Alabama’s projected opponent in the opening round of NCAA Men’s Tournament

See where Tide Hoops is expected to start the NCAA MBB Tournament!

The Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team has not had the season many had hoped for following last year’s regular season championship and conference tournament title. Despite unmet expectations, the team is still ranked inside the top-25 and is expected to earn a decent seeding for the upcoming NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.

In the latest bracketology update by USA TODAY Sports’ Shelby Mast and Scott Gleeson, the Crimson Tide sits as a No. 5 seed in the Midwest Region.

Alabama would face the winner of SMU and Michigan, which would enter the tournament as a No. 12 seed.

With limited time until the start of the tournament, few opportunities remain for Alabama to boost its seeding.

The Crimson Tide will face South Carolina at home this Saturday in the penultimate regular season contest.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow AJ Spurr on Twitter @SpurrFM.

Let us know your thoughts, comment on this story below. Join the conversation today!

Notre Dame earns four-seed in NCAA Men’s Soccer Championship

Notre Dame’s men’s soccer NCAA Championship run starts Sunday. See who the ACC Champion Irish drew here!

A day after winning their first ACC Championship in program history, Notre Dame learned their draw for the 2021 NCAA Division I Men’s Soccer Championship.

The 12-5-3 overall Fighting Irish earned the fourth overall seed in the tournament and as a result get a bye to the round of 32.  Up first for Notre Dame will be the winner of the Vermont vs. Villanova contest.  The winner of that pod will advance to the Sweet 16 where they will meet whoever comes out of the other side of the pod between No. 13 Florida International, Wake Forest, and Mercer.

This is Notre Dame’s 23rd all-time appearance in the Men’s Soccer Championship and 19th appearance since 2001.

Notre Dame will get underway against that Vermont-Villanova winner on Sunday, November 21.

See the full bracket on the NCAA webpage.

Related:

Notre Dame’s ridiculous weekend in athletics 

NCAA Tournament upset predictions: These are the first-round March Madness upsets to watch

We asked five of our college basketball gurus from across the USA TODAY Network to pick the entire NCAA Tournament bracket. Here’s the list.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published by USA TODAY Sports and has been republished in its entirety below.

It happens every year. Selection Sunday comes and goes and suddenly, the pressure is on to pick your March Madness bracket.

You agonize over which first-round upsets to pick. Will it be Georgetown over Colorado? Or will Winthrop take down Villanova?

And then, inevitably, you always pick the one that doesn’t happen.

Our experts are here to help. We asked five of our college basketball gurus from across the USA TODAY Network to pick the entire NCAA Tournament bracket and this list below is made up of every first-round upset they picked.

Get your printable 2021 NCAA Tournament bracket right here

USA TODAY Sports released its 2021 NCAA Tournament bracket on the heels of the final seeding announcement on Sunday.

March Madness has finally arrived and after a season marred by the coronavirus — and for the Florida Gators, the loss of Keyontae Johnson as well — these postseason festivities represent the finish line for 2021 men’s college basketball season.

Now that the seedings have been announced and the pairings for the first round of the Big Dance are set, it is time to get your brackets ready for the pandemonium that is sure to ensue these next few weeks. If you do not have a bracket set up yet, then friend, we have you covered.

USA TODAY Sports released its 2021 NCAA Tournament bracket on the heels of the final seeding announcement on Sunday. The bracket is printable and is all set for the start of college sports’ most storied event.

Here at Gators Wire, we’ll keep you posted with wall-to-wall coverage of Florida’s postseason, including when the site and time for the first game become official.

Get ready for March Madness by registering in advance for USA TODAY Sports’ bracket sweepstakes. In the meantime, mobile users can play USA TODAY Sports’ Couchketball virtual hoops challenge – the interactive basketball game where your skills determine the outcome.

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Alabama basketball demolishes Mississippi State in first game of SEC Tournament

Alabama basketball continues their reign of dominance in the SEC, as their first game of the conference tournament is a monster win.

Alabama basketball earned the No. 1 seed, as well as a first-round bye, in the SEC tournament. With their first game of the tournament against Mississippi State, the Crimson Tide did not hold back.

The final score of the contest was 48-85.

The outcome of the game is a perfect example of Alabama’s style of play: fast-paced, high scoring offense, and strong defense.

Offensively for Alabama, scoring was evenly distributed, with Jahvon Quinerly being the leading scorer with 14 points.

On the defensive side of things, Herbert Jones, who was recently named the SEC Player of the Year and Defensive Player of the year, recorded seven rebounds.

Freshman guard Josh Primo went down in the second half with an apparent knee injury. He was helped to the lockerroom, and his status for tomorrow’s contest is unknown.

