The first round of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament was marked by massive upsets. Will it continue in the Round of 32?
I’ll be providing a full breakdown of every game on Saturday, but first, make sure you check out a few key items: our NCAA Tournament bracket, NCAA Tournament schedule, 50 reasons to be excited for March Madness and top plays of the first round.
Here is a complete recap of Day 2.
Next, stay tuned for exclusive interviews, running analysis and more from Day 3.
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No. 8 Arkansas 72, No. 1 Kansas 71
The NCAA Tournament is officially off the rails.
The Arkansas Razorbacks have done it again. After shocking 1-seed Gonzaga last year in the Sweet 16, Eric Musselman’s program came back from a 12-point halftime deficit to stun defending national champion Kansas, 72-71, in Des Moines on Saturday evening.
For a third straight season, the Muss Bus will roll into the Sweet 16.
First, a word on Arkansas: this win says it all about the winning DNA that Musselman has built in just four years at the helm. A season-ending injury to Trevon Brazile, a long road for top freshman Nick Smith to get on the court and some struggles at certain points … and yet, the Razorbacks will be one of just 16 still standing.
After an offseason of changes to the roster, Musselman counted on Devo Davis to be a leader for this team. In this NCAA Tournament, the junior has stepped up time and again, and had his finest hour on Saturday with a season-high 25 points – 21 of which came in the second half. While he willed the Hogs back into the game, Ricky Council IV was the man in closing time. The Wichita State transfer scored 11 points in the final five minutes as the Razorbacks went blow for blow with Kansas to take home the win.
Some historical perspective:
Kansas was 47-0 all-time when leading by 8 points or more at halftime in NCAA Tournament history.
That record is now 47-1.
What went wrong for the Jayhawks?
Missing Bill Self for a fifth-straight game as he recovers from a heart procedure, it certainly didn’t help Kansas that it didn’t have its Hall of Famer on the sideline.
The Jayhawks really got away from their defensive identity in the second half, going from allowing 27 in the opening 20 minutes to 45 in the second frame. Gradey Dick, whose shooting has opened up a different dimension for KU, shot just 3-for-9 from the floor on a day when the Jayhawks only hit five triples.
Dajuan Harris delivered 12 points and five assists. Kansas was 18-0 when he scored at least seven points, but not on this day.
It was a case of Arkansas refusing to lose, and don’t forget about freshman Jordan Walsh’s defense over 33 minutes, in addition to his 10 points.
What does this mean? The Razorbacks are a win away from three straight Elite Eight appearances, and the West Region just opened up wide. Texas and UCLA’s chances just increased, while the winner of UConn/Saint Mary’s will get Arkansas in Vegas.
Another historical note with Houston and Alabama still in action tonight: Per FOX Sports Research: Since the NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, there have never been three 1-seeds to lose before the Sweet 16.
Purdue and Kansas have already fallen. Houston is currently down 10 at the half to Auburn.
We know one thing: Florida’s back-to-back national championship runs in 2006 and 2007 will remain as the last program to go back-to-back.
No. 4 Tennessee 65, No. 5 Duke 52
Jon Scheyer’s first season ends, and the East Region is wide open
Every time Duke started to creep back in, Olivier Nkamhoua and Tennessee punched right back.
The Volunteers senior forward scored a career-high 27 points, notching three triples — he had 15 on the entire season before this game! — in a commanding victory over the Blue Devils.
Tennessee, even without star Zakai Zeigler (out for season — torn ACL), is marching on to New York City for the Sweet 16 next week.
Duke, after winning 10 in a row and playing as well as anyone in the last month, saw Scheyer’s first season end on Saturday with a thud at 27-9.
For Rick Barnes, Saturday put the criticism to bed that he can’t get Tennessee going on a deep NCAA Tournament run. How did they do it? Well, we entered asking how the Vols would score. A team that entered shooting 33% from beyond the arc on the season had a game-changing day from downtown, going 9-for-21 from 3. With Zeigler down, it has meant Santiago Vescovi has to take on an even bigger role. He drilled four triples, scoring 14 points to go along with five rebounds and as many assists. March Madness can bring out a different wave from a team, and we saw that on the offensive end from the Vols on Saturday.
