College Basketball Top 25 Predictions, Game Previews: Sunday

The college basketball biggest games, top 25 predictions, TV schedules, game previews, and game times for Sunday, March 7.

The college basketball biggest games, top 25 predictions, TV schedules, game previews, and game times for Sunday, March 7.


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How are the picks so far?
SU 145-53, ATS 103-93-1, o/u: 114-81-1

CFN Fearless Predictions & Game Previews

Click on each link for the game preview and prediction. All times Eastern.

Memphis at Houston

12:00 CBS
Line: Houston -10, o/u: 132.5


Wisconsin at Iowa

12:30 FOX
Line: Iowa -6, o/u: 144


Drake at Loyola

2:20 CBS
Line: Loyola -6.5, o/u: 132.5


Texas Tech vs Baylor

4:00 ESPN
Line: Baylor -8, o/u: 139.5


Michigan at Michigan State

4:30 CBS
Line: Michigan -8, o/u: 136


Texas at TCU

7:00 Big 12/ESPN+
Line: Texas -7.5, o/u: 137.5

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Iowa vs Wisconsin Prediction, College Basketball Game Preview

Iowa Hawkeyes vs Wisconsin Badgers prediction and college basketball game preview.

Iowa Hawkeyes vs Wisconsin Badgers prediction and college basketball game preview.


Iowa vs Wisconsin Broadcast

Date: Thursday, February 18
Game Time: 7:00 ET
Venue: Kohl Center, Madison, WI
Network: ESPN3

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All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

Iowa (15-6) vs Wisconsin (15-7) Game Preview

For latest lines and to bet on college basketball, go to BetMGM


Why Iowa Will Win

Didn’t you used to be Wisconsin?

Oh sure, the Badgers are good enough to beat a Nebraska here and a Penn State there, but they’ve died from the field, the threes aren’t dropping – they’re shooting way too many for them – and they’re getting thumped on the boards lately.

There’s a chance Iowa gets the O rolling early and the Badgers can’t keep up. The Hawkeyes might not play a whole lot of D, but they’re going to win the rebounding battle by a mile.

Why Wisconsin Will Win

Yeah … about that defense thing …

Iowa doesn’t really do it.

To be fair, the defensive side of things has improved over the last few games, but for the most part there hasn’t been enough success against anyone who can hit from the outside – again, give the Hawkeyes credit for being better lately – but this is when the Badgers have to start getting hot from the field again.

For all of Wisconsin’s issues lately, the defense is still playing well with the losses coming to a great Michigan team, a strong Illinois on the road, and in general, to the Big Ten’s better teams. On the flip side, Iowa is mostly beating the mediocre.

What’s Going To Happen

Stick with the pattern.

No, Wisconsin isn’t playing as well as it should be, and it’s not imposing its will like it should, but it’s been able to rise up, adjust, and avoid that second loss in a row.

The Badgers have gone win-loss-win-loss-win-loss-win-loss …

They’re due for a home win, and they’ll get it by hitting their threes and making Iowa play their style of game. The Hawkeyes are 0-3 when making fewer than 40% of their shots from the field.

Make it 0-4.

Iowa vs Wisconsin Prediction, Line

Wisconsin 71, Iowa 66
Bet on college basketball with BetMGM
Iowa -1, o/u: 145
ATS Confidence out of 5: 3

Must See Rating: 3

5: Throwing the Lombardi Trophy
1: Various things done with and to the Stanley Cup

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Iowa’s leading receiver declares for the NFL Draft

Iowa Hawkeye wide receiver Ihmir Smith-Marsette announced earlier today that he is declaring for the 2021 NFL Draft

As the college football season winds to an end, many of the nation’s top players announce their decision of whether or not to enter the NFL Draft.

This year is unlike any other, though, in that every senior was granted an extra year of eligibility and therefore has the option to return next season.

So, instead of hearing seniors declare for the draft and only not play in their team’s bowl game, now these announcements have another full year of impact.

Related: Wisconsin football seniors 2021 roster decision tracker

One of the first big-time decisions came earlier today when Iowa Hawkeye leading receiver Ihmir Smith-Marsette announced he is entering the NFL Draft.

The senior led the Hawkeyes this season with 345 yards and 4 touchdowns on 25 receptions.

Badger fans probably remember his final collegiate play–a long touchdown reception capped off by a front-flip.

TheDraftNetwork currently ranks him as the No. 155 player in the draft class and the No. 20 wide receiver.

Iowa vs Wisconsin Prediction, Game Preview

Iowa Hawkeyes vs Wisconsin Badgers prediction and game preview.

