November is often the most exciting part of the NCAA basketball season, though this season has certainly begun in earnest. Nearly two weeks of games have transpired, and we’re starting to feel out the hundreds of D1 college basketball programs. While we’re still far away from conference play, postseason excitement, and the NCAA Tournament, there’s no question that these games mean something important.
Nonconference play provides differing opportunities for each team, though every team is uniquely different. Some have been completely rebuilt with young talent or Transfer Portal additions, while others lean on star returners and veteran talent. A few teams haven’t yet been seriously challenged or even played a game away from home, while others seem to be running the early gauntlet of difficulty.
No one can pretend to know what will happen this season after just a few weeks’ worth of games. This sport is all about unpredictability and chaos, even if we think we know what should happen in the coming days, weeks, and months. Any team from top to bottom could deal with injuries or inconsistent play, though that won’t stop us from examining what we’ve already seen and building early expectations.
While the grasp isn’t firm, we have something of an understanding on which teams are the best this season. We’ll continue presenting those thoughts with our next attempt at the Top 25 rankings. You can certainly expect ebbing and flowing among these and other teams on our rankings, though this is what we’ve got after less than two weeks of games. Let’s begin our deep dives and see what these twenty-five teams have accomplished early on.
The most common refrain Kentucky fans could hear from other Kentucky fans after and even during the loss to Ohio State last night was an annoying fact that Aubu
“We are breaking camp after the game on December 21 — if we win.” Those were Mark Pope’s final words ahead of Kentucky’s trip to New York City for th
For the first time since November 19, Aaron Bradshaw jogged over to the scorers table for Ohio State, checking in at the 17:46 mark of the first half. As his n
The numbers behind Kentucky‘s loss to Ohio State in Madison Square Garden are ugly. Mark Pope even acknowledged the discrepancies in his postgame comments fr