Shocking: Rutgers basketball left out cold for the NCAA Tournament on Selection Sunday

Rutgers basketball got left out of the NCAA Tournament and it was a shockingly bad decision.

There will be no third straight NCAA Tournament for Rutgers basketball as the program got kicked to the curb in favor of several teams with much lesser resumes.

It was a rough ‘Selection Sunday’ for Rutgers basketball, who were left out of the NCAA Tournament despite having a much stronger resume than a number of at-large kids.

Rutgers finished the Big Ten regular season 18-13 (10-10 Big Ten). In last week’s Big Ten Tournament, Rutgers helped their stock with a second round win over Michigan and then a tight 70-65 loss to Purdue, the conference’s top team in the regular season.

Had Rutgers been selected, it would have been three straight NCAA Tournament appearances which would have represented a first in program history.

The Scarlet Knights finished No. 40 in the NET Rankings. They were 4-7 against Quad 1 teams and 6-3 against Quad 2 opposition. Providence, for instance, a No. 11 seed, was No. 56 in the NET Rankings and 4-8 against Quad 1 opposition.

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Coming into the Big Ten Tournament, Rutgers was reeling a bit, having lost of three of their last four games in the regular season. But the win over Michigan helped the Scarlet Knights considerably, knocking off a bubble team and helping their own resume.

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Make it 25 straight: MSU basketball gets No. 7 seed, will face USC in NCAA Tournament

Michigan State basketball is officially heading back to the NCAA Tournament for a 25th straight appearance

Michigan State basketball is officially heading back to the NCAA Tournament for a 25th straight appearance.

The men’s basketball NCAA Tournament bracket was revealed on Sunday evening, with Michigan State once again making the field of 68. The Spartans landed as a No. 7 seed and will face No. 10 seed USC in a first round matchup in the East Region.

The Spartans’ first round matchup against the the Trojans will be played on Friday in Columbus, Ohio. Should Michigan State beat USC then they would face the winner of No. 2 seed Marquette-No. 15 seed Vermont in the second round on Sunday.

The Spartans hold the second longest active NCAA Tournament streak, behind only Kansas — who reached their 33rd straight tournament this year.

Stay with Spartans Wire all week as we prepare you for Michigan State’s first round matchup.

Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan state news, notes, and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on Twitter @RobertBondy5.

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USC men’s basketball makes the 2023 NCAA Tournament

#USC made the Big Dance in a season marked by resilience. USC overcame Vince Iwuchukwu’s health limitations. #FightOn!

It wasn’t a surprise when it was announced on Sunday afternoon, but the USC Trojans men’s basketball team has officially made the 2023 NCAA Tournament.

Andy Enfield’s team won 20-plus games again, earned the No. 3 seed in the Pac-12 Tournament, and came into the Pac-12 Tournament on the positive side of the bubble conversation.

All the stars were aligned, and the Trojans now have made the NCAA Tournament for the fourth consecutive time if you count the 2020 pandemic season. Enfield’s stature continues to rise after an impressive turnaround of the program.

USC made the NCAA Tournament this season despite not having Vince Iwuchukwu for the first two months of the season, and not for the past few games against Arizona State. The Trojans also lost Isaiah Mobley to the pros and did not have the rebounding and toughness of Chevez Goodwin, who used up his eligibility last year. Enfield and his staff were able to reassemble the pieces of a new-look roster and get enough production — and defense — to survive. It’s a terrific achievement for a program which continues to display consistency and stability.

Much more on USC’s NCAA Tournament seed, bracket, opponent, and more here at Trojans Wire. Watch this space.

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2023 NCAA Tournament: Tennessee’s opponent, seed announced

Tennessee basketball’s opponent and seed have been announced in the 2023 NCAA Tournament.

The NCAA announced the field for the men’s basketball tournament on Sunday.

Tennessee (23-10, 11-7 SEC) is a No. 4 seed in the East Region and will play Louisiana (26-7) in Orlando, Florida, on Thursday.

The Tennessee-Louisiana winner will advance to play the winner between Duke and Oral Roberts.

The 2023 NCAA Tournament will begin March 14 with the First Four. The first round will tip off on March 16.

