
I hesitate to give anyone credit for how the schedule has played out, but whether it be by luck or by design, the college hoops slate has been terrific in the first week of post-football action.
A sports blog by and for Midwest Sports Fans

On Thursday at 8:00 ET, the 23rd-ranked Indiana Hoosiers (18-6, 6-6) return home to face the Illinois Fighting Illini (16-7, 5-5), on the Big Ten Network.
As always, Jerod, Ryan, and Andy will be here with another episode of The Assembly Call as soon as the game ends with instant analysis and fan reaction.

Maybe it’s simply a factor of having 345 Division One teams, but there is never a shortage of exciting finishes, confounding losses, and clutch performances, all of which add up to make college basketball so compelling on a nightly basis. It also lends itself to a roller coaster of emotions with teams looking brilliant in one game and pedestrian the next.
So after another unpredictable week of college hoops, here are five teams on the rise and five teams on the decline.

A number of college basketball bracketologists released updated projections on Tuesday, and while it’s easy to argue the merits of doing this so early, it certainly makes for some interesting discussion and helps gauge where teams stand as conference play gets rolling.
I’ll be releasing my own projections starting next week, but for now I thought it would be worthwhile to look at how Big Ten teams are shaping up with as many as nine of them in some of these mock brackets.

College hoops is essentially taking a few days off for Christmas, but after a number of close games and exciting finishes on Thursday night, I am almost as excited for conference play to begin as my four-year-old is for Christmas. I say “almost” because there’s pretty much no way I will ever be as excited about anything as she is right now.
Some teams are entering league play brimming with confidence based on their recent performances while others are trying to prevent things from snowballing in the wake of a few losses. Here’s my weekly look at college basketball’s risers and fallers. [Read more...]
I have no idea how to put the feeling I have into words, so I won’t spend too much time trying; but seeing Indiana dispose of Illinois Thursday night reminded me why, after everything, I am still a dedicated IU fan.
No matter how hard it is to watch your favorite basketball team be royally screwed over (I won’t even mention his name) and become the laughingstock of many college baskeball fans, I still watch every IU game I can. It’s not easy, but nights like last night make it worth it.

This post and all of our weekly Ohio State previews are made possible by Steamatic by Carrara Companies, which proudly provides restoration, cleaning, and construction services to all of Central and Northeast Ohio including Columbus, Cleveland, Akron and the surrounding areas.
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THE Ohio State University is 62-30-4 all-time against the Illinois Fighting Illini. The winner of this game receives the wooden turtle Illibuck Trophy. This is on the long list of Big Ten trophy games and the tradition started way back in 1925.
Somehow I don’t see this trophy game being preserved in the new divisional alignment starting next year (see lopsided all-time record above).
Look! Ohio State is on the road for the first of only four trips this year!
Now on to the game data and preview:
Note: This post is from 2009. Follow the link to view our 2010 March Madness upset analysis, including 5-12 seed predictions.
To view our other 2010 March Madness coverage, use the following links:
- 2010 Mens NCAA Basketball Tournament Bracket Breakdown
- March Madness 2010 Schedule, Sites, and Tickets
- MSF Bracket Challenge
- Mens NCAA Tournament Bracket, TV Schedule, Announcers, Spreads
- Midwest Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- East Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- South Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- West Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- History of Final Four in Indianapolis
- Women’s NCAA Tournament Schedule, Sites, Tickets
- Gus Johnson NCAA Tournament Announcing Schedule
——————–
You’re set to make your March Madness betting picks, but your hands start to tremble. You know it’s coming. Coming for you. Coming to break your heart. Yes – that evil 12 seed gets you every year.
Think the 12-seed upset theory is just a March Madness betting myth? Think again. No. 12s beat No. 5s 33% of the time – that’s one in three matchups, meaning online betting fans should expect at least one first-round upset every season.
Which 12 seed – or seeds – will pull it off this year? Let’s break down the four 5-12 March Madness lines.
