Duke, Kentucky, KU top CBS Sports’ 1-351 college basketball rankings – CBSSports.com
After the flawless success of last year’s forecast, once again, CBS Sports is ranking all of Division I men’s college basketball in advance of the start of the season.
I may be out of my mind.
So here it is, an all-encompassing, thoroughly engrossing, undeniably consummate echelon of the sport’s 351 teams, from Air Force to Youngstown State, Duke to …. well, you’ll have to scroll all the way to the bottom to see who comes in at 351 this year.
Why do it? Um, why not! I love it, you love it, and it gives me a chance to give every single team some ink.
The first 26 teams listed are in accordance with the Top 25 (and one), assembled by Gary Parrish and myself. After that? I went a little nuts.
Let’s get on with it. Enjoy, and feel free to tell me how amazingly correct this list is.
1. Duke
The Blue Devils bring in one of the best recruiting classes in school history, led by projected lottery picks Harry Giles, Jayson Tatum and Marques Bolden. Grayson Allen is the odds-on leader for national player of the year. Veterans Amile Jefferson and Matt Jones will prove vital. Luke Kennard is set to have a breakout sophomore season. This team is going to beat you 28 different ways. Giles’ health could be the key to Duke being the best team over the likes of the five or six teams you see listed directly below.
2. Kentucky
The Wildcats’ five-man recruiting class ranks only a hair behind Duke’s, and we think this group will come together in much smoother fashion than other big-time classes John Calipari has brought in to Lexington. De’Aaron Fox is an outstanding, smart point guard. Malik Monk is a scorer, slasher and a terrific athletic. Bam Adebayo is a force down low, a guy who could play his way into top-three draft status. Wenyen Gabriel is green but will be twice the player he is now by the time we get to March. Sacha Killeya-Jones, also a top-25 recruit, has the best name of any player Cal’s ever recruited, and yet he’s the overlooked one. The most important player? Isaiah Briscoe is back, and his defense will be setting the standard.
3. Kansas
Josh Jackson is the star freshman wing, a player who could be the No. 1 pick in the 2017 draft. Kansas has a reliable backcourt with Devonte’ Graham and Frank Mason. Ukrainian Svi Mykhailiuk finally blasts through as a top-100 player this season. Down low, Kansas is expecting huge returns on sophomore Carlton Bragg. Freshman giant Udoka Azubuike is a player Self says could be one of his best big men ever. He’ll need time. Perry Ellis is back for his eighth season. Kidding. (OR AM I??)
4. Villanova
The Wildcats are capable of going back-to-back. The only pieces lost are Ryan Arcidiacono and Daniel Ochefu. Fordham stud transfer Eric Paschall enters the rotation, while Josh Hart is on the short list of preseason National Player of the Year favorites. Kris Jenkins, Jalen Brunson, Phil Booth, Mikal Bridges, Darryl Reynolds — they’re all back. Looks like another No. 1 seed to me.
5. Xavier
The Musketeers were a No. 2 seed last season and should be even better this year, though the schedule will provide a lot of challenges. Edmond Sumner, Trevon Bluiett, J.P. Macura (breakout player special), Myles Davis and transfer RaShid Gaston are all capable of being The Guy on any night. Chris Mack has terrible taste in music but is establishing himself as a top-25 coach in America.
6. North Carolina
The reigning national runner-up will be in the mix for another Final Four. Kennedy Meeks, Joel Berry, Theo Pinson, Justin Jackson and Isaiah Hicks make up a terrific starting five, and Nate Britt’s a terrific sixth man. UNC should get nice production in spots from five-star frosh Tony Bradley as well. (Check out our list of the top 20 freshmen right here.)
7. Oregon
Dana Altman has a loaded roster. This team was a 1-seed last year that got upended by Oklahoma and the Buddy Band in the Elite Eight. Dillon Brooks is the team’s MOP, but there’s so much more. Chris Boucher, Tyler Dorsey, Jordan Bell, Dylan Ennis with a sixth year of eligibility. The Ducks have to be considered the favorites in the Pac-12.
