2012 NCAA regional rankings, Week 2

The second NCAA regional rankings of the 2011-12 season have been released. For women’s rankings, scroll down.

Need to know more about the regional rankings process and what they mean? Check our blog post — updated for 2012. Need to know more about the NCAA Tournament? Check out our NCAA Tournament FAQ.

Through Sunday’s games.

The first record is in-region record, followed by overall.

Men’s rankings
Atlantic Region

1 William Paterson 21-3 21-3
2 Staten Island 18-2 19-4
3 St. Joseph’s (L.I.) 19-2 19-3
4 Richard Stockton 16-6 17-7
5 New Jersey City 15-5 17-6

East
1 Hartwick 21-2 22-2
2 Oswego State 19-2 19-3
3 Hobart 18-4 19-4
4 New York U. 18-4 18-4
5 Medaille 20-2 21-2
6 Nazareth 16-6 16-8

Great Lakes
1 Hope 14-0 22-1
2 Wittenberg 16-4 18-5
3 Wooster 17-4 19-4
4 Ohio Wesleyan 16-6 17-6
5 Wabash 15-6 17-6
6 Bethany (W. Va.) 19-2 20-3

Mid-Atlantic
1 Cabrini 23-0 23-1
2 Keystone 20-4 20-4
3 Franklin & Marshall 21-2 21-2
4 Mary Washington 15-5 16-7
5 St. Mary’s (Md.) 16-5 18-6
6 Messiah 15-6 16-6
7 Misericordia 17-6 17-6
8 Widener 13-6 17-6
9 Lycoming 15-6 17-7

Midwest
1 Washington U. 17-4 17-5
2 Lake Forest 18-2 19-2
3 Transylvania 20-1 21-2
4 Wheaton (Ill.) 16-5 18-5
5 North Central (Ill.) 15-5 16-7
6 Illinois Wesleyan 15-6 17-6
7 Hanover 16-5 16-6
8 Edgewood 16-5 18-5

Northeast
1 Amherst 20-2 22-2
2 Middlebury 20-2 22-2
3 Western Connecticut 19-4 19-4
4 MIT 22-1 22-1
5 Keene State 15-4 18-5
6 Rhode Island College 18-5 18-5
7 WPI 17-5 17-5
8 Wesleyan (Conn.) 19-4 19-5
9 Eastern Connecticut 18-5 18-5
10 Albertus Magnus 22-1 22-1
11 Becker 19-4 19-4
12 Tufts 16-7 16-7

South
1 Mary Hardin-Baylor 21-1 22-1
2 Virginia Wesleyan 18-3 19-3
3 Randolph-Macon 16-3 19-4
4 Birmingham-Southern 19-1 22-1
5 Emory 18-4 18-4
6 Christopher Newport 16-4 19-4
7 Guilford 15-6 16-7
8 Hardin-Simmons 15-6 17-6

West
1 UW-River Falls 18-3 18-5
2 UW-Stevens Point 17-4 19-4
3 UW-Whitewater 20-3 20-3
4 Whitworth 19-2 20-3
5 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 15-1 21-1
6 Gustavus Adolphus 17-5 18-5
7 St. Thomas 15-6 16-6
8 Whitman 15-6 17-6
9 Puget Sound 13-5 18-5

Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
Atlantic  |  East  |  Great Lakes  |  Middle Atlantic  |  Midwest  |  Northeast  |  South  |  West

Women’s

The first record is in-region record, followed by overall record.
Atlantic
1 Mary Washington 21-0 23-0
2 William Paterson 21-1 23-1
3 Kean 17-3 20-4
4 Mount St. Mary (N.Y.) 19-3 20-3
5 Rutgers-Newark 16-7 16-7
6 York (Pa.) 19-4 19-4

Central
1 Chicago 22-0 22-0
2 UW-Stevens Point 19-2 20-3
3 UW-River Falls 18-4 19-4
4 Washington U. 17-3 18-4
5 Illinois Wesleyan 14-5 18-5
6 UW-Eau Claire 18-4 18-5

