Here are some things you might have missed while paying attention to all of the March Madness awesomeness.
No. 9: The Big-12 fails to boast
It’s very common for conferences to talk themselves up with postseason success and here is the Big-12’s attempt.
On the surface, this is impressive. However, the Big-12 has fewer teams than the other leagues on this list with only 10. Everyone else has 12 or more, hurting their percentage.
With that taken into account the chart doesn’t really say much at all. It doesn’t help that none of the seven Big-12 teams made it to the Elite Eight.
No. 8: NIT upsets
While there were several upsets in the NCAA tournament, there were quite a few in the NIT too. Robert Morris took down a No. 1 seed for the second straight year in St. John’s. Conference USA was able claim success having Southern Miss and Louisiana Tech reach the quarterfinals. Belmont was the victim of a court storming at Clemson. I guess beating Belmont is like beating Duke in the eyes of Clemson fans.
No. 7: Best fan photo ever
There have been some amazing photos of fans and players celebrating in the tournament. The best has to go to two rival coaches eating popcorn together. I’m biased being born in Kentucky, but Denny Crum and Joe B. Hall is just too good to pass up. Hard to believe they host a radio show together now.
Photo from last night's game: pic.twitter.com/3VDADtXKCm
— Kentucky #BBN (@BBN) March 29, 2014
No. 6: Year of the Bison
North Dakota State has to have the happiest athletic department this year. With a FCS championship and a basketball team that won its first ever NCAA tournament game, things are pretty darn good.
Incredible photo, per @NDSUathletics. Make sure you check out our "Year of the Bison" article next month! pic.twitter.com/WPvOnB1xBO
— Bison Illustrated (@bisonmag) March 24, 2014
No. 5: Women’s NIT
There actually is a women’s NIT and unlike the men’s it is 64 teams. That’s a lot of postseason basketball that receives little to no media attention. This tweet confirms that.
UTEP had the largest announced attendance in round two with 4,703 fans.
— WNIT (@WomensNIT) March 25, 2014
That’s the best crowd for round 2? That’s 10 percent of the attendance for some of these men’s NCAA Tournament games.
No. 4: CBI team with a losing record
If you can’t get into the NCAA Tournament or the NIT there is always the College Basketball Invitational. The CBI has attracted some power conference teams in the past and got Penn State and Texas A&M in this year. So it’s sort of legit.
Problem is Siena is in the championship final. The Saints were the only team in the field to have a losing record and they might win it all. Kind of looks bad for the CBI but it’s not its fault. Other teams turned down their CBI bid like Indiana, allowing lesser schools to get in. Siena is making the most of their opportunity as it should. Postseason basketball should never be taken for granted.
No. 3: A women’s CBI exists too.
The Women’s Basketball Invitational has already crowned their champion as Illinois-Chicago defeated Stephen F. Austin in the title game. While attention is scarce, it is still a meaningful event to the team’s fans.
Thank you to our wonderful fans for the welcome home from the #WBI. You guys are the best! #AxeEm #ToughAndTogether pic.twitter.com/Bh4Etz0kQO
— Ladyjacks Basketball (@SFA_WBB) March 30, 2014
No. 2: CIT is still meaningless
Meaningful is the opposite of the College Insider.com Tournament or CIT. Unlike the CBI, the CIT field is composed of nothing but mid-majors, most of which are from conferences with low RPIs. The CIT does not have a set bracket making it a tournament that’s constantly in flux and difficult to follow. Check out how many people attended a game at Eastern Michigan. Less than 400!
So what does the CIT do to validate themselves?
Rookie of the Year from CollegeInsider.com 4 on Vimeo.
Because claiming Damian Lillard is going to make people care? Sorry, but finding the one or two guys from small schools who made it big in the NBA is not compelling enough. The other tournaments have more NBA prospects. Good luck with that.
No. 1: Central Missouri shows dedication
The University of Central Missouri won the division II basketball title Saturday and congratulations. UCM goes with the Mules for its men’s teams and Jennies for its women’s. I guess the Philadelphia Phillies are a softball team then.
The main story here though is how UCM reacted to the championship title. Whoever runs their Twitter account was updating a softball game for the “Jennies” while the “Mules” won the championship game on the hardwood.
Mules call a :30 timeout to set up their defense. UCM leads 80-75 after two Dillon Deck FTs with 35.4 to play. #teamUCM
— UCM Mules & Jennies (@UCMMULES) March 29, 2014
Lucas hits a bloop single to center, driving in Rogers. Jennies trail, 4-1 #teamUCM
— UCM Mules & Jennies (@UCMMULES) March 29, 2014
Pinch-hitter Leonhart grounds out to short w/ bases loaded to end the 5th inning. Jennies trail, 4-1 to UCO. #teamUCM
— UCM Mules & Jennies (@UCMMULES) March 29, 2014
The Mules are National Champions!!! UCM beats West Liberty 84-77 to claim the crown! Daylen Robinson had a game-high 21 pts. #teamUCM
— UCM Mules & Jennies (@UCMMULES) March 29, 2014
After 5 1/2 innings, Jennies trail, 4-1. Nally, Mabe, Rogers due to hit. #teamUCM
— UCM Mules & Jennies (@UCMMULES) March 29, 2014
This has to be the most dedication to a job I’ve seen by an athletic department. Most would have solely focused on the basketball game but here is UCM weaving it in and out with regular season softball coverage.
Props to Central Missouri to making sure the Jennies get the same amount of respect as the Mules. Feminists better rejoice.