No. 5 Florida State Seminoles vs No. 12 Wisconsin Badgers Pick
The Seminoles, who pulled off a big upset over North Carolina in the ACC tournament, face Wisconsin in what should be a war between two defensive-minded teams. Can online betting fans trust the Seminoles? Aside from their win over the Tar Heels, they lost to Pittsburgh, Duke (twice), Wake Forest and even North Carolina in their first meeting. Does that mean Florida State is a pretender?
Not necessarily. Guard Toney Douglas can be magic for Florida State on both sides of the court, as he puts up big points but also plays great defense and forces turnovers. Wisconsin is just as good defensively, but it can’t match Florida State’s offense. The Badgers’ leading scorer, Marcus Landry, averages only 12.6 points per game. Look for FSU’s slight offensive advantage to be the difference maker here.
Online betting pick: Florida State
No. 5 Utah Utes vs. No. 12 Arizona Wildcats Pick
In the top-heavy Midwest Regional, which features major contenders Louisville, Michigan State, Kansas and Wake Forest, Utah’s best-case scenario was the fifth seed. The Utes draw Arizona, who many online betting followers felt shouldn’t have made the tournament. Regardless, the Wildcats may be the scariest 12 seed in March Madness betting the season. Not only did they beat UCLA and Gonzaga, they boast a true game-changer in center Jordan Hill, who looks like a surefire NBA first-rounder.
Utah won the Mountain West was but wasn’t tested like other No. 5 seeds were; it also relies too heavily on its outside shooting. Arizona looks like the hottest 12-seed upset pick in March Madness betting this year.
Online betting pick: Arizona
StubHub: 2009 NCAA Tournament Tickets
No. 5 Illinois Fighting Illini vs No. 12 Western Kentucky Hilltoppers Pick
Can you say upset alert again? Anyone who likes to bet on basketball at the sportsbook should remember Western Kentucky from last year, when it reached the Sweet 16 as – you guessed it – a 12 seed. The Hilltoppers won the Sun Belt tournament, led by junior guard A.J. Slaughter and his hot shooting. Western Kentucky also beat No. 1 overall March Madness betting seed Louisville this season, so it must be taken seriously.
Illinois is outstanding defensively and doesn’t turn over the ball but has serious trouble scoring. Since Western Kentucky is no slouch defensively, Slaughter could push them over the top as four-point underdogs.
Online betting pick: Western Kentucky
No. 5 Purdue Boilermakers vs No. 12 Northern Iowa Panthers Pick
This could be the safest of the five-versus-12 March Madness lines. Eight of Purdue’s regular season opponents were nationally ranked on the game day, whereas Northern Iowa faced just one ranked team in that time span. While online betting fans can’t exaggerate the value of facing ranked teams, there’s no denying that Purdue is the more proven squad here.
While the Boilermakers are viewed by many as a bust this season, lacking size and depth, they play solid defense. Guard Lewis Jackson, though he doesn’t score much, is an all-around, X-factor type player. Bet on Purdue to survive the first round.
Online betting pick: Purdue

Note: This post is from 2009. To view our 2010 March Madness coverage, use the following links:
- 2010 Mens NCAA Basketball Tournament Bracket Breakdown
- March Madness 2010 Schedule, Sites, and Tickets
- MSF Bracket Challenge
- Mens NCAA Tournament Bracket, TV Schedule, Announcers, Spreads
- Midwest Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- East Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- South Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- West Region Bracket Picks, Predictions, TV Schedule, Sites, Announcers
- History of Final Four in Indianapolis
- Women’s NCAA Tournament Schedule, Sites, Tickets
——————–
There is only one thing more fun than watching the NCAA Tournament brackets be announced live on Selection Sunday: filling them in over the next few days to arrive at your own personal Final Four and, ultimately, national champion.
We all know that the NCAA Tournament is essentially a crapshoot. Oh sure, there are historical trends that make sense to follow (#1 seeds will make the Sweet 16, for example) and a wide spectrum of personal college basketball knowledge can help you see a Cinderella before any of the Thursday games tip-off.
But, we all see it every year: we enter into a family pool, all the guys have been watching every basketball game since January and have been poring over the numbers, and then Mom decides to pick “the underdogs and the teams with the prettiest uniforms” and ends up winning the bracket.
