Friday, March 19, 2010

Big East Blues

The Big East Conference holds many of college basketball's powerhouse teams. Syracuse, Georgetown, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, Villanova, Louisville, Marquette, and West Virginia were all selected to this year's NCAA tournament. Literally, half of the conference is in the tournament, and that's without traditional power UConn. There's been debate the last few years on whether or not the Big East or the ACC (Atlantic Coast Conference) is the better conference. After day one of March Madness, the ACC is looking good while three Big East teams made an early exit, and a fourth nearly joined them.

Georgetown's Chris Wright. Photo courtesy the Washington Post.

The biggest surprise of the day was third-seeded Georgetown losing to fourteenth-seeded Ohio, 97-83. The pundits who like to call upsets never saw this one coming. For Georgetown to lose to a team that had a losing conference record and by 14 points is the very definition of March Madness. Ohio led by as much as 19 and face sixth-seeded Tennessee Saturday afternoon.

In college basketball the last few years, there's been an inherent East Coast bias, partially because there weren't as many teams out West that had the "quality" of the Eastern clubs. So it was a pleasant surprise to see the Washington Huskies beat the Marquette Golden Eagles narrowly on a Quincy Pondexter jumper. Few basketball pundits were calling for the upset here. Not bad for the 11th-seeded Pac-10 tournament champs. They'll face the third-seeded New Mexico Lobos Saturday evening.

Photo courtesy of The State (S.C.).

Villanova was a Final Four candidate for some going into the tournament. No one gave 15th-seeded Robert Morris a chance. While Villanova did go on to win 73-70, it was in overtime. Robert Morris players played the game of their lives to bring a tournament power to the brink of elimination. As for 'Nova, it was a close call in part due to the disciplining of Scottie Reynolds and Corey Fisher and this narrow win could serve as a catalyst for a deep run in the tournament.

The third Big East team to fall was Notre Dame to Old Dominion, 51-50. The fact that the Irish lost wasn't the surprise, many pundits had this game pegged for an upset, but rather that Notre Dame's star senior forward Luke Harangody only scored four points in 23 minutes. Certainly not the way Harangody wanted his last game in an Irish uniform to go. Old Dominion next takes on Baylor Saturday evening in a game that could be even more of an uphill battle for Dominion, since Baylor is a three-seed.

As for the ACC, their turn to dance is today. Wake Forest won their matchup yesterday against Texas in an overtime upset but fellow ACC teams Duke, Maryland, Florida State, Clemson, and Georgia Tech play their first-round games today.

Other notable scores on Day 1 of March Madness:

6 Tennessee def. 11 San Diego State, 62-59
5 Butler def. 12 UTEP, 77-59 (many had this game pegged for an upset)
13 Murray St. def. 4 Vanderbilt, 66-65 (buzzer-beater upset special)
10 St. Mary's def. 7 Richmond, 80-71
7 BYU def. 10 Florida, 99-92 (Billy Donovan shown the door)

2 comments:

  1. Oh stop it. You and the whole nation are calling out the Big East for losing a couple games. Isn't that what March Madness is all about? Teams like Robert Morris and Ohio giving it all they've got for a once in a lifetime shot in the big dance? What about the other Big East teams that rolled to easy victories? Oh yeah, you don't give them credit. They were supposed to win! The Big East consistently had a strangle hold on the top 25 and therefore college basketball in general this season. Louisbille losing was not even an upset because they were a 9 seed palying an 8. And the 6-11 matchups between ND and ODU and Washington-Marquette are not really that much of an upset either. I'll give you Georgetown didn't play so well. But come on. You know more than anyone that when you're built up as this strong team/conference, everyone is gunning for you and gets up to play against you. There are still 5 Big East teams remaining, two of which were top 5 most of the season and may have been there longer if they didn't have to fight each other. The Big East consistently is a powerhouse in college basketball. Give em a break for losing a couple games here and there after a brutal regular season and conference tournament!

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  2. If it's any consolation, I had West Virginia winning the title in my bracket. So I can't say I'm bagging on the Big East. Having said that, I do find it interesting that so many people were singing the Big East's praises during the season (while bashing the Pac 10 and other western conferences) then having those western conferences perform well in the tournament (Washington and St. Mary's in particular, since both won against Big East clubs). If someone were to ask me what the best conference was in the country, I'd still say Big East, despite its recent hiccups in the tourney.

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