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Dick Vitale, College Basketball analyst 3y

Dick Vitale's 'Sweet 16' College Basketball Excitement Index for 2021-22

Men's College Basketball, Gonzaga Bulldogs, Villanova Wildcats, Memphis Tigers, UCLA Bruins, Texas Longhorns, Kansas Jayhawks, Michigan Wolverines, Duke Blue Devils, Baylor Bears, Purdue Boilermakers, Illinois Fighting Illini, Indiana Hoosiers, Syracuse Orange, Kentucky Wildcats, Alabama Crimson Tide, Arizona Wildcats, North Carolina Tar Heels, Marquette Golden Eagles, Cincinnati Bearcats, Oklahoma Sooners, Texas Tech Red Raiders, Utah Utes, Iowa State Cyclones, Loyola Chicago Ramblers, Minnesota Golden Gophers, DePaul Blue Demons, UNLV Rebels, San José State Spartans, Charleston Cougars, Tennessee Volunteers, Florida State Seminoles, St. John's Red Storm, Virginia Tech Hokies, Auburn Tigers, UConn Huskies, Oregon Ducks, Maryland Terrapins, Virginia Cavaliers, Houston Cougars

I was sitting at one of my favorite breakfast spots -- the First Watch in Lakewood Ranch, Florida -- the other day and started looking ahead to a college basketball season that is now just over two months away. There are quite a few storylines to be excited about, so many that I had a hard time trimming the list to a mere 10 or even 25 or 50!

So I decided to break it down into separate "Sweet 16s" of players, new coaches, teams and great nonconference games that I'm anticipating. These are not my top teams or coaches or All-Americans, but they represent some of the storylines I'm most excited about as we get closer to a 2021-22 campaign that ought to feel a lot closer to normal than the one we experienced last season.

So, here we go!

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Players | Coaches | Teams | Games

 


'Sweet 16' players I want to watch

Chet Holmgren, Gonzaga Bulldogs

The 7-foot Minnesota native is the top diaper dandy coming in. Holmgren can do it all: score, rebound, pass, run the court. Mark Few has a winner ready to make an immediate impact.

Collin Gillespie, Villanova Wildcats

After suffering a torn MCL late last season, Gillespie took advantage of an extra year of eligibility provided by the NCAA during the pandemic. His long-range shooting ability and leadership will make Jay Wright happy.

Emoni Bates, Memphis Tigers

Bates ended the speculation about his 2021-22 destination when he signed on with Penny Hardaway and the Tigers on Wednesday. He'll rival Holmgren as a high-impact diaper dandy. 

Jalen Duren, Memphis Tigers

Like Bates, the 6-10 product from the powerful Montverde Academy reclassified to become eligible for the upcoming season. Hardaway is thrilled to have this top-10 frontcourt prospect.

Drew Timme, Gonzaga Bulldogs

Powered by a sensational season and tournament from Timme, the Zags fell one game short of a perfect season. The All-American should average a double-double in 2021-22.

Johnny Juzang, UCLA Bruins

Juzang scored 29 points in the Final Four loss to Gonzaga. He decided to return to college, where more big things are expected.

Marcus Carr, Texas Longhorns

One of the nation's top transfers, Carr averaged 19.4 PPG for Minnesota last season. He will join an impressive group of transfers in Austin.

Remy Martin, Kansas Jayhawks

Bill Self had to be thrilled to add an experienced player in the Arizona State transfer Martin, who led the Pac-12 last season in scoring at 19.1 PPG.

Hunter Dickinson, Michigan Wolverines

Dickinson pulled out of the NBA draft, saying he wanted to "experience a normal year" as a college basketball player. The big man can forget about normalcy, at least in the ways opposing teams will try to shut him down.

Paolo Banchero, Duke Blue Devils

The 6-10 frontcourt star from O'Dea High School in Seattle will be special in Mike Krzyzewski's final season in Durham. Banchero has a chance, along with Holmgren and a selection of others, to become the No. 1 pick in the 2022 NBA draft.

James Akinjo, Baylor Bears

Scott Drew has relied on transfers in the past -- he won the title game with several. Now he will rely on Akinjo, who averaged 15.6 PPG at Arizona last season and was the Big East Freshman of the Year while at Georgetown.

Trevion Williams, Purdue Boilermakers

The 6-10 All-Big-Ten pick was one of six players nationally to average at least 15 points, nine rebounds and two assists per game, and was the only high-major player to do so.

Kofi Cockburn, Illinois Fighting Illini

Cockburn pulled out of the NBA draft and also withdrew from the transfer portal, returning to Illinois to become one of the top candidates at center for preseason All-America teams.

Trayce Jackson-Davis, Indiana Hoosiers

Mike Woodson is ecstatic Jackson-Davis returned to Bloomington. He was fourth in the Big Ten in scoring (19.1 PPG), second in rebounding (9.0) and fifth in field goal percentage (51.7).