If something like this has never happened to you during March Madness you are either lying or Joe Lunardi. And hell, Joe Lunardi is only proven to be good at picking the brackets before they are announced. I’m sure he runs into the same problems as the rest of us when trying to predict the outcome of actual tournament.
Because of the randomness of it all, I usually just eyeball my brackets and go with first impressions. Some years I pick a lot of upsets, some years I don’t. And usually I do three, four, five different brackets in an effort to diversify my picks and give myself, theoretically, a better chance of at least winning one pool.
Well now that I have this blog, and have decided it is a good idea to publish every infinitesimal and meaningless thought I have about sports, I feel like there is more at stake with my picks this year. So I decided that I wanted to do just one bracket, and to have a specific system I used for filling it out. (Plus, I took one look at this year’s bracket and realized that so many of the games seemed like toss-ups, I needed some kind of analysis I trusted to fall back on and break the ties.)
Let me be clear right off the bat: In no way do I endorse the following system as the best NCAA Tournament bracket system possible. Nor am I wholeheartedly convinced that it is even necessarily good; nor, truth be told, did it really require a whole lot of in-depth thought to come up with.
But…after devising the system and using it to go through the entire bracket, the results were as follows:
So, I did not fudge my system in any way during the selection process, and the results were what I “hoped” to get. By this I mean that my system did not place 4 #10 seeds in the Final Four, or just give me all favorites winning. It actually matched up pretty well with typical tournament trends that we see from year to year.
Before I jump into my actual picks, here is a description of my subjective-objective system, which, if it proves successful this year, may be my new system for picking the NCAA Tournament moving forward.
StubHub: 2009 NCAA Tournament Tickets
The JRod Subjective-Objective System for Picking the NCAA Tournament (Which Hopefully is More Successful Than Throwing Darts or my Mom’s Picks)
Why do I call it a “subjective-objective” system? Because I sat down and defined what kinds of quantifiable team stats mean the most to me when deciding what team will beat another. My choice of metrics was obviously very subjective. But once that choice was made, there was very little room for any other subjective decision-making, with one caveat — which I will get to in a bit.
Here are the metrics I used to measure each matchup on a head-to-head basis:
A few quick notes about the metrics:
If anything is unclear, leave me a question in the comments and I’ll try to clear it up. Again, I am not claiming that this system was particularly well thought out or perfect. However, the relative simplicity of the stats did allow me to compile everything into a spreadsheet in about 2.5 hours, it does take into account the traits that I personally value, and the results ended up producing a bracket I would have been happy to end with if I had just run straight through it off the top of my head.
If you are interested, here is the actual bracket breakdown spreadsheet I used so you can see the actual data. You will notice that I did not list the #16 seeds. Sorry guys, but I knew nothing would make me pick a #16 over a #1. Perhaps that will burn me, but I feel fairly confident going with history on that one.
All that said, let’s break down the regions:
First Round Picks – Midwest Region
Siena and Ohio State were actually pretty evenly matched up, with Siena having a slight 3-2-1 advantage. Siena has a much better record on the road and more experienced guards, so I feel comfortable about that one. But it’s an 8/9 game so who the hell knows.
The one that will jump off the page is #14 North Dakota State over #3 Kansas. NDSU went 10-4 on the road this year, makes just under 74% of their free throws, has all senior guards, and only turns the ball over 11.3 times. Their Strength of Schedule is obviously not very good, but they played outstanding against their level of competition. Considering Kansas’ poor play very late in the season, and their relative youth, I am not afraid of this upset pick. If I had to bet money, I’d obviously put it on the Jayhawks, but now I won’t be at all shocked if they go down, much to the dismay of Bill Self.
Second Round Picks – Midwest Region
I like Utah over Wake Forest because of the experience factor, the fact that Utah turns the ball over more than two times per game less, and Utah’s ability to hit free throws at a 78.2% clip. Wake Forest clearly has the more talented team though; so again, this is a game where me being wrong would not be surprising at all.
And once again, you see my tourney darkhorse North Dakota State winning again. Considering the numbers I stated above, does this surprise you? West Virginia shoots less than 70% from the line, has relative inexperience at the guard position (a 2.5 score to NDSU’s 4) and turns the ball over slightly more.