East
1 Rochester 18-3 19-3
2 Ithaca 19-2 20-4
3 Hartwick 20-2 21-3
4 St. Lawrence 19-3 19-4
5 Oneonta State 16-4 16-6
6 Buffalo State 18-2 20-2

Great Lakes
1 Mount Union 20-1 22-1
2 DePauw 20-1 21-1
3 Calvin 16-1 22-1
4 Franklin 19-2 21-2
5 Thomas More 18-2 19-4
6 St. Vincent 19-3 19-4

Mid-Atlantic
1 Juniata 22-0 23-1
2 Lebanon Valley 21-2 21-2
3 King’s 19-2 20-3
4 Johns Hopkins 18-3 20-3
5 Messiah 17-3 18-4
6 Franklin & Marshall 16-6 17-6

Northeast
1 Amherst 22-0 24-0
2 University of New England 19-4 19-4
3 Rhode Island College 20-3 20-3
4 Tufts 19-4 19-5
5 Southern Maine 17-5 18-5
6 Colby 18-5 18-5
7 Williams 17-5 19-5
8 Bowdoin 17-5 18-6
9 Babson 19-2 20-2
10 Emmanuel (Mass.) 16-5 17-6

South
1 Louisiana College 18-2 19-3
2 Centre 19-2 20-2
3 Howard Payne 19-3 20-3
4 Virginia Wesleyan 17-3 18-4
5 Ferrum 17-4 19-4
6 Greensboro 15-4 18-4

West
1 George Fox 18-0 23-0
2 St. Thomas 22-1 22-1
3 Simpson 15-5 18-5
4 Lewis & Clark 14-2 21-2
5 Wartburg 17-6 17-6
6 Gustavus Adolphus 18-5 18-5

Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
Atlantic | Central | East | Great Lakes | Mid-Atlantic | Northeast | South | West

2012 playoff primer: Mind your B’s and C’s

Well, we’re updating this for 2012 because there are a couple of things that did change, namely the site of the women’s Final Four! From now until the end of the regular season you may well see a lot of Division III buzzwords floating about on our front page, here in the Daily Dose and on our message boards. Pool A, Pool B, Pool C, OWP, OOWP … what do those all mean?

Pool A, Pool B and Pool C are the labels given to groups (also known as Pools) of bids awarded to the playoffs. The field is 62 men’s teams and 64 women’s teams culminating in the Final Four and national title games in Salem, Va. (men) and Holland, Mich. (women).

Understanding Pool A is fairly simple — let’s just pretend that ‘A’ stands for automatic. Those are the automatic bids that are awarded. There are 42 conferences with men’s automatic bids and 43 conferences with women’s automatic bids. Every conference other than the UAA awards its automatic bid to the winner of a conference tournament.

If you are not in one of those conferences, there is one bid set aside for you, which is what’s referred to as Pool B. The best team out of that group, which includes independents and (for men only) the Great South Athletic Conference teams, gets a bid as well.

Every eligible team not already selected is dropped into Pool C, which consists of 19 men’s and 20 women’s at-large bids. At-large bids are determined using the NCAA’s criteria, which includes regional winning percentage, strength of schedule, head-to-head competition, results against common opponents and results against regionally ranked teams.

If your conference has an automatic bid and your team doesn’t win it, then you are only eligible for Pool C bids. If your conference doesn’t have an automatic bid, you are eligible for Pool B or, if you don’t make that cut, Pool C.

Q: Why is the women’s tournament 64 but the men’s only 62?
A:
There are more schools with women’s basketball teams than men’s basketball teams. As more schools join Division III (or more women’s-only schools go co-ed), the men’s tournament will grow to 64. It just expanded from 61 to 62 teams this season.

Q: How can my team guarantee it will get into the playoffs?
A:
Win your conference’s automatic bid. There’s no guarantees otherwise.

