Shock Treatment: UK Loses in Opening Round Second Time in Three Seasons
You're supposed to expect the unexpected but no unbiased observer with a pulse promoted idea in the preseason that Oakland would eventually upend perennial powerhouse Kentucky for the Wildcats' second "bottom-of-bracket" reversal in last three NCAA Tournaments. Adding insult to injury for the SEC, Auburn was kayoed by Yale.
In the first six years of the NCAA tourney seeding process from 1979 through 1984 when the playoff field ranged from 40 to 53 teams, the bottom of the bracket racket included a total of 13 No. 1 and 2 seeds losing their openers. Notwithstanding the misleading media's spin, the NCAA tourney hasn't been saturated with authentic upsets since the playoff field expanded to at least 64 teams in 1985. On the other hand, there were only five years in that span failing to provide a first-round shocker from the bottom of the bracket (1994, 2000, 2004, 2007 and 2017).
Teams seeded 13th or worse defeated teams seeded among the top four in a regional a total of 68 times in the last 39 tourneys after the Grizzlies emerged victorious in opening-round game this year. At least Kentucky's stunning reversals against Saint Peter's and Oakland weren't as ugly as a couple of sorry SEC setbacks when Navy overwhelmed LSU by 23 points in 1985 and Siena smothered Vanderbilt by 21 in 2008.
Arizona's similar shocking defeat against Santa Clara in 1993 materialized despite the Wildcats reeling off 25 unanswered points in a stretch bridging the last five minutes of the first half and the first five minutes of the second half. Gary Waters is the only coach to win two opening-round games in this category while in charge of two different schools (Kent State in 2001 and Cleveland State in 2009).
Until Virginia's 1 vs. 16 debacle six years ago, Michigan State was the only #2 seed to lose its playoff opener after spending a portion of the regular season atop the AP national poll. Following is a rundown of the first 67 first-round knockouts by the bottom of the bracket (#13 through #16 seeds) since the NCAA field expanded to at least 64 teams in 1985:
#16 seed (2 victories)
Year | #16 Seed Winner | Coach | #1 Seed Loser | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | Maryland-Baltimore County | Ryan Odom | Virginia | 74-54 |
2023 | Fairleigh Dickinson | Tobin Anderson | Purdue | 63-58 |
#15 seed (11 victories)
Year | #15 Seed Winner | Coach | #2 Seed Loser | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|
1991 | Richmond | Dick Tarrant | Syracuse | 73-69 |
1993 | Santa Clara | Dick Davey | Arizona | 64-61 |
1997 | Coppin State | Ron "Fang" Mitchell | South Carolina | 78-65 |
2001 | Hampton | Steve Merfeld | Iowa State | 58-57 |
2012 | Lehigh | Dr. Brett Reed | Duke | 75-70 |
2012 | Norfolk State | Anthony Evans | Missouri | 86-84 |
2013 | Florida Gulf Coast | Andy Enfield | Georgetown | 78-68 |
2016 | Middle Tennessee State | Kermit Davis Jr. | Michigan State | 90-81 |
2021 | Oral Roberts | Paul Mills | Ohio State | 75-72 (OT) |
2022 | Saint Peter's | Shaheen Holloway | Kentucky | 85-79 (OT) |
2023 | Princeton | Mitch Henderson | Arizona | 59-55 |
#14 seed (22 victories)
#13 seed (33 victories)