Bubble Watch 2021: Creighton joins Villanova as Big East locks

NCAABB

Creighton has joined Villanova as an NCAA tournament lock atop the Big East. Congratulations, Bluejays.

Greg McDermott’s team is projected as a No. 5 seed, a position that could improve over the next few days. With the notable exception of Iowa, teams that have spent time on the No. 4 line in February have tended to fall more often than rise. That creates an opening for a team like Creighton.

The Bluejays have won seven of their last eight by bringing together highly accurate shooting with tough defense. Villanova has had the Big East’s best offense in league play and UConn ranks first for defense, but Creighton is a strong No. 2 on both sides of the ball. That quality has given McDermott’s group a level of consistency that’s readily apparent.

Marcus Zegarowski has been a model of high-usage efficiency for a second consecutive season, and his 25 points keyed the 86-70 win over Jay Wright and the Wildcats earlier this month. Christian Bishop is shooting a Zion Williamson-like percentage on his 2s, and as a team the Bluejays excel at forcing misses inside the arc.

This isn’t the strongest rebounding rotation you’ll see in the field of 68 (and that’s partly by choice on the offensive glass), but Creighton’s versatility gives it the ability to win both shootouts and rock fights. They could be a tough out in March, and now they’re a lock in February.

Two other teams moved into lock status: Arkansas and Tennessee of the SEC.

Here’s our current projection of the bubble:

Bids from traditional one-bid leagues (minus the Ivy): 20 teams

Locks: 20 teams
The bubble: 38 teams for 28 available spots
Should be in: 15 teams
Work to do: 23 teams

ACC | Big 12 | Big East | Big Ten | Pac-12 | SEC | American | Others


ACC

Locks: Virginia, Florida State

Should be in

Virginia Tech Hokies

After a 17-day pause due to COVID-19 issues and then a 16-point loss at home to Georgia Tech, the Hokies are something of an unknown quantity. Mike Young’s team entered its game against the Yellow Jackets with a No. 6 seed in the mock brackets, a relatively lofty position attained through wins over Villanova, Virginia, Clemson and Duke. Keve Aluma followed his coach from Wofford to Blacksburg and has emerged as one of the best players in the ACC. The profile and the talent are no mystery, but how Virginia Tech responds will determine where the Hokies land in the bracket next month.

Clemson Tigers

A Clemson team that seemed highly erratic in January has rather quietly spent February shutting down opposing offenses and winning games. The Tigers are still being shown as a No. 7 seed in mock brackets, but their record is up to 8-5 in ACC play. Indeed, there’s a fair chance Brad Brownell’s men will win out, with games still to be played at home against Miami and Pitt and on the road against Syracuse. The Tigers defense has held opponents under a point per possession in three of its last four outings.

Work to do

Louisville Cardinals

For a team coming off a 99-54 loss at North Carolina, nothing could have been timelier than a 12-point win at home over Notre Dame. Louisville had been looking like the shakiest member of “Should be in” that Bubble Watch has beheld in many a moon, but perhaps the victory over the Fighting Irish (one recorded without David Johnson) will steady Chris Mack’s men. The Cards have been seen as a likely No. 8 or No. 9 seed for the past two weeks, and it was vital the team find its footing at home before the schedule takes a more challenging turn. Louisville will close the season at Duke, at Virginia Tech and at home against Virginia.

North Carolina Tar Heels

This season has thrown many challenges at teams and their evaluators, but North Carolina has come up with a wrinkle that’s new even for a wild 2021. What do you do with projected No. 9 seed from the ACC that loses emphatically on its home floor to a 10-12 Big East team … during the last week of February? Marquette came to North Carolina at this unusual time of year and came away with an 82-70 victory. For the record, that’s a Quad 3 defeat, UNC’s first of the season. That likely will knock the Tar Heels off the No. 9 line in mock brackets, and now Roy Williams’ team will face Florida State in Chapel Hill.