Sweet 16 Picks – Midwest Region
Louisville beats Utah across the board, except for free throw shooting. The Michigan State-North Dakota State game was actually a tie by the categories. Michigan State wins in road record, seed, and strength of schedule, but falls short in FT shooting, guard experience, and TO/game. Non-adjacent favored seeds win out though, so NDSU’s Cinderalla story comes to an end.
Elite 8 Pick – Midwest Region
Honestly, this surprised me a little bit. When I first sat down to look at the brackets, the Spartans were a team I looked at as potentially being ripe for an early upset. But looking deeper, many of their metrics, at least with respect to my personal basketball biases, make them a tournament-ready team. Add in the extra motivation of the Final Four being in Detroit, and I can see this happening.
The Spartans win 3-2-1, with the teams tying in guard experience and Louisville besting Michigan State in seeding and TO/game. Michigan State’s other advantages were by slim margins, which is to be expected. I think this would be a great regional final that could go either way (a refrain you will probably hear repeated as we move forward), but as a Big Ten fan I would love to see Tom Izzo and the boys make it to Detroit.
First Round Picks – West Region
No real surprises. BYU-Texas A&M was a 3-3 tie based on the metrics, but I chose Texas A&M because they have slightly more experienced guard play and played a slightly tougher schedule. Again, total toss-up, could go either way — but you have to pick one!
Second Round Picks – West Region
The top part of the bracket goes according to seed. I actually thought Purdue would go a little farther when I first embarked on this analysis, but Washington just edges them out. The surprises come in the bottom half of the bracket.
Marquette defies seeding to beat Missouri, but I don’t really consider this an upset. Even without Dominic James, Marquette has vast experience in its backcourt, they don’t turn the ball over much, and they make 72% of their free throws.
Memphis losing this early surprised me a little, but I do not think they are nearly as good as they were last year. Cal actually bests Memphis in FT%, SOS, guard experience, and TO/game. I think Memphis’ inexperience and lower level of competition since January hurts them and they make an early exit. I have no qualms going with the stats and picking Cal here. (Side note: Is John Calipari screaming, crying, or yawning in that picture?)
Sweet 16 Picks – West Region
UConn is very strong across the board with respect to the stats I chose, and they pretty much dominate Washington. Marquette-Cal is a relatively even matchup, but the experience and slightly better TO/game numbers give Marquette the edge.
Elite 8 Pick – West Region
An all Big East regional final in the West would be great. The problem for Marquette is that UConn is just a little bit better at a couple more categories. UConn went 10-1 on the road this year and has an all-senior backcourt that includes the great AJ Price (who I have been a big fan of ever since he dismantled Indiana last season). Plus, while this is not really taken into account statistically, having a 7’3 big man down low in Hasheem Thabeet obviously gives UConn a dimension that most teams do not have. I am comfortable sending the Huskies to the Final Four.
First Round Picks – East Region
Oklahoma State-Tennessee was a 3-3 tie. However, one of the categories Tennessee “won” was being a 9 seed over an 8 seed. Considering the fact that OSU has more experienced guards, turns the ball over less, and shoots better from the line, I like them to win. And for goodness sakes, 9 seeds only win 3% mo
re than 8 seeds, so it’s not like the 9 over 8 advantage should determine every one of these matchups.
Wisconsin is my #12 seed that pulls the upset. The Badgers burned me in the Big Ten Tournament (I picked them to win it) and this pick scares me a little bit considering how well Florida State played in the ACC Tournament. However, Wisconsin has more experienced guards (by class anyway) and turns the ball over a staggering 5.6 times less per game. I actually look at this game as a toss-up, but I feel comfortable going with the Badgers in the upset.
Interesting note: VCU over UCLA is a trendy first round upset pick. Led by former tournament star Eric Maynor (remember VCU’s upset of Duke a couple years ago?) a lot of people, including Jay Bilas, think VCU could/will beat UCLA. However, this was the only first round game (minus the 1/16 battles, which I did not analyze) in which one team won all six categories — and it was UCLA doing the winning. I had actually anticipated picking VCU, but based on the analysis, I now feel pretty good picking the Bruins.
