Monday, October 16, 2017
AP Exclusive: Corruption probe prompts reviews of NCAA teams
Associated Press
The spate of arrests, details of under-the-table bribes to teenagers and the expected downfall of one of the sport's best-known coaches has triggered uncomfortable soul-searching among the institutions at the heart of college basketball, including internal reviews by more than two dozen schools of their own prominent programs.
At stake is the future of a business that, over the span of 22 years ending in 2032, will produce $19.6 billion in TV money for the NCAA Tournament, known to the public, simply, as March Madness.
The NCAA distributes those billions to its conferences and universities, and that figure doesn't include the millions splashed around by shoe companies, who play an outsized role in the success of the programs and the careers of some of their top players.
More than two dozen universities with major hoops programs — including Louisville, where Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino is in the process of being fired after 16 seasons — have responded to news of the sport's bribery scandal by conducting internal reviews of their compliance operations.
The Associated Press asked 84 schools, including all the nation's power programs, and six top conferences about their response to the arrests that upended college hoops mere days before practices for the 2017-18 season began around the country.
Of 63 schools that responded, 28 said the probe prompted their own internal reviews. So did the Pac-12 Conference, which formed a task force to dive into the culture and issues of recruiting.
Among the schools reviewing their programs are Arizona, Auburn, Oklahoma State and Southern California; each had assistant coaches arrested as part of the sting.
The list also includes Alabama, where a review led to the resignation of basketball administrator Kobie Baker but unearthed no NCAA violations, according to school officials.
A representative from one school, St. Johns, told AP the NCAA directed all Division I programs to examine their programs for potential rules violations after the federal complaints were filed. The NCAA declined to comment when asked about that specific directive.
But last week, the NCAA formed a fact-finding commission to be led by former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, with results expected in April — right around the time the NCAA Tournament comes to an end.
"My only piece of advice (to young players), don't let the process ruin you because we will. I blame myself," said Tom Izzo of Michigan State, one of the schools conducting a review.
Izzo is convinced players' circles grow too large as they near the big-time and fill up with too many people with different agendas.
But in an illustration of wide-ranging perceptions of the issue, Michigan State's cross-state rival, Michigan, said it isn't conducting an internal review and its coach, John Beilein, said "I don't think the sky is falling in college basketball."
"I think that there's certainly some rogue coaches," Beilein said. "How many? Maybe I'll be proven wrong, but I can't believe there's too much of that going out there."
Michigan, 34 other schools and the Big East Conference said they were not specifically responding to the federal probe. But many of the "no" responses came with the caveat that the school's athletic department is always reviewing its compliance.
Four conferences and 21 schools declined to respond to the AP's survey, including one university that declined to respond on the record but acknowledged privately that it was reviewing its program because of the probe.
The vast majority of schools surveyed have shoe deals with Nike, Adidas or Under Armour. A top Adidas marketing executive was among the 10 people arrested, after authorities spent two years untangling schemes, often bankrolled with money from the apparel companies, to steer future NBA players toward particular sports agents and financial advisers. No players were accused of doing anything illegal, but any recruits found taking any improper benefits could lose eligibility to play.
In many corners, the arrests have been portrayed as the government's response to activities that have long been viewed as business-as-usual in big-time hoops — a long-awaited reckoning with problems the NCAA has been unwilling or unable to rein in.
An announcement Friday by the NCAA that a seven-year-long investigation into academic fraud at North Carolina would result in no sanctions for the Tar Heels did nothing to promote confidence in the body tasked with keeping its sports clean.
The AP also asked universities if they had been contacted by federal or state law enforcement. Only the schools involved in the federal complaints acknowledged being contacted.
That doesn't mean more isn't coming. Prosecutors have made clear the probe could widen in scope as the investigation continues.
"I'd say most people agree that this is the tip of the iceberg," said John Tauer, the coach at St. Thomas in Minnesota, which has won two Division III titles this decade. "Over the next six months to a year, a lot more chips are going to fall, and you'd have to think that schools that aren't diligent right now could end up paying dearly."
Tauer, who doubles as a social psychology professor specializing in issues of sports in society, spends a lot of time wrestling with the NCAA rulebook. His task isn't as high-stakes, though, because scholarship money and big-time shoe deals are essentially nonexistent in Division III.
"As an educator and a coach, you're certainly disappointed but not shocked to know this kind of thing goes on," Tauer said. "You hear rumors and stories of things that go on in the underworld of recruiting. You always hope they're not true, but you probably know, deep down..."
Utah coach Larry Krystkowiak told a story of losing a hard recruiting battle, and his initial reaction was "at least we didn't cheat."
He called it his heat-of-the-moment reaction, though he's certainly not blind to the issues confronting his sport. When he arrived at Utah in 2011, his two guiding principles were: "We are never going to cheat," and "We aren't going to recruit any turds."
