Tag: NCAA

2015 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament: Round of 64 Day 2 Afternoon

Well, this is one of those days I warned you about.  No results until the evening, but don’t worry, none of those teams will be playing today.

This Afternoon’s Matchups-

Time Channel Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
12:15pm CBS 2 Kansas 26-8 15 New Mexico St. 23-10 Mid-West
12:40pm True 7 Michigan State 23-11 10 Georgia 21-11 East
1:40pm TBS 5 UNI 30-3 12 Wyoming 25-9 East
2:10pm TNT 5 West Virginia 23-9 12 Buffalo 23-9 Mid-West
2:45pm CBS 7 Wichita State 28-4 10 Indiana 20-13 Mid-West
3:10pm True 2 Virginia 29-3 15 Belmont 22-10 East
4:10pm TBS 4 Louisville 24-8 13 UC Irvine 21-12 East
4:40pm TNT 4 Maryland 27-6 13 Valparaiso 28-5 Mid-West

2015 NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament: Round of 64 Day 1

Meta notes-

The one thing you will instantly notice is that the Women’s Tournament shares 1 time slot on 1 network between 4 teams.

This leads to a hodgepodge mishmash kind of game hopping programming that the Men’s Tournament used to use (and Golf still does) that is highly confusing and some, like me for instance, would call sexist because the Women’s games are so much more entertaining (please, we shall not talk of the NBA, the single most boring sport on the planet, even exceeding Turn Left Racing because there are so seldom flaming chunks of twisted metal).

This is the whole day because because it’s basically a single continuous broadcast from noon to 10 pm.

Oh and by the way-

Back in the day it was performed vocally, a cappella.

UConn Husky

Symbol of might to the foe.

Fight, fight Connecticut,

It’s victory, let’s go!

Connecticut UConn Husky,

Do it again for the white and blue

So go, go, go, go Conecticut.

Connecticut U

U-Conn Husky

Today’s Matchups-

Channel Time Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
ESPN2 12:00PM 7 Dayton 25-6 10 Iowa State 18-12 East
ESPN2 12:00PM 7 Northwestern 23-8 10 Arkansas 17-13 Mid-West
ESPN2 12:00PM 6 Washington 23-9 11 Miami (Fla.) 19-12 Mid-West
ESPN2 12:00PM 4 Duke 21-10 13 Albany 24-8 West
ESPN2 2:30PM 2 Kentucky 23-9 15 Tennessee State 18-12 East
ESPN2 2:30PM 2 Baylor 30-3 15 N’western St. 19-14 Mid-West
ESPN2 2:30PM 3 Iowa 24-7 14 American 24-8 Mid-West
ESPN2 2:30PM 5 Mississippi St. 26-6 12 Tulane 22-10 West
ESPN2 5:00PM 5 Texas 22-10 12 Western Ky. 30-4 East
ESPN2 5:00PM 8 Minnesota 23-9 9 DePaul 26-7 Mid-West
ESPN2 5:00PM 1 South Carolina 30-2 16 Savannah State 21-10 South
ESPN2 5:00PM 3 Oregon State 26-4 14 South Dakota St. 24-8 West
ESPN2 7:30PM 4 California 24-9 13 Wichita State 29-4 East
ESPN2 7:30PM 1 Notre Dame 31-2 16 Montana 24-8 Mid-West
ESPN2 7:30PM 8 Syracuse 21-9 9 Nebraska 21-10 South
ESPN2 7:30PM 6 Geo. Washington 29-3 11 Gonzaga 24-7 West

2015 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament: Round of 64 Day 1 Evening

Meta note- The Razorbacks’ site is a useless piece of crap!  Video (none for the Tournament of course) and no schedule.

There are others that are difficult (looking at you Harvard and you NC State) but at least it’s there somewhere.  I hope you and your non-standard impossible to find anything IT crew get booted quickly you losers!