Q: If the two best teams are in the same region, will they be placed in separate brackets?
A:
This is at least possible, but not very likely. They don’t seed this tournament like a D-I tournament, unfortunately. Teams are placed in groups according to geography and seeded, though keeping teams from having to travel 500 miles in the first round is more important to the NCAA than maintaining proper matchups. We can expect from history that the women’s basketball committee will do its best to separate the top teams. The history in men’s basketball is mixed at best, but the men’s committee delivered a nice bracket in 2011.

Q: There are a lot of criteria to go through. How can I tell where my team stands?
A:
The NCAA releases regional rankings over the final weeks of the regular season, starting today. However, being No. 6 in one region doesn’t necessarily mean you’re ahead of a team that’s No. 7 in one of the other seven.

Q: So if I’m ranked seventh in these rankings, I’m in the playoffs?
A:
No. There are still the 42/43 automatic bids. They’ll all get in first. Take the automatic bids out of the rankings (and keep in mind some conferences don’t have anyone in these rankings) and one Pool B team, then the remaining 19/20 get in.

Q: We’re ranked in the D3hoops.com Top 25. Since the bracket has more than 60 teams, we should be in, right?
A:
Unfortunately, no. We would love to be able to say that’s the case, but remember that there are still all those automatic bids. Plus, the NCAA doesn’t agree with us as to who the best at-large teams are.

Q: Can you explain more about the various playoff selection/regional ranking criteria?
A:
Absolutely. We have a whole section of our FAQ devoted to the NCAA Tournament, with that and game dates and the list of conferences with automatic bids.

Q: I have a question you haven’t answered. What do I do?
A:
E-mail info@d3sports.com and/or post below in the comments section.

2012 NCAA regional rankings, Week 1

The first NCAA regional rankings of the 2011-12 season have been released. For women’s rankings, scroll down.

Need to know more about the regional rankings process and what they mean? Check our blog post — it’s from last year but it’s still good. Need to know more about the NCAA Tournament? Check out our NCAA Tournament FAQ.

The first record is in-region record, followed by overall.

Men’s rankings
Atlantic Region

1 Staten Island 15-2 16-4
2 William Paterson 19-3 19-3
3 St. Joseph’s (L.I.) 17-1 17-2
4 Richard Stockton 14-6 15-7
5 New Jersey City 14-4 16-5

East Region
1 Hartwick 19-2 20-2
2 Oswego State 17-2 17-3
3 New York University 17-2 17-2
4 Hobart 15-4 16-4
5 Medaille 19-2 20-2
6 Nazareth 15-5 15-7

Great Lakes
1 Hope 12-0 20-1
2 Wittenberg 15-3 17-4
3 Wooster 16-3 18-3
4 Ohio Wesleyan 15-5 16-5
5 Wabash 13-6 15-6
6 Capital 13-6 14-7

Mid-Atlantic
1 Cabrini 21-0 21-1
2 Keystone 17-3 17-3
3 Lycoming 15-4 17-5
4 Mary Washington 14-4 15-6
5 Franklin & Marshall 19-2 19-2
6 St. Mary’s (Md.) 14-5 16-6
7 Messiah 13-6 14-6
8 Misericordia 15-6 15-6
9 Alvernia 13-6 15-6

Midwest
1 Washington U. 15-4 15-5
2 Transylvania 18-1 19-2
3 Lake Forest 17-2 18-2
4 Wheaton (Ill.) 15-4 17-4
5 North Central (Ill.) 14-4 15-6
6 Illinois Wesleyan 14-5 16-5
7 Edgewood 14-5 16-5
8 Concordia (Wis.) 15-4 16-4

Northeast
1 Amherst 18-2 20-2
2 Middlebury 18-1 20-1
3 Rhode Island College 16-4 16-4
4 Western Connecticut 17-4 17-4
5 WPI 16-4 16-4
6 Eastern Connecticut 17-4 17-4
7 MIT 20-1 20-1
8 Keene State 14-3 17-4
9 Wesleyan (Conn.) 17-4 17-5
10 Tufts 16-6 16-6
11 Becker 16-4 16-4
12 Albertus Magnus 20-1 20-1