"I wasn't sure in my lifetime that we were going to see anything of this magnitude where the lid got blown off," Krystkowiak said. "I was hopeful that at some point somebody's going to pay the price. Now when you get the feds and the FBI involved, it takes it to a new level."
Kansas coach Bill Self, whose school is among those conducting an internal review, said he harbors no illusions about what's at stake.
"This is bigger than us just coming up with ideas, this is us coming up with ideas that can withhold all the headwind that's going to be coming toward it," Self said.
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Nearly four dozen AP sports writers around the United States contributed to this report, including Kareem Copeland, Oskar Garcia, Jimmy Golen, Larry Lage, John Marshall, Eric Olson, Dave Skretta and Noah Trister.
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For more AP college basketball coverage: http://collegebasketball.ap.org and http://twitter.com/AP_Top25
Thursday, August 31, 2017
Coaching legend Massimino dies at 82
Keiser, an NAIA school in West Palm Beach, Fla., announced Wednesday that Massimino had passed away at his home in Florida. He had served as the coach of the school's men's basketball team for the past 10 years.
Massimino had been in relatively good health before he battled lung cancer in recent years. He had surgery to remove a tumor in his lung in 2011, suffered a collapsed lung and had brain surgery in 2016.
Born Roland Vincent "Rollie" Massimino, the affable coach had won more than 800 games in his coaching career, but is best known for leading a then-eighth-seeded Wildcats team to a victory over Patrick Ewing and top-seeded Georgetown in the 1985 title game.
"He was a life coach, not just a basketball coach," former Villanova star Ed Pinckney said, per ESPN. "Coach was all about family. He was an unbelievable man -- and a great person."
Massimino coached the Wildcats for 19 seasons and compiled a 355-241 record before leaving for UNLV in 1992 to replace Jerry Tarkanian. He spent two years with the Runnin' Rebels and also coached at Cleveland State from 1996-2003.
Massimino joined Chuck Daly's staff at Penn before becoming the head coach at Villanova in 1973. The Wildcats went to 11 NCAA Tournaments -- including three Sweet 16s, one Elite Eight and its first national championship under Massimino's watch.
Including nearly 300 wins while at Northwood/Keiser, Massimino's career record is 816-462 in 41 seasons.
"As our campus community deeply mourns the loss of Coach Massimino, we extend our warmest thoughts and condolences to his wife Mary Jane and the entire Massimino family," Keiser University chancellor Arthur Keiser said in a statement. "We are so truly honored to have shared this time with him and take some degree of comfort in knowing the positive impact he has had on college students for the last four decades remains immeasurable."
Monday, January 30, 2017
Gonzaga moves to No. 1 for second time in school history
Associated Press
Gonzaga, the last unbeaten team in Division I, moved to No. 1 in The Associated Press college basketball poll for the second time in school history.
The Zags (22-0) jumped up from third when Villanova and Kansas both were beaten in a week when seven of the top 10 lost.
Gonzaga received 46 first-place votes from the 65-member national media panel Monday. The Zags were No. 1 for the last three weeks of the 2012-13 season.
Gonzaga is the fifth team to reach No. 1 this season joining Duke, Kentucky, Villanova and Baylor.
Baylor (20-1), one of the three top 10 teams to not lose, jumped from fifth to second. The Bears had six first-place votes and were one point ahead of Kansas (19-2), which dropped one place after losing at West Virginia before winning at Kentucky. The Jayhawks had nine first-place votes.
Villanova, which had been No. 1 for the last two weeks and six overall, dropped to fourth after losing at Marquette. The Wildcats (20-2), who also had a last-second win over Virginia, were No. 1 on four ballots.
Northwestern (18-4) is the week's lone newcomer. The Wildcats were last ranked for one week in 2009-10.
Arizona, the other top 10 team to get through the week without a loss, moved from seventh to fifth and was followed by Louisville, West Virginia, Kentucky, Virginia and Wisconsin.
UCLA was 11th and was followed by North Carolina, Oregon, Cincinnati, Florida State, Butler, Maryland, Saint Mary's, South Carolina and Notre Dame.
The last five ranked teams were Duke, Creighton, Purdue, Florida and Northwestern.
Xavier (15-6), which has lost four of six with all the losses to ranked teams, dropped out from 24th. The Musketeers, who had been ranked for the last 29 polls, were seventh in the preseason voting.
West Virginia, which beat Kansas and Texas A&M, had the week's biggest jump from 18th to No. 7. Louisville, which beat Pittsburgh and North Carolina State by an average of 40 points, moved from 13th to No. 6.
