Where Michigan State stands on the morning of Selection Sunday

While it’s not guaranteed the Spartans are dancing, things do seem to be pointing in that direction.

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In most years, Michigan State is safely in the field and Selection Sunday is more about getting a good draw for a run in the NCAA Tournament. This year, fans are just crossing their fingers that they’ll just be part of March Madness.

While it’s not guaranteed the Spartans are dancing, things do seem to be pointing in that direction — according to numerous bracket projection experts.

Joe Lunardi of ESPN currently has Michigan State as one of the final teams to make the tournament and avoid playing in the “First Four” play-in games. The Spartans are currently listed as a No. 11 seed playing against USC in the opening round of Lunardi’s most up-to-date bracket.

Shelby Mast and Scott Gleeson of USA TODAY have the Spartans in a similar spot as Lunardi in their final projection that came out on Sunday morning. Michigan State is listed as a No. 11 seed playing Clemson in this projection from Mast and Gleeson.

CLICK HERE TO SEE USA TODAY BRACKET PROJECTION

Jerry Palm of CBS Sports is a little higher on the Spartans than ESPN and USA TODAY, with Michigan State sitting as a No. 10 seed in his most recent bracket projection that came out on Sunday morning. The Spartans are currently slated to play Oregon in Palm’s most recent projection.

One final indication that the Spartans will be dancing is from the Bracket Matrix — a tool that compiles bracket projections and provides an average seed and odds of making the NCAA Tournament. As of this morning, the Bracket Matrix had the Spartans sitting as the first 11 seed ahead of fellow bubble teams like UCLA, Wichita State, Louisville, Drake and Syracuse.

https://twitter.com/Slicknickshady/status/1371076794498039816

So what does all of this mean? Well, Spartans fans should feel pretty good about hearing Michigan State’s name called today during CBS’ Selection Show at 6 p.m. ET. However, we need to keep in mind that these are all just projections and that the selection committee could have a completely different view of the Spartans. So nothing is guaranteed at this point but at least we can feel relatively good about their chances at making a 23rd straight NCAA Tournament.

Either way, we’ll know soon enough.

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Michigan State still safely in NCAA Tournament in latest ESPN Bracketology

MSU didn’t play on Friday but not much changed for the Spartans as far as their NCAA Tournament standing goes — if anything, it improved.

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Michigan State didn’t play on Friday but not much changed for the Spartans as far as their NCAA Tournament standing goes — if anything, it improved.

The Spartans benefited from a number of bubble teams losing in their conference tournaments on Friday, and because of that, they remain as a No. 11 seed and safely in the NCAA Tournament of ESPN’s latest Bracketology from Joe Lunardi. Lunardi has the Spartans two spots above the “Last Four In” currently, and facing No. 6 seed BYU in the opening round.

There are a number of bubble games on Saturday that could affect the Spartans’ but based on where Lunardi currently has Michigan State, it seems unlikely they’ll drop out of the field at this point. Things can of course change, but Michigan State should feel pretty comfortable at this point.

Selection Sunday is tomorrow with the annual selection show on CBS starting at 6 p.m. ET. We’ll then know the Spartans’ match-up in the NCAA Tournament — or if their lengthy March Madness streak ends.

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Bubble Watch: Five games on Saturday with bubble implications for MSU

Let’s take a look at a handful of important games that could either support or hurt Michigan State’s chances of making the NCAA Tournament.

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Michigan State didn’t play on Friday, but it still was a really good day for the Spartans and their NCAA Tournament odds.

A number of fellow bubble teams were on the court in conference tournaments on Friday, and a good chunk of those bubble teams lost, including Seton Hall, Ole Miss, SMU and Colorado State. All of these teams will now sweat it out on Selection Sunday and that’s good news for the Spartans, who are projected safely ahead of these squads.

Friday was a good bubble day for Michigan State, and I now feel more comfortable with the Spartans making the big dance this morning than I did yesterday. But there’s still a handful of games that could impact Michigan State’s standing on the bubble and seeding line on Saturday. Let’s take a look at those games and who you should be rooting for:

Bubble Watch: Five Games on Friday with Bubble Implications for MSU

Let’s take a look at a handful of important games that could either support or hurt Michigan State’s chances of making the NCAA Tournament.

