Cnotes 2016 NCAA Basketball News-Trends-Picks !

Search

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Alford '100 percent' no on Indiana return
March 25, 2017



MEMPHIS -- Steve Alford is staying at UCLA, eschewing interest from Indiana some 30 years after he led the Hoosiers to a national championship under Bobby Knight.


"I'm absolutely, 100 percent, not going to Indiana," Alford said Friday night, moments after the Bruins lost 86-75 to Kentucky in the Sweet 16. "I am happy here. I love it here. We have a great recruiting class coming in and a brand-new practice facility. Obviously, I love my alma mater. But I'm committed to UCLA. I am not going to talk to Indiana. I am staying a Bruin."


National media termed the deal "done" as recently as Friday morning. CBS Sports radio host Doug Gottlieb and ESPN's Seth Greenberg separately reported that Alford was heading back to Bloomington and Bleacher Report detailed terms of the alleged contract agreement.


But Friday night, Alford said he's not even planning to interview at Indiana. The Hoosiers fired Tom Crean after nine seasons and said they were looking for "an Indiana guy," as a replacement.


Alford has a $7.8 million buyout at UCLA.


The commitment to the Bruins comes as a mild surprise considering the school renegotiated his contract to take away one full year, a matter that privately rankled Alford and his family.


Considering UCLA stands to lose the bulk of its playing rotation, including freshman sensation Lonzo Ball, TJ Leaf and Alford's senior son, Bryce, there is some rebuilding to do.


Crean was fired after Indiana missed the NCAA Tournament and then lost in the NIT, prematurely ending a season the Hoosiers began in the Top 25.


---------------------------


Jayhawks coach Bill Self has mellowed over the years
March 25, 2017



KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Kansas coach Bill Self has kicked out the signage on scorer's tables, tossed sweat-stained suit jackets and screamed so loudly at players and officials that his face turned beet red.


Good thing he's mellowed over the years.


These days, Self merely slams clipboards in frustration, yanks to loosen his tie and his face turns a bit scarlet when his temper starts to flare. It's a subtle change in demeanor, to be sure, but one that's noticeable to those who hang around his program on a daily basis.


''Since I've been here, I've definitely seen the changes,'' senior guard Frank Mason III said. ''I think he's mainly trusting us more and we can tell, and you know, he just wants us to compete.''


Self has always employed a tough-love approach to coaching, and he still rides his players just as hard as ever. But the sharp edges that he carried with him through Oral Roberts, Tulsa and Illinois have been filed off, and the bitterness he tasted after defeats has become easier to handle.


They once ate at him for weeks. Now, they might just keep him up a night.


Landen Lucas has seen the changes in his coach over the years, and he traced the watershed moment to the summer of 2015. The Jayhawks anchored the U.S. team for the World University Games in South Korea, and Self was the coach. And during that trip aboard, away from the constant pressure and almost unrealistic expectations that come with coaching at Kansas, Self revealed a different side of himself.


He was a bit more loose. A bit more fun. The bond between coach and players grew just a bit tighter, the trust in each other growing just a bit more. And it remains two years later, as the No. 1 seed Jayhawks prepare to face No. 3 seed Oregon on Saturday night for a spot in the Final Four.


''I think overseas was a time when, you know, it started a bit,'' Lucas said. ''Now this year, if we're playing hard and competing, he doesn't have to worry about getting on us about those things, which we've done so far in this tournament for the most part. It makes it easier when we can coach the other things and not have to worry about intangibles. This team has done pretty well with him.''


Of course, there have been times all that trust has been stretched to the limit.


There is still an ongoing rape investigation involving the men's basketball team's dormitory where five players are listed as witnesses. Devonte Graham and Carlton Bragg Jr. have had minor legal issues, and star freshman Josh Jackson served a one-game suspension for his own legal problems, including when he allegedly kicked in the taillight of a women's basketball player's car.


But the players aren't concerned they've lost Self's faith.


''Coach trusts and believes in us,'' guard Svi Mykhailiuk said, ''and lets us do our thing.''


Even Self is willing to admit he has toned things down over the years, the byproduct of age and experience. The highs are still plenty high, but the lows are no longer quite so devastating.


It has made him a better coach.


By extension, his Jayhawks are a better team.


''The biggest thing is to just go play. Don't play the game like there's - like you've got to win to go to the Final Four,'' Self said Friday, before taking the floor for practice. ''Play the game like you've got to go compete, because you have a chance to win a regional championship.


''Look in the moment,'' he said, ''and enjoy the moment.''
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Lonzo Ball says he's one and done at UCLA, headed to NBA
March 25, 2017



MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Star UCLA freshman Lonzo Ball says he's one and done at UCLA and headed to the next level.


The guard said Friday night after his team lost to Kentucky in the Sweet 16 that he is moving on from the college game.


''That was my final game for UCLA. I appreciate all the fans and all the support,'' Ball said in the UCLA locker room.


Ball was widely expected to declare for the NBA draft after this season. His father, LaVar Ball, has been especially vocal, declaring that the eldest of three hoops-playing brothers is better than NBA MVP Steph Curry.


Ball said he felt bad that he couldn't carry his team's seniors to another win in the NCAA Tournament. He says UCLA simply lost to a good team.


Ball was outdueled by Kentucky's De'Aaron Fox on Friday night, scoring just 10 points on 4-of-10 shooting. Fox scored 39 for the Wildcats.


UCLA coach Steve Alford indicated he wasn't surprised by Ball's decision, even saying he assumed it was the end of the freshman's college career.


''I probably don't like to assume anything, but he's pretty good,'' Alford said.


He noted that there is a different culture in college basketball than in his playing days at Indiana.


''Guys can make a good living sooner than what it was two decades ago, three decades ago,'' Alford said. ''We've had our share of some very good one-and-dones.''


**************************


SEC, yes the football power, has 3 teams in Elite 8
March 25, 2017



MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) The chant ''S-E-C'' so well known around football across the South is coming to the Elite Eight.


The league best known for winning national titles in football has the most teams still alive and playing for a trip to the Final Four. Kentucky and Florida have been joined by upstart South Carolina in the Gamecocks' first ever trip to a regional final.


''No,'' Kentucky coach John Calipari said sarcastically when asked about three SEC teams advancing. ''There are not three SEC teams in the Elite Eight. We're supposed to be a bad league. That's got to be all these other leagues, right?''


Nope. The SEC, which struggled to get three teams into the NCAA Tournament a year ago, now has two more teams playing on than any other league, including the Atlantic Coast Conference, which sent nine teams to the tournament.


Seventh-seeded South Carolina throttled third-seeded Baylor 70-50 in the first semifinal of the East Region in New York. Kentucky followed by knocking off No. 3 seed UCLA 86-75 in the South Region to set up a final with North Carolina on Sunday. The Tar Heels already were the only ACC team to reach the second weekend.


And back in New York, Florida needed overtime and a buzzer-beater by Chris Chiozza for a thrilling 84-83 win over Wisconsin to continue the SEC's postseason success.


De'Aaron Fox noted Florida blew the Kentucky Wildcats out in Gainesville and South Carolina was ranked when they played.


''I mean right now they're just showing them how strong our conference is,'' Fox said. ''Three teams in the Elite Eight. Man, that's tough to do. That's almost 50 percent of the field.''


The SEC currently is 10-2 with an 83.3 percent winning percentage that is the best so far of any league in this tournament, a number that will change Sunday with South Carolina and Florida facing off for a berth in the Final Four at Madison Square Garden. And yes, the SEC has been making sure people in the Big Apple know the league is in town with ads in case anyone is missing the action on the court.


SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey made sure he was at the Garden and enjoying those ''S-E-C!'' chants. The commissioner brought two ties with him to the arena. He wore garnet for South Carolina in the first semifinal, then changed to blue and orange for Florida in the nightcap.


Florida coach Mike White said the SEC is a conference known for football along with basketball, gymnastics and softball. But the Gators won the 2006 and 2007 national titles, and Florida is tied with North Carolina for the most Elite Eight berths since 2006 with seven. Kentucky is just behind with six.


White also believes the SEC has some momentum even with some negativity about the conference possibly underachieving over the last couple years.


''We know the potential and I think that our conference ... is full of good coaches, tremendous talent, a lot of young talent, recruiting classes continue to get stronger and stronger and we have three in the Elite 8,'' White said. ''And who knows, I mean, I think the SEC's going to be better next year, I really do. With the guys that are coming back, and again the young talent that will continue to grow within our league.'
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
SATURDAY, MARCH 25

GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS



XAV at GONZ 06:09 PM

GONZ -8.0


U 144.0

ORE at KU 08:49 PM


KU -6.5


O 157.0
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
2017 NCAA Tournament Results
March 26, 2017



NCAA TOURNAMENT BETTING RESULTS


Wager Favorites-Underdogs


Straight Up 45-17
Against the Spread 27-33-2


Total
Over-Under 38-23-1



First-Four Games
TUESDAY, MARCH 14

Matchup Score ATS Result
Mount St. Mary's (+1) vs. New Orleans 67-66 Underdog-Over (132)
Kansas State (-1) vs. Wake Forest 95-88 Favorite-Over (147)


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15
North Carolina Central vs. UC Davis (+3.5, ML +150) 67-63 Underdog-Under (131)
Providence vs. Southern California (-2) 75-71 Favorite-Over (141.5)


First Round - Thursday March 16
SESSION 1

Matchup Score ATS Result
Notre Dame (-6) vs. Princeton 60-58 Underdog-Under (133.5)
Virginia (-7.5) vs. UNC Wilmington 76-71 Underdog-Over (134.5)
Butler (-10.5) vs. Winthrop 76-64 Favorite-Under (145)
Gonzaga (-23.5) vs. South Dakota State 66-46 Underdog-Under (157)


SESSION 2
Matchup Score ATS Result
West Virginia (-13) vs. Bucknell 86-80 Underdog-Over (148.5)
Florida (-9.5) vs. East Tennessee State 80-65 Favorite-Under (148)
Minnesota vs. Middle Tennessee State (-1.5) 81-72 Favorite-Over (128)
Northwestern (+2, ML +115) vs. Vanderbilt 68-66 Underdog-Over (130)


SESSION 3
Matchup Score ATS Result
Maryland vs. Xavier (+2, ML +115) 76-65 Underdog-Under (142)
Mount St. Mary's vs. Villanova (-25) 76-56 Underdog-Over (131.5)
St. Mary's, CA (-4) vs. Virginia Commonwealth 85-77 Favorite-Over (128.5)
Purdue (-8) vs. Vermont 80-70 Favorite-Over (134.5)