Florida State's fall from sixth to No. 15 followed the Seminoles' losses to Georgia Tech and Syracuse. Kentucky also lost twice last week — to Tennessee and Kansas — and the Wildcats dropped from fourth to eighth.
New AP NCAA Men's Basketball Top-25 Poll
Rank
team | Record | Points | PV Rank | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Gonzaga (46) | 22-0 | 1,594 | 3 |
2 | Baylor (6) | 20-1 | 1,504 | 5 |
3 | Kansas (9) | 19-2 | 1,503 | 2 |
4 | Villanova (4) | 20-2 | 1,479 | 1 |
5 | Arizona | 20-2 | 1,387 | 7 |
6 | Louisville | 18-4 | 1,237 | 13 |
7 | West Virginia | 17-4 | 1,101 | 18 |
8 | Kentucky | 17-4 | 1,083 | 4 |
9 | Virginia | 16-4 | 1,061 | 12 |
10 | Wisconsin | 18-3 | 1,058 | 15 |
11 | UCLA | 19-3 | 993 | 8 |
12 | North Carolina | 19-4 | 965 | 9 |
13 | Oregon | 19-3 | 863 | 10 |
14 | Cincinnati | 19-2 | 756 | 19 |
15 | Florida State | 18-4 | 727 | 6 |
16 | Butler | 18-4 | 717 | 11 |
17 | Maryland | 19-2 | 518 | 22 |
18 | Saint Mary's (Cal.) | 19-2 | 409 | 21 |
19 | South Carolina | 17-4 | 384 | 23 |
20 | Notre Dame | 17-5 | 363 | 14 |
21 | Duke | 16-5 | 339 | 17 |
22 | Creighton | 19-3 | 307 | 16 |
23 | Purdue | 17-5 | 264 | 20 |
24 | Florida | 16-5 | 213 | 25 |
25 | Northwestern | 18-4 | 106 | - |
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Mitchell's 28 points lead Louisville past NC State 85-60
Donovan Mitchell recorded 28 points and 8 rebounds, leading No. 13 Louisville past NC State, 85-60 on Sunday.
Abdul-Malik Abu and Maverick Rowan each had 13 points for NC State (14-8, 3-6), who shot 38 percent and failed to follow up on their upset win at No. 17 Duke.
NC State is home this week for games against Syracuse on Wednesday and Miami on Saturday, while Louisville hits the road for two ACC games in three days, starting Saturday at Boston College.
After Boston College, Louisville faces No. 12 Virginia on Feb. 6, where the Cardinals aim to avenge last month's loss.
No. 1 Villanova defeats No. 12 Virginia
No. 1 Villanova caught fire in the 2nd half and overcame No. 12 Virginia, 61-59 on Sunday.
Mikal Bridges led Villanova with 15 points, and rebounds with 5.
Ty Jerome led Virginia with 15 points.
Villanova plays Wednesday at Providence. The Wildcats have a 46-18 career record against the Friars.
Virginia heads home to play Virginia Tech on Wednesday.
Bracketology - Edition VI
East Regional
#1 Villanova vs. #16 Texas Southern/#16 North Carolina Central
#8 Dayton vs. #9 Indiana
#5 Cincinnati vs. #12 Michigan State/#12 Wake Forest
#4 Florida State vs. #13 Monmouth
#6 St. Mary's vs. #11 Miami (FL)
#3 Oregon vs. #14 Bucknell
#7 Northwestern vs. #10 Virginia Tech
#2 Kentucky vs. #15 North Carolina-Asheville
West Regional
#1 Gonzaga vs. #16 Sam Houston State
#8 Marquette vs. #9 Iowa State
#5 Purdue vs. #12 Nevada
#4 Notre Dame vs. #13 Florida Gulf Coast
#6 South Carolina vs. #11 Texas Tech
#3 Virginia vs. #14 New Mexico State
#7 Creighton vs. #10 North Carolina-Wilmington
#2 Arizona vs. #15 North Dakota State
Mid-West Regional
#1 Kansas vs. #16 UC Davis/#16 Mount St. Mary's
#8 Virginia Commonwealth vs. #9 Illinois State
#5 Butler vs. #12 Arkansas/#12 Clemson
#4 Wisconsin vs. #13 Valparaiso
#6 Duke vs. #11 Texas Christian
#3 UCLA vs. #14 Texas-Arlington
#7 Southern California vs. #10 Middle Tennessee
#2 North Carolina vs. #15 Princeton
South Regional
#1 Baylor vs. #16 Weber State
#8 Seton Hall vs. #9 Minnesota
#5 Florida vs. #12 Akron
#4 Maryland vs. #13 Vermont
#6 Southern Methodist vs. #11 Kansas State
#3 Louisville vs. #14 Belmont
#7 Xavier vs. #10 Michigan
#2 West Virginia vs. #15 East Tennessee State
Bubble
Last Four Byes: Miami, Texas Christian, Texas Tech, Kansas State
Last Four In: Michigan State, Wake Forest, Arkansas, Clemson
First Four Out: Wichita State, California, Georgia Tech, Utah
Next Four Out: North Carolina State, Georgia, Tennessee, Memphis
Following Four Out: Rhode Island, Syracuse, Oklahoma State, Alabama
Friday, January 27, 2017
Top 25 Capsules (January 27, 2017)
Johnathan Williams added 13 points and 12 rebounds for Gonzaga (21-0, 9-0 West Coast), which has the nation's longest winning streak at 21 games. The Zags are the nation's last remaining undefeated Division I team.
