Cart: 0 Items :: Checkout
Guaranteed Sports Picks
HOME    |    BUY PICKS    |    FREE PICKS    |    SCORES & ODDS    |    LEADERBOARD    |    JOIN NOW    |    LOGIN
Tulsa
vs
Michigan
Today's Featured Sports Pick

Game Date:
03/16/2016
9:15pm EST

Lines:
Tulsa +2
Michigan -2

Total:
Over 142.5 (-108)
Under 142.5 (-108)

Community Picks: Tulsa 0% vs Michigan 0%

Tulsa and Michigan Thread

Team Tweets & News Articles
Michigan
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) -- A jumper with 3.3 seconds left in overtime. A 3-pointer from the corner at the buzzer. Michigan needed every last moment to get to the NCAA Tournament. Continue to Article
March 15, 2016 2:22:pm EST
Michigan
Scenes like one at Florida Gulf Coast were playing out at plenty of schools Sunday night. It was nearly 10 p.m. Sunday and people in three different offices at FGCU are calling the school's top donors, asking if they want to be part of the team's travel party for Tuesday's game against Fairleigh Dickinson in Dayton, Ohio. Meanwhile, in another office, Billy Blood - the Chief Financial Officer for FGCU athletics - is simultaneously working his office phone, his cellphone and emails, trying to actually secure that plane and those hotel rooms. Continue to Article
March 14, 2016 2:17:am EST
Tulsa
Play Tourney Pick'em  |  Fill out your bracket   |  Print it   |  Celebrity Challenge It's as time-honored a Selection Sunday tradition as filling out a bracket and entering an office pool. As soon as the field of 68 is revealed, the bellyaching begins. The bracket this year's selection committee created offered plenty of reasons to complain, from unbalanced regions, to peculiar seeding decisions, to the absence of top mid-majors. Here's a look at the five biggest mistakes the committee made: 1. Cinderella wasn't invited to the ball. The appeal of the NCAA tournament's opening weekend is the potential for a no-name mid-major to pull a stunning upset, but this year's committee members robbed the event of some of its usual charm. They passed over a handful of deserving small-conference at-large hopefuls in favor of forgettable middle-of-the-pack bubble teams from power conferences. Michigan made the field despite a 4-12 record against RPI top 50 opponents. So did Vanderbilt despite underachieving for three months and then falling to woeful Tennessee in the SEC tournament. Heck, 13-loss Syracuse had the lowest RPI of any at-large team ever, yet somehow managed to avoid the First Four. You can make a case for the Wolverines by virtue of their four top 30 wins and lack of bad losses, but it's tougher for the other two. The opening weekend of this NCAA tournament would have been far more compelling had Monmouth, Saint Mary's, St. Bonaventure or Valparaiso gone in their place. Committee chairman Joe Castiglione railed on Saint Mary's schedule, yet the Gaels had two more top 100 wins than Michigan. He also ripped Monmouth for its three sub-200 losses, yet Syracuse seemed to get a free pass for falling to No. 245 St. John's. It's a good thing this year's selection committee wasn't in place 10 years ago. Instead of making an improbable Final Four run, George Mason would have been a No. 1 seed in the NIT. 2. Loaded East Region is too difficult Remember a few years ago when the selection committee put undefeated Wichita State, preseason No. 1 Kentucky and powerful Louisville, Duke and Michigan in the same bracket? Apparently they didn't learn from that mistake. This year's East Region is so overloaded with high-quality teams that it's almost surprising the Golden State Warriors aren't in it. The No. 1 seed is North Carolina, which swept the ACC regular season and tournament titles. The No. 4 seed is SEC tournament champion Kentucky, which once shared preseason No. 1 honors with the Tar Heels. The No. 5 seed is outright Big Ten champion Indiana, which has beaten five NCAA tournament teams in the past five weeks. That means only one of those three teams can advance beyond the Sweet 16. As if that's not enough, the other half of the region is loaded too. Looming there are Big East runner-up Xavier and Big 12 runner-up West Virginia, both of whom have spent the past two months entrenched in the AP top 10. The top five seeds in the East Region have an average rating of 9.4 in Ken Pomeroy's rankings. No other region has an average lower than 12 and the Midwest's is 16. Four of the top five seeds appear in the current AP top 10. No other region has more than two top 10 teams. It's nice that this region could provide us Kentucky-Indiana in the round of 32 when