Buddy Boeheim, Syracuse Orange

Boeheim was a workhorse last season, playing over 36 minutes per game. He averaged 17.8 PPG, shot 38.3% on 3s and 84.9% on free throws.

Kellan Grady, Kentucky Wildcats

John Calipari needed outside shooting and experience, and the Davidson transfer -- already a 2,000-point college scorer -- provides both. In a group of talented transfers, he may be the most vital.

 


'Sweet 16' coaches at new addresses

Chris Beard, Texas Longhorns

Texas Tech fans were not thrilled with this move. Beard inherits a program that lost a lot -- though Andrew Jones and Courtney Ramey are back -- and landed a great class of transfers including Marcus Carr (Minnesota), Timmy Allen (Utah), Tre Mitchell (UMass), Dylan Disu (Vanderbilt), Devin Askew (Kentucky) and Christian Bishop (Creighton).

Tommy Lloyd, Arizona Wildcats

Lloyd, an assistant at Gonzaga for the past 20 seasons, was the choice to replace Sean Miller. This is a pressure-packed job, though Lloyd is ready.

Hubert Davis, North Carolina Tar Heels

When Roy Williams announced his retirement, the Tar Heels kept the replacement in-house just as they did when the Michelangelo of coaching Dean Smith retired. Davis spent nine seasons on the bench with Williams, and becomes the fourth former Tar Heel to become UNC head coach. He is the first Black head coach in Carolina men's basketball history.

Mike Woodson, Indiana Hoosiers

The Hoosiers are another program relying on a former star to lead them. Indiana last made the Big Dance in 2015-16 and is coming off a 12-15 season. Woodson had some success as a head coach at the NBA level, and has the leadership ability to succeed.

Shaka Smart, Marquette Golden Eagles

Smart left Texas for Marquette after a tough NCAA tournament loss. He's made the tourney eight times in his 12 seasons as a head coach, and led VCU to a surprise Final Four in 2011.

Wes Miller, Cincinnati Bearcats

Miller played under Roy Williams at North Carolina, later spending 10 seasons as head coach at UNC Greensboro. Considered one of the game's best young coaching prospects, Miller can build the Bearcats back up.

Porter Moser, Oklahoma Sooners

Over the past four years, Moser led Loyola Chicago to three Missouri Valley titles, two Sweet 16s and the 2018 Final Four. His Ramblers stunned top-seeded Illinois in the most recent Big Dance. He inherits a program that performed consistently well under Lon Kruger.

Mark Adams, Texas Tech Red Raiders

Replacing Beard is not easy, but the Red Raiders rebuilt with transfers. Kevin Obanor comes from Oral Roberts, where he shined in leading the 15-seed Golden Eagles within a made bucket of the Elite Eight. Adams will also receive help in a returning Terrence Shannon Jr.

Craig Smith, Utah Utes

Smith crosses the state after going 74-24 at Utah State with three straight NCAA berths. The Utes last went dancing in the 2015-16 season.

T.J. Otzelberger, Iowa State Cyclones

Otzelberger spent the last two seasons as UNLV's head coach, and was previously lead recruiter and bench coach for ex-ISU coaches Greg McDermott, Fred Hoiberg and Steve Prohm. Otzelberger has familiarity with Ames.

Drew Valentine, Loyola Chicago Ramblers

Valentine spent four seasons as an assistant with the Ramblers, taking the reins at age 29 when Moser departed for Oklahoma.

Ben Johnson, Minnesota Golden Gophers

Johnson, an assistant for the past three seasons at Xavier, returns to the Gophers after playing at Minnesota (2002 to 2004) and previously serving as an assistant to Richard Pitino for five seasons (2013 to 2018).

Tony Stubblefield, DePaul Blue Demons

Stubblefield spent the past 11 seasons as an assistant at Oregon, and four seasons before that at University of Cincinnati. He takes over a Blue Demons program that has enjoyed just one winning season over the last 14 years.

Kevin Kruger, UNLV Rebels

Kruger, the son of Lon Kruger and a former UNLV player and assistant under his dad, replaces Otzelberger in Vegas.

Tim Miles, San Jose State Spartans

The former Nebraska coach is back on the sidelines in the Mountain West, where he did terrific work in leading Colorado State from 2007 to 2012.

Pat Kelsey, Charleston Cougars

Kelsey did a great job at Winthrop, averaging 20.7 wins per season over the last nine years and qualifying for the NCAA tournament three times.

 


'Sweet 16' intriguing teams

UCLA Bruins

The Bruins last won the national title in 1995. Can they add to their historic championship total of 11?

Texas Longhorns

As mentioned, Beard has a great crop of transfers joining Jones and Ramey. Expectations will run high in Austin.

Gonzaga Bulldogs

Can Few finally cut down the nets as a national champion? Holmgren and Timme hope so.

North Carolina Tar Heels

Davis will be under the microscope in his first season at his alma mater. Armando Bacot's return helps, as will transfers including Dawson Garcia and Brady Manek.