If Gonzaga can win at Pepperdine on Saturday, the Zags have a good chance of claiming the top spot in the next Top 25 as No. 1 Villanova and No. 2 Kansas lost this week.
Olin Carter III scored 12 points for San Diego (10-11, 3-6), which has lost five straight to Gonzaga.
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No. 7 ARIZONA 79, WASHINGTON ST. 62
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Allonzo Trier scored 17 points in his first home game of the season and Lauri Markkanen had a double-double for Arizona.
Trier scored 12 points against UCLA on Saturday in his first game back from a 19-game suspension for performance-enhancing drugs. He scored 11 points in the second half to help Arizona (19-2, 8-0 Pac-12) finally shake the pesky Cougars.
Markkanen finished with 16 points and 13 rebounds in Arizona's 13th straight win overall and 17th straight at home.
Conor Clifford had 19 points for Washington State (10-10, 3-5).
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No. 9 NORTH CAROLINA 91, VIRGINIA TECH 72
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Justin Jackson scored 26 points and North Carolina hit a season-high 14 3-pointers.
Kennedy Meeks added 15 points and 14 rebounds for the Tar Heels (19-3, 7-1), who have climbed into sole possession of first place in the Atlantic Coast Conference with seven straight wins.
UNC led 44-33 by halftime, then ran off 10 straight points midway through the second half to turn this one into a rout.
Seth Allen scored 19 points for the Hokies (15-5, 4-4).
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No. 10 OREGON 73, UTAH 67
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Dillon Brooks returned from missing a game with a foot injury to score 17 points for Oregon.
The Ducks (19-2, 8-0 Pac-12) led by as many as 13 points in the second half, but Kyle Kuzma's 3-pointer made it 70-66 with 1:40 to play.
But the Utes (14-6, 5-3) were denied multiple chances at the rim, including Chris Boucher's block of Kuzma's shot with 31 seconds left.
Jordan Bell had 15 points and Dylan Ennis added 13 for the Ducks, who extended the longest winning streak in Oregon history to 17 games.
Kuzma scored 18 points and Daniels had 11 for Utah.
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No. 19 CINCINNATI 86, No. 24 XAVIER 78
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jacob Evans III scored 21 points and led Cincinnati's second-half surge, ending Xavier's streak of three straight wins in their annual crosstown rivalry game.
The Bearcats (18-2) got their 11th straight win by overcoming Trevon Bluiett's incredible shooting performance - 12 of 15, including 9 of 11 from 3-point range, for a career-high 40 points.
Cincinnati dominated up front, outrebounding Xavier (14-6) 42-18 and scoring 30 second-chance points.
Bluiett tied the school record for 3s in a game.
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No. 21 SAINT MARY'S 66, SAN FRANCISCO 46
MORAGA, Calif. (AP) - Calvin Hermanson scored 18 points and sparked a 14-0 run in the second half that carried Saint Mary's to its 12th win in 13 games.
Hermanson started the decisive stretch early in the second half by hitting a 3-pointer and capped it with a layup as the Gaels (18-2, 8-1 West Coast Conference) won for the 23rd time in the past 24 meetings against the Dons (14-8, 4-5).
Emmett Naar scored 18 points and Jock Landale added 13 for Saint Mary's.
Charles Minlend scored 13 points for the Dons, who had won three straight games.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