SESSION 4

Matchup Score ATS Result
Florida State (-11) vs. Florida Gulf Coast 86-80 Underdog-Over (149.5)
Wisconsin (-6) vs. Virginia Tech 84-74 Favorite-Over (136)
Arizona (-18.5) vs. North Dakota 100-82 Underdog-Over (147)
Iowa State (-6) vs. Nevada 84-73 Favorite-Over (157.5)


First Round - Friday, March 17
SESSION 1

Matchup Score ATS Result
Michigan (-2.5) vs. Oklahoma State 92-91 Underdog-Over (155)
Baylor (-11.5) vs. New Mexico State 91-73 Favorite-Over (135)
Arkansas (+1, ML -105) vs. Seton Hall 77-71 Underdog-Over (147)
Oregon (-15) vs. Iona 93-77 Favorite-Over (156.5)


SESSION 2
Matchup Score ATS Result
Louisville (-18.5) vs. Jacksonville State 78-63 Underdog-Over (133)
Southern Methodist vs. USC (+7.5, ML +310) 66-65 Underdog-Under (142)
North Carolina (-26.5) vs. Texas Southern 103-64 Favorite-Over (157.5)
Creighton vs. Rhode Island (-2) 84-72 Favorite-Over (144.5)


SESSION 3
Matchup Score ATS Result
Kansas (-23) vs. UC Davis 100-62 Favorite-Over (144)
Dayton vs. Wichita State (-6.5) 64-58 Underdog-Under (144)
Duke (-19.5) vs. Troy 87-65 Favorite-Under (155.5)
Cincinnati (-3) vs. Kansas State 75-61 Favorite-Over (130)


SESSION 4
Matchup Score ATS Result
Miami-Florida vs. Michigan State (+2, ML +105) 78-58 Underdog-Over (127)
Kentucky (-20) vs. Northern Kentucky 79-70 Underdog-Under (155)
South Carolina (PK) vs. Marquette 93-73 Favorite-Over (143.5)
UCLA (-19.5) vs. Kent State 97-80 Underdog-Over (163.5)


Second Round
SATURDAY, MARCH 18

Matchup Score ATS Result
Notre Dame vs. West Virginia (+2.5, ML +130) 83-71 Underdog-Over (150)
Wisconsin (+5.5, ML +230) vs. Villanova 65-62 Underdog-Under (134)
Northwestern vs. Gonzaga (-10.5) 79-73 Undedog-Over (140.5)
Xavier (+7.5, ML +270) vs. Florida State 91-66 Underdog-Over (154)
Middle Tennessee State vs. Butler (-2.5) 74-65 Favorite-Push (139)
St. Mary's, CA vs. Arizona (-5) 69-60 Favorite-Under (137)
Virginia vs. Florida (-1.5) 65-39 Favorite-Under (126)
Iowa State vs. Purdue (-1) 80-76 Favorite-Over (154.5)


SUNDAY, MARCH 19
Matchup Score ATS Result

Arkansas vs. North Carolina (-11.5) 72-65 Underdog-Under (165.5)
Rhode Island vs. Oregon (-5) 75-72 Underdog-Over (144.5)
Michigan State vs. Kansas (-8) 90-70 Favorite-Over (149)
Michigan (+3, +140) vs. Louisville 73-69 Underdog-Under (142.5)
Southern California vs. Baylor (-5.5) 82-78 Underdog-Over (142)
South Carolina (+6.5, ML +280) vs. Duke 88-81 Underdog-Over (145.5)
Wichita State vs. Kentucky (-3.5) 65-62 Underdog-Under (149.5)
Cincinnati vs. UCLA (-4) 79-67 Favorite-Over (153.5)


Sweet Sixteen
THURSDAY, MARCH 23

Matchup Score ATS Result
Michigan vs. Oregon (+1, -105) 69-68 Underdog-Under (149)
West Virginia vs. Gonzaga (-3) 61-58 Push-Under (150.5)
Purdue vs. Kansas (-5.5) 98-66 Favorite-Over (155.5)
Xavier (+7.5, ML +350) vs. Arizona 73-71 Underdog-Under (145)


FRIDAY, MARCH 24
Matchup Score ATS Result
Butler vs. North Carolina (-7) 92-80 Favorite-Over (155)
South Carolina (+3, ML +140) vs. Baylor 70-50 Underdog-Under (135.5)
UCLA vs. Kentucky (+1.5, ML +105) 86-75 Favorite-Under (167.5)
Wisconsin vs. Florida (-1) 84-83 (OT) Push-Over (131)


Elite Eight
SATURDAY, MARCH 25

Matchup Score ATS Result
Gonzaga (-8.5) vs. Xavier 83-59 Favorite-Over (145.5)
Kansas vs. Oregon (+6.5, ML +290) 74-60 Underdog-Under (158)


SUNDAY, MARCH 26
Matchup Score ATS Result
South Carolina vs. Florida - -
Kentucky vs. North Carolina - -


Final Four & Championship
SATURDAY, APRIL 1 & MONDAY APRIL 3

Matchup Score ATS Result
TBA vs. TBA - -
TBA vs. TBA - -
TBA vs. TBA - -
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
2017 NIT, CBI, CIT Results
March 26, 2017



National Invitation Tournament (NIT)
REGION 1 - CALIFORNIA

Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 14 CSU Bakersfield (+6.5, ML+240) at California 73-66 Underdog-Over (125)
Mar. 14 College of Charleston at Colorado State (-4.5) 81-74 Favorite-Over (136)
Mar. 15 Texas-Arlington (+5.5, ML +220) at Brigham Young 105-89 Underdog-Over (166.5)
Mar. 15 Akron (+7.5, ML +300) at Houston 78-75 Underdog-Over (144)
Mar. 20 CSU Bakersfield (+4.5, ML +170) at Colorado State 81-63 Underdog-Over (135.5)
Mar. 20 Akron at Texas-Arlington (-5) 85-69 Favorite-Under (157)
Mar. 22 CSU Bakersfield (+4, ML +240) at Texas-Arlington 80-76 Underdog-Over (143.5)


REGION 2 - SYRACUSE
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 15 UNC Greensboro at Syracuse (-12) 90-77 Favorite-Over (146)
Mar. 14 Mississippi (+1) at Monmouth 91-83 Underdog-Over (167)
Mar. 14 Indiana at Georgia Tech (+2.5, +125 ML) 75-63 Underdog-Under (143)
Mar. 15 Belmont (+5, ML +180) at Georgia 78-69 Underdog-Under (147.5)
Mar. 18 Mississippi (+7.5, ML +290) at Syracuse 85-80 Underdog-Over (158.5)
Mar. 19 Belmont at Georgia Tech (-4) 71-57 Favorite-Under (138.5)
Mar. 21 Georgia Tech (+5.5, +220 ML) at Mississippi 74-66 Underdog-Under (144)


REGION 3 - ILLINOIS STATE
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 14 Boise State (+12, +575 ML) at Utah 73-68 Underdog-Under (156)
Mar. 14 Valparaiso at Illinois (-9) 82-57 Favorite-Over (138.5)
Mar. 15 UC Irvine at Illinois State (-10) 85-71 Favorite-Over (130.5)
Mar. 15 Colorado at UCF (-3.5) 79-74 Favorite-Over (139)
Mar. 20 Boise State at Illinois (-8.5) 71-56 Favorite-Under (145.5)
Mar. 20 UCF (+5.5, ML +190) at Illinois State 63-62 Underdog-Under (128)
Mar. 22 Illinois at UCF (-4) 68-58 Favorite-Under (130)

REGION 4 - IOWA

Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 14 Richmond (+8, +315 ML) at Alabama 71-64 Underdog-Under (139)
Mar. 14 Oakland (+10.5, +525 ML) at Clemson 74-69 Underdog-Under (157)
Mar. 15 South Dakota at Iowa (-11) 87-75 Favorite-Under (164)
Mar. 15 Fresno State at Texas Christian (-8.5) 66-59 Underdog-Under (145)
Mar. 19 Oakland at Richmond (-4.5) 87-83 Underdog-Over (159)
Mar. 19 Texas Christian (+3, ML +130) at Iowa 94-92 (OT) Underdog-Over (155)
Mar. 21 Richmond at Texas Christian (-8) 86-68 Favorite-Over (149)


SEMIFINALS & FINALS
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 28 Georgia Tech vs. CSU Bakersfield - -
Mar. 28 Texas Christian vs. UCF - -
Mar. 30 TBA vs. TBA - -


College Basketball Invitational (CBI)
FIRST ROUND

Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 15 Utah Valley (+4.5, ML +170) at Georgia Southern 74-49 Underdog-Under (156.5)
Mar. 15 Loyola-Maryland (+10, ML +450) at George Mason 73-58 Underdog-Under (141)
Mar. 15 Hampton at Coastal Carolina (-9) 83-67 Favorite-Over (145)
Mar. 15 Toledo at George Washington (-6) 73-69 Underdog-Under (146.5)
Mar. 16 Stony Brook at Illinois-Chicago (-2.5) 71-69 Favorite-Under (147)
Mar. 15 Green Bay at Missouri-Kansas City (+1.5, ML +110) 92-82 Underdog-Over (169)
Mar. 15 San Francisco at Rice (-1.5) 85-76 Favorite-Over (154.5)
Mar. 15 Eastern Washington at Wyoming (-4.5) 91-81 Favorite-OVer (163)


QUARTERFINALS AND SEMIFINALS
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 20 Loyola-Maryland at Coastal Carolina (-5.5) 72-63 Favorite-Under (141)
Mar. 20 George Washington at Illinois-Chicago (+6, ML +220) 80-71 Underdog-Over (149)
Mar. 20 Utah Valley (+4.5, ML +175) at Rice 85-79 Underdog-Over (162)
Mar. 20 Missouri-Kansas City at Wyoming (-9.5) 72-61 Favorite-Under (171.5)
Mar. 22 Illinois-Chicago at Coastal Carolina (-4.5) 89-79 Favorite-Over (153.5)
Mar. 22 Utah Valley at Wyoming (-4) 74-68 Favorite-Under (159.5)


FINALS (BEST-OF-THREE)
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 27 Wyoming at Coastal Carolina - -
Mar. 29 Coastal Carolina at Wyoming - -
Mar. 31 Wyoming at Coastal Carolina - -


CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT)
FIRST ROUND

Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 13 Norfolk State at Liberty (-7) 73-64 Favorite-Over (131)
Mar. 14 St. Francis, PA (+4, +165 ML) at Jacksonville 78-76 Underdog-Under (157.5)
Mar. 14 Houston Baptist at Campbell (+1.5, +105 ML) 98-79 Underdog-Over (150.5)
Mar. 14 Canisius at Samford (-3.5) 78-74 Favorite-Under (164)
Mar. 15 Ball State at IUPUI Fort Wayne (-4.5) 88-80 Favorite-Under (171)
Mar. 15 Fairfield at Maryland-Baltimore County (-3) 88-83 Favorite-Over (153)
Mar. 15 Georgia State at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (+3, ML +135) 80-64 Underdog-Under (146.5)
Mar. 15 Stephen F. Austin at Idaho (-4.5) 73-50 Favorite-Under (138.5)
Mar. 16 Lamar at Texas State (-9.5) 70-60 Favorite-Under (135.5)
Mar. 16 St. Peter's (+2, ML +110) at Albany 59-55 Underdog-Under (121.5)
Mar. 16 Furman (-6.5) at South Carolina-Upstate 79-57 Favorite-Under (148.5)
Mar. 16 UNC Asheville at Tennesse-Martin (+5, ML +180) 89-75 Underdog-Over (151)
Mar. 16 Weber State (+2.5, ML +120) at CS Fullerton 80-76 Underdog-Over (148)


SECOND ROUND AND QUARTERFINALS
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 18 St. Francis, PA at Maryland-Baltimore County (-6.5) 87-79 Favorite-Over (165)
Mar. 20 Tennessee Martin at Campbell (PK) 73-56 Favorite-Under (149)
Mar. 20 Samford at Liberty (-1.5) 66-58 Favorite-Under (140.5)
Mar. 20 Weber State at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi (-1.5) 82-73 Favorite-Over (150.5)
Mar. 22 Idaho at Texas State (-5) 64-55 Favorite-Under (131.5)
Mar. 25 Furman (-6) at Campbell 79-64 Favorite-Over (141)
Mar. 25 St. Peter's (+1) at Texas State 49-44 Underdog-Under (120)
Mar. 26 IUPUI-Fort Wayne at Texas A&M-Corpus Christi - -
Mar. 26 Liberty at Maryland-Baltimore County - -


SEMIFINALS & FINALS
Date Matchup Score ATS Result
Mar. 29 TBA at TBA - -
Mar. 29 TBA at TBA - -
Mar. 31 TBA at TBA - -
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
East Regional Final
March 25, 2017


East Regional Final
No. 4 Florida Gators (-3 ½) vs. No. 7 South Carolina Gamecocks (134½)


Venue: Madison Square Garden
Location: New York, New York
TV-Time: CBS, 2:20 p.m. ET



New York City -- Raise your hand if you had an All-SEC East Region finals at Madison Square Garden in New York City in your bracket? If your hand is up, now stop lying.


Whether or not anyone out there called this matchup ahead of a Villanova-Duke showdown (like I did), it will be fourth-seeded Florida and seventh-seeded South Carolina who will square off for the third time this season here at MSG on Sunday afternoon. The East Region finals will tip at 2:20 p.m. Eastern on CBS.


As of Saturday night, most betting shops had Florida (27-8 straight up, 19-13 against the spread) installed as a three-point favorite with a total of 134.5. The total opened at 132.5 points. The Gamecocks were +145 on the money line (risk $100 to win $145).


Florida won a thriller over Wisconsin 84-83 in overtime thanks to Chris Chiozza’s running 3-pointer at the buzzer. “For Chris to have the wherewithal to know that he can get all the way the length of the court in four seconds. He obviously utilized his speed and quickness and had tremendous composure, of course,” UF second-year head coach Mike White said.


“I just knew I had four seconds and I was trying to get down the court as fast as I could and if somebody was open I was going to pass it,” Chiozza said. “But I was really trying to get to the rim, but they did a good job of bumping me and slowing me down and that was the only shot I had, so I had to take that one.”


It was the second time UF won on a buzzer beater in the NCAA Tournament. The last time it was Mike Miller to beat Butler in the 2000 Tournament at Lawrence-Joel Coliseum. That Gator squad advanced to the final for the first time in school history before losing to Michigan St.’s ‘Flintstones’ team.


KeVaughn Allen likes the rims at MSG. The sophomore guard from Little Rock dropped 21 points on Duke at this venue in December, making 8-of-12 from the field and 3-of-5 launches from downtown. Allen made only 3-of-21 shots in Orlando last weekend, but the change of scenery served him well in Manhattan on Friday night. Allen erupted for a career-best 35 points, the most points ever scored by a Gator in Tourney history. He buried 11-of-24 looks from the field and 9-of-10 from the charity stripe.


Chiozza’s winning 3-ball gave him eight points to go with five assists, four rebounds and one steal. Kevarrius Hayes finished with eight points, seven boards, two blocks, one assist and one steal. Speaking of blocked shots, Canyon Barry had a crucial one with about 35 seconds left, chasing down a UW player who was ahead on a run-out with the Badgers leading by two. After Barry’s block, Chiozza shook a defender to break free for an easy layup to pull UF even.


However, back at the other end, UW’s Nigel Hayes was given an extremely kind whistle and sent to the line for a pair with four seconds remaining. Although Hayes went only 7-of-14 from the stripe for the game, including four misses in the extra session, he buried both like the senior stud he is. But Chiozza’s heroics moments later stole the show. UF blew a 12-point advantage with 5:23 remaining in regulation. Wisconsin senior point guard Bronson Koenig, who, like Hayes, produced so many big plays in 17 career NCAA Tournament games, came through again in the clutch, splashing the nets with a crucial trey to slice the deficit to 72-67 with 1:30 left.


An Ethan Happ layup on the next possession brought the Badgers within three with 44 ticks left. Next, Zak Showalter buried a running 3-pointer (very similar to the one Chiozza would make later) with 2.9 seconds remaining to force the extra session.


South Carolina (25-10 SU, 14-16 ATS) advanced to its first Elite Eight in program history by blasting Baylor 70-50 as a three-point underdog Friday night. Frank Martin’s squad roared out to a 37-22 halftime lead. Defense was the key in this game, as USC forced 16 turnovers, won the rebounding battle by a 37-29 margin and forced Baylor into a deplorable shooting night. The Bears made 17-of-56 (30.4%) shots from the field and only 3-of-13 from long distance (23.1%).


Sindarius Thornwell scored 24 points to go with six rebounds, two assists, two steals and a pair of blocked shots. For the Tournament, Thornwell is averaging 25.7 points, 7.7 rebounds, 3.0 assists, 2.0 steals and 1.3 blocked shots per game.


Chris Silva has also come up huge during USC’s improbable Tourney run in the fifth season of Frank Martin’s tenure. Silva had his minutes limited to 25 due to foul trouble, but he still managed 12 points, seven rebounds, two blocks and one steal. P.J. Dozier contributed 12 points, six boards, three assists and two steals, while Duane Notice added 11 points, five rebounds and four assists.


South Carolina advanced to the region semifinals with wins over Marquette (93-73) and Duke (88-81). The Gamecocks had slumped coming into the Tournament from mid-February, losing six of their last nine games, including double-digit losses at Florida and vs. Alabama at the SEC Tourney.


These SEC rivals split a pair of regular-season games with both home teams winning. The first matchup went down in Columbia, where Martin’s club captured a 57-53 victory as a two-point home favorite. The 110 combined points dropped ‘under’ the 135.5-point total.


UF led 28-21 at intermission, but the Gators finished the game missing all 17 of their 3-point attempts. Also, they were an abysmal 15-of-28 (53.6%) from the free-throw line.


Thornwell scored a game-high 20 points for the winners. Silva had 11 points, seven boards and two rejections. In the losing effort, Barry scored a team-best 13 points.


In the rematch at the O-Dome on Feb. 21, UF took a two-point lead into halftime, but the competitive contest didn’t stay that way for long in the final 20 minutes. Allen, who scored just one point in the first meeting at USC, scored 26 points and grabbed a career-high seven rebounds to lead the Gators to an 81-66 win as 7.5-point home ‘chalk.’ The 147 combined points jumped ‘over’ the 136.5-point tally.


Devin Robinson added 14 points, six rebounds, three blocks and two steals for the winners. Chiozza finished with 12 points, four assists and three boards, while Kasey Hill was also in double figures with 10 points.


Thornwell was outstanding in defeat, tallying 23 points, 10 rebounds, three steals and two assists without a turnover. Notice added 16 points.


This is UF’s 10th appearance in the Elite Eight and the fifth in the last seven seasons. The Gators now own a 42-15 record in 18 NCAA Tourney appearances.


USC is ranked eighth in the nation in defending the 3-point line (29.9%), 14th in FG percentage defense (39.8%) and 30th in scoring defense (64.8 PPG).


Despite three consecutive covers, USC is still just 4-9 ATS in its last 13 contests.


The ‘under’ is 18-15-1 overall for the Gators, although a 3-0 ‘under’ streak was ended Friday vs. Wisconsin.


The ‘under’ is 18-13-1 overall for USC, going 4-2-1 in its last seven games.


The UF-USC winner will face Gonzaga in the national semifinals next Saturday.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
South Regional Final
March 26, 2017


South Regional Final No. 1 North Carolina Tar Heels (-2 ½) vs. No. 2 Kentucky Wildcats (159 ½)


Venue: FedEx Forum
Location: Memphis, Tennessee
TV-Time: CBS, 5:05 p.m. ET



In a year when many surprising guests have invaded the Elite Eight, there’s nothing shocking about the schools that’ll square off Sunday in the South Region finals at FedEx Forum in Memphis. That would be North Carolina and Kentucky.


UK is in its 57th NCAA Tournament and is looking to make its 18th Final Four appearance. Meanwhile, UNC is in its 48th Tourney, hoping to go to its 20th Final Four.


As of late Saturday night, most books had North Carolina installed as a 2.5-point favorite with the total in the 159-160 range. The Wildcats were available on the money line for a +125 return (risk $100 to win $125).


These storied programs have only met three times in the NCAA Tournament, but all three of those encounters have come in this same situation – a region final. In 1977, the Tar Heels won a 79-72 decision. Then in 1995, UNC sent UK packing again on its way to another Final Four. But in 2011, the ‘Cats captured a 76-69 victory.


Kentucky (32-5 straight up, 19-17 against the spread) avenged a December home loss to UCLA by beating the Bruins 86-75 as a 1.5-point underdog. The 161 combined points fell ‘under’ the 167-point total. De’Aaron Fox exploded for a career-high 39 points, but it was the defense that was the difference against the nation’s top-scoring offense.


UCLA still shot at a 52.7 percent clip from the field, but the Bruins committed 13 turnovers compared to only six for the ‘Cats. Steve Alford’s team made only 8-of-13 attempts at the free-throw line.


Fox hit 13-of-20 shots from the field and 13-of-15 tries from the charity stripe. The freshman point guard who is expected to be a one-and-done lottery pick in the 2017 NBA Draft also had two steals, three rebounds and four assists compared to just one turnover.


Malik Monk went for 21 points, nailing 4-of-9 launches from 3-point range. Dominique Hawkins came off the bench to score 11 points, draining 3-of-4 from downtown, in only 17 minutes of playing time.