South
1 Mary Hardin-Baylor 19-1 20-1
2 Virginia Wesleyan 17-2 18-2
3 Birmingham-Southern 17-1 20-1
4 Randolph-Macon 14-3 17-4
5 Christopher Newport 15-4 18-4
6 Emory 16-4 16-4
7 Guilford 14-5 15-6
8 Hardin-Simmons 14-5 16-5

West
1 UW-River Falls 16-3 16-5
2 UW-Stevens Point 16-4 18-4
3 UW-Whitewater 19-2 19-2
4 Whitworth 17-2 18-3
5 Claremont-Mudd-Scripps 13-1 19-1
6 St. Thomas 14-6 15-6
7 Gustavus Adolphus 14-5 15-5
8 Dubuque 15-3 16-6
9 Whitman 13-6 15-6

Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
Atlantic  |  East  |  Great Lakes  |  Middle Atlantic  |  Midwest  |  Northeast  |  South  |  West

Women’s

The first record is in-region record, followed by overall record.

Atlantic
1 Kean 17-2 20-3
2 William Paterson 19-1 21-1
3 Mary Washington 19-0 21-0
4 Mount St. Mary (N.Y.) 17-3 18-3
5 York (Pa.) 17-3 17-3
6 Catholic 16-4 18-4

Central
1 Chicago 20-0 20-0
2 UW-Stevens Point 18-2 19-3
3 Washington U. 15-3 16-4
4 Illinois Wesleyan 12-5 16-5
5 UW-Eau Claire 17-4 17-5
6 Carthage 15-4 17-4

East
1 Rochester (N.Y.) 16-3 17-3
2 Ithaca 17-2 18-4
3 Hartwick 18-2 18-3
4 St. Lawrence 17-3 17-4
5 Oneonta State 14-4 14-6
6 Buffalo State 16-2 18-2

Great Lakes
1 DePauw 19-1 20-1
2 Mount Union 18-1 20-1
3 Calvin 14-1 20-1
4 Franklin 18-1 20-1
5 Ohio Northern 18-3 18-3
6 St. Vincent 17-3 17-4

Mid-Atlantic
1 Juniata 20-0 21-1
2 Lebanon Valley 19-2 19-2
3 King’s 17-2 18-3
4 Johns Hopkins 17-2 19-2
5 Messiah 15-3 16-4
6 Muhlenberg 15-5 15-5

Northeast
1 Amherst 20-0 22-0
2 Rhode Island College 19-2 19-2
3 Babson 17-2 18-2
4 Tufts 18-4 18-5
5 Williams 16-4 18-4
6 University of New England 17-4 17-4
7 Southern Maine 15-5 16-5
8 Connecticut College 15-4 16-4
9 Keene State 14-4 14-5
10 Colby 15-5 15-5

South
1 Louisiana College 17-1 18-2
2 Centre 18-1 19-1
3 Howard Payne 17-3 18-3
4 Christopher Newport 17-4 17-4
5 Eastern Mennonite 17-2 18-2
6 Piedmont 15-3 18-3

West
1 George Fox 16-0 21-0
2 St. Thomas 20-1 20-1
3 Lewis and Clark 12-2 20-2
4 Gustavus Adolphus 17-4 17-4
5 Wartburg 16-5 16-5
6 Simpson 13-5 16-5

Regional score reporting forms (including SOS) below:
Atlantic | Central | East | Great Lakes | Mid-Atlantic | Northeast | South | West

Pausing before the stretch run

Buffalo State struggled with Justin Mitchell out. He’s not missing any longer.
Buffalo State athletics photo

Teams have started to clinch regular season titles and the first regional rankings will be published this week. So we must officially be in the stretch run. Here’s a few points of view on the men’s and women’s basketball season so far — who has surprised, who has disappointed and who is the player of the year…so far.