Bracketology - Edition IV
Buffalo
1 Villanova vs. 16 Morgan St./Texas Southern
8 Iowa St. vs. 9 Arkansas
Orlando
5 Duke vs. 12 Nevada
4 Purdue vs. 13 New Mexico St.
Sacramento
6 Saint Mary's vs. 11 Seton Hall
3 UCLA vs. 14 Winthrop
Greenville
7 South Carolina vs. 10 TCU
2 North Carolina vs. 15 Bucknell
WEST
Salt Lake City
1 Gonzaga vs. 16 UC Irvine
8 Minnesota vs. 9 USC
Buffalo
5 Norte Dame vs. 12 Akron
4 West Virginia vs. 13 Vermont
Indianapolis
6 Creighton vs. 11 VCU
3 Louisville vs. 14 Princeton
Salt Lake City
7 Indiana vs. 10 Wake Forest
2 Arizona vs. 15 North Dakota St.
SOUTH
Tulsa
1 Baylor vs. 16 Mount St. Mary's/New Orleans
8 Dayton vs. 9 Michigan St.
Greenville
5 Cincinnati vs. 12 Miami/Michigan
4 Virginia vs. 13 Monmouth
Milwaukee
6 Maryland vs. 11 Middle Tennessee
3 Butler vs. 14 Belmont
Indianapolis
7 Northwestern vs. 10 Kansas St.
2 Kentucky vs. 14 UNC Greensboro
MIDWEST
Tulsa
1 Kansas vs. 16 Weber St.
8 Marquette vs. 9 Virginia Tech
Milwaukee
5 Florida vs. 12 Clemson/Texas Tech
4 Wisconsin vs. 13 Valparaiso
Sacramento
6 Xavier vs. 11 UNC Wilmington
3 Oregon vs. 14 Florida Gulf Coast
Orlando
7 SMU vs. 10 Illinois St.
2 Florida St. vs. Georgia Southern
Monday, January 23, 2017
Bracketology - Edition III
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
No. 2 Kansas beats Iowa State 76-72 for 17th straight win
Associated Press
AMES, Iowa (AP) -- No. 2 Kansas passed its biggest Big 12 road test of the season, winning in a gym where losing was threatening to become a trend.
Frank Mason III had 16 points, Landen Lucas scored 14 and the Jayhawks held off Iowa State 76-72 on Monday night for their 17th straight win.
Svi Mykhailiuk added 13 for the Jayhawks (17-1, 6-0 Big 12), who snapped a two-game skid in Ames and opened 6-0 in the Big 12 for the 10th time.
"It's always tough (here)," Lucas said. "We should be proud to come in here and win. Our young guys maybe don't understand that."
Though it was never comfortable for Kansas, the Jayhawks led the entire second half. Iowa State star Monte Morris drilled a long 3-pointer and two free throws to make it 75-72 with 14.6 seconds left. But then Devonte Graham's free throw made it a two-possession game and Morris missed a 3 that would've made for an interesting finish.
Morris scored 23 points with seven rebounds and seven assists for the Cyclones (11-6, 3-3), who saw their recent string of success against the Jayhawks come to an end.
Iowa State had won four of its last six against the 12-time defending league champions.
"We've just got to figure out a way to become a better defensive team. They shot 14 layups in the first half. Layups. You can't give Kansas 28 points in layups and expect to beat them," Iowa State coach Steve Prohm said.
Deonte Burton had 21 points on 21 shots for the Cyclones, losers of two straight for the first time in six weeks.
BIG PICTURE
Kansas: This was a win Kansas has a right to be proud of. Hilton Coliseum is one of the most intimidating atmospheres in America - especially when the Jayhawks come to town - and over 14,000 fans braved an ice storm to scream at them. Victories like this are the reason Kansas keeps winning the Big 12. "No disrespect, but I think it was the best home court we've played in so far," Kansas coach Bill Self said.
Iowa State: The Cyclones let a huge opportunity slip by. Iowa State is very talented and remains a threat in the postseason because of its strong backcourt. But the Cyclones have lost tight games to Gonzaga, Baylor and Kansas, and their program has long since passed the day when moral victories mattered.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
In a slight surprise, voters picked Villanova over Kansas for the top spot on Monday. It'll be hard for the Jayhawks to pass the Wildcats after Villanova routed Seton Hall by 30 points on Monday. The defending national champions host Providence on Saturday. "It really doesn't matter. I told our staff that Villanova would jump us in (the) AP (poll). They beat Xavier by 25 last week. That didn't surprise me at all. We're in a pretty good spot right now," Self said.
TURNING POINT
Burton's three-point play brought the Cyclones within 67-63. But a quick 6-0 run capped by Mason's layup put Kansas up 10 with 1:57 left, and those baskets came in handy after Iowa State made its late surge. Given that the Jayhawks' first two road league wins were at TCU and scuffling Oklahoma, the resolve Kansas showed down the stretch was impressive.
THE DIFFERENCE
Kansas dominated Iowa State on the boards, 41-24, and scored 52 points in the paint. The Cyclones' guards did their part, with Naz Mitrou-Long chipping in 18 points, but the inability to hang with teams inside continues to haunt Iowa State against elite competition.
THE NUMBERS
Kansas shot 54.8 percent from the floor, helping mitigate its 18 turnovers. ... Iowa State was 9 of 27 from 3-point range. ... Graham had nine points and eight assists, freeing up Mason to attack the basket. ... Morris also had four steals, but he turned it over three times in the first half after committing just one such miscue in his first five Big 12 games.