Duke Blue Devils

How many more wins do the Blue Devils need in order to earn an at-large bid? While the victory over Syracuse was compelling due to the “play-out game” nature of the contest, it is still, in profile terms, a Quad 2 win over an opponent unlikely to reach the NCAA tournament. That means there’s still work to be done in Durham, starting with a victory in the upcoming home game against Louisville. Coach K’s team has games remaining not only against the Cardinals but also at Georgia Tech and at North Carolina. Both road dates will present Quad 1 opportunities, and a tournament hopeful with a NET ranking in the 50s, even one named Duke, could really use both of those wins on its profile. Alternately, the Blue Devils could pick up a Quad 1 victory or two in the ACC tournament, but two more of them would be advisable.

Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets

Beating Virginia Tech in Blacksburg is a really nice win, but make no mistake, the Yellow Jackets are no one-game wonder. (Ask Florida State, Clemson and North Carolina.) Georgia Tech has been creeping into bubble position for a while now, and even before the tipoff against the Hokies this is a team that was “next four out” material in Joe Lunardi’s eyes. Josh Pastner’s men have played excellent defense against the ACC while building a NET ranking that blends in comfortably with those carried by Louisville and Duke. The Yellow Jackets are now clearly in the conversation, and their upcoming home games against Syracuse and the Blue Devils loom as true bubble showdowns.

Syracuse Orange

While Syracuse could theoretically earn an at-large bid, Boeheim’s men are closing in on the last desperate scenario embraced by die-hard fans. (We are all die-hard fans at Bubble Watch HQ. Salute.) These are the true believers who respond to every dire bubble situation with, “Yes, but what if my team wins out and loses in the tournament title game?” If Syracuse wins out, posts a 9-6 record in conference play and loses in the ACC title game, you’ll be looking at a profile that added its first Quad 1 win of the season at Georgia Tech and then, most likely, recorded one or two more at the ACC tournament. Possibly that would be enough. Barely. Win out, Orange.

Big 12

Locks: Baylor, Oklahoma, West Virginia, Texas, Kansas

Should be in

Texas Tech Red Raiders

The Red Raiders’ three consecutive losses — at home against West Virginia and on the road versus Kansas and Oklahoma State — are being viewed by mock brackets and laptops alike with a notable lack of concern. Texas Tech’s projected seed has stayed on the Nos. 4 and 5 lines, and the team’s NET ranking was still in the top 15 nationally at tipoff of the contest against the Cowboys. The prevailing view is that the Big 12 is just this strong; and indeed, this challenge will continue for the Red Raiders with a home game against Texas coming next.

Oklahoma State Cowboys

Throughout the month of February, the Cowboys have been a model of stability in projected brackets — a No. 8 or No. 7 seed. If Mike Boynton’s team delivers on that promise, it will represent the best seed the program has earned since a No. 5 seed in 2013. Cade Cunningham is at the point of attack for the Big 12’s fastest-paced team in league play. At the other end of the floor, OSU ranks alongside Kansas and Oklahoma as having one of the best interior defenses in the conference.

Big East

Locks: Villanova, Creighton

Work to do

Xavier Musketeers

The Musketeers are at risk of dropping out of the projected field after losing three of their last four games. The latest defeat occurred at Providence, a game that Xavier began with a No. 12 seed next to its name in mock brackets. Travis Steele’s men will now host Creighton before closing out the season on the road against Georgetown and Marquette. Zach Freemantle is a combination featured scorer and rebound workhorse at 6-foot-9, and as a team the Musketeers are excellent at limiting Big East opponents to one shot. The problem for the Musketeers has been that those single shots by opposing offenses quite often are makes.

Seton Hall Pirates

The No. 10 seed that Seton Hall carried in bracket projections just two games ago is long gone. The Pirates have dropped road games at Georgetown and Butler, and, at a minimum, Seton Hall is headed for an introduction to the No. 12 line. (Make that a reintroduction. It’s where this team was at the beginning of February.) If up-and-coming teams elsewhere on the bubble keep winning, Seton Hall could be bumped out of the projected field entirely. Kevin Willard’s group has two more regular-season chances to impress the committee. Games remain against UConn in Newark and St. John’s in Queens.