    MEN

Who is the biggest surprise?
Gordon Mann: The Hope Flying Dutchmen didn’t make the preseason Top 25. In fact, they wouldn’t have made the Top 30 since they were seven slots out of the preseason poll. Now Hope is the only team left that is unbeaten against Division III opponents.
Pat Coleman: Whitworth. Losing the consensus Player of the Year from a team with an already-tight rotation, then losing the head coach, seemed like a recipe for mortality. But the Pirates have done pretty well for themselves, at 18-3 with one of the losses to a scholarship school, one to UW-Whitewater and another to rival Whitman. The addition of another transfer, Idris Lasisi, has been huge for Whitworth. (Understandable about Hope — however, since they wouldn’t provide our voters with a preseason breakdown of who was returning, we didn’t speculate.)
Dave McHugh: New York University. The Violets always seem to start their season strong, but once they enter UAA play they have struggled in recent years. After losing to Brandeis, it appeared to be deja vu, but NYU has since then only lost one more game against Carnegie Mellon at home (figure that one out!). They have beaten Chicago and Wash U. on the road and still have those teams to play in New York City. However, the big test will be the three games on the road against Emory, Rochester, and Brandeis.

Who is the biggest disappointment?
Gordon Mann: Rochester isn’t the only preseason Top 10 team to fall off the national radar. Marietta is in the same predicament. But unlike Marietta, Rochester doesn’t have a chance to save its season by winning its postseason conference tournament. The UAA awards its automatic bid to the regular season title winner and the Yellowjackets are three games out of first place with four to play.
Pat Coleman: Williams. The Ephs have struggled in the second semester. Heck, even in the first semester, a home loss to Salem State is not an indication of a stellar season. Whether it’s the back injury or the absence of Troy Whittington, James Wang is simply not the player we’ve seen on the national scene.
Dave McHugh: Marietta. The Pioneers looked poised to dominate the OAC, but instead have struggled with two loses to Ohio Northern and one against Baldwin Wallace (both behind Marietta in the standings). They have also lost to the two teams ahead of them, Capital and John Carroll, and still have to face both teams in the last two games of the season. Those five in-conference loses with potentially more could put the Pioneers in a very difficult role of a road team who needs to win the conference title to get an NCAA AQ.

What team are you buying stock in?
Gordon Mann: Wittenberg seems like a good buy on the virtual Division III basketball stock market. The Tigers sit atop a quality conference and have just three regional losses. So they are in decent position to host an NCAA tournament pod … if they can win their last four games … and the NCAC tournament. Well, stock picking is speculative, isn’t it?
Pat Coleman: Buffalo State. The Bengals dropped off the radar with back-to-back losses, one of them by 24, when Justin Mitchell (12.8 points per game) was out. They’ve bounced back to win six in a row, averaging 95.5 points per game in the process. They lost to Oswego State in December and must travel to Oswego on Feb. 17.
Dave McHugh: Transylvania. There is something about how the Pioneers are playing basketball that impresses me. They have two loses on the season to Gustavus Adolphus, who was a giant killer in Las Vegas, and Defiance, which is a head scratcher. Coach Brian Lane nearly broke his dad’s record for start to a season at 10-0 with a team that is unselfish (check out their assist numbers) and several players like Ethan Spurlin, Brandon Rash, Barrett Meyer and Tate Cox who contributing on all levels. And if they don’t get very far in the NCAA Tournament this season, get ready because pretty nearly the entire team returns next season.