8. Michigan State
It’s the highest-rated freshman class Tom Izzo’s ever had: Miles Bridges, Josh Langford, Cassius Winston, Nick Ward. If those four play up to their talent this season, then look out. MSU will have a scoring savant in Eron Harris, a 3-point specialist in Matt McQuaid, a reliable on-ball defender in Tum-Tum Nairn and a season-long stopgap in the post in Gavin Schilling. Ben Carter’s health/return is the X-factor.
9. Virginia
Virginia loses a lot but gets one really good transfer in Austin Nichols, who was one of the best players in the American when he played at Memphis. Nichols will be asked to do a lot, but London Perrantes is UVA’s leader this season. It’s not often you see a frosh class with big pub at Virginia, but Kyle Guy leads the way for a group of newbies who will see plenty of time on the floor.
10. Indiana
The Hoosiers have a tremendous offense, led by Thomas Bryant down low and the return of James Blackmon on the wing. Yogi Ferrell graduated and Troy Williams left early for the draft, but expect Indiana to get pop from OG Anunoby, Juwan Morgan and Collin Hartman, when the latter returns from injury. Will be a fun team on offense again.
11. UCLA
This looks like the most loaded roster on a UCLA squad since Ben Howland was going to Final Fours. Isaac Hamilton is on my short list for super-breakout players. Lonzo Ball is a very good freshman point guard, and he’ll be teamed up with Bryce Alford, who’s been more valuable than people realize over the past two seasons. The Bruins have another fab frosh in T.J. Leaf, and that’s not even accounting for a bump in volume from Thomas Welsh. A complete script-flip for Uckluh this year, as last season’s 15-17 campaign is a distant memory.
12. Wisconsin
Almost everyone is back from a Badgers team that won 22 games and has the Big Ten preseason player of the year in Nigel Hayes. Bronson Koenig will wind up being the team’s most important player, I think, and Ethan Happ is going to establish himself as a top-20 guy in the Big Ten by the time we get to league play. We’re going to be talking about Wisconsin this season as much as just about any team not named Duke, Kentucky, North Carolina or Villanova.
13. Arizona
I am all-in on Arizona’s talent. Sean Miller’s team is young but boy will they be fun to watch grow. Let’s cover the vets first. Kadeem Allen and Dusan Ristic are level-above glue guys. Allonzo Trier will be an All-American candidate, as he’s likely to lead the team in scoring. Lauri Markkanen’s going to be a top-five freshman of impact nationally. Kobi Simmons and Rawle Alkins are five-star frosh as well. If Ray Smith, who sat out last year with an ACL tear, is healthy enough to play 20 minutes per game, then what’s not to like here? Gobs of potential.
14. Saint Mary’s
It’s probably shocking to see the Gaels ranked this high, but the team brings back a starting five that didn’t change once last season. Emmett Naar is the star, but fellow Australian Dane Pineau is a name to know. The Gaels won 29 games with this group. The non-conference schedule is tougher than most years. NCAA tourney or bust, absolutely. Could be a banner year for Randy Bennett. Watch for Evan Fitzne to make big strides in the paint.
15. Gonzaga
Controversy! Gonzaga actually, somehow, ranked behind SMC. Nigel Williams-Goss is eligible to play this season. He’ll probably be very, very good. Another transfer, Missouri’s Johnathan Williams, will also be in the fold. Prezemek Karnowski is back, though he had back issues that nearly threatened his career last season. They’ve got this five-star freshman named Zach Collins who will have some baby-deer legs but should be a nice piece. Plus, Josh Perkins ( if he can avoid off-court trouble), is a top-15 WCC player. On the whole, it looks like one of the three or four most talented rosters Mark Few’s ever had.
