Wednesday, March 30, 2022

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/30/2022

2022-23 Men’s College Basketball Early Season Tournaments and Exempt Multi-Team Events (MTEs)--Blogging the Bracket

Exempt Multiple-Team Events (MTEs)

Myrtle Beach Invitational

Thursday, Friday, and Sunday, November 17, 18, and 20: Myrtle Beach, S.C.

Participants: Boise State (Mountain West), Charlotte (Conference USA), Colorado (Pac-12), Loyola Chicago (Atlantic 10*), Texas A&M (SEC), Tulsa (American), UMass (Atlantic 10), 1 TBA

Paradise Jam

Friday–Monday, November 18–21: Charlotte Amalie, U.S.V.I.

Participants: Belmont (Missouri Valley*), Boston College (ACC), Buffalo (Mid-American), Drake (Missouri Valley), George Mason (Atlantic 10), Howard (Mid-Eastern Athletic), Weber State (Big Sky), Wyoming (Mountain West)

Cayman Islands Classic

Monday–Wednesday, November 21–23: George Town, Grand Cayman, Cayman Islands

Participants: Akron (Mid-American), Illinois State (Missouri Valley), Kansas State (Big 12), LSU (SEC), Nevada (Mountain West), Rhode Island (Atlantic 10), Western Kentucky (Conference USA)

Hall of Fame Classic

Monday and Tuesday, November 21 and 22: Kansas City, Mo. (The D1 Docket via Twitter)

Participants: Northern Iowa (MVC), San Francisco (WCC), Wichita State (American), 1 TBA

CancĂșn Challenge

Tuesday and Wednesday, November 22 and 23: CancĂșn, Mexico

Participants (Riviera Division): Auburn (SEC), Bradley (Missouri Valley), Liberty (ASUN), Northwestern (Big Ten)

Ranking the best available men’s college basketball transfers and high school recruits for 2022-23--The Athletic

9. Will Richard | 6-5 wing | freshman | Belmont

Richard has become the most sought-after mid-major underclassman in the portal following his terrific season at Belmont. The 6-foot-5 guard was named to the OVC All-Newcomer team this year after averaging 12 points, six rebounds, two assists and over a steal per game. He’s a genuine long-term NBA draft prospect who somehow slipped through the cracks and fell to Belmont, at 6-foot-5 with something in the range of a plus-six wingspan that is really evident on the court. You can feel his length out there. He moves like an NBA player moves, with terrific footwork and polish as well as strong slashing and finishing ability. He plays well off the ball, and is used to running high-level actions from playing in Belmont’s offense. He can shoot off the catch, direct off of dribble-hand-offs, or whatever you need. He also has high-level defensive ability. Basically, as soon as the shot comes around — and it will given his touch; he just needs to work on some slight tweaks such as finishing higher as opposed to farther out in front of his face — he’s going to be a high-level scorer for whatever team he ends up on.

10. K.J. Williams | 6-10 big | graduate | Murray State

The Ohio Valley Player of the Year this past season, Williams joined wing Tevin Brown and guard Justice Hill to form the nucleus of a 31-3 Murray State team that went to the Round of 32. Given the accolades, though, Williams was the centerpiece. He is an inside-out big who can punish smaller players on the block just as easily as he can pick-and-pop from distance. He hit just 30.4 percent from 3 this year, but over his career he’s made 35 percent of his 219 attempts. Because of that inside-out skill, he’s a fit almost anywhere at the collegiate level. He’s definitely more offense-first than defense, but he averaged 18 points and eight rebounds and is good enough on offense and versatile enough to play at the high-major level as a difference-maker. His coach at Murray State, Matt McMahon, is now the LSU head coach, so that could be a real fit.

