1. Minnesota beat Iowa on the road and took down Oregon. The win over Oregon was the second-straight win over a ranked team at home. The last time that happened was in 2021 when Richard Pitino was the head coach. Dawson Garcia was sensational with 31 in the win over Oregon and 20 at Iowa. The previous week he hit the game-winning 3-pointer to beat Michigan. Garcia came home to Minnesota after playing at North Carolina three years ago. He is committed to the school and coach Ben Johnson. Johnson has tremendous respect from his coaching peers and clearly the players enjoy playing for him. The portal departures (Pharrell Payne, Elijah Hawkins and Joshua Ola-Joseph) left for more money. Had they all stayed, the Gophers would/should have been an NCAA Tournament team this season. Hopefully now Minnesota will invest in the men’s basketball program. Johnson deserves a shot to be on more of an equal playing court with other Big Ten schools. They’ve won three in a row and are fully in contention to be in the Big Ten tournament and avoid the embarrassment of finishing in the bottom three and missing out on the event.
2. The MAC has quite a race at the top with Akron ahead of Miami of Ohio by a game. The Zips knocked off the Redhawks 102-75. Both schools are coached by former power coaches in Akron’s John Groce (Illinois) and Miami’s Travis Steele (Xavier). Both are great examples that coaching wasn’t the issue at their previous stops. They can maximize talent and are thriving again, albeit at just a tad lower level.
3. Pat Kelsey’s energy at Louisville is contagious. He has done wonders completely turning the program around. Kelsey was the right person at the right time for the Cards. Expect Louisville to be in the mix in the top five of the ACC for quite some time.
4. Two names that better be familiar to the AP All-American voters aren’t household names: Memphis’ P.J. Haggerty (22 ppg) and New Mexico’s Donovan Dent (19.6 ppg).
5. Great to see the Martelli family tree is doing well. Phil Martelli Jr., has Bryant as the team to beat in the America East. The Bulldogs are 6-0 (12-9 overall) and already have a win over the three top contenders Vermont, Lowell and Maine.
RANKINGS: AP Top 25 Poll | NET Rankings
Under consideration: Oklahoma, Stanford, Baylor, BYU, Bradley, Utah Valley.
Dropped out: Michigan (25), West Virginia (28), Oregon (29), Georgia (33), Wake Forest (34), UC Irvine (36).
RECAP SATURDAY’S LOADED SLATE: Auburn edges Tennessee, Houston defeats Kansas in 2OT and more
March Madness National Team of the Week
Houston: The Cougars just needed time to mature and evolve into a power. The Cougars are one of the toughest teams, if not the most difficult, to play against in the country, let alone the Big 12. Every possession seems to be a chore. They guard, trap, and frustrate each opponent. This was on full display in the 70-36 obliteration of Utah. And then in a miraculous comeback, they beat Kansas in Lawrence 92-86 in double overtime. The Cougars were down 40-31, scored 13 straight, and then down six with 1:09 left tied it to go to overtime. Houston was down six with 28 seconds left before a frantic run to tie it and send it into a second OT. Houston outlasted Kansas in the final stanza 13-7. Houston is now 16-3, 8-0 in the Big 12.
March Madness National Player of the Week
Julian Reese, Maryland: The senior big man was instrumental in Maryland’s massive road sweep at Illinois and Indiana. The Terps won at Illinois 91-70 behind Reese’s 27 points and 17 boards. The Terps exploited Illinois’ vacuum in the middle with Tomislav Ivisic out with mono. Reese joined forces with freshman Derik Queen (25) to control the middle. But Reese didn’t wilt against the Indiana big men combo of Oumar Ballo and Malik Reneau. Reese scored 14 and 10 in the paint. Sure, guards Rodney Rice, Selton Miguel and Jacobi Gillespie scored a combined 56 points. But the Terps don’t win if the middle wasn’t won by Reese and Queen. Reese’s leadership throughout the road weekend has transformed the Terps into a Big Ten top-three contender.
North Carolina at Duke, Saturday: The greatest rivalry in men’s college basketball NEVER disappoints. Duke is rolling and is a lock to be a No. 1 seed at this pace and maybe the No. 1 overall. The Blue Devils may not lose again in the ACC. But the Tar Heels are in a desperate mode to pull off an upset. So who knows what we shall get?
Indiana at Purdue, Friday: The Hoosiers are struggling. Purdue is not. But this is still one of the best rivalries in the game.
New Mexico at Utah State, Saturday: These are the two best teams in the Mountain West. And we get this rivalry twice! The winner has the early upper hand in the top seed in Las Vegas.
Gonzaga at Saint Mary’s, Saturday: The script has flipped. Now Gonzaga needs this game more than the Gaels. That’s not normally the case. But Gonzaga needs a Quad 1 road win.
Florida at Tennessee, Saturday: The Gators have proven to be one of the SEC’s best. The Vols are still elite in the conference and difficult to put away, regardless of venue.
Arkansas at Kentucky, Saturday: John Calipari’s return to Lexington comes at a time when the Hogs are struggling and have just one SEC win. Kentucky entered the week losing two in a row and can’t afford another loss to a lower-level SEC team if it wants to stay in contention for a top-three league finish.
Wisconsin at Maryland, Wednesday: The Terps are coming off a sweep of Illinois and Indiana while the Badgers have been relatively red hot. Both are trying to catch Michigan State.
Iowa State at Arizona, Monday: Houston is now the team to beat in the Big 12. Iowa State needs to keep pace and Arizona would like to be in the conversation.
Kentucky at Tennessee, Tuesday: Both are coming off losses and need to try to keep up with Auburn and Alabama.
Auburn at Ole Miss, Saturday: This could be the game where Auburn loses in the SEC. Ole Miss going for the State of Alabama sweep.