Sadly, Michigan State will not be playing on Friday after a lackluster performance in their Big Ten Tournament opener on Thursday. The Spartans fell to Maryland, 68-57, in their lone Big Ten Tournament game and will now have to wait until Selection Sunday to know if they’re dancing or not.

Current reports from Andy Katz and Joe Lunardi suggest the Spartans are safely into the field, but a win on Thursday would have really secured their spot.

With the Spartans not playing any more games this weekend, let’s take a look at a handful of important games that could either support or hurt Michigan State’s chances of making the NCAA Tournament.

Bubble Breakdown: Fellow Bubble Teams to Keep an Eye on This Week

MSU is considered a lock for the NCAA Tournament by some analysts but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t keep an eye on other bubble squads.

With Saturday’s win over No. 2 Michigan, it appears the Spartans are heading back to the NCAA Tournament for a 23rd consecutive season.

The win over the Wolverines was Michigan State’s third against a top five team in the past two weeks and capped off an impressive 5-2 stretch to end the regular season. The Spartans are certainly on the right side of the bubble entering the Big Ten Tournament this week, and a win over Maryland on Thursday should all but secure a spot in March Madness. But what happens if they lose vs. the Terps?

There’s still a little bit of wiggle room and uncertainty surrounding the Spartans and their NCAA Tournament status, and a loss to Maryland could leave open the door for a fellow bubble team to steal their bid. I don’t think that’ll necessarily happen — but since there’s still a chance, it would be smart to look at who else is in the similar spot as Michigan State as we enter the final week before Selection Sunday.

Here is a complete breakdown of the fellow bubble squads (put together by bracket projections) and their upcoming schedule this week. As Spartan fans, these are the teams we’d like to see lose to help cement a spot in the NCAA Tournament.

Field of 96? A Proposal for an Expanded NCAA Tournament

Field of 96? A Proposal for an Expanded NCAA Tournament in 2021 All contingency plans should be on the table for the next March Madness. Contact/Follow @andrewdieckhoff & @MWCwire Could the NCAA Tournament expand to 96 teams? As the likelihood …

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Field of 96? A Proposal for an Expanded NCAA Tournament in 2021


All contingency plans should be on the table for the next March Madness.


Contact/Follow @andrewdieckhoff & @MWCwire

Could the NCAA Tournament expand to 96 teams?

As the likelihood increases for a college basketball season unlike any other, it has become open season for speculations about how the NCAA might proceed with its second-most popular sport. National outlets such as CBS Sports and The Athletic have dedicated thousands of words to enumerating nearly every scenario imaginable on how the 2020-21 hoops season might unfold.

Particularly noteworthy is Matt Norlander’s recent rundown of different tournament formats that the NCAA could adopt for its annual spring fling. While most options were presented in a positive light, his final suggestion – temporarily expanding the field to 96 teams – came with multiple all-caps warnings:

WARNING, WARNING: DO NOT DO THIS, NCAA. DON’T EVER DO THIS.

I REPEAT: ONE YEAR ONLY AND PREFERABLY IN AN ALTERNATE UNIVERSE FROM OUR OWN

DO NOT DO THIS, NCAA. I’M GOING AGAINST EVERYTHING IN MY DNA BY EVEN PUTTING THIS OPTION OUT THERE.

Clearly, Norlander isn’t sold on the idea of giving out extra bids.

Even so, he does outline a few broad strokes for a 96-team field would look, most notably suggesting that each conference would be awarded two automatic bids and divvy out the remaining 32 at-large bids to leagues “based on historical league performance.”

The idea is treated with such contempt, however, that its author goes into no further detail, leaving at least one reader to wonder what it would look like to play this tune out. With seemingly endless time to speculate until anybody in charge makes any official proclamations, we here at the Mountain West Wire are happy to tug on that thread.

Let’s make one thing clear before we begin: I’m not advocating for this proposed and very very hypothetical tournament format to become the new status quo. And just in case you’re worried that the idea is gaining traction with the powers that be, NCAA president Mark Emmert recently said that pulling off even a 64-team tournament in a bubble scenario would be “tough.”

He makes a fair point. But what if the NCAA were to split up an expanded 96-team field over multiple bubbles, with the winner of each regional bracket advancing to a separate Final Four weekend event?