North Carolina (30-7 SU, 19-15 ATS) has been a single-digit favorite 16 times this year, cashing tickets at a 9-6-1 ATS clip. The Tar Heels advanced to the South Region finals thanks to Friday’s 92-80 win over Butler as seven-point ‘chalk.’ The 172 combined points sailed ‘over’ the 155-point total.


Roy Williams, who was coaching in the Sweet 16 for the 18th time in his career, saw his team race out to a 52-36 halftime lead. Luke Maye, a sophomore forward, already had a career-high 14 points at intermission. He would finish with his first double-double (16 points, 12 rebounds).


Unlike Arkansas, which battled back from a 17-point first-half deficit to put UNC on the ropes with a five-point lead at the three-minute mark last Sunday, Butler had no comeback in it Friday. Joel Berry II shook off his ankle woes to score a game-high 26 points. Justin Jackson added 24 points, five rebounds and five assists compared to merely one turnover.


John Calipari’s club has been an underdog twice this year, winning outright against UCLA on Friday and losing by 22 at Florida. Speaking of that loss at UF, UK hasn’t tasted defeat since then, winning 14 in a row.


This will be a rematch of a Dec. 17 matchup at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, where UK won by a 103-100 count as a one-point favorite. The 203 combined points soared ‘over’ the 171-point tally.


Monk went off for a career-high 47 points on amazing 8-of-12 shooting from 3-point land. Fox scored 24 points, grabbed four rebounds, made two steals and dished out 10 assists compared to two turnovers. Edrice Adebayo added 13 points and seven boards, but he was limited to 19 minutes of action before fouling out. Isaiah Briscoe was also in double figures with 10 points, seven boards and four assists with only one turnover.


Jackson scored 34 points to go with five rebounds and three assists without a turnover. Berry scored 23 points, dished out seven assists and grabbed five boards. However, Berry fouled out like Kennedy Meeks, who was only able to log 20 minutes of playing time. Meeks had 12 points and seven rebounds.


UK is ranked 10th in the nation in scoring, averaging 85.2 PPG. The ‘Cats are 15th in the country at defending the 3-point line, holding foes to 30.8 percent.


The ‘under’ is on an 11-2 run for UK to improve to 20-17 overall.


The ‘under’ is 20-14-1 overall for UNC, but the ‘over’ is 3-1 in its last four outings.


The winner will face Oregon in the national semifinals. The Ducks are in the Final Four for the first time since 1939.


Tip-off on CBS is scheduled for 5:05 p.m. Eastern.


**B.E.’s Bonus Nuggets**


-- Kentucky is 3-9-1 ATS in its last 13 head-to-head meetings against UNC.


-- Indiana hired Dayton’s Archie Miller as is its next head coach to replace Tom Crean after an up-and-down nine-year tenure. Crean was fired more than a week ago. Miller has enjoyed outstanding success with the Flyers after a stellar playing career at North Carolina St. Miller is the younger brother of Arizona head coach Sean Miller. This is a great hire for the Hoosiers, who haven’t won a national title since 1987.


-- With Miller out at Dayton, I would expect the school to go after a couple of big names. If those attempts fail, the Flyers can do a lot worse than going with Miller’s long-time assistant Tom Ostrom, who got his start at Florida during Billy Donovan’s iconic tenure. Ostrom went to Dayton after serving as John Pelphrey’s top assistant at Arkansas. He was critical in the recruitment of both Mike Miller and Joakim Noah.


-- How about that performance from Oregon last night? Damn! The Ducks took Kansas behind the woodshed in its own backyard, capturing a 74-60 victory as 6.5-point underdogs at Sprint Center in Kansas City. Tyler Dorsey’s remarkable play of late continued, as he dominated the game with 27 points on 9-of-13 shooting from the field, including 6 makes on 10 shots from long distance. Jordan Bell was incredible as well, producing 11 points, 13 rebounds, four assists and eight blocked shots.


-- The other region final Saturday saw Gonzaga advance to its first Final Four in program history. Mark Few’s team cruised to an 83-59 win over 11th-seeded Xavier, which was trying to become the third No. 11 seed to get to the national semifinals (VCU and LSU were the others). The ‘Zags easily took the money as 8.5-point ‘chalk.’ Nigel Williams-Goss stole the show with 23 points, eight rebounds, two steals and four assists without a turnover. Johnathan Williams added 19 points, eight boards and three rejections.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Rematches to decide last two spots
March 26, 2017



The most entertaining college basketball game of the regular season came in December.


Malik Monk set a record for a Kentucky freshman with 47 points, including a go-ahead 3-pointer taken against his coach's wishes, to lift the Wildcats to a 103-100 win over North Carolina.


Are these two ready for an encore?


Of course they are - though it's a valid argument to say this rematch might be better suited for next weekend in the Final Four than Sunday in the Elite Eight.


''I remember watching them play and I'm thinking, `Please don't put them in our bracket,''' Kentucky coach John Calipari said. ''And there they are in our bracket.''


Indeed, the South bracket in which Kentucky and Carolina reside was pegged as the toughest on Selection Sunday. The top four seeds made it to the Sweet 16, and the Wildcats and Tar Heels moved within a game of the Final Four with double-digit wins.


North Carolina is a 2 1/2-point favorite in Sunday's game, which will fill out a Final Four that already includes Gonzaga and Oregon, both of which won Saturday. The first meeting between the Heels and Cats - the late half of a made-for-TV doubleheader in Las Vegas three months ago - now feels like a distant memory.


''I don't think we're freshmen anymore,'' Monk said. ''You can't use that term anymore because it's in the tournament now. Nobody looks at that.''


Kentucky trailed 100-98 and Calipari was imploring his young freshman to drive the ball to the hoop in transition. Instead, he pulled up and made the 3 to put the Wildcats ahead for good with 16 seconds left.


''Heck of a college basketball game if you don't care who won,'' Carolina coach Roy Williams said afterward. ''But I do care who wins.''


If North Carolina turns the tables, it will give the Tar Heels a return trip to the Final Four after their heartbreaking loss to Villanova in the final last year - on a buzzer-beating 3 by Kris Jenkins. It will also mark a festive send-off for Justin Jackson, who leads Carolina with 18.2 points a game and is expected to call this, his junior year, his last in college.


Kentucky's list of probable one-and-doners includes Monk, Bam Adebayo and De'Aaron Fox.


''I'm not worried about that,'' Fox said. ''We're still playing basketball, so I'm not thinking about leaving. If things go as planned, we still have three games left, so that's not in my mind right now.''


SPEAKING OF REMATCHES: Sunday's first game pits familiar foes in an unexpected setting. Florida and South Carolina of the Southeastern Conference will meet at Madison Square Garden for a trip to the Final Four.


''We're playing a team we know,'' said coach Frank Martin, who has led the Gamecocks further through the NCAA bracket than they have ever been. ''We're not playing the moment. We're not playing a building. We're not playing the NCAA Tournament. We're playing the Florida Gators. And our focus should be playing a team that we have played twice.''


In many ways, it was the first meeting - a 57-53 South Carolina win on Jan. 18 - that set the stage for where both teams are today.


The Gators failed to sink a 3-pointer for the first time in 850 games - a streak that began in 1992 and lasted the entire Billy Donovan era. Another loss, three days later, prompted a two-hour team meeting that triggered a nine-game winning streak, including the rematch with the Gamecocks.


But South Carolina's win over Florida also announced the Gamecocks as a force. It was their third win over a Top 25 team this season, and when it was over, senior Sindarius Thornwell said this: ''Before the game, I was saying these are the games you prepare for in your backyard growing up.''


They certainly are. And this next one, too.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Indiana hires Archie Miller as new coach
March 25, 2017



Fred Glass wanted to hire a proven winner for Indiana's next coach. The athletic director didn't have to wait long - or travel far to find what he was looking for.


On Saturday, less than 24 hours after UCLA coach Steve Alford pulled his name out of the sweepstakes, Glass announced he had hired Archie Miller from Dayton. Miller replaces Tom Crean, who was fired March 16 after missing the NCAA Tournament five times in nine seasons.


''Archie Miller was on my short list from the very beginning,'' Glass said in a statement. ''The more I learned about him, the more convinced I became that he is the coach we need to meet our high expectations for many years to come.''


Miller will be introduced at a Monday afternoon news conference.


The 38-year-old Miller comes from a basketball family and put together a solid track record in six seasons with the Flyers - earning a school-record four straight NCAA Tourney bids, winning 24 games in each of those seasons and claiming the last two Atlantic 10 regular-season titles.


Miller's older brother, Sean, coaches at perennial powerhouse Arizona, and the younger Miller is considered one of the brightest young coaches in America.


''IU is one of the greatest basketball programs and academic institutions in the country and I cannot wait to get started,'' Miller said. ''With peerless fan support, outstanding facilities and tradition, a beautiful campus, and located in one of the most fertile recruiting areas in the country, IU is a dream destination for me and my family.''


Miller's teams are known for their disciplined, hard-nosed play. Glass also dubbed Miller a tireless recruiter in the Midwest and a ''noted developer of talent.''


Indiana fans wanted all of those features in their new coach - as expect postseason success, too.


Alford, a former Indiana star, might have been a candidate for the job, but he reiterated Friday night that he wanted to remain at UCLA.


The move comes at an opportune time for Miller. The Flyers are losing at least five players from the school's incredible four-year run.


''We did everything we could to keep Archie at UD, but now our sole focus turns to continuing to build the quality of our nationally competitive program,'' athletic director Neil Sullivan said in a statement.


Before taking the Dayton job in 2011, Miller worked as an assistant for his brother at Arizona and as an assistant under Thad Matta ta Ohio State. He also has been an assistant at Arizona State, North Carolina State, his alma mater, and Western Kentucky. And he worked on the staff with USA Basketball's under-19 team, which won the FIBA world championship gold medal in 2015.


Miller's father, John, coached in high school.


Sean, Archie and Lisa Miller all played Division I basketball, and now it's the youngest of the three children who finds himself leading a program that has won five national championships.


''I cannot wait to connect with former players, current players, and future players and all of Hoosier Nation,'' Miller said. ''I want to thank all of the great people and players at the University of Dayton who have supported me along the way. I look forward to outlining my vision for IU basketball.''


Miller is 139-63 in his career.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Armadillo: Sunday's six-pack


Odds to win this year’s World Series:


19-5— Chicago Cubs


7-1— Cleveland Indians, Los Angeles Dodgers


8-1— Boston Red Sox


12-1— Houston Astros, New York Mets, Washington Nationals


14-1— San Francisco Giants


30-1— Detroit, Bronx, Seattle, St Louis, Texas, Toronto


**********


Armadillo: Sunday's List of 13: Wrapping up a sports Saturday……..