16. Louisville
The Cardinals are raw but talented, led by Donovan Mitchell, who will probably be appointment television. Ray Spalding and Deng Adel round out a trio of talents that will be good enough to keep Louisville’s defense active and a true pain the you-know-what for opponents. The school is still under investigation by the NCAA, but chances are last year’s self-imposed postseason ban will suffice, meaning this is a tourney team come March.
17. Texas
We’re aggressively picking Texas higher than most. Wait until you see how good Jarrett Allen is right out of the gate. He’ll be critical to Texas’ chances at contending for second in the Big 12. Kerwin Roach, Jr. should take a big hop in his sophomore year, and Tevin Mack is almost certainly going to have a huge sophomore season. This is a projection on how we think the sport shakes out, so while Texas won’t be a top-20 team in November, by the time Shaka molds these guys in February, we think UT will be contending for a No. 4/5 seed.
18. Rhode Island
It has to be URI’s year. We’ve said that so many times over the past 15 seasons, but this is finally it. Right? Lord help Dan Hurley if it’s not. E.C. Matthews was lost last season to an injury, and Hassan Martin went down in league play. They’re back, the roster is athletic, strong, fast, has shooters, shot-blockers, depth. It’s all there. This looks like the best team in the A-10. Jared Terrell and Jarvis Garrett are bulldogs. IU transfer Stan Robinson is going to be the special ingredient.
19. UConn
Like the Huskies this season because there’s undeniable talent at every position in the starting five, and even the backups are capable of stepping in and playing against pretty good competition. The favorite in the AAC, I think. Jalen Adams is the breakout candidate, while Rodney Purvis, Amida Brimah and Kentan Facey are the vets in position to get UConn back to the NCAAs.
20. Purdue
Caleb Swanigan is back, Vince Edwards is better than most realize, and Isaac Haas should step up and produce the way 7-foot-2 college men do. Spike Albrecht, formerly at Michigan, is a grad transfer here. Guard play should be better on the whole as well. Purdue will have an inside-outside-inside attack thanks to Swanigan almost certainly become all-league caliber.
21. Syracuse
Jim Boeheim believes it’s one of his best rosters ever. Andrew White was a late add-on after White left Nebraska. Cuse will have an elite sophomore and likely 2017 NBA pick in Tyler Lydon, a good senior PF in Tyler Roberson, a Providence transfer addition in Paschal Chukwu. Freshmen Matthew Moyer, Tyus Battle and Taurean Thompson align a bright future for SU. And this is a team that somehow broke through to the Final Four last season. It has a better chance at getting back this year.
22. Cal
An ambitious ranking to be certain. But Ivan Rabb is going to compete with anyone and everyone for Pac-12 player of the year. Cuonzo Martin should have a breakout player in Kam Rooks. Throw in Kingsley Okoroh and its a top-three front line in the conference. Jabari Bird, this has to be your season. Cal being a top-30 team falls on Bird’s shoulders. We think he’s up for it.
23. Creighton
Two studs in Mo Watson, Jr. and Marcus Foster, guys who will compete with each other to be First Team All-Big East. Greg McDermott is going to have a terrific 1-2 attack in the backcourt, and then consider Cole Huff’s presence and Khyri Thomas as a breakout-player special. Bluejays are back.
24. Iowa State
Monte Morris is the pick for Big 12 Player of the Year. He’s so good that we have to include ISU in the top 25. The rest around him is to be determined, though Deonte Burton’s probably going to have a very productive season. Important to note that Naz Mitrou-Long is back as well. The Cyclones continue to be nationally relevant.
25. West Virginia
I love Jevon Carter’s game and expect him to be nearly as important to WVU this year as Morris will be for Iowa State. WVU probably won’t be as good on the boards this year, making their reputation as a grind-it-out team all the more interesting, as they’ll rely more on mercurial but improving Daxter Miles Jr.