Which ranked team are you not sold on?
Gordon Mann: MIT. Dominating the NEWMAC is not a precursor to national success. The NEWMAC teams have received 17 bids to the NCAA tournament since 2002 (sixth most among all conferences) and won 16 games. MIT’s own NCAA tournament record is 2-3 in the last four years with loses to DeSales, Rochester and Farmingdale State.
Pat Coleman: Hope. Clearly they’ve beaten everyone we would expect them to, though, with the only loss to D-I Western Michigan. I just am not sure who they have beaten, because they play so many non-Division III teams. It’s hard to tell what a win against Cornerstone or Mount Vernon Nazarene means. The best win on a D-III level is a one-point win against Wheaton (Ill.) on a neutral floor. That at least puts Hope on par with the best teams in the CCIW, so considering them for No. 1 is not at all a stretch. But just not sold.
Dave McHugh: Franklin and Marshall. The Diplomats have two loses in a sub-par Centennial Conference: on the road against Muhlenberg and at home against Washington College. Outside of the conference, F&M has played mostly lowly teams with just ONE game outside of the Mayser Gymnasium (Lancaster Bible) and two games against Oneonta State (2-19), though just one of those games counts in the eyes of the NCAA. In all, they are 19-2 against an opponent record of 150-164 (.478) (counting Oneonta State twice, it would be 152-183). They are having trouble playing an inside-outside game, which has made them tough in the past. It appears teams are choosing to stop either Hayk Gyokchyan or Georgio Milligan, the teams only major threats, and that seems to be working to keep games tight.

Who is your player of the year so far?
Gordon Mann: Ryan Sharry of Middlebury leads his team in scoring (20.6 per game), rebounding (10.1 per game) and blocks (32). He scores efficiently – 66.3 percent shooting from the field and 42.4 percent from behind the arc. And he has helped establish the Panthers as legit national title contenders.
Pat Coleman: Matt Johnson of Chicago. The guy’s streak of late is obviously impressive, and he has been carrying a Maroons team that would otherwise really be struggling. He’s upped his average above 20 points per game, shoots 38 percent from three-point range (with a lot of attempts) and is 88 percent from the line. But another game like Sunday’s at Rochester and I’ll be looking for someone else.
Dave McHugh: Matt Addison of Hardin-Simmons. The nation’s second leading scorer (28.0 ppg) has also made his Hardin-Simmons team much better – e.g. he missed the Cowboys’ home game against Mary Hardin-Baylor which the Cowboys’ lost in overtime. Addison is tough to stop because he can slice to the rim, stop and hit from 12 feet, and is 33rd in the nation in three-point shooting at .417. And don’t put him on the line, because he is shooting .883 which is 15th best in Division III. And we aren’t done… he has 2.6 steals/game (20th in the NCAA) and handing out 4.9 assists/game (33rd in the NCAA). He is also a difficult defender, usually taking on the opponent’s biggest threat on the outside. Oh, and he is a father of two and a Ministry major.

What is the best conference race?
Gordon Mann: MAC Freedom, though the MAC Commonwealth race is also very good. In both cases, only the top four teams make the conference playoffs and at least six are alive. On the Freedom side, it’s unlikely any team will get an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament, so the urgency adds to the entertainment value. Defending champion Delaware Valley won’t make the playoffs, but the Aggies can still play spoiler. Their two conference wins come against co-first place holders Wilkes and Eastern.
Pat Coleman: The NJAC North, where two strong teams will get left out of the conference playoffs, while either Kean (5-18, 4-7) or TCNJ (8-15, 2-9) will get in because of being in the NJAC South. In the NJAC North, New Jersey City (16-5, 6-4), Rutgers-Newark(13-9, 6-4), Montclair State (16-7, 6-5) and Ramapo (15-7, 6-5) are battling for two playoff spots.
Dave McHugh: I could have gone with the NCAC, UAA, or NESCAC, but the Landmark Conference has surprised me. While Scranton is up two games with three to play on Juniata and Moravian (tied for second) and three games on Catholic and Susquehanna (tied for fourth), these teams have been beating on each other all season. And then there is Merchant Marine. The Mariners have rebounded with three straight wins including games against Juniata and Catholic to put them 5-6 and one game back of a playoff spot. Who makes the four-team tournament and in what positions won’t be decided until the final game of the season. And then anything is possible for the tournament crown since anyone can beat anyone, anywhere.