But it all goes back to the matchup. Duke is defensively oriented, but that played right into Tennessee’s hands. The Vols are wired for that style of a game, ranking No. 1 in KenPom adjusted defensive efficiency.
For the Blue Devils, they didn’t match Tennessee from the perimeter and Kyle Filipowski needed 16 shot attempts to score 13 points. With Jeremy Roach battling foul trouble and playing with four for the final 12 minutes, that also contributed to some struggles. Duke was also without freshman forward Mark Mitchell, who injured his knee in practice.
The Blue Devils were 19-1 with their full complement of players. They were 8-9 when they weren’t at full strength.
Overall, Scheyer’s first year should be regarded as a solid one all things considered, with a freshman class that took time to develop and a team that dealt with injuries. The second weekend of the NCAA Tournament is obviously the benchmark in Durham with Final Four runs every few years — if not more often — but it was Year 1. Scheyer brings in the nation’s top recruiting class next season.
A big takeaway: Tyrese Proctor should go early in the NBA Draft this June. He had 16 points and six assists, making some terrific offensive plays along the way.
The Big Picture: Tennessee should be rejoicing. The path to an Elite Eight is beating either 9-seed FAU or 16-seed FDU.
By the same point, Kansas State and Kentucky, along with Marquette and Michigan State, have a gettable path to a regional title compared to others.
The hottest team entering the tournament, Duke, is gone. The 1-seed, Purdue? They’re already home.
The East is wide open.
No. 5 San Diego State 75, No. 13 Furman 52
This was tabbed as the year for San Diego State to get on the national map in a major way.
In an isolated TV window to tip off Saturday’s action in the NCAA Tournament, the Aztecs showed their very best and punched the program’s first ticket to the Sweet 16 since 2014 with a rout of Furman.
Head coach Brian Dutcher, who was Steve Fisher’s right-hand man at SDSU from 1999-2017, now has his signature moment as the leader of the program. A year following the heartbreak vs. Creighton in the first round, the Aztecs welcomed back four of five starters from a 23-win squad, and it’s produced a great redemption story.
In the win over the Paladins, who bowed out after a program-record 28-win season and their first March Madness victory since 1974, the Aztecs showed why they’re as strong defensively as any team in the country.
For a third straight game, SDSU held its opponent to the lowest output of its season, as the Aztecs held the Paladins to just one made field goal in the final 11 minutes of the first half.
Furman led 16-12 through nine minutes. The Aztecs then put their mark on the game, turning stops into scores and going on an 18-1 run behind junior Micah Parrish, who scored 14 of his game-high 16 points in the first half and knocked down two triples. Matt Bradley, the fifth-year senior leader, only shot 3-for-10 from the floor, a reflection that the Aztecs don’t simply hinge on him like last year.
Dutcher addressed those needs in the transfer portal last offseason, bringing in Darrion Trammell (Seattle), who had 13 points in the win. Lamont Butler, a steady starting guard, had 12 points, six assists and six rebounds.
The Aztecs outscored the Paladins in the paint, 40-16. They led in bench points, 27-11. None of those things were surprising, but with 17 assists on 29 made field goals, that’s telling for SDSU in the big picture as they won their sixth straight game.
With the winner of Alabama/Maryland ahead in the Sweet 16, the key is simple: Can this team continue to find enough offensive balance and hit some timely 3s?
For now, it’s celebration time for the Aztecs and the Mountain West, which greatly needed this from its flagship program.
COMING SOON:
No. 7 Missouri vs. No. 15 Princeton
No. 1 Houston vs. No. 9 Auburn | 7:10 p.m. ET
No. 2 Texas vs. No. 10 Penn State | 7:45 p.m. ET
No. 2 UCLA vs. No. 7 Northwestern | 8:40 p.m. ET
No. 1 Alabama vs. No. 8 Maryland | 9:40 p.m. ET
John Fanta is a national college basketball broadcaster and writer for FOX Sports. He covers the sport in a variety of capacities, from calling games on FS1 to serving as lead host on the BIG EAST Digital Network to providing commentary on The Field of 68 Media Network. Follow him on Twitter @John_Fanta.
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