14. Noah Carter | 6-7 forward | sophomore | Northern Iowa

Carter is one of the higher IQ players in the portal, a big-bodied, 6-foot-7, undersized forward who makes it work with pure feel for the game. He averaged 15 points and four rebounds in a slow Northern Iowa system, doing a little bit of everything. But above all, Carter just never really stops moving. He’s constantly searching for little creases and openings in the defense, hunting for ways to leverage his opponent to use his strength at 230 pounds to seal his man away from the rim. He was second-team All-Missouri Valley this year, and moves people around at his position pretty easily. High-major teams recruiting Carter will need to worry a bit about his footspeed and ability to defend against the most athletic guards. On top of that, Carter did only hit 29 percent from 3 this season, but his touch is excellent around the rim and from the foul line, and gives reason to believe that he has room for growth there. But Carter is a potential high-major starter, albeit with a bit of downside if the footspeed doesn’t totally translate.

15. Terry Roberts | 6-3 guard | junior | Bradley

Roberts was the Missouri Valley’s Newcomer of the Year this past season, a first-team all-conference player for Bradley who is lightning in a bottle offensively. He’s electric with the ball, capable of creating something out of nothing on offense in a flash. His handle is terrific, and he’s an explosive athlete who can get where he needs to go out of isolations. He averaged nearly 15 points, five rebounds and four assists this year, and hit 34 percent from 3 on a steady diet of tough pull-up shots. He makes some really impressive live-dribble passing reads, but the critical part of his game that he’s going to have to clean up will be turning it over. His assist-to-turnover ratio was very close to the 1-to-1 mark, and he makes some choices both in terms of shot selection and distribution that will worry high-major coaches. But above all, this is a high-major athlete at the guard spot with enough size to not be a liability on defense and enough handle to genuinely break down opposing teams. He has a real shot to be a starter.

18. Antonio Reeves | 6-5 wing | junior | Illinois State

If you’re looking for scoring, scoring, and more scoring, Reeves might be the perfect player for you. He averaged 20.1 points per game in the Missouri Valley this year on his way to winning second-team all-conference honors as well as the league’s Most Improved Player award. Above all, he’s a pull-up maestro, capable of getting his shot from wherever on the floor at just about any time. He finished second in the conference behind Isiaih Mosley from Missouri State in scoring, hitting pull-up jumpers at a 51.4 effective field goal percentage, a very high number given his volume of shots. Among the 227 players nationally to take at least 100 pull-up jumpers, Reeves finished 19th in his efficiency in terms of making them, per Synergy. And yet, there’s a reason he only made second-team all-league despite those numbers. The rest of his game is a real work in progress. He has a long way to go as a passer and playmaker for others, and his defense leaves something to be desired. There is some question how scalable his game is to high-major situations where he’s just a piece of the puzzle. Still, my bet is a good high-major takes a shot on him and sees if those parts of his game can improve. The scoring is lethal enough to take such an informed bet.

22. Tyreke Key | 6-3 guard | senior | Indiana State

Key missed this entire season at Indiana State following shoulder surgery, but he is a multi-time first-team All-Missouri Valley Conference player who is about as terrific a scorer as you’ll find at that level. He’s very polished and poised, a ground-bound player for the most part who gets by with terrific footwork and strength to bump guys off their spot. Indiana State back under Greg Lansing would even use him as a pseudo-post-up/mid-post option where he could use those drop steps and spin moves to score. Plus, prior to the shoulder injury he could really step away and knock down shots. That percentage took a bit of a dive in his senior season in 2021, but the hope is that he can get back to the level he was at previously, where there were few more efficient high-volume scorers at the high mid-major level. There are some questions here with him returning from injury, which is why he falls below guys like Reeves and Carter from the Missouri Valley. But at his best, he’s very much in their group and maybe even better.

