also a team full of pros, which you can’t really say about San Diego St or Utah. With how prone all of the teams can be, this region could be up in the air. I’m being boring and rolling with the top squad.
http://gty.im/466252312
Upset Some People are Picking – Davidson Over Iowa
There is good reason for this one and that is Davidson is a great offensive team and Iowa can not shoot well. The strength of the Hawkeyes is getting to the foul line, where they are a top 25 team in free throw percentage. Iowa is one of the teams in the region that crash the offensive glass, which is something Davidson needs to lock down if they are going to pull the upset. The Hawkeyes can really struggle from three point range and from two point range. Luckily for them, Davidson is very weak on the interior. Davidson shoots very well and don’t turn the ball over. Those are keys for an upset. Any team a team is great from three, that’s a major advantage.
http://gty.im/466011038
Game We Want to See: Gonzaga vs Iowa State
We need these teams to play. We need tons of threes in the air. We need Kyle Wiltjer and Georges Niang trying to top the other. We need Monte Morris being guarded by Gary Bell. We need Pangos. We need Gonzaga to be up 15 in the second half and the rally to start. We may or may not need a Gonzaga player crying on the court like Adam Morrison, but that might be pushing it too much.
http://gty.im/460414702
Best Scorer – Tyler Harvey, Eastern Washington
The nation’s leading scorer is the main reason that I would lean Eastern Washington over Georgetown. Of course Harvey gets it done in every way. He hits 52.4% of his two point shots, 40.4% from three point range and 85.4% from the free throw line. He’ll get his against anyone.
http://gty.im/464580776
Best First Round Story: Larry Brown vs UCLA
SMU is a bit of a comfortable favorite against the Bruins. The main story of this is Larry Brown coaching against the program he took to a title game back in the 1980s.
Who is most vulernable: Duke, Gonzaga or Iowa State?
http://gty.im/459696040
There are very legitimate cases to make all of them could lose in the second round. Duke could go up against a San Diego State team that is long and tenacious, followed by a Utah team that is great defensively. Back to back body blow games.
Gonzaga would have a tough game against Iowa or Davidson. The Wildcats offense could give Gonzaga fits the same way that BYU did. Iowa has a lot of great talented led by Aaron White.
Iowa State has a potential tough game against SMU waiting in the second round. The Mustangs with Markus Kennedy aren’t the same team that failed every early season test. The key for SMU would be holding on to the ball. SMU has playmakers like Nic Moore that could pull out a close contest.
How hard do teams have to try to turn it over in this region?
You can see those turnover rates, good lord. With how good the ball handling appears to be, some teams are going to be in trouble if they are down late. This is not the best region if you like a turnover fest.
http://gty.im/459121578
Let’s run down the best players in the South.
Points
- 22.9 – Tyler Harvey, Eastern Washington
- 18.8 – Lawrence Alexander, North Dakota St
