Notre Dame moves up to No. 3 seed in latest ESPN bracketology

You want want to start making plans to be at Purcell Pavilion in a couple of weeks.

Notre Dame has become impossible to ignore during its seven-game winning streak late in the season. Because of it, all signs point to the Irish hosting the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament as a top-four seed. Now, simply getting to the ACC Tournament championship game appears to have helped them even more.

ESPN’s Charlie Creme updated his bracketology before the title game and bumped the Irish up to a No. 3 seed. The move was noticeable enough that Creme devoted his paragraph at the top of his bracket to them:

“Notre Dame looks like the best team in the ACC and has reached the championship game of the ACC tournament. With wins over Louisville and Virginia Tech in Greensboro, Notre Dame has jumped to a No. 3 seed. The Irish were just outside looking in during the NCAA tournament selection committee’s two reveals of the top 16 seeds. But now, they’ve won seven in a row since losing to NC State – their opponent in Sunday’s ACC tournament title game. Notre Dame was the biggest mover on a Saturday that saw most of the remaining favorites win and hold their spots.”

For what it’s worth, Her Hoop Stats projected the Irish as a fourth seed in the update it published before the Irish won their semifinal game. Regardless, it would be a shocker at this point if the Irish aren’t an NCAA Tournament host. In that case, there needs to be a serious overhaul of the selection process. Hopefully, that discussion won’t be necessary in a week’s time.

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Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Check the yardage book: Sedgefield Country Club for PGA Tour’s 2023 Wyndham Championship

StrackaLine offers a hole-by-hole course guide to the PGA Tour’s Wyndham Championship in North Carolina.

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Sedgefield Country Club – site of the 2023 Wyndham Championship on the PGA Tour – opened in 1926 in Greensboro, North Carolina, with a design by legendary architect Donald Ross.

The private layout, which features relatively small and undulating greens, was extensively restored in 2007 by Kris Spence. The Tour event returned in 2008.

Sedgefield will play to 7,131 yards with a par of 70 for the Wyndham Championship, which is the final event of the Tour’s regular season and the last chance for players to earn entry into the 70-player FedEx Cup Playoffs.

Thanks to yardage books provided by StrackaLine – the maker of detailed yardage books for thousands of courses around the world – we can see exactly the challenges the players face this week in North Carolina.

Mike Brey, Cormac Ryan, Marcus Hammond speak after Notre Dame loss

Read some final words summing up the season and a whole era of Irish basketball.

Notre Dame’s 67-64 loss to Virginia Tech in the ACC Tournament signaled the end of an era. Yes, it means [autotag]Mike Brey[/autotag]’s days as Irish coach are over, but it also means the end for many players on the roster, especially rotational players. Two of them are [autotag]Marcus Hammond[/autotag] and [autotag]Cormac Ryan[/autotag], players who didn’t begin their collegiate careers with the Irish but were the most impactful in Brey’s final game for the program. That allowed them to come out with Brey for the season’s last postgame news conference.

Hammond and Ryan sat next to Brey as he, among other things, called out the officials for a late lengthy review that ultimately resulted in a dead-ball technical for [autotag]Matt Zona[/autotag] that might have affected the game’s outcome. This came as the Irish were about to shoot their own free throws in a close contest. Brey has called out ACC officials before, and he apparently decided to do it one more time on his way out.

Here is what the Irish trio said after the game:

ACC men’s basketball leaders as of March 5

No one for Notre Dame is on this list.

The ACC Tournament takes place this week, so all eyes will be on Greensboro, North Carolina. Whatever the standing of your team, this is the perfect opportunity to see the best of what the conference has had to offer this season. Here are the players you particularly will want to see:

ACC honors galore for Notre Dame

So many Irish folks won awards that we had to make a listicle out of this story.

When you win the outright ACC regular-season championship, as Notre Dame did, many conference honors are sure to come. That’s exactly what happened when the ACC unveiled its annual honors. The best part is the honors weren’t limited to those who are on the court every game.

All of this is happening ahead of the ACC Tournament, which begins Wednesday in Greensboro, North Carolina. Having earned one of the top four seeds, the Irish received an automatic berth to the quarterfinals, which will take place Friday. As the top seed, they will play the winner of the second-round game between Syracuse and an NC State program that has given them problems over the past year.