    WOMEN

Who is the biggest surprise?
Gordon Mann: UW-Eau Claire and Mary Washington both qualify as pleasant surprises, but the team that made the biggest jump from preseason to now is Franklin. The Grizzlies had no votes in the preseason Top 25 and then vaulted into the first regular season poll, buoyed by a 52-47 win over preseason No. 10 DePauw.
Pat Coleman: St. Thomas. The Tommies having a team in the top 15 in our poll is not surprising, but it being the women, that’s a different story. Now, it could be said that the Tommies have lost to the best team (or only regionally prominent team) they’ve played, and that was the opener, 70-53 at UW-Stevens Point on Nov. 16.
Dave McHugh: Mary Washington. I know Deena Applebury can not only do a terrific job of coaching, but she is also a solid recruiter, but I didn’t see a 21-0 record at this point in the season. York (Pa.) is one game behind them, but already lost to the Eagles 59-42 in Fredricksburg, Vir. The Eagles have also dominated many of their other opponents while getting solid victories over teams like Christopher Newport, Ferrum, and Keene State. The Eagles are also outscoring their opponents by nearly 23 ppg with seniors Katie Wimmer and Jenna McRae leading the way, but not the team’s only threats.

Who is the biggest disappointment?
Gordon Mann: Denison. DePauw moved into the NCAC this season and instantly became the favorite over the Big Red, who were last year’s conference champions. But Denison still had high expectations coming off a 28-1 year and was ranked No. 12 in the preseason. Now, a year removed from going undefeated in the NCAC, Denison is 7-5 in conference.
Pat Coleman: Muhlenberg. Rallying from 17 down at Rochester last season put the Mules in the Sweet 16. The Mules’ standout player, Alexandra Chili, returned this year. But this year, when the Mules rallied from 17 down, it was to beat Washington College (12-9). Without that rally, Muhlenberg would have lost six of its past eight games. Five of eight isn’t much better.
Dave McHugh: I have to agree with Pat and say Muhlenberg. The Mules looked to be in control of the Centennial Conference after winning their first 12 games of the season and 7 in the conference climbing to as high as #9 in the country. But, they have stumbled badly since then. They still have time to turn it around with five games left in the season, but they have put themselves in a win-or-go-home scenario in the conference tournament.

What team are you buying stock in?
Gordon Mann: Illinois Wesleyan, and I’ve pretty much cornered this market. The Titans had 38 points in the Week 9 Top 25 poll and I account for almost a third of them because Illinois Wesleyan is No. 14 on my ballot. From what I’ve seen, they have a great scorer in Olivia Lett and good depth. They are physical enough to beat big teams and quick enough to beat small teams. On paper, only two of their losses are “bad” and even those aren’t terrible. UW-Whitewater is a quality program from an elite conference and Wheaton (Ill.) beat the Titans in double overtime.
Pat Coleman: Mount Union. Although they’re getting about as high as I feel comfortable. I’ll feel more comfortable in a couple of weeks, if they win at Ohio Northern (18-3, 12-2 OAC) and Baldwin-Wallace (14-7, 9-5).
Dave McHugh: If this was last week, I would have said Millsaps, but after losing two games this past weekend, my focus has switched to Centre. The Colonels have one blemish on their resume which was a heart-breaking OT loss to Thomas More when a jumper wouldn’t fall at the buzzer. They have beaten Millsaps and Rhodes to site 2.5 games up on their side of the SCAC while outscoring their opponents by 15. And Maggie Prewitt is leading the way with 16.6 ppg, 6.2 rpg, and 7.3 apg while shooting .460 from the floor, .385 from beyond the arc, and .890 from the charity strip… impressive.