- 17.7 – Jahlil Okafor, Duke
- 17.4 – D’Angelo Harrison, St John’s
- 17 – Tyler Kalinoski, Davidson
- 16.7 – Kyle Wiltjer, Gonzaga
- 16.6 – Venky Jois, Eastern Washington
- 16.4 – Norman Powell, UCLA
- 16.3 – Jack Gibbs, Davidson
- 16.2 – D’Vauntes Smith-Rivera, Georgetown
- 16 – Aaron White, Iowa
- 15.9 – Dallas Moore, North Florida
- 15.7 – Quinn Cook, Duke
- 15.7 – Thomas Walkup, Stephen F Austin
- 15.4 – Georges Niang, Iowa State
- 15.2 – Rodney Pryor, Robert Morris
- 15.1 – Bryce Alford, UCLA
- 14.9 – Delon Wright, Utah
- 14.8 – Lucky Jones, Robert Morris
- 14.3 – Dysheed Jordan, St John’s
- 14.3 – Elijah Minnie, Robert Morris
- 14.2 – Nic Moore, SMU
- 14.1 – Jacob Parker, Stephen F Austin
- 13.5 – Sir’Dominic Pointer, St John’s
- 13.1 – Phil Greene IV, St John’s
- 13.1 – Robert Brown, UAB
Field Goals Made
- 239 – Jahlil Okafor, Duke
- 221 – Tyler Harvey, Eastern Washington
- 214 – Kyle Wiltjer, Gonzaga
- 207 – Dallas Moore, North Florida
- 202 – Venky Jois, Eastern Washington
- 196 – Lawrence Alexander, North Dakota St
- 195 – Norman Powell, UCLA
- 189 – Tyler Kalinoski, Davidson
- 183 – Georges Niang, Iowa State
- 183 – Rodney Pryor, Robert Morris
- 181 – Thomas Walkup, Stephen F Austin
- 179 – Marcquise Reed, Robert Morris
- 172 – Quinn Cook, Duke
- 171 – D’Angelo Harrison, St John’s
- 166 – Sir’Dominic Pointer, St John’s
Free Throws Made
- 189 – Aaron White, Iowa
- 152 – D’Angelo Harrison, St John’s
- 147 – Tyler Harvey, Eastern Washington
- 144 – Thomas Walkup, Stephen F Austin
- 136 – Delon Wright, Utah
- 132 – Jalen Nesbitt, North Florida
- 127 – D’Vauntes Smith-Rivera, Georgetown
- 122 – Tyus Jones, Duke
- 115 – Norman Powell, UCLA
- 112 – Bryce Alford, UCLA
- 111 – Lawrence Alexander, North Dakota St
- 108 – Rysheed Jordan, St John’s
- 104 – Lucky Jones, Robert Morris
- 103 – Jacob Parker, Stephen F Austin
- 100 – Nic Moore, SMU
Free Throw % – min 40 attempts
- 88.5 – Nic Moore, SMU
- 88.4 – Tyus Jones, Duke
- 88.3 – Kevin Pangos, Gonzaga
- 87.6 – D’Vauntes Smith-Rivera, Georgetown
- 87.5 – Brandon Taylor, Utah
- 86.4 – Trent Mackey, North Florida
- 86.3 – Jordan Loveridge, Utah
- 85.3 – Jack Gibbs, Davidson
- 85 – Tyler Harvey, Eastern Washington
- 84.8 – Nick Norton, UAB
- 84.2 – Bryce Alford, UCLA
- 83.7 – Jacob Parker, Stephen F Austin
- 83.4 – Delon Wright, Utah
- 82.6 – Jared Johnson, Stephen F Austin
- 82 – AJ Jacobson, North Dakota St
3 Pointers Made
- 122 – Tyler Harvey, Eastern Washington
- 100 – Lawerence Alexander, North Dakota St
- 91 – Quinn Cook, Duke
- 91 – Tyler Kalinoski, Davidson
- 83 – Beau Beech, North Florida
- 81 – Brian Sullivan, Davidson
- 80 – Trent Mackey, North Florida
- 79 – Bryce Alford, UCLA
- 76 – Rodney Pryor, Robert Morris
- 75 – Naz Long, Iowa State
- 75 – Brandon Taylor, Utah
- 72 – Kevin Pangos, Gonzaga
- 71 – Nic Moore, SMU
- 68 – D’Vauntes Smith-Rivera, Georgetown
- 65 – D’Angelo Harrison, St John’s
3 Point % – min 40 attempts
- 56.1 – Bogdan Bliznyuk, Eastern Washington
- 47.5 – William Lee, UAB
- 47 – Jacob Parker, Stephen F Austin
- 46.6 – Kyle Wiltjer, Gonzaga
- 46.5 – Sterling Brown, SMU
- 46.3 – Brekkot Chapman, Utah
- 45.8 – Kevon Looney, UCLA
- 44.4 – Kevin Pangos, Gonzaga