Which, of course, means that VCU will still probably win. Oh well. Such is March Madness.
Second Round Picks – East Region
Well, here I go again banking my credibility on Bo Ryan and the Badgers. Their experience, protection of the ball, FT%, and SOS all trump Xavier. This worries me a bit because Wisconsin has been so up and down this year, but they do play the kind of basketball I respect, and have made noise in the tournament before. By no means would I be shocked to see Wisconsin lose here (or in the first round for that matter), but I’m sticking with the Badgers to move onto the Sweet 16 and help restore some cred to the Big Ten.
Sweet 16 Picks – East Region
Halelujah, Pittsburgh beats Wisconsin. I was really worried that I might have devised a system that would choose this game in a way I would have a really hard time justifying. But Pitt was better on the road and has more experience in the backcourt. It ended up a 3-3 tie, with Pitt’s tremendous seed advantage tipping the scales.
The Villanova-Duke matchup was 3-3, which should go to the higher seed. However, because it’s a 2-3 matchup, I gave myself the wiggle room to be subjective in my choice. Duke is playing well, but I love ‘Nova’s backcourt and I just don’t see this Duke team as being built for a long tourney run. ‘Nova moves on for another all Big East Regional Final.
Elite 8 Pick – East Region
As you can tell, my subjective choices of metrics obviously prove that I am a fan of the Big East’s brand of basketball. Through three regions, I have chosen five Big East schools to make the Elite 8. Villanova is far superior at the line, but Pittsburgh faced a tougher schedule and has more experience guards that turn the ball over less. Jamie Dixon and the Panthers move on to Detroit.
First Round Picks – South Region
A pretty much by-the-seed first round in the South. There are a few games I would not be surprised to see go the other way (WKU over Illinois, Michigan over Clemson, for example) but I have no issue
s with any of these games. Butler and LSU was close, and LSU actually has more experience and turns the ball over less, but Butler actually played a tougher schedule and was better on the road. I like rooting for the Bulldogs anyway, so I’m glad this turned out how it did.
Second Round Picks – South Region
Chalk reigns again as the top four seeds all advance. Illinois versus Gonzaga was very close, but I definitely would have picked Gonzaga in this one without the stats, so I feel good that it turned out this way — especially with Illinois not having Chester Frazier. Syracuse-Arizona State was won by the Orange based on their seed, but I would not be shocked to see ASU win. Syracuse turns the ball over a lot and is not good at all from the FT line. But I do love their backcourt and think Jonny Flynn is one of the ten best players in America and could lead my team anytime.
Sweet 16 Picks – South Region
Chalk again. And neither is really all that close. Surely Ty Lawson would be healthy (or healthy enough) by the Sweet 16, and I think UNC would need him to beat a really good Gonzaga team. Oklahoma beats Syracuse in everything but SOS. And honestly? It’s about time a Big East team did not make the Elite 8. With a healthy Blake Griffin all year, Oklahoma probably gets a #1 seed. This is not a surprise to see them advance so far.
Elite 8 Pick – South Region
The Tar Heels actually beat Oklahoma in every category. Before looking at the stats I wondered who I would pick just based on the eyeball test. But it’s hard to argue with a system that I devised saying North Carolina is better in every category. The Tar Heels head to the Final Four.
UConn bests Michigan State in four categories, and I think the Huskies are the better and more consistent team overall. The Spartans valiant run to Detroit ends here.
North Carolina-Pitt is very close statistically, with Pitt actually holding the edge in guard experience and TO/game. I would not be surprised to see Pitt advance and make it an all Big East championship game, but North Carolina was a better team on the road and is almost a full 10% better at the FT line. This would be a GREAT Final Four game, with the slight edge going to the Tar Heels.
Based on the metrics, UConn wins this 3-2-1. Each category is very close (save for UNC’s wide edge in FT%) but UConn’s slight advantage in backcourt experience and TO/game gives them the edge. Add in the questions surrounding Ty Lawson’s health and I’ll take this.