The 2023 NCAA Tournament will conclude with the Final Four at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas, on April 1-3.

Tennessee enters the NCAA Tournament after being eliminated by Missouri in the Southeastern Conference Tournament quarterfinals.

No. 5 seed Tennessee lost to No. 4 seed Missouri, 79-71, Friday in the SEC Tournament.

Rick Barnes has guided the Vols to five NCAA Tournament appearances as Tennessee’s head coach. Tennessee advanced to the Sweet 16 in 2019.

PHOTOS: Rick Barnes through the years

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Twitter reacts to Penn State’s NCAA Tournament announcement

How Twitter reacted to Penn State basketball’s NCAA Tournament seeding and announcement

Penn State’s NCAA Tournament drought came to an end on Sunday when the Nittany Lions were handed an at-large bid to this year’s tournament. The Nittany Lions, shortly after coming up two points shy in the Big Ten championship game against Purdue, were given a No. 10 seed in the Midwest Region and they will face Texas A&M on Thursday.

While most of the college basketball world was targeting a possible Texas A&M-Texas matchup in the second round, Penn State fans are once again embracing the underdog role in an attempt to spoil the storyline most seem to be running with already.

Here is how Twitter reacted to the NCAA Tournament announcement when  Penn State returned to the Big Dance for the first time since 2011.

The drought is over! Penn State is heading to the NCAA men’s basketball tournament

Penn State’s NCAA Tournament drought is officially over. The Nittany Lions are going dancing!

For the first time since 2011, Penn State will participate in the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. The long drought officially came to an end on Sunday when the NCAA Tournament’s selection committee handed the Nittany Lions an at-large bid to this year’s Big Dance.

Penn State received the No. 10 seed in the Midwest Region of this year’s tournament. Penn State will open its tournament on Thursday against seventh-seeded Texas A&M from the SEC.

Head coach Micah Shrewsberry is taking Penn State to its 10th NCAA tournament in program history and its fourth since joining the Big Ten. He does so in his second year at the helm after guiding the Nittany Lions to an appearance in the Big Ten championship game, its second such appearance in program history and first since 2011.

Penn State finished the regular season with momentum-shifting wins against Northwestern and Maryland and continued its hot streak with three straight wins in the Big Ten tournament against Illinois, Northwestern and Indiana before falling to Purdue in the Big Ten championship game on Sunday. In the past week, Penn State went from being on the bubble to flirting with a potential single-digit seed in the NCAA Tournament. Now the Nittany Lions hope to keep rolling.

Penn State has not won a game in the NCAA Tournament since upsetting North Carolina in 2001 to advance to the Sweet 16. Its 2001 tournament run was stopped by Temple in the Sweet 16. Coincidentally, Temple eliminated Penn State from the 2011 tournament in the first round.

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Alabama earns top overall seed in 2023 NCAA men’s basketball tournament

The Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team enters March Madness as the top overall seed.

Alabama men’s basketball has earned the top overall seed in the 2023 NCAA men’s basketball tournament after an impressive season that has netted the program an SEC regular season championship and an SEC Tournament title.

Nate Oats has continued to improve the program throughout his time in Tuscaloosa, and the 2022-2023 season has been his best yet. Now, the Crimson Tide will have its eyes set on one goal: winning a national championship.

Two seasons ago, Alabama won the SEC regular season and tournament, as the team has done this season, and made it all the way to the Sweet 16, but lost in overtime to UCLA.

According to the recently-revealed bracket, Alabama will play the winner of Southeast Missouri State and Texas A&M-CC.

Roll Tide Wire will continue to follow Alabama basketball as March Madness begins and the NCAA Tournament gets underway.

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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.

Every NCAA Final Four Court since 2001

Where the road ends each March

Editor’s note: This post was originally published in 2022. It has since been updated. 

There’s something extremely powerful about the court each year at the Final Four.

We don’t have to go into the whole Hoosiers speech and note that all the dimensions are the same as every other floor, but knowing that you’ve reached the final stage—not just in the NCAA Tournament, but for many players, their college careers—helps turn hardwood into hallowed ground.