Iowa vs Wisconsin prediction and game preview.


Iowa vs Wisconsin Broadcast

Date: Saturday, December 12
Game Time: 3:30 ET
Venue: Kinnick Stadium, Iowa City, IA
Network: FS1

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All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

Iowa (5-2) vs Wisconsin (2-2) Game Preview

For latest lines and to bet on the NFL, go to BetMGM


Why Wisconsin Will Win

The Wisconsin defense continues to be special.

The Badgers lead the the nation in total defense by a relative mile – allowing just 229 yards per game – run defense, third down defense, and time of possession. They’re holding he ball a whopping 3:18 a game more than the No. 2 team in time of possession, Rice.

Iowa passing game is okay, but nothing special. It doesn’t have to run to win, but it has to be at least decent, and it has to do something to control the clock – it’s going to lose the time battle by at least ten minutes.

Worst of all for the Hawkeyes, they’re awful on third downs, and now they have to deal with that D that allowed teams to covert just 24% of the time.

Week 15 College Schedule

Why Iowa Will Win

The Wisconsin offense continues to be awful.

Most of the top wide receivers are banged up, the running game can’t get going – it ran for 140 yards or fewer in back-to-back games for the first time since early in the 2016 season – and the team just can’t score.

The offense hasn’t stalled, but it can’t put the biscuit in the basket. The last time the program failed to score more than seven points in back-to-back games was in early November of 1991.

Iowa hasn’t been spectacular, but it’s been rock-solid with great line play – it’s Iowa – a good turnover margin, and enough of an offensive balance to be fine. It’s a formula team that isn’t going to be great in shootouts, but handles itself well in tough battles.

Welcome to the Wisconsin game.

CFN Experts Picks: Week 15

What’s Going To Happen

It’s going to be a low-scoring battle with neither team able to establish anything throughout the game. However, Wisconsin is stalling way too much.

It’s a simple problem. Defenses are loading up against a running game that’s missing a Jonathan Taylor-type of back, Graham Mertz doesn’t have the top targets to throw to and hesitates a bit too much, and the whole thing has come to a stop.

The offense will get creative, but it won’t work well enough. Iowa will have to live off of several Keith Duncan field goals, but it’ll come up with a strong, tough home win.

CFN Experts Picks: NFL

Iowa vs Wisconsin Prediction, Line

Iowa 19, Wisconsin 13
Bet on Iowa vs Wisconsin with BetMGM
PICK, o/u: 42
ATS Confidence out of 5: 3

Must See Rating: 3.5

5: Wonder Woman 1984
1: A Holly Dolly Christmas

CFN 1-127 Rankings | Bowl & CFP Projections

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What should realistic expectations be for Wisconsin basketball in 2020-2021?

Analyzing what the Badgers expectations are for next year

If you told me this past December that you thought the Wisconsin Badgers could go undefeated from February 9 until the end of the year I would have called you crazy. Nobody, absolutely nobody after watching the first three months of a topsy-turvy start to the 2019-20 season expected Wisconsin to be heading into their final regular season game at Indiana with a Big Ten title hanging in the balance. The 2019-20 team did not care about our expectations for them or any noise that could potentially sway their focus. Even when odds were stacked against them, they responded time and time again. The best news? Nearly the entire team is coming back to Madison to finish what they started.

So with D’Mitrik Trice, Nate Reuvers, Aleem Ford, Micah Potter, and Brad Davison all coming back to Madison for their senior season, what should realistic expectations be? The first answer is that Wisconsin should absolutely be considered the Big Ten favorite heading into the year, and that would even include if reigning Big Ten Player of the Year Luka Garza returns to Iowa instead of heading to the NBA. The preseason big three is clear, the order is less obvious: Iowa (assuming Garza returns), Wisconsin, and Michigan State.

At this point, the team with the least questions of the three is Wisconsin. Once Iowa answers the Garza question, I could see a case for them being Big Ten favorites, although the continuity of a Badgers core that has played together and already won a championship together should give them the edge. Even if Michigan State big man Xavier Tillman returns instead of staying in the NBA draft, which at this point does not look extremely likely, the Spartans still have an inexperienced backcourt following the departure of their leader Cassius Winston.