26. Wichita State
Markis McDuffie’s health is key, but remember, Landry Shamet steps in to replace Fred VanVleet at point guard. While VanVleet is a Shockers legend, there are things Shamet can do athletically that VanVleet could not. Ultimately, WSU should be OK in the backcourt, as I expect Connor Frankamp to bust out big this season. Shaq Morris down low will be the security blanket Gregg Marshall needs this season.
27. Miami
The Hurricanes have a freshman duo of Bruce Brown and Dewan Huell that will keep this team in the ACC mix. Supplanting the freshmen: Ja’Quan Newton, Kamari Murphy and Davon Reed. The Hurricanes are better than you think, even while losing three really important players.
28. Texas A&M
The SEC is weak again, as it took me until 28 to get to a second team — and I think I’m being a little generous with Texas A&M here. Tyler Davis is basically immovable down low, and D.J. Hogg will probably average 14 points, but overall, the Aggies need to overcome losing four starters and still keep pace with a top-10 defense. A tough ask.
29. Dayton
Archie Miller’s team would’ve been top 25 had four-star recruit Kostas Antetokounmpo been ruled eligible this season. Since he’s not, we’ll sneak the Flyers into the top 30. Charles Cooke is set up to thrive this season. Scoochie Smith is one of the best names in the sport. The defense will be the best in the A-10. Josh Cunningham is the X-factor.
30. Cincinnati
The Bearcats have been consistent and tough as hell under Mick Cronin. This is an NCAA Tournament team again. I’d rank Troy Caupain among the 10 most overlooked players in America right now. Gary Clark is also a guy battling to make our list of the top 100 (and one) players in the sport.
31. Florida State
Dwayne Bacon, Xavier Rathan-Mayes, Jonathan Isaac. Three very good reasons why FSU should break from its malaise and finally play like a good-to-very-good team.
32. NC State
Dennis Smith Jr. is my pick for top point guard in the country by season’s end. Morris will do more at Iowa State, but Smith is the better point guard overall. He’s surrounded with a lot of interesting players this season. I think NC State is way undervalued right now. Abdul-Malik Abu is a top-100 player, Omer Yurtseven should get eligible, and when he does,he’ll be one of the 10 best freshmen in the ACC. Buy on the Wolfpack.
33. Georgetown
The Hoyas should be able to turn around and forget a 15-18 season. Isaac Copeland could be a First Team guy in the Big East, and Jessie Govan’s ready to break out. L.J Peak and Marcus Derrickson are also players oozing with potential.
34. San Diego State
The favorites in the Mountain West yet again. The Aztecs will have the league’s best defense, its deepest roster, its second or third-best player (Trey Kell), the breakout-player special (Zylan Cheatham), the best home-court advantage and a culture of making six of the past seven Big Dances. Last year’s team won 28 games — and did not reach the tournament.
35. Oklahoma
Buddy Hield is gone, but Oklahoma is not an NIT team. Khadeem Lattin is set for a huge year, and Jordan Woodard is still around to keep consistency in the backcourt. Lon Kruger’s team won’t be nearly as good as last season, but don’t sleep on the Sooners.
36. Pittsburgh
Kevin Stallings takes over for Jamie Dixon. The roster is better than you think it is, but we’re going to have an interesting blend of Stallings’ style with Dixon’s players. I’m very torn on if this will be an NCAA Tournament team this season. It should be, but you could say that about a handful of Stallings’ Vandy teams that didn’t play up to par.
37. Florida
Mike White’s team is probably locked in as the No. 3 group in the SEC. Canyon Barry comes in as a transfer, one of the five best in the country, by way of Charleston. Kasey Hill is still running show at the point, and Devin Robinson is going to have a breakout season.
38. Colorado
People tend to underrate Colorado every year. Maybe that’s because it’s not a national program and it doesn’t land top-five seeding in the NCAAs. This should be a top-five Pac-12 team this season, though. Tad Boyle continues to do a great job; I wonder how long it is before he lands an even bigger gig. George King, Josh Fortune and Dominique Collier will shoot the Buffs into the Big Dance.
