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NCAA
Basketball Tournament Preview
By: Brian Gabrielle
BRIAN
GABRIELLE offers players consistency
difficult to find in the world of
sports handicapping. As CEO of BRIAN
GABRIELLE SPORTS, he and his team
finish at or near the top of handicapper
ratings every year and make Gabrielle
sought out as a trainer and public
speaker for handicappers.
Planting
Seeds
- When it comes to dancing in March,
all teams are not created equal.
Pay close attention
to seeds and HOW teams get there.
Automatic bids are much better bets
than At Large bids.
Here's some historic
seeding notes to keep in mind when
filling out your brackets.
# 16th seeds
are 0-80 since the tournament moved
to a 64 team format in 1985
# 15th seeds
are 4-76
# 14th seeds
are 16-64 and 13th seeds are 18-62
, giving them a combined record of
35-125 . Last season both Vermont
& Bucknell both pulled the upset
as a 13 & 14 respectively.
# of the 35
13th & 14th seeds to win a first
round match, only 5 have gone on to
win in the second round. All five
of the 13 & 14 seeds to advance
to the Elite 8 were Conference Champions
- an 'At Large' bid has never pulled
an upset from the 13/14 hole and gone
on to win in the second round. Bucknell
lost to Wisconsin by 9 in the 2nd
round last season while Vermont lost
by 11 to Michigan State.
# 5th through
12th seeds is the land of upsets.
6 out of every 7 occasions an upset
comes from an Automatic Bid rising
to the occasion and upsetting an At
Large bid. The notion that "it
doesn't matter how you got here"
is nonsense. Character teams who were
good enough to win their conference
tournaments are ALWAYS more dangerous
than those invited through the good
ol' boys network. In every sense of
the word, astute handicappers know
that the Conference Tournaments are
an "audition" for the main
event. Wisconsin-Milwaukee was the
best example from 2005, beating both
Alabama and Boston College to advance
to the Sweet 16 from the 12 seed.
# There is a
very high percentage of "upsets"
when 2 "At Large" bids face
each other. The underdog will pull
the upset near 50% of the time when
two top ranked (top 32) "at large"
teams face each other, so when we
are looking for upsets, look for them
when 2 at large bids meet and when
teams who are seeded 9th through 12th
are teams who are earned bids facing
favored teams who are "At Large"
bids.
# Since 1985,
a #1 seed has won 12 titles and finished
second 8 times but never have all
four #1s made it to the Final Four.
Last season, two #1's met in the final
with North Carolina beating Illinois
75-70.
# There have
been 23 teams with records of .500
or worse. They have never won a game
in the field of 64.
# Only two teams
(North Carolina and Wisconsin in 2000)
have made the Final Four with 13 or
more losses.
# Since they
started seeding teams in 1979, no
seed lower than #8 (Villanova, 1985)
has won a national title.
# No 5 or 7
seed has ever won a national title.
# There have
only been two teams seeded lower than
eighth to make a Final Four.
Final Four Predictions
& Picks Click
Here...
Brian Gabrielle is a documented member
of The Professional Handicappers League.
Read more of his articles and get
his premium plays here.
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