Realistic expectations should see the Badgers as a two or three seed when the dust settles in March. Back-to-back Big Ten crowns would be ideal, but as is the unfair life that is college basketball, you are truly judged based on a few weeks in March. Wisconsin has all the pieces to be a successful team in The Big Dance. Senior leadership, depth, rebounding, and a regular season schedule that will be more challenging than most given the nature of the Big Ten should set the Badgers up for postseason success in 2020-2021. Anything less than a second weekend appearance would feel like a disappointment in March. Should we expect a Final Four? Unfortunately, the nature of college basketball makes that a fools errand. You are always one bad shooting night away from going home before your fan base feels like you should.

A Big Ten championship and a second weekend appearance feels like a fair bar to set, although I understand if Badger fans are clamoring for more this season. This team has all the makings for a Final Four run, and although they are built entirely differently than the 2014-15 squad, it would be fair to say they have the highest expectations since that team made a run to the National Championship game. This team could be special.

Kobe King DNP vs Iowa is complicated and costly for Wisconsin

More on Kobe King

The Wisconsin Badgers obviously could have used Kobe King on Monday night versus the Iowa Hawkeyes, in a game which was hugely critical for Greg Gard midway through this college basketball season. Gard goes deep into his bench. Spreading around minutes keeps this team fresh at the defensive end of the floor. Players such as Tyler Wahl who barely dent the scoresheet are still valuable because they can eat up lots of minutes without being turnstiles on defense. Wisconsin can hold teams to 60 points or fewer with active defenders who aren’t worn down late in the second half.

Within this context, King — one of the Badgers’ better offensive players — could have provided just enough scoring punch to lift UW over the top in Carver-Hawkeye Arena. King might have been the player who could have prevented the late collapse at the offensive end of the floor. We can guess or debate just how much King meant, but this much is clear: With no superstars on the 2020 Badgers, Wisconsin needs an “all hands on deck” contribution model. Everyone needs to chip in for this team to do well.

Moreover, with Brad Davison being less than 100-percent healthy and Micah Potter picking up an ankle injury late against Iowa, King’s presence could have been useful if only as an immediate response to attrition. Yet, we all know he wasn’t available:

The obvious and easy temptation in a situation such as this is to excoriate a young man for being a coward or a wimp, as though his frustration with a coach is a grave sin (or any sin at all).

Let’s step away from that temptation. This isn’t bad behavior. This is cutthroat competition, and a college basketball career is a very fragile, short-term organism. It doesn’t have a long lifespan. It is essential, from an athlete’s perspective, to make the most of a career. We see transfers all the time, and if King soon becomes another one, we won’t be surprised.

The argument will be made by some — and it is fair — that if you’re not happy with your role on a team, you should still try to arrive at an understanding with the coach and work through problems so that you can be there for your teammates. I think we can generally agree with that claim. Life being difficult doesn’t mean you abandon teammates or co-workers in a time of need.

Yet: Relationships require a lot of hard work. They go through very difficult periods, sometimes difficult enough that the two people in a relationship (Kobe and Gard as player and coach) need some distance and time to refocus. This is an honest, human conflict. It is part of life. The timing could not be worse, but if any of you have been embroiled in a work conflict, a bad roommate situation, or a contentious family argument that got nasty, you can relate to Kobe King. One can disapprove of his actions yet still retain empathy for him. Adults know how to be critical of other people yet not allow that stern criticism to wipe away their respect or care for that person.

So it should be with Wisconsin fans and Kobe King.

This was a costly DNP versus Iowa, but it is also complicated. Be mad at Kobe King, a member of the Badger family who hasn’t done what the family needed him to do. Don’t let that anger erode your respect and care for him, however.

Let’s see if he and Gard can make peace. This upcoming Michigan State game might be the game which ultimately determines where this team lands on Selection Sunday.

Micah Potter vs Iowa embodies this season for Wisconsin

Micah Potter vs Iowa

Micah Potter isn’t the most important player on the 2019-2020 Wisconsin Badgers, but he is the player who most profoundly and aptly symbolizes what the Badgers have gone through.

Potter didn’t play in the first 10 games of the season, through no fault of his own — darn NCAA! — and his team could have used him. Small doses of minutes in his arrival to the lineup in late December seemed to snap the rotations into place. Potter gave Greg Gard and his own teammates more flexibility.

Yet, Potter didn’t play too many minutes because of his defensive limitations. Wisconsin has needed to win primarily with its defense, so Gard accordingly tried to restrict Potter’s minutes. The Badgers will generally win by containing damage rather than exploding past the opposition. To that extent, there was and is a clear logical coherence to the decision by Gard to limit Potter’s minutes.