Joe Lunardi’s latest Bracketology has the Irish holding steady as the No. 3 seed in the quadrant featuring undefeated and top-ranked South Carolina. Should the Gamecocks draw the Irish in the Elite Eight in that scenario, they’ll have to deal with these heavy hitters that have made the Irish such a force this season:

ACC women’s basketball leaders as of Feb. 26

One Notre Dame player, hopefully a healthy one, is on the list.

The ACC Tournament takes place this week, so all eyes will be on Greensboro, North Carolina. Whatever the standing of your team, this is the perfect opportunity to see the best of what the conference has had to offer this season. Here are the players you particularly will want to see:

Notre Dame wins outright ACC regular-season championship

Feels nice to be alone on the conference mountaintop.

[autotag]Niele Ivey[/autotag]’s transformation as a worthy successor to [autotag]Muffet McGraw[/autotag] officially has been completed. With Notre Dame needing a road win over Louisville in its regular-season finale to clinch at least a share of the ACC regular-season title, the pressure couldn’t have been higher. The road was made tougher with the sudden loss of [autotag]Olivia Miles[/autotag], one of the country’s best players, to a right knee injury. All signs pointed to a disappointing precursor to the ACC Tournament.

Instead, Ivey kept her team focused, and the Irish overcame a 10-point third-quarter deficit to come away with a hard-fought 68-65 win over the Cardinals. With Duke losing to North Carolina, the Irish won their first outright ACC regular-season championship since 2017. They last won a share of the ACC regular-season title in 2019.

The 24-4 Irish finished conference play with a 15-3 record. They will have the top seed in the conference tournament, which begins Wednesday in Greensboro, North Carolina. Their first game will be in the quarterfinals Friday against the winner of Thursday’s second-round game between NC State and Syracuse.

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Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Mike Brey, Nate Laszewski and Cormac Ryan speak after loss

The Irish seem almost speechless about this season.

SOUTH BEND – Wake Forest took Notre Dame by surprise in the second half, and you could see that after the Irish’s 81-64 loss. Sometimes, even after a tough defeat, you’ll hear plenty of words from Mike Brey and whichever players are selected to take part in the postgame news conference. This time, nobody seemed to be in a good mood. While Brey still has his usual bright and chipper moments, [autotag]Cormac Ryan[/autotag] and [autotag]Nate Laszewski[/autotag] looked completely at a loss as to what had just happened.

When a team already is at 10 conference losses and still has a month of games to go, it has to be deflating. That many defeats in league play will get to anybody, even a veteran-laden team like the Irish. The feeling in that locker room is obvious, and there’s no sign that anything on the court will change that feeling anytime soon.

Here is some of what was said after the loss:

 

A botched wide-open UNC Greensboro dunk led to a wild bad beat

Oof.

March Madness is nearly upon us, but this bad beat is already pretty maddening for some bettors.

The situation: UNC Greensboro was on its way to beating Mercer in the SoCon conference championship to clinch a spot in the 2021 NCAA tournament. With the Spartans up 69-61 with over 13 seconds left, Keyshaun Langley went in for a breakaway dunk to put an exclamation point on the win … and it bounced off the rim.

It didn’t matter in the final score. But there were bettors who were pretty shocked it didn’t go in: the over/under for the Spartans in the game was either 69.5 or 70.5. Ooooofff.

Here’s the play:

And some reaction:

Yikes.

(Thanks to The Comeback for sharing.)

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Notre Dame hopes to begin ACC Tournament run vs. Wake Forest

It will be a long road for Notre Dame if it wants to make a Cinderella run in Greensboro, North Carolina, and win the ACC Tournament.

It will be a long road for Notre Dame if it wants to make a Cinderella run in Greensboro, North Carolina, and win the ACC Tournament. That road begins Tuesday when the 11th-seeded Irish take on 14th-seeded Wake Forest. When the Irish (10-14, 7-11) hosted the Demon Deacons (6-15, 3-15) on Groundhog Day at Purcell Pavilion, they put together one of their most dominant wins of the season, 79-58. The question is whether they can repeat that feat in a win-or-go-home situation.

In the recent past, the Irish have done very well in their conference tournament openers, winning 11 of their past 12. Discounting first-round byes, Mike Brey has failed to win his first game in a conference tournament only four times as Notre Dame coach. Strictly based on that, it’s very likely the Irish will advance to face North Carolina in the second round.

Juwan Durham will be the player to watch for the Irish as he cruised against the Deacons last time. He had a line of 18 points, nine rebounds, four blocks and two assists. He also shot 7 of 9 from the field. Knowing any game from here on out could be his last with Notre Dame, he’ll do everything he can to delay the inevitable.

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.