There are a few reasons why this hypothetical 96-team model could make some sense if the non-conference season is eventually canceled or severely truncated:

  • It allows for tournament games to be played across five sites total and could reasonably be completed within four to five weeks, including rest periods.
  • It increases the total number of NCAA Tournament games being played, potentially helping the NCAA and its member programs recoup some of the financial losses suffered due to the lack of a 2019-20 postseason and assuming there is no non-conference play in 2020-21. A guarantee of multiple teams from each conference would increase the NCAA Tournament units earned by each league.
  • It recognizes that the typical at-large selection process would lose the context provided by non-conference games and accounts for the lack of data by giving more bids to programs from all 32 conferences, while attempting to preserve existing hierarchies among the leagues with regard to the distribution of at-large bids.
  • It removes the subjective NCAA Tournament selection process, which would be hindered by the lack of inter-conference data, replacing the typical 68-team bracket with four brackets, each of which are comprised of 24 teams chosen from eight predetermined, geographically proximal conferences.
  • It places an even greater importance on winning conference games, which seems reasonable in the hypothetical scenario in which the non-conference slate is axed.
  • It allows each conference to exercise its own judgment regarding how its representative teams will be selected (conference tournament, order of finish in league play, etc.), giving each team a clear and unchanging rubric for how to make the NCAA Tournament and the consequences for falling in the standings.

Is it an ideal solution? Of course not. However, it’s going to take some enterprising spirit to get college basketball back, and so we can’t be afraid to discuss taking a first step down a potentially slippery slope. Norlander pointed out in his piece that the tournament has only ever expanded – it has never contracted. It’s a fair concern.

But If there were ever a season for a break-the-glass contingency plan, this is it.

NCAA senior VP of college basketball, Dan Gavitt, recently told Andy Katz, “We’ll be flexible. We’ll be nimble and we’ll deliver what the country is desperately looking for again and that’s just an incredible March Madness tournament in 2021.”

Here’s hoping Gavitt is serious, because the proposal that follows will certainly test the tensile strength of the NCAA’s flexibility.

If nothing else, it has been a fun thought exercise to put this together, and in the end, it may not be the worst idea I will ever have. Here goes nothing. (And who knows? Maybe we’ll find a miracle cure tomorrow and all of this will be moot.)

BID ALLOTMENT

By expanding the tournament, each league would still receive an automatic bid into the tournament, and further, each would be guaranteed one spot in round of 64 by virtue of its champion receiving a bye past the qualifying round. The remaining 64 at-large teams square off to see who fills out the bracket.

Of course, it would be naive to think that all leagues are created equal. But just how do you quantify the inequality that we know to exist between conferences?  One way is to look at the distribution of at-large bids granted to each conference over recent years, as well as to look at which leagues had teams under close consideration for an at-large bid. I’ll spare you all the calculations, and you can feel free to argue with them, but I established three tiers for the Division I conferences based on recent history:

  • Near-Lock Multi-Bid Leagues (Tier 1)
    • American, Atlantic 10, ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big XII, Pacific 12, SEC
  • Potential Multi-Bid Leagues (Tier 2)
    • Conference USA, Ivy League, Mid-American, Missouri Valley, Mountain West, Ohio Valley, Southern, West Coast
  • Near-Lock One-Bid Leagues (Tier 3)
    • America East, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Big West, Colonial, Horizon, MAAC, MEAC, Northeast, Patriot, Southland, Summit, Sun Belt, SWAC, WAC

By splitting the leagues up in such a way, bids can be evenly spread across the tiers:

  • Tier 1: five (5) bids per league x 8 leagues = 40 bids
  • Tier 2: three (3) bids per league x 8 leagues = 24 bids
  • Tier 3: two (2) bids per league x 16 leagues = 32 bids

Of course, while most of us may recognize a reality in which the Big Ten and the A-10 would likely not receive the same number of bids in a normal year, this is not a normal year. By divvying up bids from the start, the NCAA could save itself a big headache down the line in trying to split hairs between schools. They could also allow conferences to determine how their bids are chosen.

Don’t want to have a conference tournament at all? Fine, don’t! Want to choose your participants based strictly on order of finish in league play instead? Go for it! Want to use a conference tournament to determine your automatic bid and the league standings to determine the at-large representatives? You do you!