13) Gonzaga 83, Xavier 59— Would be a fun night to be in Spokane, with Gonzaga making the Final Four for the first time. Clock struck midnight for Xavier, which went further than they should have, considering their point guard last played on January 29. Gonzaga made 12-24 on the arc, and when the favorite makes their 3’s, they often win big.


This is first time since 2002 a double digit seed made regional finals and didn’t cover the spread; they’re now 3-3 SU, 5-1 vs spread in last six tries.


12) Oregon 74, Kansas 60— Wherever Bill Walton watched this game, he had to be gushing; the Ducks were up 11 at the half- they made 11-25 on the arc, Kansas was 5-25. Jordan Bell blocked eight shots, was dominant inside. Jayhawks played only six guys (a 7th guy played 4:00)- this was the fewest points they scored in a game all season.


Must be fun to play for Oregon; tons of free sneakers when your #1 booster is Phil Knight.


11) It bothers me to type this because the guy is one of the best coaches ever, but Bill Self is now 2-7 in Elite 8 games; he’s been a #1-seed in the tournament seven times, and made the Final Four once in those seven years. He’s also won the Big X regular season 13 years in a row, which no other coach has ever done in any league, not even John Wooden.


When you don’t win the national championship there will always be naysayers, and Kansas has won “only” one national title under Self, but for the love of God, Kansas is lucky to have him.


10) Devin Booker scored 70 points Friday night in the Suns’ loss in Boston, their 7th loss in a row and first of the seven losses where they even covered the spread. They’re a very young NBA team that is obviously looking forward to the season ending.


After the game, the team took a pic in the locker room, celebrating Booker’s 70-point night, which is one of the best scoring nights in NBA history, but did all the players have to look so damn happy? Does winning/losing even matter? They’re all young, they’re all rich- I’m just wondering what veteran NBA people think about all that. The pic just didn’t look right. Winning and losing should always matter.


9) I’m curious when NBA scouts are watching a game like Kentucky-UCLA Friday night, and De’Aaron Fox scores 36, how much (if at all) does that one game move the needle as far as their opinion of that player, or the players they were playing against?


8) Indiana hired Dayton’s Archie Miller as its new basketball coach; looks like the AD is trying really hard to distance the Hoosiers from their past, if he didn’t hire Steve Alford, who is beloved in Indiana. Reality is that Alford isn’t as good a coach as Archie Miller.


7) Michael Porter Jr makes the expected move and signs with Missouri, because they hired his father as an assistant coach. My questions are these:


When Michael Jr jumps to the NBA after next season, does Michael Sr get to keep his job?
Why sign with Cuonzo Martin? He had an NBA player in Leon Rabb this year and didn’t make the NCAA’s; he had Rabb and Jaylen Brown last year and lost to Hawai’i in the first round- what makes you think he is the best guy to coach your son?


6) Rough couple of days on the Las Vegas Strip; some genius robbed a jewelry store at Bellagio last night; he actually parked in the parking garage and was nabbed. Then Saturday, there was a shooting on a bus. Get the nonsense out of your system— I’ll be out there soon!!!


5) Minnesota Timberwolves have lost nine games this year that they led by 15+ points, the most in the NBA this season.


4) Apparently TV networks are now in the race to sign Tony Romo, who if he keeps this up much longer might become a candidate for the 2020 Presidential race- everyone seems to want the guy, but not enough to trade a draft pick for him.


3) When ESPN broadcast a Gonzaga game this season, ESPN’s Jay Bilas told Gonzaga big man Przemek Karnowski that he would grow a beard if the Zags made the Final Four, so now he has to grow a beard. Hopefully during next season, not during the summer, when he isn’t on TV.


2) Foul or defend? When your team is up 3 in last 0:15 of a game, this is a genuine gray area of coaching. Some of the best coaches in the country differ on this- there is no right answer.


People say Florida messed up when they didn’t foul Wisconsin when they were up 3 Friday- the Badgers hit a 3-pointer, sent the game to OT, but Florida won, so how did they mess up? Not everyone believes fouling there is the correct play.


What if you foul, and they miss the free throw and get the rebound? It has happened. If you believe in fouling, it has to be practiced. I’ll be very curious to see what Florida does in these situations next season.


There used to be a guy on Twitter, Steve Finamore, a high school coach in Michigan, who tracked as many of these situations as he could. Reaction was mixed on what proper strategy is.


1— One of my favorite parts of Saturday’s regional finals? Mark Few and Dana Altman were the winning coaches; neither one of them played Division I college basketball. Playing and coaching are different things that require different skills. Non-players can be excellent coaches.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
NCAAB
Dunkel


Sunday, March 26



IPFW @ TX-Corpus Christi


Game 727-728
March 26, 2017 @ 3:00 pm


Dunkel Rating:
IPFW
53.377
TX-Corpus Christi
56.705
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
TX-Corpus Christi
by 3 1/2
165
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
IPFW
by 1 1/2
161 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
TX-Corpus Christi
(+1 1/2); Over


Liberty @ MD-Baltimore Co



Game 725-726
March 26, 2017 @ 2:00 pm


Dunkel Rating:
Liberty
45.678
MD-Baltimore Co
53.326
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
MD-Baltimore Co
by 7 1/2
150
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
MD-Baltimore Co
by 3
145 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
MD-Baltimore Co
(-3); Over


Kentucky @ North Carolina



Game 723-724
March 26, 2017 @ 5:00 pm


Dunkel Rating:
Kentucky
70.574
North Carolina
75.783
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
North Carolina
by 5
154
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
North Carolina
by 2 1/2
159 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
North Carolina
(-2 1/2); Under


South Carolina @ Florida



Game 721-722
March 26, 2017 @ 2:20 pm


Dunkel Rating:
South Carolina
73.667
Florida
74.345
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Florida
by 1
130
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
Florida
by 3 1/2
134 1/2
Dunkel Pick:
South Carolina
(+3 1/2); Under









NCAAB
Long Sheet


Sunday, March 26



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


S CAROLINA (25 - 10) vs. FLORIDA (27 - 8) - 3/26/2017, 2:20 PM
Top Trends for this game.
FLORIDA is 19-8 ATS (+10.2 Units) as a favorite this season.
FLORIDA is 75-47 ATS (+23.3 Units) in all tournament games since 1997.
S CAROLINA is 16-7 ATS (+8.3 Units) after a non-conference game over the last 2 seasons.
S CAROLINA is 40-23 ATS (+14.7 Units) in road games versus good offensive teams - scoring 77+ points/game after 15+ games since 1997.

Head-to-Head Series History
FLORIDA is 2-2 against the spread versus S CAROLINA over the last 3 seasons
FLORIDA is 2-2 straight up against S CAROLINA over the last 3 seasons
2 of 4 games in this series have gone OVER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

KENTUCKY (32 - 5) vs. N CAROLINA (30 - 7) - 3/26/2017, 5:05 PM
Top Trends for this game.
N CAROLINA is 293-240 ATS (+29.0 Units) as a favorite since 1997.
N CAROLINA is 15-6 ATS (+8.4 Units) in road games in March games over the last 3 seasons.
N CAROLINA is 165-130 ATS (+22.0 Units) in non-conference games since 1997.
N CAROLINA is 8-0 ATS (+8.0 Units) after allowing 80 points or more this season.
KENTUCKY is 86-59 ATS (+21.1 Units) in March games since 1997.

Head-to-Head Series History
KENTUCKY is 2-0 against the spread versus N CAROLINA over the last 3 seasons
KENTUCKY is 2-0 straight up against N CAROLINA over the last 3 seasons
2 of 2 games in this series have gone OVER THE TOTAL over the last 3 seasons

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LIBERTY (21 - 13) at MD-BALT COUNTY (20 - 12) - 3/26/2017, 2:00 PM
There are no Top Trends with records of significance that apply to this game.

Head-to-Head Series History
There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

IUPU-FT WAYNE (20 - 12) at TEXAS A&M CC (22 - 11) - 3/26/2017, 3:00 PM
Top Trends for this game.
IUPU-FT WAYNE is 2-11 ATS (-10.1 Units) in road games this season.
IUPU-FT WAYNE is 2-11 ATS (-10.1 Units) in road lined games this season.
IUPU-FT WAYNE is 0-6 ATS (-6.6 Units) in road games after allowing 80 points or more this season.
IUPU-FT WAYNE is 6-13 ATS (-8.3 Units) after scoring 80 points or more this season.
IUPU-FT WAYNE is 0-6 ATS (-6.6 Units) in road games when playing against a team with a winning record this season.
IUPU-FT WAYNE is 19-9 ATS (+9.1 Units) in non-conference games over the last 3 seasons.

Head-to-Head Series History
There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------






NCAAB
Armadillo's Write-Up


Sunday, March 26



In last 30 years, there have been four regional finals with 4-seed vs 7-seed- they’ve all come since ’05, with underdogs covering three of four- Michigan State was only favorite to cover, but they needed OT to do it. Last four years, underdogs are 10-6 vs spread in all regional finals. Home side won both South Carolina-Florida games this season; Gamecocks beat Florida 57-53 Jan 18 (Gators were 0-17 on arc), then lost rematch 81-66 Feb 21 (Florida was 9-19 on arc). South Carolina held Baylor to 0.76 pts/possession Friday; their two senior stars were only guys to play more than 29:00. Florida played four starters 32:00+ in its wild win late Friday night.


Malik Monk scored 47 points in Kentucky’s 103-100 win over North Carolina in Las Vegas back in December; Wildcats outscored UNC 8-2 over last 1:37 of game- they made 10-18 on arc for the game. Tar Heels made 9-17 on arc in game they trailed by 12 in first half. Calipari is 4-1 in regional finals at Kentucky, beating Carolina in this round in ’11. Tar Heels won nine of last 11 games, Kentucky won its last 14 games- their last loss was Feb 4. Both teams won fairly easily Friday night; Wildcats played four guys 32:00+. UNC played had a stress-free game vs Butler. Underdogs covered four of last five regional finals that featured a 1-seed and a 2-seed.


Sunday’s extra basketball tournaments
UMBC finished 5th in America East, the #26 league; they’re #159 experience team playing #53 pace. Retrievers are 11-4 out of conference- they scored 88-87 points in first two tourney games; they’ve been off for eight days. UMBC made 25-59 on arc (42.4%) in last two games. Liberty finished 3rd in Big South, the #27 league; Flames are #294 experience team playing pace #342- they won 14 of last 18 games, but lost last two true road games, at Winthrop/NC-Asheville. Liberty’s last game was on Monday.