Racers continue to fill men’s basketball transfer portal--Murray Ledger & Times



Bradley men's basketball adds a junior college point guard from Florida--Peoria Journal Star



Illinois State head basketball coach Ryan Pedon names Andrew Dakich as assistant coach--The Pantagraph
Ryan Pedon Names Andrew Dakich Newest Assistant Coach--goredbirds.com



Drew by the Numbers: Valentine’s First Season--Loyola Phoenix

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/29/2022

Call it a ‘Prohmcoming’; Former Murray State head coach takes reins for second tenure--Murray Ledger & Times
Racer guard Hill opts for transfer portal--Murray Ledger & Times
College basketball transfer portal: The top 20 Chicago area players in the the transfer portal--Chicago Sun-Times

2. Antonio Reeves, Simeon (Illinois State)

The most coveted player in basketball right now is the shot-making player who can space the floor with consistent three-point shooting ability. They are at an absolute premium, and it’s exactly what Reeves provides. 

Reeves was lightly recruited and overlooked as a senior at Simeon. He was uncommitted throughout a breakout senior campaign for coach Robert Smith and the Wolverines. While Wisconsin was a high-major that flirted with Reeves as a senior, it was Illinois State that jumped in hard, albeit late, and nabbed the blooming 6-5 guard. 

After putting up some whopping numbers this past season as a junior, dozens of high-major programs across the country, including several high-profile ones, have been calling and clamoring for his services for next year. 

The silky smooth Reeves averaged 20.1 points this past season–– second in the Missouri Valley Conference –– and has already scored nearly 1,200 career points in three years. 

But what really makes Reeves one of the most desired players in the portal is his shooting ability. He made 76 three-pointers as a junior while shooting a very respectable 39 percent from beyond the arc.

7. Jayson Kent, Oak Forest (Bradley) — Committed to Indiana State

The classic late-blooming player in high school. Kent’s game, production and physical dimensions all came together late in his career at Oak Forest. He went from a no-namer to an all-state caliber player in a matter of a year, growing into a multi-dimensional 6-7 wing with a promising jump shot with range. 

Bradley signed the high-upside Kent. He wasn’t quite physically ready for the grind of the Missouri Valley Conference as a freshman, playing just 10 minutes a game as a freshman.

But Kent found his way on the floor this past season as a sophomore, starting 15 games and playing over 20 minutes a game. Kent averaged 6.9 points and 2.9 rebounds. The jumper, which shows the potential to be a weapon, must become more consistent going forward as he shot just 26 percent from beyond the arc (24 of 91 from three).

13. Zion Griffin, Hinsdale South (UIC)

The 6-6 forward started his career at Iowa State where he played minimal minutes with little production. As a sophomore with the Cyclones he averaged three points and two rebounds a game. 

He then came home, transferring to UIC where he’s played 26 minutes a game the past two seasons. This past season Griffin averaged 11.1 points and four rebounds for the Flames.

16. Maurice Commander, Curie (UIC)

The 5-11 point guard is on the move after spending two years at Tennessee-Chattanooga and the past two seasons at UIC.

After averaging double figures (10.5 ppg) for the Flames in just 15 games, including 12 starts, a year ago, he missed this past season with a season-ending hip surgery. Prior to his surgery, Commander played in a lot of Division I basketball games. 

Before his transfer to UIC, Commander started all 32 games as a sophomore for Chattanooga, averaging 6.2 points and 2.2 assists.



Valley switch: Kent moves from from Bradley to ISU--Terre Haute Tribune Star
Sycamore Basketball Signs Transfer Jayson Kent Ahead of 2022 Campaign--gosycamores.com



Mosley Named Finalist for Lou Henson Award--missouristatebears.com



AJ Green named Lou Henson Award finalist--unipanthers.com

Wednesday, March 23, 2022

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/23/2022

MVC Postseason Final Thoughts--Missouri Valley Beat
MVC Notebook | March Madness on, off the court--Southern Illinoisan



Inside the surprise retirement of the Bradley women's basketball coach--Peoria Journal Star
Stunner: Gorski announces retirement after 6 years at Bradley--Bradley Scout
Women's Basketball Coach Andrea Gorski Announces Retirement--bradleybraves.com