39. Ohio State
The Buckeyes just need to realize how good they can be. Marc Loving, Keita Bates-Diop, Ja’Quan Lyle, Kam Williams. A solid core four there. Thad Matta cleaned house with some transfers. Expect OSU back in the NCAA Tournament after missing last season.
40. Baylor
The Bears have an all-Big 12 talent in Johnathan Motley. Ish Wainwright can be a blur. The defense is going to be good. The offense is going to falter somewhat. BU will miss Taurean Prince and Rico Gathers.
41. Butler
The Bulldogs will have their struggles and successes this year. Chris Holtmann’s best player is Kelan Martin, someone all college hoops fans should know by January. He’s that important to this team. Tyler Wideman is the sturdy piece in the paint.
42. Maryland
It’s all on Melo Trimble now, isn’t it? The frontline from last season is basically gone, and Trimble’s going to need all the help he can get from Jared Nickens. Let’s see what freshman Kevin Huerter can do, too. Terps are a toss-up team right now.
43. Michigan
The Wolverines bring back necessary pieces — Zak Irvin, Derrick Walton, Duncan Robinson, Muhammad-Ali Abdur-Rahkman — but this team was lost without Caris LeVert relatively often last season. It’s going to be methodical and reliable, but is it an NCAA tourney group? Walton should take a jump, and Duncan Robinson might wind up as one of the biggest offensive threats in the Big Ten.
44. Washington
UW gets this high because Markelle Fultz is that good. It’s not just him, though. Matisse Thybulle is a lean sophomore whose game should blend beautifully with Fultz’s. Lorenzo Romar’s team might be on the bubble all season long, but that would be a step up from last year’s 19-15 group.
45. VCU
Will Wade has a really good lead guard in JeQuan Lewis, an all-league beast in Mo Alie-Cox, and plenty of other help returning from last season (Jordan Burgess, Justin Tillman). The Rams are probably a bubble team this season, but at the same time, I would put them in the mix to win the A-10 regular season given the way their league schedule breaks down.
46. Seton Hall
I’m going to be tentative with Seton Hall because I was that big a fan of Isaiah Whitehead. But I’m almost as big a fan of Angel Delgado. The junior workhorse will become the face of the program this season. I think he’ll average 12 points and 11 boards this season.
47. Oklahoma State
Not a big-time roster, but there is a big-time player in Jawun Evans, who could be a top-three point guard in college hoops this season. Travis Ford is gone and Brad Underwood takes over.
48. Virginia Tech
I’m a little lower on Va. Tech than most, but a bump should absolutely be coming in Buzz Williams’ third season. Zach LeDay is the team’s best overall player, and Seth Allen will be reliable at the point. Chris Clarke will have a breakout season. I doubt this team loses more than two games at home.
49. Marquette
The Golden Eagles need to replace one of the best players in the country, Henry Ellenson, but this is not a roster void of talent. Marquette’s a good on-ball defensive team, and Duane Wilson, JaJuan Johnson, Traci Carter are all back. Luke Fischer is set up to be the team’s best overall player.
50. Texas Tech
Chris Beard returns home to what, truly, is his dream job. But Tubby Smith did wonders last season. Tech was one of the most overachieving teams — maybe the biggest one. Beard took Little Rock to the second round of the NCAA Tournament. He’ll get Tech going in time, but let’s not presume he’ll be taking Tech to the dance again.
51. Valparaiso
I think some could accuse me of pegging Valpo to high because Bryce Drew left for Vanderbilt. In reality, Matt Lottich steps in as a fine replacement. And Alec Peters is back. The Crusaders will almost definitely be the best team in the Horizon. Confident this is in the neighborhood of a top-50 team in college hoops this season.