Mississippi State struggled to get moving on offense, and was unable to limit the Crimson Tide’s scoring opportunities.

Nate Oats and Alabama will face off against the winner of Tennessee vs. Florida tomorrow afternoon.

SEC Tournament bracket released, Gators at No. 5 seed

The 2021 SEC Tournament bracket has UF at a No. 5 seed and a first-round bye after losing its last two games of the season vs Mizzou and UT.

The 2021 Southeastern Conference Tournament bracket was released on Sunday, with the Florida Gators earning a No. 5 seed and a first-round bye after losing its last two games of the season against the Missouri Tigers and Tennessee Volunteers, respectively.

The seeding comes as no surprise after Sunday’s disappointing loss and has UF facing the winner of the matchup between the Texas A&M Aggies and Vanderbilt Commodores in the First Round. The second-round game will take place on Thursday starting 25 minutes after the No. 8 seed Kentucky Wildcats and No. 9 seed Mississippi State Bulldogs duke it out at 11 a.m. EST.

The full SEC Tournament schedule can be found below.

Wednesday, March 10

First Round

7 p.m. EST – No. 13 Texas A&M vs. No. 12 Vanderbilt (SEC Network)

Thursday, March 11

Second Round

Noon EST – No. 8 Kentucky vs. No. 9 Mississippi State (SEC Network)

25 minutes After Game 2 – Winner of first round vs. No. 5 Florida (SEC Network)

7 p.m. EST – No. 7 Missouri vs. No. 10 Georgia (SEC Network)

25 minutes after Game 3 – No. 6 Ole Miss vs. No. 11 South Carolina (SEC Network)

Friday, March 12

Quarterfinals

Noon EST – No. 1 Alabama vs. winner of Kentucky/Mississippi State (ESPN)

25 minutes after Game 1 – No. 4 Tennessee vs. winner of No. 5 Florida/Round 1 winner (ESPN)

7 p.m. EST – No. 2 Arkansas vs. winner of Missouri/Georgia (SEC Network)

25 minutes after Game 3 – No. 3 LSU vs. winner of Ole Miss/South Carolina (SEC Network)

Saturday, March 13

Semifinals

Noon EST – Friday afternoon winners (ESPN)

25 minutes after Game 1 – Friday evening winners (ESPN)

Sunday, March 14

Championship 

1 p.m. EST – Saturday winners (ESPN)

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NCAA Tournament bracketology: Florida stands pat in USA TODAY’s updated bracket

Here’s a look at USA TODAY Sports’ latest bracketology update and where the Florida Gators sit ahead of the NCAA Tournament.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published by USA TODAY Sports and has been republished in its entirety below.

On the heels of its first loss of the season, Baylor responded with a 94-89 overtime victory over West Virginia on Tuesday night.

The Bears (19-1, 11-1) didn’t just clinch their first Big 12 regular season title, they also locked up a No. 1 seed in the men’s NCAA Tournament with the rèsumè-boosting win.

Even with two games remaining – home clashes with Oklahoma State and Texas Tech this week – and the Big 12 Tournament on tap, there’s nothing Baylor could do in the next 11 days before Selection Sunday to lose the top seed. The Bears have the second-best NET score behind undefeated Gonzaga and enough quality wins in the Big 12.

The same cannot be said for Michigan – yet at least. The Wolverines (18-2, 13-2) met their Big Ten match on Tuesday in a 76-53 loss to Illinois. The Fighting Illini (19-6, 15-4) vaulted to a No. 1 seed earlier this week in bracketology after current No. 2 seeds Ohio State and Villanova stumbled.

While Tuesday’s victory for Illinois will bolster the profile for a top seeding line, because the Big Ten has those three top seed contenders – Michigan, Illinois, and Ohio State – the Wolverines still need just a little more on their portfolio to fully lock up a top seed. Michigan still remains comfortably ahead of Illinois with its credentials.

Back-to-back matchups with rival Michigan State, a bubble team fighting for its inclusion in the field of 68, will provide an opportunity for Michigan to lock up a No. 1 seed well before Selection Sunday, which is March 14.

The NCAA Tournament tips off March 18.

No. 1 seeds

Gonzaga, Baylor, Michigan, Illinois.

Last four in

Boise State,  Georgia Tech, VCU, Connecticut.

First four out

Michigan State, Duke, St. Johns, Syracuse.

Next four out

SMU, Memphis, Stanford, Utah State.

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Others considered for at-large bids: Saint Louis.

On life support: Marquette, Providence, Marshall, North Carolina State, Dayton,  Pittsburgh, UAB, Georgia, Ole Miss, Minnesota, Richmond, Indiana.