However, Wisconsin’s offense dies much too often in games. Potter unquestionably makes the Badgers a much more potent team. On a broader level, Potter can’t improve his defense without getting more minutes and being exposed to more situations. This doesn’t mean he has to play 30 minutes, but the 15 minutes per game he averaged coming into the Iowa game put him eighth on the roster, behind Tyler Wahl and Aleem Ford.

Before this Iowa game began, though, something happened which magnified Potter’s importance to the Badgers: Kobe King would not play for personal (non-health-related) reasons. The rotation would be shortened by one player. This increased the odds that Potter would play more minutes.

As it turned out, Potter played 15 minutes against Iowa, right in line with his current average of 14.9 per game, but he played 15 minutes while getting into foul trouble and then suffering an ankle injury (severity unknown) with just under four minutes left in regulation.

Getting into foul trouble was to be expected, given his defensive deficiencies, but it has to be said that Wisconsin’s defense was generally very good in this game. Potter might not have been particularly impressive, but he didn’t bring the team down with him. Picking up fouls isn’t fun or positive in itself, but such an experience makes a player aware of how — and why — his defense has to improve. Potter learned, and Wisconsin’s defense didn’t suffer — not severely, at any rate. There were some encouraging developments to note in Potter’s play and the way he fits into this rotation with King out.

Yet, the ankle injury (even if not especially serious) left Potter and Wisconsin with a story which was ultimately anything but happy. That individual story mirrored the loss to Iowa: UW made great progress from the Purdue game, but the bottom line was a negative one, since this game needed to go in the win column and did not.

Potter’s game against Iowa was a microcosm of the whole season to this point: Potter, like the team, needed time to find itself. It improved in the middle stages, then weakened later on. Notable improvements were overshadowed at the end by larger and more negative realities.

The only good news is that the “end” refers not to the full season, only the portion of the season which has been played to date. The month of February awaits. Hopefully Potter, Greg Gard, and the whole team will be able to evolve in ways which don’t create moral victories, but actual ones.

Cruel irony visits Wisconsin in late collapse at Iowa

Wisconsin-Iowa instant reaction

If you have followed the Wisconsin Badgers all season long, you knew Monday night’s game against the Iowa Hawkeyes in Iowa City was a huge moment for this team. Wisconsin had just been embarrassed by Purdue. The game was a disaster, and we made sure to say that.

Here is an excerpt from that story on Friday night:

The news is very bad for the Wisconsin Badgers not because they lost to the Purdue Boilermakers on Friday night in West Lafayette. Had Wisconsin played a 58-57 game and failed to make the last shot, the Badgers would have played a game largely in line with what we have seen the past few weeks. The limitations of the team would have persisted, but so would the strengths. We know Wisconsin has a relatively low ceiling, but the encouraging part of the past few weeks is that the Badgers had raised their floor.

*snip*

Friday against Purdue, the Badgers looked a lot like the weak team which had no clue on the road against ordinary opponents such as New Mexico, Richmond, and North Carolina State. Getting thrashed by Michigan State wasn’t an indication of erosion. Getting drubbed in a 19-point loss to a 10-9 Purdue team — in a game the Badgers once trailed by 28 — offers no guarantees, but it DOES carry the possibility that this team is in trouble heading to Iowa City for a game against the Iowa Hawkeyes on Monday.

We discussed the need for Wisconsin to fight and scratch and claw, to play with desperation and not get bullied in this Iowa game.

The Badgers definitely did that. They were tougher on the glass. They made this a physical game, the kind of game Iowa doesn’t like and, frankly, has never liked under Fran McCaffery. Iowa shot poorly because the Badgers got in the Hawkeyes’ chests and faces. Wisconsin played the tough defense we expected against Purdue, and which we generally expect every night UW takes the floor. It was precisely that 58-57 kind of game late in regulation, and Wisconsin came a little bit short.

Yet, Wisconsin didn’t need the moral victory here. It needed to WIN… and just before the game, it was announced that Kobe King would not play for personal and non-health-related reasons.

Tyler Wahl and the other players asked to play more minutes in King’s absence did a good job. This team played hard for Greg Gard. It showed so many of the good traits we hoped for and expected… but it wasn’t enough. More precisely, it wasn’t enough because King wasn’t there, and THAT is going to be the story which overshadows everything else.

The cruel irony of this loss is that Wisconsin did so many good things and yet suffered a loss in a game it had to win, which makes all the good things UW did very worthless. A team improved by miles from Friday against Purdue and yet watched its NCAA Tournament resume get worse, with Michigan State looming this Saturday.

That is the upside-down and very dark reality associated with the word “irony.” It is very cruel indeed.