It’s not that uncommon for a team to come out of nowhere and reach college basketball’s biggest stage, the Final Four — think No. 7 seed South Carolina a year ago, 10th-seeded Syracuse in 2016, No. 9 seed Wichita State in 2013 or 11th seed VCU in 2011
But every once in a while one of those teams actually cuts down the nets at the completion of the Big Dance as national champions.
Kansas coach Bill Self wouldn’t exactly be floored if this year’s NCAA Tournament concluded with such mayhem.
Appearing recently on Andy Katz’s podcast, [March Madness 365][1], Self’s conversation with Katz included some discussion of the 2014 tournament, when senior guard Shabazz Napier guided seventh-seeded Connecticut, a team that finished third in the American Athletic Conference, to six straight wins and a national title.
Katz wondered whether this might be a year when some under-the-radar team outside of the top five, or even the top 10, catches fire and surfaces as the NCAA champion.
> “There’s no question that can happen,”
> Self replied. “And when you say may
> not be in the top five, you could talk
> about in the country or you could talk
> about in the seeds. There may be a six
> seed, or a seven, or an eight or a
> nine, whatever, that could challenge
> and get hot at the right time. That
> has happened in the past — it’s been
> rare.”
Self correctly recalled UConn faced a No. 8 seed, Kentucky, in the 2014 title game. The Wildcats, who had lost three of their last four regular-season games, recovered for a postseason run with a typically youthful-yet-talented lineup, led by freshmen Julius Randle, James Young and Aaron and Andrew Harrison.
> “That could happen again. I don’t
> think that’s far off,” Self continued,
> “if the right players get hot at the
> right time. You would still think the
> percentage play would be the ones that
> have shown consistency throughout the
> year, but as we’ve all found out, you
> know, 1988 Kansas won it on Danny’s
> back. It’s just a six-game tournament.
> They had 11 losses that year.”
As KU’s 15th-year coach referenced, 30 years ago Naismith and Wooden award-winner Danny Manning carried the sixth-seeded Jayhawks to glory, highlighted by a regional final victory over No. 4 seed Kansas State and Final Four wins against No. 2 seed Duke and No. 1 seed Oklahoma.
> “I think it’s very possible that this
> could be a year that somebody like
> that could do it,” Self said.
Among the country’s top candidates for player of the year, most are not in position to pull off something as miraculous as Manning and KU back in 1988, or even as unexpected as what Napier and UConn did four years ago.
Between the 10 Naismith Trophy semifinalists (listed below), only two of them play for teams currently projected by [ESPN bracketologist Joe Lunardi][2] as heavy underdogs to make a lengthy March run toward San Antonio.
*Deandre Ayton, Arizona — No. 4 seed*
*Marvin Bagley III, Duke — No. 2 seed*
*Keita Bates-Diop, Ohio State — No. 4 seed*
*Trevon Bluiett, Xavier — No. 1 seed*
*Miles Bridges, Michigan State — No. 2 seed*
*Jalen Brunson, Villanova — No. 1 seed*
*Keenan Evans, Texas Tech — No. 4 seed*
*Devonte’ Graham, Kansas — No. 1 seed*
*Jock Landale, St. Mary’s — No. 9 seed*
*Trae Young, Oklahoma — No. 10 seed*
Assuming the Sooners make the field when it is announced in a little more than a week, it would take a string of remarkable performances by freshman point guard Trae Young as well as some vastly improved defense by OU as a team to pull off a Final Four run.
Similarly, while 6-foot-11 St. Mary’s senior center Jock Landale has overmatched opponents inside, averaging 21.5 points and 10.2 rebounds this year, the Gaels also would need to bolster their team defense to do real damage in the tournament.
Still, plenty of other Cinderella candidates for 2018 exist, including:
– **Nevada**, a projected No. 6 seed led by junior forward **Caleb Martin** (19.4 points, 5.2 rebounds, 43.8% 3-point shooting)
– **Houston**, a projected No. 7 seed featuring senior guard **Robert Gray Jr.** (17.7 points, 4.7 assists)
– **Creighton**, a projected No. 7 seed powered by senior guard **Marcus Foster** (20 points, 2.7 assists, 43.4% 3-point shooting), a transfer from Kansas State, and junior wing **Khyri Thomas** (15.2 points, 2.9 assists, 41.4% 3-point shooting), who is considered a first-round talent by NBA scouts
– **Arkansas**, a projected No. 7 seed with two productive senior guards, **Jaylen Barford** (18.1 points, 3.9 rebounds, 43.5% 3-point shooting) and **Daryl Macon** (17.3 points, 4 assists, 44.3% 3-point shooting), as well as a potential first-round draft pick inside with freshman **Daniel Gafford** (11.9 points, 6.2 rebounds, 2.1 blocks)
– **Butler**, a projected No. 8 seed led by senior forward **Kelan Martin** (20.7 points, 6.4 rebounds)
– **Missouri**, a projected No. 9 seed featuring senior guard **Kassius Robertson** (16.6 points, 2.4 assists, 43.2% 3-point shooting), senior forward **Jordan Barnett** (13.9 points, 5.8 rebounds, 41.1% 3-point shooting) and — possibly (?) — soon-to-be NBA lottery pick **Michael Porter Jr.**
– **Alabama**, a projected No. 10 seed with the services of a likely top-10 draft pick, freshman point guard **Collin Sexton** (18.1 points, 3.5 assists)
– **Middle Tennessee**, a projected No. 12 seed led by senior forward **Nick King** (21.3points, 8.3 rebounds)
[1]: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/march-madness-365-with-andy-katz/e/53440995?autoplay=true
[2]: http://www.espn.com/ncb/bracketology?src=desktop&wjb