College basketball transfer rankings 2022-23: Tracking the top committed transfers--Heat Check CBB

5. Sardaar Calhoun

Previous | NewTexas Tech | Drake
Height | Weight | Hometown6-6 | 210 | Tappahannock, Va.
Basic career stats33 games | 0 starts
12.7 mpg | 4.9 ppg | 1.3 rpg | .382 3P%
1.8 OBPM | 1.8 DBPM | 107.3 ORtg

Calhoun was effective as one of the first players off the bench for Florida State during the ’20-21 season. He left for Texas Tech last spring and played sparingly before leaving the program. While he has yet to prove he can carry a significant role at the D-1 level, Calhoun was the No. 4 overall JUCO transfer from the 2020 class and held offers from several high-majors. If he’s ready, Calhoun could form a solid duo with budding star Tucker DeVries at Drake. Highlights



Watch now: Illinois State extends contract of women's basketball coach Gillespie--The Pantagraph
Gillespie extended through 2026-27 season after MVC title, NCAA Tournament appearance--The Vidette
Head Coach Kristen Gillespie Agrees to Contract Extension Through 2026-27--goredbirds.com



Hittle goes into transfer portal--Terre Haute Tribune Star



Loyola’s Valentine Tabbed Finalist For Ben Jobe Award--loyolaramblers.com



Ford Named as Finalist for Ben Jobe National Coach of the Year--missouristatebears.com

What Missouri State President Clif Smart said about Coach Mox's departure, what comes next--Springfield News-Leader
Is the Missouri State Lady Bears job Molly Miller's to lose? What to know early during search.--Springfield News-Leader



Ben Jacobson named finalist for Hugh Durham National Coach of the Year Award--unipanthers.com

Successful season for UNI women ends in second round of WNIT--Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier


Edwards, Young to enter transfer portal--The Victory Bell

Sunday, March 20, 2022

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/20/2022


Bulldogs Roar Past Mastodons in CBI Opening Round--godrakebulldogs.com
Men's Basketball Continues CBI Journey--godrakebulldogs.com



Loyola Chicago – Old Era Ending and New Era Beginning--Valley Hoops Insider



Sheldon scores 25, Ohio St. tops Missouri St. 63-56 in NCAAs--Associated Press
NCAA Tournament Day 2 Recaps: No. 12 seed Belmont comes back in both overtimes to best No. 5 seed Oregon--Swish Appeal

No. 6 Ohio State Buckeyes over No. 11 Missouri State Lady Bears, 63-56

Ohio State received a scare from Missouri State, but Jacy Sheldon finished with 25 points, six rebounds, five assists and five steals to lead the higher-seeded Buckeyes to victory.

Missouri State’s largest lead of the second half was four. Ohio State was able to keep it close until it took the lead late. The Buckeyes went on a 5-0 run capped by a difficult Sheldon layup in transition to take a one-point lead. They needed a left corner three from Taylor Mikesell to give them the lead again 44 seconds later. At that point there was 3:10 remaining.

The Lady Bears were within two with 41 seconds to go, but another Sheldon layup, this time with 29 seconds remaining, pushed the Ohio State lead to four. Free throws did the rest for the Buckeyes.

A flurry of steals allowed Ohio State to take the lead late in the second quarter. The first swipe of the stretch led to a Taylor Thierry layup and was followed by a backcourt steal and Sheldon layup that gave the Buckeyes a 25-24 lead. After the Lady Bears briefly retook the lead, Sheldon made a difficult layup to make it 27-26 Ohio State. She followed with a backcourt steal turned layup and Mikesell made it a five-point lead at the break when she took a mid-court turnover and turned it into a wide-open layup.

Sheldon and Braxtin Miller had four steals apiece in the first half and Sheldon led Ohio State with 11 points and three assists at the break.

Ifunanya Nwachukwu registered nine points and 17 rebounds in defeat.