There are also questions of where to play the games, but I will save that discussion for another time, though. This is all hypothetical, after all, and there are people much better equipped to answer those questions. In fact, our own Jeremy Mauss touched on this topic earlier this week.

Instead, what I will break down is how the NCAA could actually hold this 96-team tournament in a mostly-travel-friendly way that takes the guesswork out of their lives in the event the non-conference season is canceled. Things look a little messy at first glance, but it could be an elegant solution if the NCAA decided to temporarily expand its tournament field.

Here are some important things to note:

  • The hypothetical tournament field would consist of 96 teams, with 32 conference champions receiving an automatic bid into the Round of 64. The remaining 64 bids would be allotted in a predetermined manner and seeded into a qualifying round in their respective bracket.
  • The 32 conferences would be evenly split into one the four regional brackets based on geographical footprint and the tiers noted above. Each bracket would include two Tier 1 leagues, two Tier 2 leagues, and four Tier 3 leagues, resulting in a total of 24 bids being allotted to each region. The four regional brackets would be structured as follows:
    • North: Big Ten, A-10, MVC, MAC, Horizon, Patriot, MAAC, NEC
    • East: ACC, Big East, Ivy, OVC, CAA, ASUN, AEC, MEAC
    • West: Pac-12, AAC, WCC, MWC, WAC, Big West, Summit, Big Sky
    • South: Big XII, SEC, SOCON, CUSA, Sun Belt, Southland, Big South, SWAC
  • The schedule might cause some complications of course, but if the brackets are split up into four separate sites each having the ability to play two games at overlapping times, that would facilitate things. Assuming a March 25 start date, here’s a sample timeline for the tournament, with built-in recovery periods:
    • Qualifying Round: Thurs., March 25 and Fri., March 26
    • First Round: Sat., March 27 and Sun. March 28
    • 10-day recovery period: Mon., March 29 through Wed., April 7
    • Regional Quarterfinals (same sites): Thurs., April 8 and Fri., April 9
    • Regional Semifinals: Sat., April 10
    • Regional Finals: Sun., April 11
    • 12-Day recovery period: Mon., April 12 through Fri., April 23
    • National Semifinals (new Final Four site): Sat., April 24
    • National Championship: Mon., April 26

Sure, it’s more April Madness than traditionalists might prefer, but it gets the job done in just about a month’s time, and provides some flexibility to accelerate or slow the schedule as needed.

Next is a glimpse at how each bracket would look, including how the conferences would be divided up and seeded into the tournament field.

(NOTE: To provide some extra context, I’ve included a mock-up of what each bracket would look like using results from the 2019-20 season. For the leagues that finished their conference tournaments, including the Mountain West, tournament champions were awarded the automatic bid. For all other leagues, bids were determined by conference tournament seeding, ignoring any results from canceled tournaments.)

NORTH BRACKET

  • Qualifying Round
    • Missouri Valley #2 vs. Mid-American #3
    • Atlantic 10 #4 vs. Big Ten #5
    • Atlantic 10 #2 vs. MAAC #2
    • Big Ten #3 vs. Patriot #2
    • Mid-American #2 vs. Missouri Valley #3
    • Big Ten #4 vs. Atlantic 10 #5
    • Big Ten #2 vs. NEC #2
    • Atlantic 10 #3 vs. Horizon #2
  • First Round
    • Big Ten Champion vs. NEC Champion
    • MVC #2/MAC #3 winner vs. A10 #4/B1G #5 winner
    • A10 #2/MAAC #2 winner vs. B1G #3/Patriot #2 winner
    • Mid-American Champion vs. Horizon Champion
    • Atlantic 10 Champion vs. MAAC Champion
    • MAC #2/MVC #3 winner vs. B1G #4/A10 #5 winner
    • B1G #2/NEC #2 winner vs. A10 #3/Horizon #2 winner
    • Missouri Valley Champion vs. Patriot Champion

For context, here’s how this bracket would look using 2019-20 results as earlier noted:

96team-north

EAST BRACKET

  • Qualifying Round
    • Ivy #2 vs. OVC #3
    • Big East #4 vs. ACC #5
    • Big East #2 vs. America East #2
    • ACC #3 vs. ASUN #2
    • OVC #2 vs. Ivy #3
    • ACC #4 vs. Big East #5
    • ACC #2 vs. MEAC #2
    • Big East #3 vs. CAA #2
  • First Round
    • ACC Champion vs. MEAC Champion
    • Ivy #2/OVC #3 winner vs. BE #4/ACC #5 winner
    • BE #2/AEC #2 winner vs. ACC #3/ ASUN #2 winner
    • OVC Champion vs. CAA Champion
    • Big East Champion vs. America East Champion
    • OVC #2/Ivy #3 winner vs. ACC #4/BE #5 winner
    • ACC #2/MEAC #2 winner vs. Big East #3/CAA #2 winner
    • Ivy Champion vs. ASUN Champion

For context, here’s how this bracket would look using 2019-20 results as earlier noted:

96team-east

WEST BRACKET

  • Qualifying Round
    • WCC #2 vs. Mountain West #3
    • American #4 vs. Pac-12 #5
    • American #2 vs. Summit #2
    • Pac-12 #3 vs. Big West #2
    • Mountain West #2 vs. WCC #3
    • Pac-12 #4 vs. American #5
    • Pac-12 #2 vs. Big Sky #2
    • American #3 vs. WAC #2
  • First Round
    • Pac-12 Champion vs. Big Sky Champion
    • WCC #2/MWC #3 winner vs. AAC #4/P12 #5 winner
    • AAC #2/Summit #2 winner vs. P12 #3/BW #2 winner
    • Mountain West Champion vs. WAC Champion
    • American Champion vs. Summit Champion
    • MWC #2/WCC #3 winner vs. P12 #4/AAC #5 winner
    • P12 #2/Big Sky #2 winner vs. AAC #3/WAC #2 winner
    • WCC Champion vs. Big West Champion

For context, here’s how this bracket would look using 2019-20 results as earlier noted:

96team-west

SOUTH BRACKET

  • Qualifying Round
    • SOCON #2 vs. C-USA #3
    • SEC #4 vs. Big XII #5
    • SEC #2 vs. Big South #2
    • Big XII #3 vs. Southland #2
    • C-USA #2 vs. SOCON #3
    • Big XII #4 vs. SEC #5
    • Big XII #2 vs. SWAC #2
    • SEC #3 vs. Sun Belt #2
  • First Round
    • Big XII Champion vs. SWAC Champion
    • SOCON #2/CUSA #3 winner vs. SEC #4/B12 #5 winner
    • SEC #2/Big South #2 winner vs. B12 #3/SL #2 winner
    • Conference USA Champion vs. Sun Belt Champion
    • SEC Champion vs. Big South Champion
    • CUSA #2/SOCON #3 winner vs. B12 #4/SEC #5 winner
    • B12 #2/SWAC #2 winner vs. SEC #3/SB #2 winner
    • SOCON Champion vs. Southland Champion

For context, here’s how this bracket would look using 2019-20 results as earlier noted:

96team-south

Well, there you have it. Have thoughts on the brackets? Suggestions for how it could be improved? Just want to complain? Crack your knuckles and head over Twitter to continue the conversation with @mwcwire.

Andrew is a current USBWA member, covering college basketball for Mountain West Wire of the USA TODAY Sports Media Group. He also runs the Dieckhoff Power Index, a college basketball analytics system, and provides bracketology predictions throughout the season.

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Austin Reaves publicly reprimanded by Big 12 for throat slash against TCU

The shot heard ’round the Big 12 just does not want to die.

The shot heard ’round the Big 12 just does not want to die.

The Big 12 Conference came out three days after Austin Reaves nailed a game-winner with 0.5 seconds left to cap off a 19-point comeback road win against TCU.

In the public reprimand, Big 12 commissioner Bob Bowlsby said that “Austin Reaves’ conduct after his game-winning shot last Saturday is contrary to the Conference’s Sportsmanship standards,”

Bowlsby went on to state that he appreciated Reaves’ apology posted Monday morning and that he was grateful to Oklahoma’s administration and coaching staff in their assistance in the matter.

No further punishment is expected to come from the situation and Reaves is fully expected to be on the court with his teammates when the three-seeded Sooners take on six-seed West Virginia in the Big 12 Tournament at 8 p.m. CT on Thursday.

Oklahoma currently sits well inside the bubble after flirting with being left out of the NCAA Tournament for the last two weeks of the regular season. A large reason why the Sooners are in is due to the play of Reaves.