This Evening’s Matchups-

Time Channel Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
6:50 pm TBS 1 Villanova 32-2 16 Lafayette 20-12 East
7:10 pm CBS 8 Cincinnati 22-10 9 Purdue 21-12 Mid-West
7:20 pm TNT 4 North Carolina 24-11 13 Harvard 22-7 West
7:27 pm CBS 5 Utah 24-8 12 Steph. F. Austin 29-4 South
9:20 pm TBS 8 NC State 20-13 9 LSU 22-10 East
9:40 pm CBS 1 Kentucky 34-0 16 Hampton 17-17 Mid-West
9:50 pm TNT 5 Arkansas 26-8 12 Wofford 28-6 West
9:57 pm True 4 Georgetown 21-10 13 Eastern Wash. 26-8 South

2015 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament: Round of 64 Day 1 Afternoon

Some meta notes-

During the Rounds of 64 and 32, especially tomorrow when both the Men and Women have 16 games each, it is very difficult to provide in game updates and I don’t generally try unless it’s of particular interest.

You are free of course to post your own commentary if you wish.

Also during at least the early rounds there will be one consolidated Afternoon and one consolidated Evening diary for the Men’s Tournament and the same for the Women.

I’m going to try and keep up enough that I can provide all the previous day’s results in the Afternoon diary as sometimes teams change between Afternoon and Evening starts.  Until the later rounds they never change days in the two day rotation so if I get behind I’ll slip the results so they appear the same day the team plays next.

The links in the tables take you to the college’s main basketball page and to it’s schedule and record against every team it played during the season.

Enjoy the Tournament!

Last Night’s Results

Score Seed Team Record Score Seed Team Record Region
77 16 North Florida 23 – 12 81 16 * Robert Morris 18 – 17 South
56 11 * Dayton 26 – 8 55 11 Boise State 25 – 9 East

This Afternoon’s Matchups-

Time Channel Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
12:15 pm CBS 3 Notre Dame 29 – 5 14 Northeastern 23 – 11 Mid-West
12:40 pm True 3 Iowa State 25 – 8 14 UAB 19 – 15 South
1:40 pm TBS 3 Baylor 24 – 9 14 Georgia State 24 – 9 West
2:10 pm TNT 2 Arizona 31 – 3 15 Texas Southern 22 – 12 West
2:45 pm CBS 6 Butler 22 – 10 11 Texas 20 – 13 Mid-West
3:10 pm True 6 SMU 27 – 6 11 UCLA 20 – 13 South
4:10 pm TBS 6 Xavier 21 – 13 11 Mississippi 21 – 12 West
4:40 pm TBS 7 VCU 26 – 9 10 Ohio State 23 – 10 West

2015 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament: Play Ins Day 2

It’s hard to characterize any of these results as upsets.  Manhattan was a mild favorite and lost, Old Miss a mild favorite who won.  Tonight (and every night for that matter) we will continue with teams I don’t root for since UConn (defending Champions) didn’t make the cut and sentimental favorite Syracuse is under a 5 year NCAA penalty with Jim Boeheim scheduled to retire in 3.

He was no damn good anyway, his players could never hit the clutch free throws.  Besides, it was Daryl Gross’s, the AD’s, fault.

So the only team I’m rooting for is State (Michigan duh) and they’re not that good.

Last Night’s Results

Score Seed Team Record Score Seed Team Record Region
64 16 Manhattan 19 – 14 74 16 * Hampton 17 – 17 Mid-West
94 11 * Mississippi 20 – 12 90 11 BYU 25 – 9 West

Tonight’s Matchups-

Time Channel Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
6:40 True 16 North Florida 23 – 11 16 Robert Morris 19 – 14 South
9:30 True 11 Dayton 25 – 8 11 Boise State 25 – 8 East

Tomorrow is the real deal and you might find this interactive analysis of upsets from The Guardian instructive.

Oh and the NCAA are still greedy bastards.

2015 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament: Play Ins Day 1

Yes hoopies fans, it’s that time of year again where we cram a little over 3 seasons of Basketball into 3 weeks, 128 games worth of Men’s and Women’s action.

Tonight we start with 2 Play In games in the Mid-West and West Regions.

Time Channel Seed Team Record Seed Team Record Region
6:40 True 16 Manhattan 19 – 13 16 Hampton 16 – 17 Mid-West
9:10 True 11 Mississippi 20 – 12 11 BYU 25 – 9 West

Oh and just in case  you’ve forgotten what a horrible greedy institution the NCAA is, here’s John Oliver again.