Multi-bid conferences: Big Ten (8), Big 12 (7), ACC (7), SEC (6), Big East (5), Pac-12 (4), Mountain West (3), Atlantic 10 (2), American Athletic (2), Missouri Valley (2), West Coast (2).

Leaders or highest NET from projected one-bid conferences – (20 total): America East – UMBC, Atlantic Sun – Liberty, Big Sky – Eastern Washington, Big South – Winthrop, Big West – UCSB, CAA – Northeastern, C-USA – UAB, Horizon – Cleveland State, MAAC – Siena, MAC – Toledo, MEAC – Norfolk State, Northeast – Bryant, OVC – Belmont, Patriot – Navy, Southern – UNC Greensboro, Southland – Abilene Christian, SWAC – Prairie View A&M, Summit – South Dakota, Sun Belt – Texas State, WAC – Grand Canyon.

  • Banned from participating: Alabama State, Alabama A&M, Delaware State, Auburn, Arizona
  • Transition schools, ineligible for the tournament: Cal Baptist, North Alabama, Merrimack, Dixie State, Tarleton State, Bellarmine, UC San Diego
  • COVID-19: Ivy League, Bethune-Cookman, Maryland-Eastern Shore, Howard, Maine

NCAA Tournament language explainer:

  • NET stands for the NCAA Evaluation Tool, which is the barometer for the selection committee. It includes game results, strength of schedule, game location, scoring margin (capping at 10 points per game), and net offensive and defensive efficiency.
  • Quadrant 1 wins: Home games vs. 1-30 NET teams; Neutral-site games vs. 1-50 NET; Away games vs. 1-75 NET
  • Quadrant 2 wins: Home games vs. 31-75 NET; Neutral-site games vs. 51-100 NET; Away games vs. 76-135 NET
  • Quadrant 3 wins: Home games vs. 76-160 NET; Neutral-site games vs. 101-200 NET; Away games vs. 136-240 NET
  • Quadrant 4 wins: Home games vs. 161-plus NET; Neutral-site games vs. 201-plus NET; Away games vs. 241-plus NET

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Here’s where Florida stands in USA Today’s latest NCAA bracketology

Florida has an uphill battle to the NCAA tournament given its ongoing bout with the coronavirus. Here is where they currently stand.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published by USA TODAY Sports and has been republished in its entirety below.

The Big Ten Conference is poised to win Selection Sunday.

Following Indiana’s double-overtime victory over Northwestern on Wednesday, the Hoosiers leapfrogged Connecticut to steal one of the last spots in the projected bracket, shoving the Huskies to the wrong side of the bubble.

That gives the Big Ten nine projected teams in the field of 68 – more than any other conference. The league also has four teams in the NET top 10. The NET (NCAA Evaluation Tool) is one of the rankings the selection committee uses to determine the bracket.

Because of the strength of the league, it won’t just be bubble teams benefiting. Michigan would have to go on a disastrous skid to lose its current stranglehold on a No. 1 seed. Meanwhile, Ohio State and Illinois are out front on the No. 2 seeds with Iowa close behind at a No. 3 seed. With Wisconsin as a projected No. 5 seed, that gives the Big Ten five teams ready to notch top-five seeds.

Selection Sunday is March 14. The NCAA Tournament kicks off March 18.

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No. 1 seeds:

Baylor, Gonzaga, Michigan, Villanova.

Last four in:

San Diego State, VCU, Stanford, Indiana.

First four out:

Richmond, Seton Hall, St. John’s, Connecticut.



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Others considered for at-large bids (no particular order):  Maryland, Wichita State, Western Kentucky, Memphis, SMU, Dayton, Davidson, Pittsburgh, St. John’s, North Carolina State, Penn State, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Michigan State, Nevada

On life support: Duke, TCU, Marquette, Providence, Marshall, Utah, Arizona State, Oregon State, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Kentucky, South Carolina, Texas A&M, St. Mary’s, San Francisco

Multi-bid conferences: Big Ten (9), Big 12 (7), ACC (6), SEC (6), Pac-12 (5), Big East (4), MWC (4), A-10 (3), MVC (2), WCC (2).

Leaders or highest NET from projected one-bid conferences – (21 total): AAC – Houston, America East – UMBC, Atlantic Sun – Liberty, Big Sky – Montana State, Big South – Winthrop, Big West – UCSB, CAA – Northeastern, C-USA – UAB, Horizon – Cleveland State, MAAC – Siena, MAC – Toledo, MEAC – Morgan State, Northeast – Bryant, OVC – Belmont, Patriot – Navy, Southern – Furman, Southland – Sam Houston, SWAC – Prairie View A&M, Summit – South Dakota, Sun Belt – Texas State, WAC – Grand Canyon.