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Oklahoma basketball locked into NCAA Tournament in latest bracketology

It wasn’t smooth, but Oklahoma will surely take it. As of Sunday, the Sooners are a lock to be in the NCAA Tournament in latest bracketology.

It wasn’t smooth, but Oklahoma will surely take it.

The Sooners needed a win against TCU on Saturday to maintain their position in the NCAA Tournament race. Lon Kruger and Oklahoma got behind by 20 in the first half, 17 with 10:22 left in the game and then 13 with just over four minutes left to play.

By game’s end, Austin Reaves had scored a career-high 41 points and etched his name into Oklahoma basketball lore by willing his team to victory. Reaves made a game-winning shot with half a second left to give the Sooners their first and only lead of the game at 78-76.

The question many wondered was if Oklahoma could somehow sneak in with a loss and a good enough resume. The question now is whether the Sooners will be a 10 or 9-seed come selection Sunday a week from now.

In the latest Bracket Matrix, which includes the likes of ESPN’s Joe Lunardi, CBS’ Sports Jerry Palm and YAHOO, Oklahoma is in 99 of the 99 submitted brackets for bracketology. The Sooners have an average seed of 9.61 and are in a tight, five-team group that consists of USC, Rutgers, Indiana, Texas Tech  and Arizona State. Oklahoma has been seeded by bracketologists as high as eighth.

Kruger and the Sooners will start the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday night as the 3-seed and will take on 6-seed West Virginia in Kansas City at 8 p.m. CT.

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Oklahoma helps lock up NCAA Tournament bid with 20-point comeback on the road at TCU

It appears for the seventh time in the last eight years, OU is going to be dancing. Comeback win at TCU helps lock up NCAA Tournament bid.

It appears for the seventh time in the last eight years, Oklahoma is going to be dancing.

Heading into Saturday, the Sooners were a loss on the road at TCU away from being squarely on the bubble and a bad showing at the Big 12 Tournament away from maybe being out of the NCAA Tournament.

Oklahoma boasts a 5-9 record in the ever important quadrant I games against teams inside the RPI top-30 for home games, RPI top-50 for neutral site games and in the RPI top-75 for road games. The Horned Frogs (RPI No. 88) provided an opportunity for another quality win against a quadrant II team, but potential for an average or bad loss.

The Sooners got behind by 20 in the first-half on Saturday, then 17 in the second-half. Oklahoma clawed and scratched its way all the way back before an Austin Reaves game-winning shot with half a second left in the game all but secured the Sooners spot in the NCAA Tournament.

Oklahoma last made the NCAA Tournament a year ago as the Sooners won a game against Ole Miss before losing to eventual NCAA Champion Virginia. The Sooners have made the NCAA Tournament in seven of the last eight seasons under Lon Kruger.

The Big 12 Tournament begins on Thursday, where Oklahoma climbed up to being a 3-seed. The Sooners will play 6-seed West Virginia at the Sprint Center in Kansas City at 8 p.m. CT. Selection Sunday for the NCAA Tournament is on March 15.

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Oklahoma secures 3-seed in Big 12 Tournament with win over TCU

Don’t ask, just take it. With a win over TCU on Saturday, Oklahoma will somehow be the 3-seed in the Big 12 Tournament next week.

Don’t ask, just take it.

Oklahoma headed into Saturday with a chance to be anywhere from the 3-seed in the Big 12 Tournament to the 7-seed. After West Virginia’s upset win over Baylor, it was either three or seven.

The Sooners got behind by 20 with 3:09 left in the first-half against TCU. After making a run in the second half, the Horned Frogs pushed their lead back up to 17 with 10:22 left in the second half.

Oklahoma came charging after, outscoring TCU 34-17 in the next nine minutes of the game. The Sooners got a stop with :29 seconds left with a chance to win or send the game to overtime.

Lon Kruger got the ball to Austin Reaves, who had scored 39 points. He came off a ball screen at the top of the key, sized up a defender, drove right and hit a game-winning shot with half a second left in the game.

The comeback win gave Oklahoma the 3-seed in the Big 12 Tournament on Thursday, where the Sooners will take on the 6-seed. The 3-6 game is schedule to begin at 8 p.m. CT at the Sprint Center in Kansas City.

Oklahoma also likely needed a win to secure a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Selection Sunday takes place on March 15.

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