Connecticut Huskies

Purveyors of mock brackets are showing Dan Hurley’s group as either one of the very last teams in the field or as one of the first ones out. The danger for the Huskies now is simply that the schedule isn’t necessarily brimming with chances for a team in this position to play its way comfortably into the field. UConn closes its season with home games against Georgetown and Marquette and also visits Seton Hall. Obviously, a win on the road against the Pirates would be the most valuable prize, but will it be sufficient?

Big Ten

Locks: Michigan, Ohio State, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin

Should be in

Purdue Boilermakers

In a season in which headlines in the Big Ten have been dominated by the likes of Michigan, Ohio State, Illinois and Iowa, the Boilermakers have quietly put themselves in position to earn a very good spot in the bracket in their own right. Matt Painter’s men have games remaining at Penn State and at home against Wisconsin and Indiana. If, for the sake of discussion, Purdue won out, you would be looking at a team that is 18-8 and 13-6 in the historically strong Big Ten. While the Boilermakers are currently seen as a likely No. 6 seed, a few more wins could change that number.

Rutgers Scarlet Knights

Steve Pikiell’s team will finish Big Ten play no worse than 9-11, and, with games remaining at Nebraska and Minnesota, it’s possible the Scarlet Knights will better that mark. The team’s No. 8 seed in mock brackets and wins over Illinois, Purdue, Maryland and a season sweep of Indiana all say that Rutgers is going to the tournament. Yes, anything can happen, and, no, Bubble Watch doesn’t recommend that the Scarlet Knights go 0-2 to end the regular season and then 0-1 in the Big Ten tournament. Nevertheless, this is a stronger position than anyone thought possible after Rutgers lost five straight.

Work to do

Indiana Hoosiers

While losing a game at Rutgers need not be detrimental to a team’s tournament chances, the defeat suffered by Indiana in Piscataway does indeed have that effect. The Hoosiers entered the contest projected as a No. 12 seed. Now, at 12-11 and 7-9 in the Big Ten, Archie Miller’s team has no room to fall. Michigan is coming to IU this weekend, and a win over the Wolverines would certainly turn this profile around (a profile that, after all, still contains a season sweep over Iowa). After that, Indiana plays road games at Michigan State and Purdue. How many wins do the Hoosiers get from that three-game stretch? Two would be heroic, one may not be enough, and zero will mean IU needs a near-legendary run in the Big Ten tournament.

Maryland Terrapins

When the Terrapins were 10-10 and 4-9 in the Big Ten, we here at Bubble Watch HQ had to preface any remarks about the team with an explanation for why Mark Turgeon’s group was still here in the first place. No need for disclaimers anymore. Maryland has won four straight, including wins over Minnesota and on the road at Rutgers. Now you’re looking at a 14-10 and 8-9 team with a top-35 NET ranking and an embarrassment of riches in the “good win” column (at Illinois, at Wisconsin, at Rutgers, at home against Purdue and the season sweep of the Golden Gophers). Purveyors of mock brackets have taken note, and the Terps are commonly shown as one of the last teams in the field.

Minnesota Golden Gophers

Minnesota’s position has grown more precarious. Joe Lunardi, an official Friend of Bubble Watch, dropped the team all the way down to the last spot in the field in the wake of the Golden Gophers’ 94-63 loss at home to Illinois. Richard Pitino’s team is still yet to win a game this season on an opponent’s home floor. For a time, this fact was balanced by the stellar roster of opponents who have lost at Williams Arena: Michigan, Ohio State, Iowa, Purdue and Saint Louis, among others. But the Gophers are 13-10, 6-10 in the Big Ten and carrying a NET ranking that could drop into the 60s. It all feels precarious, but Minnesota can turn things around with a sufficient number of wins against Northwestern and Rutgers at home and against Nebraska and Penn State on the road.