UP NEXT
Kansas hosts Texas on Saturday. But next week will be brutal, with trips to West Virginia and Kentucky looming.
Iowa State plays at Oklahoma on Saturday.
Monday, January 16, 2017
Bracketology Edition II
East Regional
#1 Villanova vs. #16 Texas Southern/Weber State
#8 Southern California vs. #9 Miami (FL)
#5 Arizona vs. #12 Arkansas/Kansas State
#4 Notre Dame vs. #13 New Mexico State
#6 Purdue vs. #11 Marquette/Wichita State
#3 Florida State vs. #14 Akron
#7 St. Mary's vs. #10 Northwestern
#2 West Virginia vs. #15 Princeton
West Regional
#1 UCLA vs. #16 UC-Irvine
#8 Seton Hall vs. #9 Dayton
#5 Duke vs. #12 Middle Tennessee
#4 Butler vs. #13 Nevada
#6 Maryland vs. #11 Texas Christian
#3 Louisville vs. #14 North Carolina-Asheville
#7 Southern Methodist vs. #10 Texas Tech
#2 Baylor vs. #15 Bucknell
Mid-West Regional
#1 Kansas vs. #16 North Carolina Central/Sam Houston State
#8 Indiana vs. #9 Virginia Commonwealth
#5 Cincinnati vs. #12 Texas-Arlington
#4 Virginia vs. #13 Florida Gulf Coast
#6 Xavier vs. #11 Pittsburgh
#3 Oregon vs. #14 Vermont
#7 Minnesota vs. #10 Clemson
#2 Kentucky vs. #15 Fort Wayne
South Regional
#1 Gonzaga vs. #16 LIU Brooklyn
#8 North Carolina-Wilmington vs. #9 Virginia Tech
#5 Florida vs. #12 Oakland
#4 Wisconsin vs. #13 Monmouth
#6 South Carolina vs. #11 Illinois
#3 Creighton vs. #14 North Carolina-Greensboro
#7 Iowa State vs. #10 Illinois State
#2 North Carolina vs. #15 Belmont
Last Four In: Marquette, Wichita State, Arkansas, Kansas State
First Four Out: Michigan, Oklahoma State, Michigan State, California
Next Four Out: Georgia, Nebraska, Houston, Rhode Island
New AP Top 25 Poll for NCAAB
NEW Associated Press Top-25 NCAA Men's Basketball Poll released Monday.
1 Villanova
2 Kansas
3 UCLA
4 Gonzaga
5 Kentucky
6 Baylor
7 West Virginia
7 Creighton
9 North Carolina
10 Florida State
11 Oregon
12 Louisville
13 Butler
14 Arizona
15 Notre Dame
16 Virginia
17 Wisconsin
18 Duke
19 Florida
20 Cincinnati
21 Purdue
22 Xavier
23 Saint Mary's (Cal.)
24 South Carolina
25 Maryland
Monday, January 9, 2017
New AP College Basketball Top-25
Released Jan. 9, 2017
1 Baylor
2 Kansas
3 Villanova
4 UCLA
5 Gonzaga
6 Kentucky
7 Duke
8 Creighton
9 Florida State
10 West Virginia
11 North Carolina
12 Butler
13 Oregon
14 Louisville
15 Xavier
16 Arizona
17 Purdue
18 Wisconsin
19 Virginia
20 Notre Dame
21 Saint Mary's (Cal.)
22 Cincinnati
23 Florida
24 Minnesota
25 Southern California
Saturday, December 17, 2016
NCAAB Top 25 Capsules (December 17, 2016)
Aaron Holiday had 20 points for the Bruins (11-0), who led by 24 points at halftime and were never threatened by the outmanned Gauchos (1-7).
It was the fifth time this season the Bruins scored at least 100 points.
Ami Lakoju had 12 rebounds and 11 points, and Gabe Vincent added 10 points for the Gauchos.
Santa Barbara outrebounded UCLA 50-46 but shot only 30.1 percent (25 of 83).
The Bruins played their second consecutive game without starting center Thomas Welch, who is out with a bruised right heel.
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No. 4 BAYLOR 89, SOUTHERN U. 59
WACO, Texas (AP) - Johnathan Motley had 20 points and 10 rebounds for Baylor.
The Bears (9-0) hadn't played since a 76-61 win over then-No. 7 Xavier on Dec. 3, but scored 15 of the game's first 18 points and shot 64 percent in the first half to put it away early.
Jared Sam and Shawn Prudhomme scored 24 points each to lead Southern (4-6). They combined to shoot 18 for 27 from the field, but the rest of the Jaguars combined to make five field goals.