If I had just eyeballed the brackets, I’m not sure either one of these teams makes my title game, but it’s pretty obvious that they are proficient in the areas I value.
I’m not a big Jim Calhoun fan, although I think he’s obviously a great coach. But I have to say that banking my entire bracket on a team led by AJ Price, and that has Hasheem Thabeet down low, does not make me overly nervous. UConn was generally considered one of the top two teams in the Big East all year (with Pitt — and then Louisville came on strong at the end) and the Big East was clearly the best conference in America. It is fitting then that a Big East team ends up winning it all.
My official one-and-only bracket for the 2009 Tournament:
StubHub: 2009 NCAA Tournament Tickets
So there you have it — my official subjective-objective predictions for the 2009 Men’s NCAA Basketball Tournament. All this really means is that I now have more time and thought invested into getting my bracket horribly and drastically wrong. But I will say this: I have more confidence heading into the first Thursday of March Madness than ever before.
I fully expect that confidence to be completely eroded by Thursday night.
Indiana and Illinois have played four halves of basketball and 80 minutes total this season. For the first three halves and 60 minutes, there was no question which team was better. Illinois dominated Indiana to the tune of a 114-66 advantage, which included a 22-1 lead to start the team’s first meeting in Champaign.
In the second half of today’s rematch in Bloomington, however, the Hoosiers perhaps offered a sign of what is to come in the near future: real competitiveness against a top-20 team.
Despite being down 38-21 at halftime, and continuing to play without suspended leading scorer Devan Dumes, Indiana played hard and played well in the second half. On a couple of occasions the Hoosiers got the Illini lead down to 8 or 9 points, but were never able to take the next step and erase the rest of Illinois’ advantage.
(Follow the link to view the Indiana-lllinois box score)
For the Illini, the game was won inside. Indiana actually held Demetri McCamey to only two points, but Mike Davis and Mike Tisdale combined for 32 points, 16 rebounds, and 6 blocked shots. Davis in particular was impressive with his poise and athleticism, and turned in what IU fans will no doubt agree was the best performance ever at Assembly Hall by someone named Mike Davis.
No offense intended for IU’s former coach of the same name, but it what it is.
While another home loss is hard to take, and Indiana never truly threatened to win this game, the team’s fight and defense in the second half was encouraging. Matt Roth and Malik Story played especially well in the second half, doing everything they could to compensate for the offensive void that Devan Dumes’ absence has left. Story finished with 9 points and was assertive in taking the ball strong to the hole. Roth finished with 13 points and put some juice into IU’s comeback attempt
by nailing three second half 3-pointers.
At the end of the day, the same problems plagued Indiana today that have plagued the team all year: overall lack of talent and depth and an inability to make free throws. The Hoosiers shot 24 free throws but made only 11. In a 13-point loss, it doesn’t take a genius to figure out how much different the game could have been if the Hoosiers had made their free ones.
In a season of moral victories, the second half of today’s game was another one. It continues to be imperative for IU fans to maintain realistic expectations of this year’s undermanned team. We all want victories, but this is another building block game that helped us to build the foundation for many more victories in the future.
Or at least we hope.
That said, it always sucks to lose by 13 at home, especially to Illinois. Another reward like we got a few weeks back against Iowa sure would be nice before this season is over. Maybe once Devan Dumes is back we can get one.
The 2010 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament preview post is live.
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We are now firmly in the heart of the conference schedule as the 2008-2009 college basketball season sprints towards the glory of March Madness. Earlier today, we offered up a quick preview of the 2009 NCAA Mens Basketball Tournament, and now we will get a little more granular and preview the 2009 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament.
I have to admit that doing this preview is a little bittersweet for me as an IU fan. This season’s Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament will most likely mark the first (and hopefully only) time that Indiana comes in as the #11 seed. As IU fans, we all understand that It is the price we have to pay for the era of the lying-cheating-bastard-who-shall-not-be-named, but it does not make it any easier to handle.