Which ranked team are you not sold on?
Gordon Mann: Lewis and Clark has been high on my ballot all season. But after watching the Pioneers struggle late against George Fox again on Tuesday, I’m not sure what to make of them (more on the Bruins below). The Pioneers’ win over Kean is nice, but that was months ago and the Cougars were missing second leading scorer Brittany Powell. If Lewis and Clark is as good this year as they were last year, that’s still pretty good. But last year’s version of the Pioneers split its regular season series with George Fox and still ended the year without a single vote in the Final Top 25 poll. Maybe the Pios’ Top 10 ranking is too high.
Pat Coleman: Franklin. It’s hard to argue with the only team that beat DePauw. Digging into the box score reminds me that Ali Ross fouled out for DePauw at Franklin with just five points, and it’s the only time a DePauw player has fouled out all season. The Tigers shot only 33 percent from the floor and made two three-pointers. Scoring only 36 in the home loss to Manchester is a head-scratcher. The HCAC isn’t traditionally a strong Division III women’s basketball conference, and while Franklin played three MIAA teams, they were Kalamazoo, Trine and Alma, a combined 10-27 in the MIAA.
Dave McHugh: Juniata. I realize the Eagles only have one loss and they have a two-game lead on Catholic in the Landmark Conference. They also have swept Scranton, but the Lady Royals are no longer the dominating team of yester-year. However, I have seen the Eagles in action not only in person, but via video, and I have not been impressed. They can’t seem to put together a 40 minute game and even in games they seem to dominate, they tend to allow opponents to hang around just a bit too much

Who is your player of the year so far?
Gordon Mann: Hannah Munger of George Fox. Among the players I’ve seen live or on video, Calvin’s Carissa Verkaik has the most unique skill set and Amherst’s Caroline Stedman is the one I’d want most in the clutch. But Munger is the most irreplaceable to her team. Her height in the middle takes away the opponents’ inside game and her athleticism makes her tough to stop on offense. The Bruins would still be good without Munger. They are championship contenders with her.
Pat Coleman: Well, I like those players too. UW-Eau Claire center Ellen Plendl belongs in that conversation as well. Even though she only averages 12.2 points per game, the 6-5 senior also averages 10.7 rebounds and 3.9 blocked shots.
Dave McHugh: I know, this IS a strange pick, but Megan Robertson has been a major factor in Amherst’s success this season (along with Caroline Stedman). In fact, Coach G.P. Gromacki will tell you she is their biggest surprise. Robertson is a freshman who is third on the team in scoring at 10.7 ppg, first on the team in rebounding (7.4) while shooting .531 and blocking 22 shots. And while she may play a lot of time inside, she can easily switch to point guard which gives Amherst all kinds of match-up advantages.

What is the best conference race?
Gordon Mann: The WIAC has three ranked teams (Stevens Point, Eau Claire and River Falls) and two others who’ve proved they are contenders (Whitewater and La Crosse). Stevens Point leads the pack, and it split the regular season series with fifth place La Crosse. If the teams don’t beat each other up too much, this conference could put four teams in the NCAA tournament.
Pat Coleman: The Iowa Conference. Four teams are within a half-game of the lead, with Simpson and Wartburg at 9-3, Coe and Loras at 9-4. Loras has yet to travel to Wartburg and Simpson, so they have the toughest road to the top seed of the bunch. Coe also travels to Wartburg, so while Wartburg has two games against first-place contenders remaining, at least they are both at home.
Dave McHugh: While I like the WIAC and IIAC races, the USAC is intriguing. There is a three-way tie at the top between Greensboro, Christopher Newport, and Ferrum. Greensboro has beaten Christopher Newport once with one to play. Ferrum has split against Christopher Newport including a dominating 82-58 victory on Sunday and will take on Greensboro, who they already beat earlier this season, on Wednesday. The Pride are beatable, proven by the fact they lost to Ferrum and Christopher Newport in back-to-back games earlier this season, but have won 9 straight since. Who wins the regular and tournament titles is too hard to call.