Pac-12

Locks: USC

Should be in

Colorado Buffaloes

After losses on the road to Cal and to Oregon, the Buffaloes saw their expected seed drop just one line in the mock brackets. What was once a No. 6 seed became a spot on the No. 7 line, and that is likely where Colorado will stay after its four-point win at Oregon State. Now it’s time for the main event, not only for CU but, kind of, for the entire conference. For the balance of the Bubble Watch season, the “Should be in” section of the Pac-12 has included three teams: USC, UCLA and Colorado. Over the final weekend of the regular season, Tad Boyle’s team will host first the Trojans and then the Bruins in Boulder.

UCLA Bruins

As a projected No. 9 seed with a 16-5 record, Mick Cronin’s team finds itself entirely reliant on Pac-12 teams other than USC to define just how good UCLA’s “good wins” really are. The Bruins lost to both Ohio State and San Diego State, leaving a three-point win at home over Colorado as far and away the highlight of this profile. Phrased less charitably, that game marks the Bruins’ only win against an at-large-caliber opponent. UCLA will have an opportunity to change this state of affairs when it closes the season with games against the Buffaloes and Trojans.

Oregon Ducks

The Ducks’ task will be maintaining something close to the No. 9 seed they’re carrying in mock brackets. Completing it might not be easy for a team finishing the season with six games in 13 days. The first contest in this sequence resulted in a 72-58 loss at USC. Next up for Oregon are visits to Stanford and Cal. Dana Altman’s squad will then make up previously postponed home games against Arizona and UCLA, before playing the finale at Oregon State. The Ducks will deserve a gold medal for endurance if they stagger out of this homestretch still clutching a projected single-digit seed.

Work to do

Stanford Cardinal

After an epic 85-76 loss in three overtimes at Washington State, the Cardinal are 14-9 and 10-7 in the Pac-12. At tipoff against the Cougars, Jerod Haase’s group was being projected variously as just in or just outside of the field. By itself, a Quad 2 defeat on the road might not alter Stanford’s position in the bracket as much as all the wins and losses being recorded by all the other bubble teams. In any event, the Cardinal still have games to play at home against Oregon and Oregon State. Though Stanford has struggled at times this season with both a high turnover rate and a low offensive rebound percentage, this team might yet play its way into the field if it gives itself enough chances to score.

SEC

Locks: Alabama, Arkansas, Tennessee

Should be in

Missouri Tigers

Bubble Watch is serious this time. This absolutely, positively will be the last time Missouri appears down here in “Should be in.” We’ve been trying for weeks to name some SEC team besides Alabama a lock. But every time the Tigers or Tennessee get close to that hallowed status, they take a step back. Now Cuonzo Martin’s men are holding on to a projected No. 6 seed as the end of the regular season rapidly approaches. A home game against Texas A&M is up next for Mizzou. Prepare to be locked!

Florida Gators

It would appear the Gators are pretty well locked in to a No. 8 seed or something close to that in the field of 68. Wins in remaining games at Kentucky and at home against Missouri most likely would not elevate that seed dramatically, and two losses in all probability wouldn’t drop Florida more than a seed line or so. If it does indeed play out that way, Mike White and his players will deserve a great deal of credit. This is a team that lost its preseason SEC player of the year, Keyontae Johnson, in December, yet appears to have played its way solidly into the NCAA tournament field.

LSU Tigers

Chances are Will Wade won’t be happy with his team losing by 13 at Georgia. Nevertheless, it has been a very good month, all in all, for the Tigers. In early February, LSU was precariously situated on the No. 11 line in most mock brackets. Now this team is seen as a potential No. 7 or No. 8 seed. Even after the loss to the Bulldogs, the Tigers are still keeping pace with Alabama as the best per-possession offense in SEC play. LSU is suspect on defense and downright worrisome on the defensive glass, but this offense can and definitely should worry a No. 1 or No. 2 seed in the round of 32.