The actual court themselves are, more often than not, a true sight to behold. A work of art in concept, style and design. It’s no wonder many teams who win the national title take the NCAA up on their offer to buy the floor after the game. Sometimes that means hanging the court in a team’s practice facility or auctioning off parts of it to fans and alumni.

Either way, it’s the ultimate conversation piece.

There have been many different iterations since 2001. Let’s run through them all.

Opinion: Dark days ahead for Notre Dame men’s basketball

Don’t expect any winning for the Irish in the near future.

It’s no stretch to say this past season was the worst for Notre Dame in recent memory. Its 3-17 conference record was the worst in program history, and its 21 losses tied the 1965-66 Irish for the most in program history. The Irish’s 11 wins kept them far away from the program’s worst winning percentage, but that’s little consolation to the fans who had to watch this team.

With only [autotag]Blake Wesley[/autotag] and [autotag]Paul Atkinson Jr.[/autotag] as key departures from last season’s team that won two NCAA Tournament games, the veteran core appeared perfectly positioned to at least duplicate that success. Instead, everything that could go wrong did, and [autotag]Mike Brey[/autotag]’s mantra of getting old and staying old proved nothing more than hot air. As a result, the Irish will be shut out on Selection Sunday for the fourth time in five tournaments.

But missing out on March Madness yet again isn’t the worst part. That distinction goes to the fact the Irish will be very inexperienced next season and probably beyond. With almost every rotation player having exhausted their NCAA eligibility this season, this was the season to make one more run. That goal came up woefully short. Now, the Irish will be reliant on younger players and guys who didn’t crack the departing Brey’s eight-man rotation.

[autotag]JJ Starling[/autotag], [autotag]Ven-Allen Lubin[/autotag], [autotag]Dom Campbell[/autotag] and [autotag]Matt Zona[/autotag] hardly seem like a core that will put much fear into anybody. It’s not like much known help is coming either with [autotag]Markus Burton[/autotag] the only one of three committed freshmen not to decommit from the Irish after Brey announced his departure. And who really expects [autotag]J.R. Konieczny[/autotag] to step in as an impact player right away? Plus, if you’re counting on much help coming from the transfer portal, your optimism is admirable.

It’s hard to be envious of whoever takes over Brey’s job. That person will have to work with a group that has little collective game action, and that inexperience will show when those games are played. No one can look at next year’s Irish and convincingly say there is one trusted veteran leader. Starling hasn’t proven himself a leader despite having NBA aspirations, and if Zona is supposed to be one, well, the Irish will need all the luck they can get.

With a new core and a new coach, it will be some time before the Irish are worthy of attention again. No one likes to think of a program rebuilding, but that’s the reality. When a bunch of veterans lose and don’t leave much of a foundation behind, a lot more losing is in the future. The only hope is that Brey was sitting the players who could have made this past season a better one.

It goes without saying that the next Irish coach needs to be a strong recruiter because that’s the only way this program will return to respectability. There is nowhere to go but up after a season like this past one. Well, actually, the depths might sink further over the next year or two while the new group tries to figure things out. Either way, time to embrace the suck.

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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

NCAA Tournament: What is ‘Selection Sunday’? How to watch ‘Selection Sunday’ on TV

How to watch the NCAA Tournament ‘Selection Sunday’ show.

On Sunday evening, the NCAA DI Men’s Basketball Committee will announce the field of teams for this week’s NCAA Tournament. ‘Selection Sunday’ as it is called, is a massively important day for college basketball fans to see if their teams get selected for the NCAA Tournament.

The NCAA DI Men’s Basketball Committee is responsible for the selection and seeding of the teams in the NCAA Tournament. Some of the work of the committee is made easy by the fact that there are 32 automatic qualifiers. That means the basketball committee needs to decide the remaining 32 teams (eight teams are part of the First Four) that will make up the NCAA Tournament this year.

The ‘Selection Sunday’ show will air live on CBS at 6 p.m. ET.

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Then the NCAA Tournament will kick-off on Tuesday with two ‘First Four’ games played in Dayton, OH. Two more games will be played on Wednesday.

The NCAA Tournament’s opening round begins on Thursday at noon on CBS.

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