Fort Wayne upset Indiana in November, was 14-4 at one point, then went 6-8 rest of the way. Mastodons are #94 experience team playing pace #35— they’re 9-3 out of conference, but haven’t played in 11 days, when they beat Ball State at home. A&M-Corpus Christi lost its conference title game in OT; Islanders won 13 of last 15 games after starting season 9-9- they’re 4-4 in D-I games outside Southland. Corpus Christi is 1-3 vs teams in top 150, with only win over Georgia State 11 days ago. Islanders are #127 experience team playing #155 pace.








NCAAB


Sunday, March 26



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trend Report
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


2:20 PM
SOUTH CAROLINA vs. FLORIDA
No trends available
The total has gone UNDER in 5 of Florida's last 7 games
Florida is 13-3 SU in its last 16 games

5:05 PM
KENTUCKY vs. NORTH CAROLINA
No trends available
The total has gone OVER in 4 of North Carolina's last 6 games
North Carolina is 5-1 SU in its last 6 games
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
NCAAB


Sunday, March 26



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight betting preview and odds: South Carolina vs Florida
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


The Gamecocks and Gators split their regualr season meetings, with each team winning and covering on their home court. The rubber match has the Gators -3 with a Final Four spot on the line.


South Carolina Gamecocks vs Florida Gators (-3, 134.5)

Game to be played at Madison Square Garden, New York, New York


The third time really will be the charm for SEC rivals South Carolina and Florida, who split their regular-season series and meet in a rubber match Sunday afternoon in the NCAA Tournament East Region at Madison Square Garden with a spot in the Final Four on the line. To say the teams took different paths from the Sweet 16 to the Elite Eight would be an understatement.


Seventh-seeded South Carolina used an 18-0 first half run to back another strong defensive performance, forcing 16 turnovers while holding Baylor to 30.4 percent shooting to grind out a surprisingly lopsided 70-50 upset of the third-seeded Bears on Friday. "We've been doing it all season," senior guard Sindarius Thornwell, the SEC Player of the Year, said after scoring a game-high 24 points and grabbing six rebounds. "Now, y'all gave us the stage to do it, and we're just showcasing what we've been doing all season." Fourth-seeded Florida advanced with a dramatic 84-83 overtime victory over No. 8 seed Wisconsin, winning on junior guard Chris Chiozza's buzzer-beating 3-pointer five minutes after guard Zak Showalter capped a late 12-point Badgers comeback with a dramatic leaping, one-legged 3-pointer of his own to force overtime. "I don't know how it happened, I just know it went in,"Chiozza said. "Now, we have another game to play."

TV:
2:20 p.m. ET, CBS

LINE HISTORY:
The Gators opened up as 3.5-point chalk over the Gamecocks and by Saturday night that number was down half point to an even 3. The total hit the board at 134.5 and has yet to move off that number.

ABOUT SOUTH CAROLINA:
Despite garnering SEC Player of the Year honors, the 6-5, 211-pound Thornwell was still somewhat under the radar on a national level before the NCAA Tournament but made the most of the big stage, averaging 25.7 points, 7.7 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 2.0 steals per game while also connecting on 10-of-22 3-pointers. "He's had an unbelievable year," Gamecocks coach Frank Martin said adding, "I'm happy he's getting the recognition he deserves." Sophomore guard PJ Dozier (13.7 per game this season), senior guard Duane Notice (10.3) and 6-9 sophomore forward Chris Silva (10.1) join Thornwell (21.4) in averaging double figures for the Gamecocks, who try to advance to the Final Four for the first time.

ABOUT FLORIDA (27-8):
Chiozza, who finished with eight points, five assists and four rebounds, will be remembered for his dramatic game-winner but it was the play of sophomore guard KeVaughn Allen that carried the Gators for most of the game. Allen, who leads the team in scoring (14.1), finished with 35 points against Wisconsin, a school record for an NCAA Tournament game. Senior guard Canyon Barry (11.6), son of NBA Hall of Famer Rick Barry, and junior forward Devin Robinson (11.3) also average in double-digits for the Gators, who managed to adjust after losing top rebounder John Egbunu (7.8 points, 6.6 boards) to a torn left ACL in a Feb. 14 victory at Auburn.

TRENDS:



* Gamecocks are 1-9 ATS in their last 10 vs. Southeastern.
* Gators are 6-1-1 ATS in their last 8 neutral site games as a favorite.
* Under is 10-2 in Gamecocks last 12 neutral site games as an underdog.
* Under is 4-1 in Gators last 5 NCAA Tournament games.
* Favorite is 4-1 ATS in the last 5 meetings.

CONSENSUS:
Fifty-six percent of picks of are siding with the underdog Gamecocks, while Under is picking up 54 percent of the totals wagers.




------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




NCAAB


Sunday, March 26



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight betting preview and odds: Kentucky vs North Carolina
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


Two of the country's most storied programs meet in the South Region final when Kentucky takes on UNC for a spot in the Final Four.


Kentucky Wildcats vs North Carolina Tar Heels (-2.5, 158)


Game to be played at FedExForum, Memphis, Tennessee


Two of the most successful programs in college basketball history meet Sunday in the NCAA Tournament Elite Eight at FedEx Forum in Memphis, Tenn., and the South Region game between top-seeded North Carolina and No. 2 seed Kentucky also serves as a rematch of one of the best games this season. The Wildcats beat North Carolina 103-100 on Dec. 17 in a one-day showcase in Las Vegas as Malik Monk scored 47 points, a freshman record at Kentucky, hitting the go-ahead 3-pointer with 16.7 seconds left.


Both teams faced challenging roads to this point - especially Kentucky, which beat third-seeded UCLA in the Sweet Sixteen 86-75 on Friday night, getting 39 points from freshman guard De'Aaron Fox and some redemption after the Bruins went to Kentucky and beat the top-ranked Wildcats earlier this season. Kentucky also won games by single digits over Northern Kentucky and Wichita State in the first two rounds of the tournament, so the Wildcats should be prepared for a close battle against North Carolina. The Tar Heels beat fourth-seeded Butler 92-80 in the Sweet Sixteen and their two leading scorers, Justin Jackson and Joel Berry II, came through with big games, scoring 24 and 26 points, respectively. Kentucky is well aware of the duo as Jackson, a 6-8 junior forward, scored a career-high 34 points against the Wildcats in December, and Berry, a 6-foot junior guard, scored 23.

TV:
5:05 p.m. ET, CBS

LINE HISTORY:
The Tar Heels opened as 2.5-point chalk over the Wildcats and that line has held firm in the first few hours. As for the total, it hit the betting board at 158 and like the spread hasn’t moved off the opening number.

ABOUT KENTUCKY:
The Tar Heels start four forwards that measure 6-6, 6-8, 6-9 and 6-10, so the Wildcats need to counter that with their superior guard play. Kentucky still needs strong performances in the middle from 6-10 freshman forward Bam Adebayo and 6-9 senior forward Derek Willis, their only two starters down low. They didn't hold up well against UCLA's size, combining for 10 points and 12 rebounds, and the Wildcats didn't receive any help up front off the bench.

ABOUT NORTH CAROLINA:
Like many of the high school All-Americans who sign with North Carolina, Kennedy Meeks wasn't expected to stick around for four years, but the senior forward made the decision to keep coming back and might be the biggest difference-maker in this game. Meeks is not only 6-10, but weighs 260 pounds and should be able muscle his way loose down low against the Wildcats. He played only 20 minutes before fouling out in the earlier meeting against Kentucky, but still scored 12 points and grabbed seven rebounds, numbers that figure to improve if he can stay on the court.

TRENDS:



* Wildcats are 4-0 ATS in their last 4 NCAA Tournament games as an underdog.
* Under is 7-0 in Wildcats last 7 games vs. a team with a winning % above .600.
* Under is 13-3 in Wildcats last 16 games following a straight up win.
* Under is 6-1 in Tar Heels last 7 games following a ATS win.
* Favorite is 4-1 ATS in the last 5 meetings.

CONSENSUS:
Fifty-six percent of users are taking the chalk with the Tar Heels and the Over is picking up 70 percent of the totals wage
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
SUNDAY, MARCH 26


GAME TIME(ET) PICK UNITS


LIB at UMBC 02:00 PM


UMBC -3.5


U 145.5


SCAR at FLA 02:20 PM


SCAR +3.0


U 136.5


IPFW at AMCC 03:00 PM


IPFW -2.0


O 161.5


UK at UNC 05:05 PM


UK +2.5


U 160.5
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Monday’s six-pack


Odds to win National League MVP this season:


5-2– Kris Bryant


7-2– Bryce Harper


4-1– Nolan Arenado


6-1– Corey Seager


10-1– Giancarlo Stanton, Yoenis Cespedes


12-1– Anthony Rizzo


**********************

Monday’s List go 13: Wrapping up a sports weekend…….



13) South Carolina 77, Florida 70— Before last weekend, South Carolina’s last win in NCAA tournament was in 1973. They have some basketball tradition: Alex English, John Roche, Mike Dunleavy Sr played there, Frank Maguire coached there, but not a lot of winning.


Until this month. Now the Gamecocks are headed to the Final Four. Congrats.


12) Gamecocks are first team since VCU in 2011 to get to the Final Four without being favored in any of their first four tournament games.- VCU had to win a play-in game, so they weren’t favored in any of their first five tournament games. South Carolina was pick ‘em in their first round game with Marquette last weekend.


11) South Carolina coach Frank Martin was once both a high school teacher and a bouncer in a nightclub; imagine him getting mad at some drunk guy and tossing him out the door?


10) North Carolina 75, Kentucky 73— Mailk Monk scored 47 against Carolina in December, out in Las Vegas; he had nine points here. This was a terrific ballgame that would’ve made a great national title game. Tough push if you had the Tar Heels -2.


9) What do you think of Chris Webber as a TV analyst? He talks more X’s and O’s than most analysts (good), he is passionate about the game (good) but he doesn’t seem to like anyone except players (not good).


Referees are competing to advance in the tournament too; I’m guessing Webber knows this, but doesn’t seem to care (not good). Coaches get fired if they lose; I mean, Bill Self is taking grief today- Webber definitely doesn’t seem to care about that (bad). I think he is mostly good; if only he would stop yelling when guys dunk— it is two points. Relax.


8) Odd coincidence that going into Saturday, Xavier/Gonzaga were tied with 27 tournament wins, most of any school that had never been in a Final Four. Now Xavier owns that unfortunate mark, with Boston College in second with 22 wins.


7) Not often the SEC wins more NCAA tournament games than bowl games. SEC is 8-3 in NCAA tournament games this year; they were 6-7 in bowl games.


6) I’m guessing the Mets have already been informed, but it hasn’t been made public how long Jeurys Familia’s suspension for domestic violence will be. He is their closer, so they would need to know to plan contingency plans.


5) Since 2006, Saints/Seahawks have drafted only two QB’s each, least in NFL.


