Predicting many future events in one large analysis

Feel free to jump to the conference of your choice by clicking on one of the links below:

 

ACC
Big 12
Big East
Big Ten
Pac-10
SEC
Mid-Majors

 

With the first games that count coming up on Monday night, I figured I’d get my predictions in for all the major conferences and a few select mid-majors. Here are the conference-by-conference predictions with projected league record and postseason fate. It’ll be another four-plus months before I find out how wrong I am — sooner than that with some teams. Though I don’t officially make Final Four and Sweet 16 picks, you can infer them from the seedings.

 

ACC

 

Duke (predicted conference record 11-5; possessions returned — 63.8 percent*): There are concerns at point guard, but they were there last year as well, and while Jon Scheyer isn’t a natural at the position, he’s good enough to get by considering his talent and that of those surrounding him. The loss of Elliott Williams does hurt, but the combination of Scheyer and Kyle Singler plus emerging youngsters should keep Duke at or near the top of the ACC. NCAA No. 2 seed. Read More »


Midwest: Louisville Invitational, brackets are bogus

Let me start off my first regional preview with a preface.

 

I’m not big into brackets. People always ask me who my Final Four is and who I have going far and what upsets I picked and when I’m going to come out with my bracket. And I understand why — this is the point at which the casual or non-fan relates to college basketball.

 

But I find that, when I am really into my brackets, I start rooting for teams I don’t like.

 

“Hey, Brendon, why are you rooting for Ohio State to beat Xavier? Wouldn’t that be a great upset?”

 

“Oh, it would — it’s true, and I would normally prefer Xavier, but I have OSU in the national final in my bracket.”

 

Aaargh!

 

No longer. I will pick a bracket and not get too attached to it. I will continue to root for the teams I want to root for and not worry about whether my bracket is ruined — and not get annoyed when people ask me how bracket is doing, as if it’s a newborn baby or a 401K. Read More »


WVU answers some questions, not others in win over Irish

NEW YORK — Before the tip of West Virginia’s second-round matchup with Notre Dame at the Big East Tournament on Wednesday night, I had three questions I wanted answered. First, could Notre Dame keep West Virginia and its length off the offensive boards? Second, what kind of performance would the Mountaineers get from freshman Devin Ebanks in his hometown? Third, was West Virginia’s point-guard play, — or at least its offensive initiation — good enough to compete with the Big East’s and nation’s best over the next few weeks? Read More »