Work to do

Ole Miss Rebels

Things looked bleak there after losing at home to Mississippi State, but Ole Miss is still in the mix. Or at least adjacent to it. The Rebels posted a seven-point win at Missouri, thus recording the season sweep over the Tigers. That’s a good building block on the profile, as is the win over Tennessee. There’s no way Ole Miss can play its way into the tournament with its remaining regular-season games (at Vanderbilt and at home against Kentucky), but that’s where the SEC tournament comes in. A bracket conveniently structured to give the Rebels a chance to upset both the Volunteers and Alabama — plus history’s greatest concentration of bid thieves — could at least make this a photo finish, right?

American

Locks: Houston

Work to do

Wichita State Shockers

With 40 minutes of basketball, the Shockers launched themselves from perhaps the third or fourth team under “Next four out” to quite possibly the middle of the action in “First four out.” A five-point win at home over a projected No. 2 seed like Houston will have that kind of impact. To be sure, Wichita State will have to work to keep its spot on the bubble. Two games remain to be played against SMU, and Isaac Brown’s team will finish the season with road games at Tulane and Temple. But, at 13-4 and with a win over the Cougars to their credit, the Shockers are now close enough to a bid to taste it. Well done, Coach Brown.

SMU Mustangs

Maybe someday in the far off future the committee will be replaced entirely by a metric that measures how difficult it would be to duplicate any team’s wins and losses given the opponents and venues where that record was compiled. When that happens and “strength of record” (SOR), “wins above bubble” (WAB) or something similar is in the driver’s seat, it will be good news for SMU. In a SOR world, the 11-4 Mustangs would be a No. 10 seed. In the real world, however, Tim Jankovich’s men rank in the high 50s on the NET and inhabit the far outer fringes of the bubble. Keep winning, SMU.

Others

Locks: Gonzaga

Should be in

BYU Cougars

Barring unforeseen mishaps, BYU appears well on its way to enjoying the least stressful Selection Sunday of any West Coast Conference at-large aspirant not named “Gonzaga” since Saint Mary’s in 2017. (Though, to be sure, both the Cougars and the Gaels likely would have had drama-free Selection Sundays last March if there had been one.) Mark Pope’s team is looking like a potential No. 8 seed, with road wins at San Diego State and Utah State and a neutral-floor victory over St. John’s to its credit.

Loyola Chicago Ramblers

Congratulations to the Ramblers, winners of a close game for the first time all season. Prior a victory at home over Valparaiso by the score of 54-52, Loyola Chicago was 0-3 in games decided by five points or less. Porter Moser’s team still has two more home games to play, both against Southern Illinois. With their top-10 NET ranking and 19-4 record, the Ramblers are well on their way to the No. 9 seed they’re currently earning in mock brackets.

San Diego State Aztecs

Not only are all of San Diego’s State’s losses “good,” Brian Dutcher’s men haven’t lost a game of any kind now in over a month. Setbacks to BYU, Colorado State and Utah State (twice, with both games played in Logan, Utah) are offset on the Aztecs’ profile by a season-opening win over UCLA and 16 other victories. This body of work has netted SDSU a No. 9 seed in mock brackets, a position that could be improved thanks to a season-ending two-game series against Boise State that will be played in San Diego.

Work to do

VCU Rams

Playing without leading scorer Bones Hyland, VCU eked out a much-needed 67-65 win at home against Saint Louis. Keep in mind the Rams had seen their projected seed drop down to the No. 11 line in the wake of this team’s surprising overtime loss at home to George Mason. A second consecutive defeat on its home floor could have exposed VCU to some serious peril in the bracket. Instead, Mike Rhoades’ group is 17-5 with wins over all three of its fellow A-10 bubble hopefuls: St. Bonaventure, Richmond and now the Billikens. Hyland missed the SLU game with a sprained ankle but is expected to return soon.