4) This is the fifth year in a row a team seeded 7th or lower made the Final Four:
2016— Syracuse, a 10-seed lost to UNC in semi-finals
2015— Michigan State, a 7-seed, lost to Duke in semi-finals
2014— UConn, a 7-seed, beat Kentucky, an 8-seed, for the national title
2013— Wichita State, a 9-seed, lost to Louisville in semi-finals


3) This is only second time since 2009 that two or more 1-seeds made the Final Four— three of them made it in 2015, two made it this year.


2) Of the 18,797,085 brackets on ESPN.com‘s contest, only 657 had North Carolina, Oregon, Gonzaga and South Carolina in the Final Four.


1— Gonzaga is a 6.5-point favorite over South Carolina Saturday in Arizona. North Carolina is a 5-point favorite over Oregon in the nightcap.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
NCAAB
Dunkel


Monday, March 27




Wyoming @ Coastal Carolina


Game 743-744
March 27, 2017 @ 7:30 pm


Dunkel Rating:
Wyoming
56.766
Coastal Carolina
53.227
Dunkel Team:
Dunkel Line:
Dunkel Total:
Wyoming
by 3 1/2
148
Vegas Team:
Vegas Line:
Vegas Total:
Wyoming
by 1
154
Dunkel Pick:
Wyoming
(-1); Under









NCAAB
Long Sheet


Monday, March 27



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


WYOMING (21 - 14) at COASTAL CAROLINA (19 - 17) - 3/27/2017, 7:30 PM
Top Trends for this game.
WYOMING is 22-11 ATS (+9.9 Units) in all games this season.
WYOMING is 22-11 ATS (+9.9 Units) in all lined games this season.
WYOMING is 13-5 ATS (+7.5 Units) as a favorite this season.
WYOMING is 11-3 ATS (+7.7 Units) after a non-conference game this season.
WYOMING is 11-3 ATS (+7.7 Units) in non-conference games this season.
WYOMING is 15-5 ATS (+9.5 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record this season.
WYOMING is 11-3 ATS (+7.7 Units) when playing against a team with a winning record after 15 or more games this season.

Head-to-Head Series History
There were no past matchups in this series during this time period.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------





NCAAB
Armadillo's Write-Up


Monday, March 27



Long road trip from Wyoming to Coastal Carolina; this is a best-of-3 series that resumes in Laramie Wednesday. Wyoming is 11-3 outside Mountain West; they beat Troy State of Sun Belt 72-66 in Laramie Dec 19. Cowboys won four of last five games overall but lost last three true road games- their last true road win was Feb 4 at Air Force. Coastal Carolina is 6-8 outside the Sun Belt; they’ve won last four games overall. Chanticleers are ##117 experience team that plays pace #135. Wyoming is #138 experience team that plays pace #14.








NCAAB


Monday, March 27



------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trend Report
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


8:30 PM
WYOMING vs. COASTAL CAROLINA
The total has gone OVER in 4 of Wyoming's last 5 games on the road
Wyoming is 1-5 SU in its last 6 games on the road
No trends available
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Final Four lines hit the board and early betting action causes adjustments


North Carolina is back in the Final Four for the second straight year, getting there with a thrilling victory Sunday in the South Region final.


We’ve got a fascinating Final Four on tap, with one blueblood and a whole lot of new blood. Patrick Everson checks on the opening lines for Saturday’s national semifinals, with insights from Jeff Stoneback, sportsbook manager at The Mirage on the Las Vegas Strip, and Scott Cooley, odds consultant for offshore sportsbook Bookmaker.eu.


No. 7 South Carolina Gamecocks vs. No. 1 Gonzaga Bulldogs (-6.5)


For all the years Gonzaga has been in the NCAA Tournament, often as a high seed, this will mark its first trip to the Final Four. The Bulldogs (36-1 SU, 23-9-2 ATS) have a nearly perfect record on the floor, and for much of the season were the best team against the oddsmakers. The Zags rate No. 2 now, cashing more than 71 percent of the time.


Mark Few’s squad had tough second- and third-round games, fending off No. 8 seed Northwestern and No. 4 seed West Virginia. But the Zags had no such issues with tourney upstart and No. 11 seed Xavier in the Elite Eight, pummeling the Musketeers 83-59 as an 8.5-point favorite Saturday.


South Carolina is also making its first trip to the Final Four, and a surprising one at that, when one looks at how Frank Martin’s team entered the tournament. The Gamecocks (26-10 SU, 15-16-2 ATS) went 2-5 SU and 1-6 ATS in seven games prior to the NCAAs, but have caught fire the last week and a half.


South Carolina drubbed No. 10 Marquette by 20 in the tourney opener, then upset No. 2 seed Duke 88-81 as a 6.5-point underdog. Another 20-point win followed in the Sweet 16, over No. 3 Baylor, and the Gamecocks sealed their trip to Glendale, Ariz., by outlasting SEC rival and fourth-seeded Florida 77-70 as a 3-point ‘dog in the East Region final Sunday.


Bookmaker.eu opened the Zags -7 but quickly dropped that number to 6.5.


“We’ve seen early action on the Gamecocks,” Cooley said. “We've received a handful of limit bets from smart players. We could see South Carolina closing at +6 or less.”


Offshore books moving to 6.5 made it natural for The Mirage and MGM Resorts sportsbooks to open Gonzaga -6.5.


“That was basically the number out there, and that’s what we hung,” Stoneback said of the line for Saturday’s first semifinal, which tips at 6:09 p.m. ET. “South Carolina-Gonzaga is obviously not gonna be the marquee matchup, but as a basketball fan, I think it’s a really good matchup. We’ll see how Gonzaga handles a red-hot South Carolina team.”




No. 3 Oregon Ducks vs. No. 1 North Carolina Tar Heels (-4.5)


North Carolina is back in the Final Four for the second straight year, getting there with a thrilling victory Sunday in the South Region final. The Tar Heels (30-7 SU, 19-15-2 ATS) went back-and-forth with No. 2 seed Kentucky over the last few minutes, but got the dagger bucket in the last second to notch a 75-73 win and push as a 2-point favorite.


Carolina reached the national championship game last year, where it had a similar back-and-forth with Villanova as the Heels lost on a last-second 3-pointer, 77-74 giving 2 points.


Oregon played in the very first Final Four, in 1939, and ended up winning it all. But the Ducks hadn’t been back since then before breaking through this year. Oregon (33-5 SU, 21-15-1 ATS) lost 6-foot-10 forward Chris Boucher (11.8 ppg, 6.1 rpg) during the Pac-12 tournament, but recovered quite well in winning the Midwest Region.


Dana Altman’s troops had a couple tight victories in the second and third rounds, rallying to beat No. 11 seed Rhode Island and hanging on against No. 7 Michigan. But in Saturday’s regional final against No. 1 seed Kansas, Oregon rolled to a 74-60 upset catching 6.5 points.


Cooley said this second semifinal, with an 8:49 ET start Saturday night, also received some limit bets early on from sharp bettors. And the total was already on the move, after opening at 148.5.


“The over is seeing respected money, and we've moved that up 1.5 points to 150,” Cooley said.


The Mirage opened North Carolina at -5.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Final Four Openers
March 26, 2017



The 2017 NCAA Tournament started with 68 schools and after two weeks, the field is down to four. This year’s final quartet will feature three schools making the Final Four for the first time since the tournament expanded.


Also, it will have an East Coast vs. West Coast feel as Gonzaga and Oregon will look to knock off South Carolina and North Carolina respectively.


The University of Phoenix Stadium at Phoenix, Arizona will host the semifinals on Saturday Apr. 1 with the winners meeting in the championship game on Monday Apr. 3.


Listed below is the latest future numbers from the Westgate Las Vegas Super Book, plus the odds on each school when they opening in April of 2016 and their pre-tournament odds.


ODDS TO WIN NCAA 2017 NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP


(Seed) School Opening Odds (4/5/16) Pre-Tournament Odds (3/12/17) Final Four Odds (3/26/17)


(1) Gonzaga 80/1 10/1 7/5
(1) North Carolina 15/1 6/1 8/5
(3) Oregon 20/1 25/1 4/1
(7) South Carolina 200/1 200/1 8/1


NCAA Championship Game History | Final Four History


No. 1 Gonzaga vs. No. 7 South Carolina


Opening Odds: Gonzaga -6.5, Total 138



Gonzaga
Bid: Automatic
Conference: WCC
SU Record: 35-1
ATS Record: 23-9-2
O/U Record: 15-16


South Carolina
Bid: At-Large
Conference: SEC
SU Record: 26-10
ATS Record: 15-17-1
O/U Record: 14-17-1


How They Got Here


Gonzaga
Defeated No. 16 South Dakota State Jackrabbits 66-46 (Bulldogs -23.5, Total 157)
Defeated No. 8 Northwestern Wildcats 79-73 (Bulldogs -10.5, Total 140.5)
Defeated No. 4 West Virginia Mountaineers 61-58 (Bulldogs -3, Total 150)
Defeated No. 11 Xavier Musketeers 83-59 (Bulldogs -8.5, Total 145.5)


South Carolina
Defeated No. 10 Marquette Golden Eagles 93-73 (Pick 'em, Total 143.5)
Defeated No. 2 Duke Blue Devils 88-81 (Gamecocks +6.5, Total 145.5)
Defeated No. 3 Baylor Bears 70-50 (Gamecocks +3, Total 135.5)
Defeated No. 4 Florida Gators 77-70 (Gamecocks +3, total 136)

Betting Notes - Gonzaga


-- Gonzaga has gone 2-1-1 ATS in the NCAA Tournament


-- The 'under' is 3-1 in the four games for the Bulldogs


-- The Bulldogs have only allowed 59 points per game


-- Northwestern was the only school to score more than 40 points in a half against Gonzaga through the first four games


Betting Notes - South Carolina


-- South Carolina has gone 4-0 ATS in the NCAA Tournament


-- The Gamecoks have watched the 'over' go 3-1


-- South Carolina trailed at halftime in three of the first games of the tourney


-- The Gamecocks have outscored their first four opponents by a combined 52 points in the second-half


No. 1 North Carolina vs. No. 3 Oregon


Opening Odds: North Carolina -5, 149.5



North Carolina
Bid: At-Large
Conference: ACC
SU Record: 31-7
ATS Record: 18-16-3
O/U Record: 13-23-1


Oregon
Bid: At-Large
Conference: Pac-12
SU Record: 33-5
ATS Record: 22-15
O/U Record: 17-18


How They Got Here


Oregon
Defeated No. 14 Iona Gaels 93-77 (Ducks -15.5, Total 157)
Defeated No. 11 Rhode Island Rams 75-72 (Ducks -5, Total 144.5)
Defeated No. 7 Michigan Wolverines 69-68 (Pick 'em, Total 148)
Defeated No. 1 Kansas Jayhawks 74-60 (Ducks +6.5, Total 158)


North Carolina
Defeated No. 16 Texas Southern Tigers 103-64 (Tar Heels -26.5, Total 157)
Defeated No. 8 Arkansas Razorbacks 72-65 (Tar Heels -11.5, 165.5)
Defeated No. 4 Butler Bulldogs 92-80 (Tar Heels -7, Total 155)
Defeated No. 2 Kentucky Wildcats 75-73 (Tar Heels -2, Total 161)


Betting Notes - Oregon


-- Oregon has gone 3-1 ATS in the NCAA Tournament


-- The 'over/under' has produced a 2-2 mark during this event


-- The Ducks have held double-digit leads in three of their four games


-- Oregon has only allowed 32 PPG in the second-half of the tourney, with Iona (40) having the most success


-- The Ducks have scored more points in the first-half in all four of their wins


-- Oregon hasn't had a very productive effort at the free throw line, hitting 64.7 percent (46-of-71)


Betting Notes - North Carolina


-- North Carolina has gone 2-1-1 ATS in the NCAA Tournament


-- The 'over/under' has produced a 2-2 mark during this event


-- The Tar Heels have built halftime leads in their four games


-- UNC only surrendered 32.5 in the first-half of those games
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
TIPPING OFF: Final Four welcomes trio of 1st-time coaches
March 27, 2017
By The Associated Press



RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) Frank Martin never got caught up in wins and losses, the highs and the lows, as he worked to build South Carolina into a contender for conference championships.