NCAA Tournament: Missouri State Lady Bears' season ends in first-round loss to Ohio State--Springfield News-Leader
Why Brice Calip, the winningest Missouri State Lady Bear ever, was all smiles after her final loss--Springfield News-Leader
Lady Bears Battle to the End as Their Season Comes to a Close in NCAA Tournament--missouristatebears.com



UNI falls to Cougars, 90-71, finishes season 20-12--Waterloo Cedar Fall Courier
UNI men's basketball falls at BYU in NIT second round--unipanthers.com

Honored and excited, UNI uses strong defensive play, team basketball to beat UMKC--Waterloo Cedar Fall Courier

Saturday, March 19, 2022

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/19/2022

3/19/2022 NIT/CBI/TBC NEWS AND NOTES--Staring At The Floorboards

Subscriber Content

NIT QUARTERFINALS

  1. Northern Iowa lucked out against SLU, as the Bills sat Yuri Collins and the Panthers went insane from 3 in the first half to bury them early. Now they head to BYU for their first game in altitude this year...

CBI FIRST ROUND (all games in Daytona Beach)

IPFW’s inventive motion actions are tough to defend if you’re unprepared/not engaged, and while I don’t have any reason to think Drake is either of those...



Clark, Czinano lead Iowa past Illinois State 95-58 in NCAA--Associated Press
Hawkeyes cruise past Redbirds in NCAA tournament opener--Dispatch Argus
Watch now: Iowa eliminates Illinois State from NCAA Tournament--The Pantagraph
Watch now: Takeaways from Illinois State women trip to NCAA Tournament--The Pantagraph
ISU falls 98-58 to Iowa in the first round of NCAA Tournament--The Vidette
Illinois State Falls to Iowa in NCAA First Round--goredbirds.com



The return of Kyle Young, the glue that holds Ohio State together, pushes the Buckeyes ahead in the NCAA Tournament--The Athletic
Loyola bows out of the NCAA Tournament with a first-round loss to Ohio State: ‘I don’t want this game to define our season’--Chicago Tribune
Ohio State puts clamps on Loyola Chicago in 54-41 NCAA win--Associated Press
Loyola Chicago Basketball: Ramblers offense falls flat in loss to Ohio State--Busting Brackets
NCAA Tournament: Ice-cold Loyola bounced from NCAA Tournament by Ohio State - Chicago Sun-Times--Chicago Sun-Times
Offensive Woes Doom Loyola In First Round, Eliminated by Ohio State--Loyola Phoenix
Loyola Falls To Ohio State In NCAA Tournament First Round, 54-41--loyolaramblers.com



2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament odds and picks: Lyndsey D’Arcangelo selects Saturday’s first-round winners--The Athletic

Spokane Region

No. 11 Missouri State vs. No. 6 Ohio State (-5.5), 2:30 p.m., ESPNU

Ohio State quietly put together its best season since 2017, sharing the Big Ten regular-season title with Iowa and reaching the conference tournament semifinals. The Buckeyes have the sixth-best scoring offense with 79.2 points per game. Senior transfer Taylor Mikesell (Maryland, Oregon) is second in the nation with 3.6 3s per game and owns the third-highest 3-point percentage at 46.6. Junior Jacy Sheldon (19.5) leads the team in scoring overall. Though Missouri State’s defense holds opponents to 54.5 points per game, its offensive production is middle of the road. The Bears need to put up some big points against the Buckeyes. But without a strong outside shooting game, that’s going to be hard to do. My pick: Ohio State

Three storylines for No. 6 Ohio State women’s basketball vs. No. 11 Missouri State in NCAA Tournament first round--Land Grant Holy Land
Missouri State vs. Ohio State: 4 things to know before NCAA Tournament first-round matchup--Springfield News-Leader