Still, there will be a twinge of excitement come March 12th when the Hoosiers tip off against whoever the #5 seed winds up being in this topsy-turvy season of Big Ten basketball. Maybe Devan Dumes and Matt Roth can get hot from the outside and the Hoosiers can pull off an upset. Not likely, I know. Still, the Hoosiers will have a definite home-court advantage playing in front of their fans in Indianapolis, and after last season’s heartbreaking loss to Minnesota on a wild last-second shot, the Big Ten Tournament owes us one.
Anyway, enough pipe-dreaming from me. Onto the particulars of the 2009 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament:
- Dates: March 12-15
- Location: Conseco Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana
- TV: Big Ten Network, ESPN, ESPN2, CBS Sports (see below)
- StubHub Tickets: Buy Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Tickets
- StubHub Tickets:2009 NCAA Tournament Tickets
| Game | Date | Matchup | Time | TV |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Thu, March 12 | #8 Minnesota def. #9 Northwestern 66-53 | 12:00 ET | Big Ten Network |
| 2 | Thu, March 12 | #7 Michigan def. #10 Iowa 72-45 | 2:30 ET | ESPN2 |
| 3 | Thu, March 12 | #6 Penn State def. #11 Indiana 66-51 | 5:00 ET | ESPN2 |
| 4 | Fri, March 13 | #1 Michigan State def. #8 Minnesota 64-56 | 12:00 ET | ESPN |
| 5 | Fri, March 13 | #5 Ohio State def. #4 Wisconsin 61-57 | 2:30 ET | ESPN |
| 6 | Fri, March 13 | #2 Illinois def. #7 Michigan 60-50 | 6:30 ET | Big Ten Network |
| 7 | Fri, March 13 | #3 Purdue def. #6 Penn State 79-65 | 9:00 ET | Big Ten Network |
| 8 | Sat, March 14 | #5 Ohio State def. #1 Michigan State 82-70 | 1:40 ET | CBS |
| 9 | Sat, March 14 | #3 Purdue def. #2 Illinois 66-56 | 4:00 ET | CBS |
| 10 | Sun, March 15 | #3 Purdue def. #5 Ohio State 65-61 | 3:30 ET | CBS |
And let’s take a quick trip down memory lane and count down the past Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champions: 1998 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
1999 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2000 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2001 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2002 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2003 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2004 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2005 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2006 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2007 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2008 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
2009 Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament Champion:
Who will this year’s Big Ten Mens Basketball Tournament? At this point, it looks like a major toss-up. Michigan State, Michigan, Purdue, Illinois, Ohio State, Minnesota, and Penn State have looked capable of winning it at different points this season. And if history is any indicator, a dark horse may emerge once the balls get rolled out on March 12. Four times in the brief ten-year history of the Big Ten Tournament, a team seeded #8 or lower has played in the championship game. The lowest seeded team to ever win the Big Ten tournament, however, is #6 seed Iowa in 2001. So the smart money would go on one of the teams listed above.
Either way, I’m sure it will be an exciting weekend — and the only chance for Indiana to crack this year’s field of 64. No, it isn’t likely. But you better believe Hoosier Nation will be out in droves on March 12th hoping their undermanned Hoosiers can pull off an unlikely first round upset.
The University of Illinois men’s basketball team was bolstered by the much-anticipated debut of sophomore guard Alex Legion on Saturday.
Legion, a 6-foot-5 transfer from Kentucky who just became eligible, came off the bench to score six points in 18 minutes in Illinois’ 82-51 win over Detroit Mercy at Assembly Hall. Legion was one of the nation’s top 50 recruits coming out of Oak Hill (Va.) Academy when he signed with Kentucky.
“You have to give the kid credit,” Illini coach Bruce Weber said told reporters after the game. “He made his first shot. I think it was the first time he touched the ball. He’s not shy about shooting. He’s got to be better on the defensive end with the team defensive concept. We got better because we watched film. He’s not had a chance to watch film on himself. Now he has a chance to watch and see what he’s doing. Over the next five or six games, I hope he can make progress.”
The Illini are hoping Legion can play a bigger role on Tuesday when they travel to St. Louis to face Missouri in the annual Braggin’ Rights game at Scottrade Center. Illinois has won eight straight over Mizzou in the series.
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