Kentucky Wildcats

After a 9-16 season where the Cats shot 41.7% from the floor and 33.5% on 3s, newcomers will change things in Lexington.

Oregon Ducks

Dana Altman simply reloads into an annual Pac-12 contender. Syracuse transfer Quincy Guerrier will have an immediate impact.

Memphis Tigers

Hardaway already had an improved squad, and adding Bates and Duren late was a major plus.

Auburn Tigers

Can UNC transfer Walker Kessler live up to his billing? Diaper dandy Jabari Smith will also make noise for Bruce Pearl.

Illinois Fighting Illini

Kofi Cockburn is back, but impressive guard Andre Curbelo may be the key to success.

Michigan Wolverines

Juwan Howard has developed a winner, and the Wolverines will build on last year's 23-5 mark.

Florida State Seminoles

The Seminoles have 73 wins over the past three years. Leonard Hamilton has more in store.

Maryland Terrapins

Adding Fatts Russell (Rhode Island) and Qudus Wahab (Georgetown) makes the Terps a Big Ten contender.

Villanova Wildcats

Jay Wright has a veteran nucleus ready, led by Gillespie. The Cats have four 30+ win seasons over the past seven years.

Duke Blue Devils

Can Coach K go out with a big season? His newcomers will make a difference in helping improve on last year's 13-11 record.

Virginia Cavaliers

You always have to look at Tony Bennett's squad to compete -- a 61-12 record in the ACC over the past four years should tell you all you need to know.

Houston Cougars

After a Final Four trip, Kelvin Sampson lost Quentin Grimes to the NBA but expects big things from Marcus Sasser.

 


'Sweet 16' nonconference games I want to watch in 2021-22

UCLA vs. Gonzaga, Nov. 23, Las Vegas

The rematch of April's national semifinal classic takes place as part of this season's Empire Classic.

Gonzaga vs. Duke, Nov. 26, Las Vegas

The last time these two met -- Nov. 21, 2018 in Hawaii -- the Zags won an 89-87 thriller over Zion Williamson and the Blue Devils. 

Duke vs. Kentucky, Nov. 9, New York

Coach K vs. John Calipari one more time (unless they meet in the NCAA tournament), with this installment taking place as part of the State Farm Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden.

Villanova at Baylor, Dec. 12

It's Jay Wright vs. Scott Drew from Waco, Texas, in the Big East vs. Big 12 event.

Kentucky at Kansas, Jan. 29

Always nice to see blue bloods facing off, this time as part of an SEC/Big 12 Challenge contest at Allen Fieldhouse.

Michigan State vs. Kansas, Nov. 9, New York

The Champions Classic at Madison Square Garden is always one of the best early-season events, with Tom Izzo facing Bill Self in this edition.

North Carolina vs. UCLA, Dec. 18, Las Vegas

Hubert Davis and his Heels will be tested by the Bruins as part of this year's CBS Sports Classic.

Tennessee at Texas, Jan. 29

Rick Barnes returns to Austin to face his former team.

Baylor at Alabama, Jan. 29

Both conference champions a year ago, this matchup will see the Bears and Crimson Tide meet in the SEC/Big 12 Challenge.

North Carolina vs. Purdue, Nov. 20, Uncasville, Connecticut

This featured attraction in the Hall of Fame Tip-Off Tournament should be a battle inside, with Marquette transfer Dawson Garcia squaring off with Purdue's Trevion Williams.

Villanova vs. Tennessee, Nov. 20, Uncasville, Connecticut

In the other first-round meeting of the Hall of Fame event, Vols diaper dandy point guard Kennedy Chandler is up against an experienced foe in Collin Gillespie and the Wildcats.

Michigan at North Carolina, Dec. 1

Wolverines' diaper dandy Caleb Houston has a road test in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge.

Florida State at Purdue, Nov. 30

The Seminoles won the past two meetings against the Boilermakers by a total of four points. Will this ACC/Big Ten Challenge meeting be another Maalox Masher?

Kansas at St. John's, Dec. 2, Elmont, New York

The Red Storm return star Julian Champagnie. This part of the 2021 Big 12/Big East Battle -- to be held at the new home of the NHL's New York Islanders -- is a huge test for St. John's to gain national respect.

Memphis vs. Virginia Tech, Brooklyn, Nov. 24, Brooklyn

Ex-Hokie Landers Nolley II faces his former team in the NIT Season Tip-Off from Barclays Center, also a great occasion to witness the exploits of Emoni Bates and Co. for Memphis.

Auburn vs. UConn, Nov. 24, Paradise Island, Bahamas

Two rising teams meet early in the season at the Battle 4 Atlantis.

The 17th annual Dick Vitale Gala, benefiting the V Foundation, will be held May 6, 2022, at the Ritz-Carlton in Sarasota, Florida. For more information visit dickvitaleonline.com.

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