Gonzaga's Mark Few dismissed questions of whether his Bulldogs would be a failure as long as they failed to get to a Final Four after so many great regular seasons. And Oregon's Dana Altman focused on turning one deep NCAA Tournament run into something more.


Whatever their differences in personality, playing style and approach, that trio now shares something in common after all that work: each is headed to his first Final Four. It's the first time since 2006 that the Final Four will feature three first-time coaches there.


''Anyone that's in sports dreams of moments like this,'' Martin said after Sunday's win against Florida in the NCAA Tournament's East Region final. ''It's not something that you start dreaming it the year you win 25 games. You dream it every single day.''


South Carolina and North Carolina both won regional finals Sunday, sending them to Phoenix along with Gonzaga and Oregon after their wins a day earlier.


This is nothing new for the Tar Heels and Hall of Fame coach Roy Williams, who is in his fifth Final Four with UNC and ninth overall dating to his time with Kansas. For everyone else, this is a breakthrough moment.


Gonzaga (36-1), the West's No. 1 seed, had been to five Sweet 16s and one Elite Eight under Few before this season. This time, the Zags eked past Northwestern and West Virginia before routing Xavier in the regional final.


''I've been there 28 years. My first year on staff we won four Division I games,'' Few said Saturday of his time as an assistant. ''And I mean this wasn't even possible. And each year we got better and better, and then we got really, really good. ... And our culture is just so strong. And this was a culture win and a culture statement and (I) couldn't be prouder.''


Oregon (33-5), the No. 3 seed in the Midwest, secured the program's first trip to the national semifinals since the 1939 ''Tall Firs'' won the first NCAA Tournament. Altman, in his seventh year, led the Ducks to last year's Elite Eight before falling to Oklahoma but came back to beat top-seeded Kansas in Kansas City, Missouri, to secure the program's first Final Four since that '39 title.


Then there's Martin, whose seventh-seeded Gamecocks (26-10) upset East No. 2 Duke - the preseason No. 1-ranked team - and No. 3 seed Baylor before Sunday's win against Florida in New York. Martin had coached in a regional final at Kansas State in 2010.


And with Gonzaga facing South Carolina in the first semifinal, at least one of the newcomers will coach for a national championship on the final night of the season.


Here are things to know after the regional rounds and entering the Final Four:


THE SCHEDULE:
Gonzaga and South Carolina will be Saturday's first semifinal, tipping off at 6:09 p.m. EDT. Oregon and UNC will tip off roughly 40 minutes after the conclusion of that game.


RECORD HAUL: UNC, the South Region's No. 1 seed, earned a record 20th Final Four berth on Luke Maye's last-second shot to beat Kentucky 75-73 in Memphis, Tennessee. That also sent UNC (31-7) back to the national semifinals a year after losing to Villanova on a last-second 3-pointer in the title game - which formed the basis of a season-long rallying cry to get back and try again.


UNFAMILIAR FOES: The semifinalists haven't met often. Gonzaga and South Carolina have never played. Meanwhile, UNC and Oregon have played four times, with the Tar Heels winning all four - the last coming in the 2008 Maui Invitational.


CONFERENCE BREAKDOWN: The Southeastern Conference fell short in its bid for multiple Final Four teams after getting three to the Elite Eight. Now four conferences each have one team: the SEC (South Carolina), the West Coast (Gonzaga), the Pac-12 (Oregon) and the Atlantic Coast (North Carolina).


The SEC has the most wins of any league (11-4) in this year's field of 68, followed closely by the Pac-12 (10-3).
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
South Carolina: The surprise of the Final Four
March 27, 2017
By The Associated Press



NEW YORK (AP) Gonzaga is in its first Final Four but the Zags had knocked on the door a few times. South Carolina, meanwhile, enters its first Final Four having never been close to this deep a run.


The Gamecocks reached their first national semifinals the same season they reached their first Sweet 16, coming in as the seventh seed from the East.


South Carolina guard Duane Notice said his team's run is no surprise.


''Everybody's always picking against us,'' Notice said Sunday after his team beat fourth-seeded Florida 77-70 at Madison Square Garden. ''We're focused as a team, we're focused on the next game ahead every time. The way we play defense, you can put any school - big or small - against us.''


They were a slight favorite against Marquette in the opening round but were a decided underdog against second-seeded Duke in the round of 32.


That was the first of three games where the Gamecocks, who will face Gonzaga in the Final Four, showed their mettle.


''We're not going to settle for this and we still feel, like, we got one more game,'' regional MVP Sindarius Thornwell said with one of the nets draped around his neck. ''We're still going into that game thinking we can win. Why not? Why not us? Why not go win it all?''


If Thornwell keeps playing like the SEC player of the year as voted by the coaches, anything might be possible. He is averaging 25.8 points in the tournament and he has come up with every big play the Gamecocks have needed as they have rallied from three halftime deficits during their run.


''That's why we're sitting here right now, because they don't pay attention to that nonsense,'' coach Frank Martin said of the non-believers. ''They believe in each other. They're completely invested into each other. Not winning. Each other, which then allows you to win. And they're powerful kids, man, powerful kids.''


They have been powerful enough to take South Carolina to its first Final Four. And then we'll see what happens.


''These last two weeks, when we got our name in, (Martin) said we been listening to him all season and don't stop now because we got our name on the board,'' Thornwell said. ''So when he said that, we all locked in and didn't listen to any outsiders, didn't listen to anybody else but Coach.


'' We trusted in him in everything,'' Thornwell said. ''We had this thing where don't let go of the rope, no matter what happens, no matter the outcome of anything, don't let go of that rope.
 

Active member
Joined
Sep 26, 2005
Messages
105,948
Tokens
Heels have experience edge at Final Four
March 26, 2017
By The Associated Press



PHOENIX (AP) Consider North Carolina the tour guide at this year's Final Four. The Tar Heels will be making their record 20th trip, and most of the players on this year's roster were on hand last season to find out all about the agony of coming oh-so close to winning it all.


For the rest of the guests, it's all uncharted territory.


Gonzaga finally parlayed two decades of excellence into its first trip to college basketball's showcase.


South Carolina's entire history in the NCAA Tournament could've been compiled on a cocktail napkin.


And Oregon? Well, the Ducks have been to the tournament before and won it all. But that was back in 1939, the first year of the event, and decades before the phrase ''Final Four'' became as common as ''dribble,'' ''pass,'' or ''shoot.''


''It's been a long time coming,'' said Oregon coach Dana Altman, the 10th man to hold that job since Howard Hobson, who doubled as the school's baseball coach, led the title team called the Tall Firs eight decades ago. ''Now we just need to go and continue to play well.''


Gonzaga opened as a 6 1/2-point favorite against South Carolina in the opening game next Saturday night at University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. According to ESPN Stats & Info, it's the first meeting between Final Four first-timers since 1973. In the second game, North Carolina opened as a 4 1/2-point pick over Oregon.


For South Carolina - coached by the equal-parts angry and effervescent Frank Martin - being an underdog at this point is a good thing. It means there's still a chance, which is something Gamecocks basketball never really had before Martin arrived. Before this season, South Carolina hadn't posted a win in the NCAA Tournament since 1973.


''Personally, I didn't know where this program could go,'' Gamecocks sophomore P.J. Dozier said after his team's 77-70 win over Florida. ''But I know that when Frank Martin stepped foot on campus, you just got this vibe that the ball was rolling.''


It's been rolling at Gonzaga since Mark Few took over in 1999. Problem is, there was seemingly always a bigger team from a bigger conference standing in the way of that program - from a campus of 7,400 in Spokane, Washington - taking the final step. Last year, the Bulldogs lost a 3-point heartbreaker to Syracuse in the Sweet 16. Seeded second the year before, Gonzaga couldn't hang with No. 1 Duke and lost by 14 in the Elite Eight.


Led by tenacious guards Nigel Williams-Goss and Josh Perkins and 7-foot-1 center Przemek Karnowski, the Bulldogs broke through big time this year, beating Xavier 83-59 on Saturday night.


''I've been there 28 years,'' Few said, counting his first nine seasons as an assistant. ''My first year on staff we won four Division I games. And, I mean, this wasn't even possible. And each year we got better and better, and then we got really, really good.''


North Carolina has been good for decades, and has more than enough history to make up for the other teams. Luke Maye made the winning jumper with 0.3 seconds left for a 75-73 victory over Kentucky. This will be the Tar Heels' fifth trip to the Final Four under the guidance of coach Roy Williams, and their second straight.


They have spent the last year seeing their nightmare finish to the 2016 tournament replayed on an endless loop of highlight shows and March Madness videos. Villanova's Kris Jenkins hit a shot at the buzzer in the title game, only seconds after Tar Heels guard Marcus Paige made a double-clutch 3 to tie it.


''I just think about it all the time,'' said Joel Berry II, one of three current Tar Heels who were on the floor when Jenkins hit the game-winning shot. ''Four seconds made a difference in my life. I wish I could get those 4 seconds back, but I can't.''
 

Forum statistics

Threads
1,119,877
Messages
13,574,593
Members
100,879
Latest member
am_sports
The RX is the sports betting industry's leading information portal for bonuses, picks, and sportsbook reviews. Find the best deals offered by a sportsbook in your state and browse our free picks section.FacebookTwitterInstagramContact Usforum@therx.com