Boise State Broncos

A two-game sweep over Utah State in Boise has enhanced a profile that was already landing the Broncos in mock brackets as a projected No. 11 seed. Leon Rice’s team now owns the back-to-back wins over the Aggies, as well as victories against BYU and Colorado State. BSU will end its season with a two-game set at San Diego State, and even one win there would figure to put the Broncos in a position of profile strength heading into the Mountain West tournament. Derrick Alston Jr. rang up 49 points in the two games against the Aggies and powers an offense that ranks No. 1 in the league in MWC play.

Drake Bulldogs

By completing a two-game sweep of Evansville in Des Moines, Iowa, the Bulldogs are now 23-2. This week, however, the team announced that starting point guard Roman Penn would miss the rest of the season due to a foot injury suffered in the first game against the Purple Aces. Drake has already played its past five games without leading scorer ShanQuan Hemphill, who was sidelined by a foot injury of his own. Darian DeVries’ team will wrap up the season with a two-game set at Bradley, and fans in Des Moines are holding out hope that Hemphill might return in time for the NCAA tournament if the team can get there. Drake is currently projected as a No. 11 seed, and sophomore Joseph Yesufu erupted for 68 points in the two games against Evansville.

St. Bonaventure Bonnies

With a hard-fought 56-53 win on the road against Davidson in their pocket, the Bonnies can envision finishing their abbreviated regular season at 14-3. Mark Schmidt’s team will wrap up the season at home against George Washington and Dayton. Wins in both games would give St. Bonaventure a shot at the top seed in the Atlantic 10 tournament and, more importantly, a NET ranking likely in the 30s. The Bonnies’ losses thus far have all come in true road games (at Rhode Island, Saint Louis and VCU) while the team has recorded victories over Richmond and VCU.

Richmond Spiders

At 13-5 and 6-3 in the Atlantic 10, Richmond is confronting the possibility that its shortened and interrupted regular season might not give the team enough runway to punch a ticket for an at-large bid. Among the Spiders’ remaining scheduled opportunities, only the road game at Saint Louis holds the promise of significantly improving the team’s profile. Improvement is indeed required, for Richmond is landing on a good many “next four out” lists in various bracket projections. The Spiders might still have work to do when they enter the revamped A-10 tournament.

Colorado State Rams

In the crowded bubble confines of the Mountain West, Colorado State has gone 1-1 against all three of the league’s other at-large hopefuls: Boise State, San Diego State and Utah State. So far, that track record and a NET ranking in the 40s has been sufficient for the Rams to be rewarded with either a projected spot among the last teams in the field or one amid the first teams outside it. If nothing else, this is one of the most accurate shooting offenses in the country, and CSU’s making all those shots without a single senior in the rotation. But can Niko Medved’s men hold that position when their remaining MWC schedule includes no further Quad 1 opportunities? We’re about to find out.

Western Kentucky Hilltoppers

The homestretch of Western Kentucky’s season has suddenly become way more interesting. The 15-4 Hilltoppers agreed to fill an open date for both programs by playing a road game at Houston on Feb. 25. To state the obvious, a win on the Cougars’ home floor would give a significant boost to a profile that already features a victory at Alabama. Rick Stansbury’s team is commonly shown in mock brackets as a No. 12 seed and, just as often, as Conference USA’s automatic qualifier. But could WKU earn an at-large bid with a NET ranking in the high 70s? A win at Houston would at one stroke improve the NET ranking and make a powerful statement to the committee.

Saint Louis Billikens

Even at this late date, the Billikens have played just eight conference games. Add in the fact that Saint Louis is 4-4 in A-10 play, and the challenge to this team’s postseason hopes becomes clear. Victories over LSU and St. Bonaventure are positives, certainly, but the limited number of games played by SLU also magnifies being swept by Dayton. To have any shot at all, Travis Ford’s team likely needs to win out (at home against Richmond and UMass) and hope to get another shot at highly ranked NET opponents like VCU or the Bonnies at the A-10 tournament.

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