Friday, March 18, 2022

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/18/2022


Men's Basketball En Route to Daytona Beach for CBI--godrakebulldogs.com

Bulldogs Advance to Second Round of WNIT, Set to Host--godrakebulldogs.com



TIPPING OFF: Always-dangerous Ramblers set sights on Ohio St--Associated Press
March Madness continues: Ranking the best men's NCAA Tournament games to watch Friday--USA Today

10 Loyola Chicago vs. 7 Ohio St., 12:15 p.m., CBS

This is another case where the higher seed might actually be the perceived underdog. The Buckeyes limp into the tournament with just one win in their last five outings and could still be shorthanded due to lingering injuries, but E.J. Liddell’s takeover ability will still warrant plenty of attention. The Ramblers are under new management with first-year coach Drew Valentine but still have their dangerous March reputation. Loyola has scoring balance, but expect the ball to be in veteran Lucas Williamson’s hands in key moments.

Prediction: Loyola, 69-63.

Five things to know about Ohio State’s first round NCAA Tournament opponent Loyola-Chicago--Land Grant Holy Land
Ohio State basketball vs Loyola Chicago NCAA Tournament preview: TV info, key players, starters, prediction--Cleveland Plain Dealer
March Madness Round 1 Preview: The Ohio State Buckeyes--Loyola Phoenix
Where There’s a Will, There’s a Way: Loyola Senior Walk-On Will Alcock’s Impact--Loyola Phoenix
COLUMN: Loyola’s Intangible Stats Through a Photographer’s Lens--Loyola Phoenix
Stat Breakdown: Comparing This Year’s NCAA Tournament Ramblers to the 2018 Final Four Team--Loyola Phoenix
Transfers Tip-Off: Loyola’s Ivy League Duo--Loyola Phoenix
Family Matters: Loyola’s Braden Norris and his Family Ties to March Madness--Loyola Phoenix



Missouri State advances out of women’s First Four--Associated Press
FSU women’s basketball falls to Missouri State in the NCAA Tournament--Tomahawk Nation
NCAA Tournament: How Mya Bhinhar's leadership still has the Missouri State Lady Bears dancing--Springfield News-Leader
Lady Bears Defeat Seminoles 61-50 to Advance in NCAA Tournament--missouristatebears.com

What's Up In The Missouri Valley 3/17/2022

What If EVERYONE Came Back?--Missouri Valley Beat



Bradley men's basketball sophomore Jayson Kent enters NCAA transfer portal--Peoria Journal Star



Daily Dirt – 3/17/22--Hoop Dirt

Speaking votes of confidence…Evansville AD Mark Spencer is out. He gave head coach Todd Lickliter the infamous VOC back on 2/25. Will be interesting to see how this plays out…

Evansville basketball leading scorer, Shamar Givance, enters the NCAA transfer portal--Evansville Courier & Press



2022 Women’s NCAA Tournament odds and picks: Lyndsey D’Arcangelo selects Friday’s first-round winners--The Athletic

No. 15 Illinois State vs. No. 2 Iowa (-24.5), 4 p.m., ESPN 

Iowa has two big things going for it right now — sophomore Caitlin Clark and senior Monika Czinano. Together, the dynamic duo averages 48.5 points per game, which is more than half of Iowa’s total average of 84.5. After winning the Big Ten tournament, the Hawkeyes appear destined for a Final Four appearance, though they’d have to go through South Carolina for that to happen. But I’m getting ahead of myself. (It’s that anticipation of the potential matchup!) Iowa has to take care of Illinois State first. And at 64.4 points per game, the Redbirds just don’t have enough offensive punch to knock out the Hawkeyes, or defensive answers for the Clark-Czinano combination. My pick: Iowa

Watch now: Illinois State women face huge challenge in Caitlin Clark, Iowa--The Pantagraph
Watch now: Illinois State to face sellout crowd in NCAA Tournament against Iowa--The Pantagraph
Prerost: Gillespie's Redbirds have returned to form at the perfect time--The Vidette
Five things to know before ISU's NCAA tournament matchup with Iowa--The Vidette
Scouting No. 2 Iowa before Illinois State travels to Iowa City for first round of NCAA Tournament--The Vidette
Illinois State Battles Hawkeyes in First Round of NCAA Tournament--goredbirds.com



March Madness Bets: Three First-Round Games Bettors Should Target Friday--Sports Illustrated
Loyola of Chicago’s Lucas Williamson (1) celebrates during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Drake in the championship of the Missouri Valley Conference tournament Sunday, March 6, 2022, in St. Louis.