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No. 14 WISCONSIN 73, GREEN BAY 59
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Nigel Hayes scored 24 points to lead Wisconsin.
Zak Showalter added 16 points, including a career-high four 3-pointers, and Ethan Happ had 14 points and 10 rebounds for the Badgers (10-2).
The Badgers were a little lethargic to start and trailed Green Bay 12-11 almost 9 minutes into the game. But they reeled off a 20-4 run that included a nearly 5-minute scoreless drought for the Phoenix (4-6).
Green Bay cut the lead to seven early in the second half. But Wisconsin responded with a 25-8 run that blew the game open.
Kerem Kanter led Green Bay with 18 points.
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No. 19 ARIZONA 64, GRAND CANYON 54
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Kobi Simmons scored 13 points and Rawle Alkins added 11 points and eight rebounds for Arizona.
Arizona (9-2) started ragged, built a 16-point lead in the first half and allowed Grand Canyon to claw most of the way back due to a rash of turnovers.
The Wildcats had 19 turnovers overall and struggled shooting in the second half before wearing down the Antelopes for their 39th straight non-conference home win.
Grand Canyon (5-5) kept No. 11 Louisville within reach until late last week and did the same against Arizona.
DeWayne Russell had 19 points, but had to work for it against the physical Wildcats. He hit 8 of 21 shots, including 1 of 7 from 3-point range.
Oscar Frayer scored all 16 of his points in the second half for Grand Canyon.
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No. 20 SAINT MARY'S 73, WESTERN KENTUCKY 51
MORAGA, Calif. (AP) - Jock Landale had 15 points and 13 rebounds and Saint Mary's jumped to a quick lead it never relinquished.
Evan Fitzner scored eight of his team's first 12 points as the Gaels took control from the tip. He finished with 11 points and three 3-pointers, while Emmett Naar had 14 points and six assists.
Landale went 7 for 13 from the field and is shooting 65 of 99 - 65.6 percent - on the season for the Gaels (8-1), who used a late 13-2 run in the first half for a 38-24 lead.
Justin Johnson and Que Johnson each scored 11 points to lead Western Kentucky (4-6).
Monday, December 12, 2016
Villanova tops new AP Top-25 for NCAA Basketball
Below is the poll.
Updated NCAAB Top-25:
1. Villanova
2. UCLA
3. Kansas
4. Baylor
5. Duke
6. Kentucky
7. North Carolina
8. Gonzaga
9. Indiana
10. Creighton
11. Louisville
12. West Virginia
13. Virginia
14. Wisconsin
15. Purdue
16. South Carolina
17. Xavier
18. Butler
19. Arizona
20. Saint Mary's (Cal.)
21. Notre Dame
22. Oregon
23. Florida State
24. Southern California
25. Cincinnati
Saturday, December 10, 2016
Top 25 Capsules (December 10, 2016)
Needing to rebound after Saturday's upset by then-No. 11 UCLA, Kentucky (8-1) turned a 4-all tie into a 29-9 lead behind that big run over 8:51, holding the Crusaders scoreless for 7 minutes during that stretch. Valparaiso (7-2) shot 23 of 67 from the field (34 percent), including 28 percent in the first half.
Derek Willis added 12 points and Isaiah Briscoe 10 for Kentucky, which shot 46 percent after making just 41 percent against UCLA.
High-scoring Valparaiso forward Alec Peters scored 16 of his 23 points in the second half for the Crusaders, who had their four-game winning streak snapped eight days after upsetting No. 21 Rhode Island.
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No. 7 NORTH CAROLINA 83, DAVIDSON 74
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) - Justin Jackson matched his career high with 27 points and hit a career-best seven 3-pointers for North Carolina.
Luke Maye added an early burst by scoring all of his career-high 10 points before halftime for the Tar Heels (9-1), who played without top point guard and No. 2 scorer Joel Berry II.
Jack Gibbs - ranked seventh nationally by averaging 23.3 points - finished with 30 points for the Wildcats (5-3), who trailed by 16 midway through the second half before making a late push to get within three in the final 2 minutes.
But Kennedy Meeks answered with two free throws, then Isaiah Hicks followed with two more after getting a big rebound in traffic with 52 seconds left to help UNC hang on.
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No. 8 GONZAGA 98, WASHINGTON 71
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) - Nigel Williams-Goss scored 23 points for Gonzaga in a resumption of the cross-state rivalry.
Przemek Karnowski added 17 points and Jordan Mathews had 14 for Gonzaga (9-0), which dominated from the opening minutes.
Freshman Markelle Fultz had 25 points and 10 rebounds for Washington (4-4), which has lost three straight. The Huskies came in averaging 88 points per game.