NCAA Profits Off Athletes, Even Injured Ones

During the recent madness of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament, Louisville Cardinals’ player Kevin Ware fractured his lower leg during the game. The injury, caught on camera, was so gruesome that most news outlets refused to show the film or pictures. Fortunately for Ware, the injury, a fractured tibia that required surgery to repair, will most likely not end his college basketball career. He’s lucky, so far. Others have not fared so well, despite the fact that both the NCAA and the schools that are members make millions off these athletes, as well as, from the merchandise and advertising.

A 2009 New York Times article raised concerns about the inadequacy of health insurance for college athletes that the National Collegiate Athletic Association required.

But the association never established clear standards for that coverage when it introduced the rule four years ago, leaving colleges to decide for themselves. While some colleges accept considerable responsibility for medical claims, many others assume almost none, according to a review of public documents from a cross section of universities and interviews with current and former athletes, trainers, administrators and N.C.A.A. officials. [..]

Many students, whether athletes or not, have medical insurance through their parents. But these plans often exclude varsity sports injuries, limit out-of-state treatment or do not cover much of the bill. Some colleges buy secondary policies to fill the gaps, although even these plans have holes. And only players hurt badly enough to require extensive care can turn to the N.C.A.A. for coverage. Its catastrophic insurance carries a $75,000 deductible, which will increase to $90,000 next year.

The absence of mandated coverage for athletes has prompted calls for change.

That was four years ago and it seems little has changed. While the athletes play for free and risk injury that could end not only their playing but their college ambitions as well, since many are on athletic scholarship dependent on their participation. Dave Zirin, at The Nation, recounts what happened in the aftermath of Ware’s injury and the reaction of the NCAA and the university:

On Wednesday we learned that Adidas, in conjunction with the University of Louisville athletic department, will be selling a $24.99 t-shirt with Kevin Ware’s number 5 and the slogan “Rise to the Occasion” emblazoned across the back. His team will also be wearing warm-ups with Ware’s name, number and the slogan “All In.” (This tragically is not a tribute to Chris Hayes.)

You almost have to tip your cap: no non-profit does buccaneer profiteering quite like the NCAA. What other institution would see a tibia snap through a 20-year-old’s skin on national television and see dollar signs? In accordance with their rules aimed at preserving the sanctity of amateurism, not one dime from these shirts will go to Kevin Ware or his family. Not one dime will go toward Kevin Ware’s medical bills if his rehab ends up beneath the $90,000 deductible necessary to access the NCAA’s catastrophic injury medical coverage. Not one dime will go towards rehab he may need later in life.

Kevin Ware was returned to the unversity accompanied by hi s coach and has been declared well enough to attend the “Final Four.” Meanwhile, university officials were mum on what will happen to his scholarship in the fall if rehab doesn’t go well over the summer.

MSNBC’s Chris Hayes addressed the question of NCAA athletes as uncompensated employees of the NCAA and the “fat profits” the NCAA makes off not just the games but the individuals after they leave the team.

If you happen to be among the millions of people who watched the NCAA tournament Sunday, you watched as Louisville Cardinals sophomore guard Kevin Ware broke his leg during an awkward fall after a routine move: an injury so gruesome it left players in tears, and more than a few people feeling sick to their stomachs.

People who saw it in real-time howled involuntarily. Everyone in the stadium was affected. Social media blew up.

Right away, people wanted to know if Ware’s leg was going to be OK, and if he was ever going to play basketball again. But they also wanted to know-I wanted to know-if Ware isn’t going to play basketball again because of this injury, is he going to be able to go back to Louisville next year, and is he going to have a scholarship?

If Ware isn’t going to have a scholarship, what’s going to happen to him? And in any case, who is going to pay his medical bills? Is he covered for this? And most profoundly and urgently, why isn’t Kevin Ware being paid for his labor? [..]

It was gruesome on a visceral level, because of the severity of the injury, but it was also gruesome because while all of us were enjoying the game, all the people making money off of it, including the advertisers, and athletic directors, and apparel companies, had to reckon for a brief instant with the fact that this kid, now in agony, was on the job making their programs possible.

Chris noted an article in The Atlantic by Taylor Branch; it is long but a must read that tell os the scandalous mess that is the NCAA and college sports.

Load more