No. 10 Loyola Chicago (25-7) vs. No. 7 Ohio State (19-11)

Spread: Loyola-Chicago -1.5 (-110) | Ohio State +1.5 (-110)
Total: 133 – Over (-110) | Under 133 (-110)
Moneyline: Loyola-Chicago -118 | Ohio State -110
Game Info: Friday, March 18, 2022 | 12:15 p.m. ET | CBS
Site: PPG Paints Arena, Pittsburgh, Penn.
Editor’s Note - Odds are subject to change.

The line has held steady from the opening line of displaying No. 7 Ohio State (19-11 SU; 15-15 ATS) as 1.5-point favorites over No. 10 Loyola Chicago (25-7 SU; 12-15-4 ATS) at SI Sportsbook.

Sister Jean’s boys are back and they are once again poised to advance in the NCAA tournament. Fresh off winning the Missouri Valley tournament, Loyola Chicago has won seven of their nine games overall. Senior guard Lucas Williamson leads the Ramblers attack averaging 14.0 points, 5.0 rebounds and 3.0 assists per game. Led by Branden Norris who leads the club shooting 43.5% from beyond the arc, with the Ramblers ranking 18th in the country as a team hitting at an impressive 38.8% from deep.

On the flip side, Ohio State are one of the coldest teams in the tournament having lost four of their last five games overall. The Buckeyes were bounced by Penn State 71-68 in the second round of the Big Ten Tournament as 5.5-point favorites. Overall, Ohio State has burned bettors posting a disappointing 1-4 ATS mark over their last five.

In this matchup, Ohio State will lean heavily on forward E.J. Liddell (19.6 ppg, 7.9 rbg). The junior big-man is as consistent as they come scoring in double-digits in every game this season.

This game will likely come down to Loyola’s efficient offense against a Buckeyes defense that ranks 130th in defensive efficiency that struggles to defend opponents three-point shooting.

The early respected money in Las Vegas and at SI Sportsbook backed Sister Jean and the Ramblers. Now is not the time to get in the way of divine intervention. 

BET: Loyola Chicago Moneyline (-118)

Ohio State and Loyola (IL) open up Friday’s NCAA Tournament action--Mid-Major Madness
TIPPING OFF: Always-dangerous Ramblers set sights on Ohio St--Associated Press
NCAA Tournament trends: Davidson hasn’t won a tourney game since Steph Curry was there and more fun facts for all 68 teams--The Athletic

SOUTH

7. Ohio State vs. 10. Loyola

Ohio State (19-11, 12-8 Big Ten)

The Buckeyes have not played their best basketball in March. Ohio State enters the tournament having lost four of five and three of those losses were to teams not in the 68-team field. The Buckeyes were favored in all five of those games and only covered in one.

E.J. Liddell gives OSU a chance in almost any game though. The forward is Ohio State’s leading scorer, a potential first-round pick and was a first-team All-Big Ten selection.

Loyola (25-7, 13-5 Missouri Valley)

This is Loyola’s second straight Tournament appearance, the first consecutive bids since 1963 and 1964. The Ramblers won the national title in 1963.

Loyola won the MVC Tournament as the No. 4 seed, but is just 9-15 against the spread this season.