Noah Dickerson had 12 points and 15 rebounds for Washington, which shot just 30 percent for the game. Gonzaga shot 53 percent.
Williams-Goss, who played for Washington before transferring to Gonzaga and becoming eligible this season, made 9 of 13 shots against his former team.
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No. 10 CREIGHTON 77, NEBRASKA 62
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) - Maurice Watson Jr. scored a season-high 25 points and Cole Huff added 13 as Creighton dominated the second half.
The Bluejays (9-0) have won 15 of 18 meetings with the Cornhuskers (5-4), including the last six by double digits.
Creighton led 31-30 at halftime and held Nebraska scoreless for 6 1/2 minutes in the second half while going up 51-37 and grew the lead to 21 in the last 3 minutes.
Tai Webster had 16 points and Ed Morrow had 13 rebounds for the Huskers.
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No. 11 LOUISVILLE 74, SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 51
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Mangok Mathiang scored 15 points to lead Louisville.
The 6-foot-10 senior got the Cardinals (8-1) off to a hot start as he scored the team's first seven points, and Louisville settled in from there, extending the lead to 21-4 in the game's first 8 minutes. In making six of nine shots, Mathiang finished two points shy of his career high in just 22 minutes.
As Southern Illinois (5-4) had no one taller than 6-9, Louisville used its size to its advantage. The Cardinals blocked nine shots and outrebounded the Salukis 43-31.
Sophomore Deng Adel posted his first double-double for Louisville, as the 6-7 forward finished with 12 points and a career-high 12 rebounds.
Sean O'Brien led the Salukis with 15 points and 11 rebounds.
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COLORADO 68, No. 13 XAVIER 66
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) - Derrick White scored 23 points and had a crucial block with 13 seconds remaining to help Colorado.
Xavier Johnson added for 18 points for the Buffaloes (7-2), who have posted consecutive wins over ranked teams for the first time since 2013. They knocked off a ranked Texas team at the Legends Classic in New York last month.
Colorado was 1-5 against ranked teams last season.
Trevon Bluiett tied a career high with 27 points for Xavier (7-2), which has lost two straight.
Spurred on by the shooting of White and Johnson, the Buffaloes went on a 12-0 run midway through the second half. They kept Xavier scoreless for more than 6 minutes during the pivotal stretch.
It was a frenzied ending, though, with Xavier getting several good looks. White swatted one of those away - his only block of the game.
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No. 15 WEST VIRGINIA 90, WESTERN CAROLINA 37
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Esa Ahmad scored 14 points for West Virginia.
West Virginia (7-1) didn't slack off after a close road win at No. 14 Virginia on Saturday. The Mountaineers forced 34 turnovers against Western Carolina, a week after setting a school record by forcing 40 against Manhattan.
West Virginia scored the game's first seven points and used a 16-0 run to build a 25-point lead midway through the first half. Western Carolina went scoreless over the final 7:39 and trailed 46-12 at halftime.
By then, Western Carolina (3-6) had 19 turnovers to far surpass its season average. And West Virginia's pressure defense was just getting started. A 26-4 run by the Mountaineers followed early in the second half.
Jevon Carter added 13 points for the Mountaineers, who had 21 steals.
Western Carolina's Haboubacar Mutombo was limited to six points, six under his team-leading average.
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INDIANA ST. 72, No. 16 BUTLER 71
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) - Brenton Scott made one of two free throws with 0.8 seconds left and finished with 25 points to help Indiana State to the upset.
Matt Van Scyoc scored 23 points and had six 3-pointers, both career highs, as the Sycamores (5-4) won their third straight to snap a four-game losing streak in the series.
Coach Greg Lansing set a school record by picking up his fifth career victory over a ranked team. Lansing had been tied with Bill Hodges, who coached Larry Bird, and the late Royce Waltman.
Andrew Chrabascz had 18 points for Butler (8-1) and Tyler Lewis added 15. The Bulldogs came into the game as one of 11 unbeaten teams left in Division I.
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No. 17 WISCONSIN 78, IDAHO ST. 44
MADISON, Wis. (AP) - Bronson Koenig scored 21 points and Ethan Happ had 12 points and 12 rebounds for Wisconsin.
The Badgers (8-2) scored the first 10 points and opened up a 21-3 lead as the Bengals (1-8) could only muster a single 3-pointer in the opening 11 1/2 minutes. Wisconsin led 35-16 at halftime.
Nigel Hayes added 11 points for the Badgers, who had a 44-14 edge in points in the paint and outscored Idaho State 23-5 in points off turnovers. Wisconsin won its fourth straight game.
The Badgers held Bengals leading scorer Ethan Telfair (19.8 ppg) to two points on 1-of-9 shooting, with his only basket coming with 5:57 left in the game.