12 Days of Championships: New York, NY

Baruch Ramirez

The “world’s greatest city” takes center stage on the first Sunday of our championship run. Baruch is the top seed in the women’s CUNYAC tournament but last year’s winner, Staten Island, plays host. After an aggressive non-conference schedule, Diane Ramirez (pictured) and her Bearcat teammates will try to get past York (N.Y.) today.

The UAA doesn’t have a conference tournament, but the next two weekends will serve the same purpose on the men’s side. Five teams are vying for the automatic bid and two of them – Washington U. and NYU – battle in the first game of our D3hoopsNet doubleheader (12 PM EST).

The NYU women fight for their playoff lives against UAA champs Wash U. at 2 PM. With a good internet connection, you can watch the ODAC men’s semifinals courtesy of Penn Atlantic. And the LMC will see if the third time’s the charm after having three of their men’s quarterfinals snowed out again yesterday.

12 Days of Championships: The End?

CMS Taylor

With some conference tournaments starting today, a few familiar men’s teams could face the end of their season.

Williams travels to Tufts in a battle of regionally ranked teams in the NESCAC tournament’s first round. Two teams previously ranked in the top 25, Randolph-Macon and Hampden-Sydney, enter the ODAC tournament badly needing wins. Read what one CUNYAC aficionado has to say about the conference quarterfinals, which tip off today in Staten Island.

Out west Claremont-Mudd-Scripps can write a happy ending to their SCIAC season. Miles Taylor (pictured) and Stagg Nation can clinch the conference title and its bid into the men’s tournament by beating No. 15 Occidental.

In women’s action traditional rivalries ratchet up a notch with Bates hosting Colby, Williams hosting Amherst and Wesleyan (Conn.) hosting Trinity (Conn.) in the NESCAC Tournament Quarterfinals. Meanwhile the LMC plays its semifinals at 8 PM.

Here’s where you can catch a few of those games on the net, including all four NESCAC quarterfinals.

Women

2 PM EST: NESCAC – #1 Bates vs. #8 Colby

3 PM EST: NESCAC – #3 Wesleyan (Conn.) vs. #6 Trinity (Conn.)

8 PM EST: LMC – #2 Concordia (Wis.) vs. #3 Edgewood

Men

3 PM EST: NESCAC – #1 Amherst vs. #8 Conn College

3 PM EST: NESCAC – #2 Trinity vs. #7 Colby

3 PM EST: NESCAC – #3 Tufts vs. #6 Williams

4 PM EST: NESCAC – #4 Bates vs. #5 Bowdoin

6 PM EST: ODAC – #2 Randolph-Macon vs. #7 Bridgewater (Va.)

8 PM EST: ODAC – #3 Hampden-Sydney vs. #6 Roanoke

10:30 PM EST: SCIAC – Claremont-Mudd-Scripps vs. No. 15 Occidental

Please feel free to share your thoughts on these or other games below.

Immediate thoughts on Friday night

Alright, getting down to the nitty-gritty. One automatic bid is in (Wash U women) and 74 are left to go over the next nine days.

Chicago swept NYU and put the NYU women on the bubble, in my opinion. This game is worth six points to NYU in the Quality of Wins Index for now, but Chicago has to go to Brandeis on Sunday and hosts Wash U next Saturday. They could easily lose both games, slip below .667 in-region and make this a four-point game for NYU. Currently NYU’s QOW slips from 10.636 to 10.434, but if Chicago loses twice, NYU loses two points for each meeting and it becomes 10.26.

Oh, and NYU still has to host No. 3 Wash U and travel to No. 12 Brandeis. A sweep will keep NYU on track thanks to its steady non-conference diet of top teams in weak conferences.

The Carnegie Mellon men losing at Emory isn’t horribly surprising. Emory is just 10-13 but 9-4 at home. Carnegie Mellon and Wash U are tied for first at 8-4, Chicago, NYU and Rochester one game back at 7-5. Remember, no conference tournament in the UAA.

As I write, Puget Sound’s men are up 66-49 on Willamette, though there are 11 minutes left. Winner gets the top seed in the NWC tournament (according to the Willamette broadcasters, I don’t have the conference tiebreakers in front of me), which is just three teams.

Looks like Trinity (Texas) has wrapped up the top seed in the SCAC men, edging Sewanee at home to go to 11-2. Southwestern (no report at home against Centre) could finish 11-3 by beating Sewanee on Sunday but Trinity swept the head-to-head series. Top seed doesn’t mean home court in the SCAC, though — this tournament is at Rhodes. DePauw has long since clinched the women’s top seed and can run the table in the league with a home win tomorrow against Rose-Hulman.

Should be an interesting next few days! Stay tuned, too, with Gordon Mann’s 12 Days of Championships running Daily Dose feature.

12 Days of Championships: Will Bears roll ‘Deis?

Brandeis Malcolm

For many years Washington U. was the standard for Division III women’s basketball excellence.

The Bears rolled off four consecutive national titles from 1998 to 2001. Then they started a new, less enjoyable trend in 2002:

2002: Lose to UW-Stevens Point in the tournament. UW-Stevens Point wins the title.
2003: Lose to Trinity (Texas) in the tournament. Trinity (Texas) wins the title.
2005: Lost to Millikin in the tournament. Millikin wins the title.

Tonight the Bears can be pioneers of excellence again. With a win at No. 12 Brandeis, Wash U. will clinch the UAA title and be the first team to wrap up a bid to the NCAA tournament. You can hear the game on WBRS at 6 PM.

Not that the Judges and Caitlin Malcolm (pictured) will just roll over. They have plenty to play for as they chase Wash U. in conference and Southern Maine and Bowdoin in region.

Elsewhere the LMC women’s tournament resumes play, weather permitting. And lots of other teams gear up for a final push just to make their conference tournament.

Regional games on break out, better SOS in

At the January convention, the intriguing proposal to designate any D-III games played on an institutional break of seven or more days (winter break basketball and spring break baseball/softball/lacrosse come to mind) count as regional games was tabled.

At the recent Division III championships committee meeting, it was killed. Says The NCAA News:

Two specific concerns — about how teams would notify opponents about designation of a game as an in-region contest and the probable difficulty of obtaining both teams’ consent for that designation — prompted the committee to abandon the proposal, which it first recommended to the Division III Management Council last year.

“When discussing the specifics of implementing the proposal, it became apparent there were some logistical hurdles that were going to be difficult to clear,” (Iowa Conference commissioner and championships committee chair John) Cochrane said.

They’re looking at something different, expanding the definition of a regional game to include teams in the NCAA’s overall defined regions. There are four of those, which means more schools would be in a particular region. That goes into the NCAA pipeline and requires more approval.

Finally, too, the opponents’ opponents winning percentage is headed back into play for selection criteria.

“A goal of the committee over the past year has been to develop and implement a true strength-of-schedule component in our criteria,” Cochrane told the News. “The component we have now, the ‘quality of wins index,’ is not a very accurate measure of an institution’s strength of schedule. (Emphasis added.)

“For years, we’ve talked about the importance of encouraging our institutions to play the best teams within their region that they possibly can, but our criteria haven’t rewarded institutions for doing so in near as strong a way as we would like. We’re hoping this gets us closer to that objective.”

Well hallelujah! It’s about time! They call it opponents’ opponents’ average winning percentage, so one would think that is pretty self-explanatory. If that gets through the pipeline, the strong teams will actually benefit and be measured more accurately.