those teams refuse to play one-another in the regular season. A potential Kentucky-North Carolina Sweet 16 game would be must-see TV too. But it's unfair to those teams that their path is so much more difficult than some of the other regions are. 3. Michigan State shouldn't be in Virginia's region Any joy Virginia coach Tony Bennett experienced when his team landed a No. 1 seed had to have vanished quickly when he saw the No. 2 seed with which the Cavaliers were paired. It's Michigan State, the same team that eliminated Virginia from the NCAA tournament both of the past two seasons. In 2014, the fourth-seeded Spartans upset the top-seeded Cavaliers 61-59 in the Sweet 16. Last March, seventh-seeded Michigan State jumpstarted a surprise Final Four run by toppling Virginia again in the round of 32. This year's Spartans are better than either of those previous teams and they are clearly confident playing at Virginia's pace and attacking Virginia's pack-line defense too. It's entirely possible that this is a moot point and that either Michigan State or Virginia fall prior to the Elite Eight, but it's unfair to the Cavaliers that another matchup is even a possibility before the Final Four. In a national tournament, Virginia shouldn't have to encounter the same road block in its regional year after year. 4. Tulsa doesn't belong in the field Of all the mid-majors for the committee to include, it's baffling that Tulsa was the one chosen. The Golden Hurricane were so off the radar they didn't even appear in most mock brackets' list of teams in consideration. Tulsa had a respectable 8-8 record against the RPI top 100, but that masks glaring flaws in the Golden Hurricane's resume. They were a pedestrian 58th in the Pomeroy's rankings, they accomplished little out of conference and they have three bad losses, one to Oral Roberts in December and a pair against Memphis in the past two weeks. The inclusion of Tulsa reflected the committee's unexpected show of respect to the American Athletic Conference, a league it snubbed the previous two years by unexpectedly excluding SMU and Temple. UConn, Cincinnati and Temple all made the field and all avoided the First Four, a mild surprise considering each of their resumes consisted largely of victories against one another.  In an odd twist, Temple and Cincinnati may have been helped by losing to UConn in the conference tournament. Those wins vaulted the Huskies into the RPI top 50, a metric the committee seemed to fall back on as a crutch 5. The committee relied too heavily on RPI Top 50 wins and too little on other metrics Unlike last season when advanced metrics appeared to influence numerous seeding decisions, this year's committee all but ignored anything besides RPI top 50 and top 100 victories. The result is some seeding decisions that will put some teams at a massive advantage and others at a massive disadvantage. Oregon State received a No. 7 seed by virtue of its 12 RPI top 100 wins even though the best team the Beavers beat on the road might be UCLA. While the Beavers belong in the field, you can bet 10th-seeded VCU was not disappointed to draw Pomeroy's 60th-ranked team in the first round. Among the other teams whose seedings vary wildly from their ratings in Pomeroy's rankings: Temple (a No. 10 seed despite its No. 86 ranking), Wichita State (an 11 seed despite a No. 12 ranking) and Stephen F. Austin (a No. 14 seed despite a No. 33 ranking. Safe to say Arizona was less than thrilled at the possibility of seeing a top 15 Shockers team in the first round? Without a doubt.   - - - - - - - Jeff Eisenberg is the editor of The Dagger on Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email him at daggerblog@yahoo.com or follow him on Twitter! Follow @JeffEisenberg Continue to Article
March 13, 2016 11:02:pm EST
Michigan
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- A.J. Hammons had 27 points and 11 rebounds, and No. 13 Purdue beat Michigan 76-59 on Saturday to advance to the Big Ten Tournament championship. Continue to Article
March 12, 2016 3:37:pm EST
Michigan
Purdue easily handled one upset-minded team in its Big Ten tournament opener and will seek to knock off another in Saturday's semifinals. The 13th-ranked Boilermakers will try to deal a blow to Michigan's NCAA Tournament hopes while advancing to their first conference title game in seven years. Purdue, the fourth seed in Indianapolis, blew out No. 12 seed Illinois 89-58 on Friday. Continue to Article
March 11, 2016 7:52:pm EST
 
Previous Matchups:
View Available Sports Picks View Cart View Sports Picks