  • Banned from participating: Alabama State, Alabama A&M, Delaware State, Auburn, Arizona
  • Transition schools, ineligible for the tournament: Cal Baptist, North Alabama, Merrimack, Dixie State, Tarleton State, Bellarmine, UC San Diego
  • COVID-19: Ivy League, Bethune-Cookman, Maryland-Eastern Shore

Note: Mostly all statistical data is used from WarrenNolan.com. The NCAA’s NET rankings are also a reference point. 

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Here’s where Sports Illustrated’s latest basketball bracket has the Gators

Take a look at where Sports Illustrated thinks UF basketball will be seeded in the 2021 NCAA tournament and who they might face.

While the Florida Gators men’s basketball season might be on pause due to a second outbreak of the coronavirus on the team, life continues to go on with the rest of college basketball. However, not much has changed in the eyes of one major media outlet in its most recent assessment of the NCAA tournament landscape.

Sports Illustrated updated its NCAA tournament bracket on Tuesday, with UF standing pat at No. 7 in the “Ohio State” region, though the potential opponents have changed since our last update. In this iteration of Kevin Sweeney’s tournament projections, Florida would face the No. 10 seed North Carolina Tar Heels in the opening round, with the winner of Villanova versus Grand Canyon State awaiting them if they emerge victoriously.

Other SEC teams in the projected field are the No. 2 Alabama Crimson Tide, No. 4 Missouri Tigers and No. 5 Tennessee Volunteers — all holding their previous positions. The No. 10 Arkansas Razorbacks and No. 12 LSU Tigers, previously seeded at No. 11, are among the “Last Four Byes” and “Last Four In”, respectively.

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NCAA tournament bracketology: Here’s where the Gators currently stand

The examination of NCAA Tournament teams will take on a much different outlook ramping up to March Madness due to the ongoing COVID pandemic

Editor’s note: This article was originally published by USA TODAY Sports and has been republished in its entirety below. 

In an unpredictable men’s college basketball season with constant cancellations and postponements due to COVID-19, the examination of NCAA Tournament teams will take on a much different outlook ramping up to March Madness.

What is clear five weeks from Selection Sunday is which four teams are No. 1 seeds in the debut of USA TODAY Sports bracketology. Gonzaga and Baylor are undefeated and national title contenders, while Villanova (12-2) and Michigan (13-1) are far ahead of the pack of No. 2 seeds.

It would take a lot of stumbling from those No. 1 seed favorites to see one of the No. 2s – Alabama, Ohio State, Texas Tech or Illinois – vault ahead. But that makes the battle for a No. 2 seed all the more appealing with little separating No. 3 seeds Texas, Oklahoma, Houston and Iowa.

Selection Sunday is March 14 with all games set to be played in the Indianapolis area.

No. 1 seeds:

Baylor, Gonzaga, Villanova, Michigan.

Last four in:

San Diego State, VCU, Stanford, Connecticut.

First four out:

Richmond, Seton Hall, St. John’s, Indiana.



Others considered for at-large bids (no particular order):  Maryland, Duke, Wichita State, Western Kentucky, Memphis, SMU, Dayton, Davidson, Pittsburgh, St. John’s, North Carolina State, Penn State, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Michigan State, Nevada

On life support: TCU, Marquette, Providence, Marshall, Utah, Arizona State, Oregon State, Ole Miss, Mississippi State, Kentucky, South Carolina, Texas A&M, St. Mary’s, San Francisco

Multi-bid conferences: Big Ten (8), Big 12 (7), ACC (6), SEC (6), Pac-12 (5), Big East (4), MWC (4), A-10 (3), MVC (2), WCC (2).

Leaders or highest NET from projected one-bid conferences – (21 total): AAC – Houston, America East – UMBC, Atlantic Sun – Liberty, Big Sky – Montana State, Big South – Winthrop, Big West – UCSB, CAA – Northeastern,  C-USA – UAB, Horizon – Cleveland State, MAAC – Siena, MAC – Toledo, MEAC – Morgan State, Northeast – Bryant, OVC – Belmont, Patriot – Navy, Southern – Furman, Southland – Sam Houston, SWAC – Prairie View A&M, Summit – South Dakota, Sun Belt – Texas State, WAC – Grand Canyon.

  • Banned from participating: Alabama State, Alabama A&M, Delaware State, Auburn, Arizona
  • Transition schools, ineligible for the tourney: Cal Baptist, North Alabama, Merrimack, Dixie State, Tarleton State, Bellarmine, UC San Diego
  • COVID-19: Ivy League, Bethune-Cookman, Maryland-Eastern Shore

Note: Mostly all statistical data is used from WarrenNolan.com. The NCAA’s NET rankings are also a reference point. 

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