2022 NCAA Tournament picks: Seth Davis makes his picks for Friday’s first-round games--The Athletic

No. 10 Loyola Chicago (-1.5) vs. No. 7 Ohio State, 12:15 p.m. (ET), TNT. This is one case where it makes sense for the lower seed to be the favorite. The Buckeyes were beset by a combination of a compressed schedule and injuries to two key frontcourt players, 6-8 senior Kyle Young (concussion) and 6-8 sophomore Zed Key (ankle). This team did not have a huge margin for error to begin with, and as a result, it dropped four of its last five games, including to Penn State in the Big Ten tournament. Chris Holtmann has said he is hopeful those two will be available for this game, but there’s no way to be sure until it begins. The Ramblers, on the other hand, just got an important piece back in Marquise Kennedy, a 6-1 junior combo guard who missed most of February because of a knee injury but returned to help Loyola win the Missouri Valley Conference tournament. Like most every team that plays Ohio State, the Ramblers will have a hard time containing 6-7 junior forward E.J. Liddell, but the injuries to the frontcourt will make it harder for Ohio State to take advantage of Loyola’s lack of size. The Ramblers don’t have an individual player as talented as Cameron Krutwig, who spearheaded their Sweet 16 run last year, but they have loads of experience and a winning culture, not to mention a centenarian nun who will be summoning divine intervention from her seat inside the arena. The pick: Loyola Chicago

Ranking the 32 first round NCAA Tournament games from the 2022 March Madness bracket--CBS Sports

9. (7) Ohio State vs. (10) Loyola-Chicago

Friday | 12:15 p.m. | CBS
The winner of this game will have sleeper potential in the South Region. Loyola-Chicago beat Illinois in last season's NCAA Tournament and will be undisturbed by Ohio State's Big Ten pedigree. The Buckeyes are a No. 7 seed but have the talent to perform well above that slotting. Expect Ohio State to be particularly motivated for redemption after it lost to No. 15 seed Oral Roberts in the first round last season.

South Preview: Loyola, Sister Jean eyeing another March run--Associated Press
What Ohio State basketball can learn from Illinois’ upset NCAA Tournament loss to Loyola Chicago last year--Cleveland Plain Dealer
No. 10 Loyola feels relaxed — and confident — heading into the 1st round of the NCAA Tournament vs. No. 7 Ohio State--Chicago Tribune
Loyola Chicago Basketball: 3 keys for Round of 64 matchup vs Ohio State--Busting Brackets
LUC Run It Back – One More Time--Valley Hoops Insider
Mark Gonzales: Expectations or not, Loyola and Illinois are where they belong--Daily Herald
Illinois’ and Loyola’s state rivalry is on display — sort of — on a big weekend in Pittsburgh--Chicago Sun-Times



Postseason Honors Continue to Roll in for Prim, Mosley--missouristatebears.com

When adversity hit, Missouri State Lady Bears basketball never doubted they'd make the NCAA Tournament--Springfield News-Leader
NCAA Tournament: Missouri State Lady Bears move past Florida State in First Four win--Springfield News-Leader



Northern Iowa Wants to Win Championships--Valley Hoops Insider
UNI tops Billikens, 80-68, advances to second round of NIT--Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier
Panthers rebound from MVC exit in NIT first round, Green moves up scoring list--Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier
UNI men's basketball upends Billikens in NIT opener--unipanthers.com
Panther men's basketball to meet BYU in second round of NIT--unipanthers.com

UNI women’s basketball tries to turn page to WNIT after losing late lead in MVC tournament championship--Cedar Rapids Gazette
UNI women’s basketball pulls away from Kansas City in WNIT first round--Cedar Rapids Gazette
UNI prepares to host UMKC in WNIT first round--Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier
Panthers handle UMKC, advance to second round of WNIT--Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier
UNI women's basketball downs Kansas City in WNIT opening round--unipanthers.com



SIU Women's Basketball | Silvey reaches 2,000 points in WNIT loss at Purdue--Southern Illinoisan
Women’s Basketball Cinderella Season ends in WNIT Round 1 vs Purdue--Daily Egyptian
Salukis Fall to Purdue in WNIT--siusalukis.com