- 44.1 – Jack Gibbs, Davidson
- 44.1 – Parker Kelly, Eastern Washington
- 44.1 – Lawrence Alexander, North Dakota St
- 44 – Elijah Minnie, Robert Morris
- 44 – Trent Mackey, North Florida
- 43.9 – Brandon Taylor, Utah
- 43.8 – Dustin Hogue, Iowa State
- 43.8 – Jordan Loveridge, Utah
Rebounds
- 302 – Kevon Looney, UCLA
- 288 – Jahlil Okafor, Duke
- 243 – Sir’Dominic Pointer, St John’s
- 241 – Aaron White, Iowa
- 236 – Domantas Sabonis, Gonzaga
- 234 – Drew Brandon, Eastern Washington
- 230 – Venky Jois, Eastern Washington
- 215 – Chris Davenport, North Florida
- 213 – Jakob Poeltl, Utah
- 211 – Yanick Moreira, SMU
- 211 – Thomas Walkup, Stephen F Austin
- 209 – Chris Obekpa, St John’s
- 205 – Kyle Wiltjer, Gonzaga
- 204 – Tony Parker, UCLA
- 200 – Jarrod Uthoff, Iowa
Offensive Rebounds
- 125 – Jahlil Okafor, Duke
- 111 – Kevon Looney, UCLA
- 83 – Jakob Poeltl, Utah
- 82 – Tony Parker, UCLA
- 81 – Joshua Smith, Georgetown
- 80 – Amile Jefferson Duke
- 79 – Yanick Moreira, SMU
- 79 – Thomas Walkup, Stephen F Austin
- 79 – Venky Jois, Eastern Washington
- 73 – Mikael Hopkins, Georgetown
- 72 – Gabriel Olaseni, Iowa
- 72 – Chris Obekpa, St John’s
- 71 – Domantas Sabonis, Gonzaga
- 71 – JJ O’Brien, San Diego St
- 69 – Aaron White, Iowa
Assists
- 190 – Tyus Jones, Duke
- 172 – Monte Morris, Iowa State
- 172 – Nic Moore, SMU
- 170 – Kevin Pangos, Gonzaga
- 169 – Delon Wright, Utah
- 166 – Bryce Alford, UCLA
- 159 – Drew Brandon, Eastern Washington
- 144 – Kavon Stewart, Robert Morris
- 130 – Nick Norton, UAB
- 128 – Tyler Kalinoski, Davidson
- 128 – Trey Pinkney, Stephen F Austin
- 124 – Mike Gesell, Iowa
- 123 – Dallas Moore, North Florida
- 121 – Thomas Walkup, Stephen F Austin
- 120 – Brian Sullivan, Davidson
Turnovers
- 91 – Rysheed Jordan, St John’s
- 88 – Georges Niang, Iowa State
- 87 – Marcquise Reed, Robert Morris
- 85 – Nic Moore, SMU
- 83 – Bryce Alford, UCLA
- 82 – Jahlil Okafor, Duke
- 82 – Kavon Stewart, Robert Morris
- 82 – Jalen Nesbitt, North Florida
- 81 – Winston Shepard, San Diego St
- 77 – Isaac Hamilton, UCLA
- 77 – Dallas Moore, North Florida
- 72 – Robert Brown, UAB
- 72 – Lucky Jones, Robert Morris
- 72 – Chris Davenport, North Florida
- 70 – Norman Powell, UCLA
Steals
- 66 – Delon Wright, Utah
- 64 – Norman Powell, UCLA
- 62 – Marcquise Reed, Robert Morris
- 61 – Sir’Dominic Pointer, St John’s
- 60 – Monte Morris, Iowa State
- 59 – Drew Brandon, Eastern Washington
- 57 – Jalen Nesbitt, North Florida
- 54 – Kavon Stewart, Robert Morris
- 51 – Rysheed Jordan, St John’s
- 49 – Tyus Jones, Duke
- 49 – JJ O’Brien, San Diego St
- 48 – D’Vauntes Smith-Rivera, Georgetown
- 46 – Nick Norton, UAB
- 45 – Kevin Pangos, Gonzaga
- 45 – Trey Pinkney, Stephen F. Austin
Blocks
- 94 – Chris Obekpa, St John’s
- 85 – Skylar Spencer, San Diego St
- 78 – Sir’Dominic Pointer, St John’s
- 67 – Venky Jois, Eastern Washington
- 64 – Tosin Mehinti, UAB
- 54 – Jakob Poeltl, Utah
- 54 – Jarrod Uthoff, Iowa
- 53 – Jameel McKay, Iowa State
- 53 – Demarcus Daniels, North Florida
- 50 – Gabriel Olaseni, Iowa
- 49 – Mikael Hopkins, Georgetown
- 49 – Tanner Clayton, Stephen F. Austin
- 48 – William Lee, UAB
- 45 – Chris Kading, North Dakota St
- 44 – Jahlil Okafor, Duke