Alabama men among potential high seeds that could make early exits in NCAA tourney

AP photo by David J. Phillip / Kansas center Hunter Dickinson, right, is helped after being injured during the Jayhawks' 76-46 loss at Houston in a Big 12 regular-season matchup last Saturday.
AP photo by David J. Phillip / Kansas center Hunter Dickinson, right, is helped after being injured during the Jayhawks' 76-46 loss at Houston in a Big 12 regular-season matchup last Saturday.

March Madness wouldn't be March Madness without the excitement of those early upsets.

The 68-team field for the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament won't be announced until Sunday, but it's a safe bet that one or more high seeds will get bounced before the first week of national postseason action is over.

Purdue was a 23 1/2-point favorite when it went out in the first round against No. 16 seed Fairleigh Dickinson last year, another in a line of tournament clunkers for the Boilermakers. Maybe it was because Purdue's guards couldn't make shots. Maybe Fairleigh Dickinson's small lineup bothered the Boilermakers.

Meanwhile, Kihei Clark's memorably bad pass set up JP Pegues' winning 3-pointer in No. 13 Furman's upset of No. 4 Virginia last year, but the matchup did the favored Cavaliers no favors. Furman plays at a high tempo and spreads the floor. Virginia goes slow and its defense had difficulty guarding the perimeter, allowing the Southern Conference representative to stay in the game.

"The style makes the fight in how some of these things can happen if your strength combats the other team's weakness and the other team is one of those higher seeds. That's where you run into trouble," said Field of 68 analyst and TV commentator Terrence Oglesby.

The odds of various teams winning the NCAA championship are fun to consider. As of Tuesday, injury-riddled blue blood Kansas is a 35-1 long shot, according to FanDuel Sportsbook, while San Diego State is 75-1 a year after crashing the national title game. Different season, different team.

  photo  AP photo by Chris O'Meara / Furman guard JP Pegues, third from right, celebrates with his teammates after the 13th-seeded Paladins beat No. 4 seed Virginia in an NCAA tournament first-round game last March 16 in Orlando, Fla. Pegues' winning 3-pointer was set up by a notably bad pass by Purdue's Kihei Clark.
 
 

Here are some projected high seeds that could be on upset alert the first weekend of the tournament.

Alabama: The Crimson Tide can win a scoring contest against anybody. The question is whether they can play enough defense to win a game if the pace becomes grinding, as often happens in the NCAA tournament. Mark Sears is one of the best guards in the country, and he leads the nation's most efficient and highest-scoring offense, but Alabama is 342nd out of 351 D-I teams in scoring defense.

Duke: First, the Blue Devils are among the teams fully capable of reaching the Final Four, something their program has done 17 times. They went into this week's Atlantic Coast Conference tournament 8-2 in their past 10 games, and most of those wins weren't close. But there's been a drop in rim protection since Derek Lively II left after last season. There's also been a recent injury to freshman guard Caleb Foster — a part-time starter — that has left him wearing a protective boot on his right foot. A team with quick guards who can get to the basket could cause trouble for Duke.

Iowa State: The Cyclones have been fabulous defensively in three seasons under T.J. Otzelberger, and they beat Houston, Kansas and BYU while going 18-0 at Hilton Coliseum this season. However, almost half of those home wins came against weak nonconference opponents that inflated their NET ranking. The concern is if the Cyclones get a matchup against a team that takes care of the ball and has a big, physical guard.

Kansas: Big 12 scoring leader Kevin McCullar, big man Hunter Dickinson and freshman Johnny Furphy headline a strong starting five, but McCullar tweaked a bone bruise in his knee and Dickinson dislocated a shoulder, so both will miss the league tournament. That puts pressure on a bench woefully short of depth. The Jayhawks' eight losses in conference play are their most since 1988-89, and a program that won it all just two seasons ago went 3-7 on the road.

Marquette: In another example of how a late-season injury to a key player could be ruinous, Tyler Kolek has missed the past three games with a strained oblique and has been ruled out of the Golden Eagles' Big East tourney opener Thursday. Coach Shaka Smart said Kolek will be available for the NCAA tournament, but will he be 100%? The Golden Eagles are potentially great when he is fully healthy; they aren't nearly the same otherwise. The best point guard in America is capable of scoring 30 points with double-digit assists on any given night.

Purdue: The Boilermakers seem likely to land another No. 1 seed and are on the list only because of their recent history: a first-round loss to No. 16 seed Fairleigh Dickinson last season, a Sweet 16 loss to No. 15 Saint Peter's the year before that and a first-round loss to No. 13 North Texas in 2021. They have been upset by a lower seed in six of their past 10 NCAA appearances. Still, this team is better than a year ago, with Zach Edey again leading the way, and maybe coach Matt Painter's first Final Four is in the works.

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