52. Notre Dame
Mike Brey is the only man with the potion to kill Coach K-led teams. But Notre Dame, which was a second-weekend team last season, will have a big drop this year. At least Steve Vasturia, V.J. Beachem and Bonzie Colson are around. The Irish will pull off a few big wins, but I think they’re an NIT group this year.
53. Utah
Larry Krystkowiak gonna make me look silly, I bet. He’s got another player who I think should find his way to draft night in Kyle Kuzma. He’ll be helped by the combo-guard stylings of Lorenzo Bonam. I don’t put Utah higher, because I wonder about the depth here, the quality of the Pac-12 and a defense that’s probably not going to be keeping most top-100 opponents under 72 points per game.
54. Princeton
The Tigers are fully stocked with a returning group of starters. Henry Caruso is the best player on the team, and if you think I’m overrating Princeton, then be sure to check out just how efficient this group was against the conference last season. No Ivy program has the reliable depth and relative strength 1-7 like Princeton.
55. Kansas State
Bruce Weber has to have a better offensive team this season. So much bulk from the roster returns that I think K-State gets above .500 again this season. The Wildcats were 17-16 at the end of the year.
56. SMU
The Ponies could be better, but let’s just settle here at 56. Larry Brown left the program amid contract disputes over the summer. Tim Jankovich takes over. Shake Milton will compete with UConn’s Jalen Adams as one of the best sophomores in the American. Ben Moore is probably the team’s best player.
57. Illinois State
The Redbirds have duded. Paris Lee, MiKyle McIntosh and Deontae Hawkins are three of the six or seven best players in the Missouri Valley. You have to rank Wichita State as the conference’s best team right now, but it’s very possible Illinois State gets to Arch Madness as the No. 1 seed. The team is destined to be better on both ends of the floor.
58. Georgia
Big J.J. Frazier fan here. And Mark Fox is top two in SEC wins in the past three years. The Bulldogs will be good at home this year, though the SEC is weak, so the league won’t allow them to boost their resume to the level of at-large contender.
59. BYU
Triple-double machine Kyle Collinsworth is gone, but I’m buying on BYU because Eric Mika is back, Nick Emery is going to fill it up, and Kyle Davis is a prime “X-factor” type of player. This should be a top-40 offense in America. Will be a bubble team into late February if it can pick off Gonzaga and SMC at least once apiece.
60. Monmouth
Not a novelty team. Monmouth should be the best of the MAAC this season, and it’s appropriately motivated after being snubbed an at-large berth last March. Justin Robinson is one of those “pound-for-pound best players” kind of guys you hear announcers say. He’s legit. So is this team. Bring on the Hawks, and we’re ready for the bench mob.
61. Vanderbilt
Bryce Drew takes over for Kevin Stallings. Matthew Fisher-Davis will be the star here, and the Commodores still have enough talent left over from last season to be a top-five team in the SEC.1
62. Clemson
Jaron Blossomgame might be a first-round pick in June, but Donte Grantham will have to step up in production in a big way to have Clemson break into the top half of the ACC. Looks a little too tough. Blossomgame is still a top-five player in the ACC, most likely.
63. Nevada
The Wolf Pack have a lot to work with here, and the gap between them and San Diego State might wind up being closer than what I’ve got with my rankings here. Marcus Marshall, a transfer from Missouri State, is primed to have a big year. Cameron Oliver is an NBA prospect. And Eric Musselman is the sharpest tactician in the league.
64. Penn State
I’ll buy your Penn State stock. A really good recruiting class comes in, plus Terence Samuel is eligible via transfer from UConn, and Shep Garner/Payton Banks will be a steady backcourt. Nittany Lions will make noise in the Big Ten.
65. Illinois
Potential abounds here. Gotta stay healthy. Gotta have guys not get suspended. Malcolm Hill is a star. Jalen Coleman-Lands and Tracy Abrams are ready to help right now. This is your upset-the-apple-cart team in the Big Ten.
66. USC
Got into the NCAAs as an 8 seed last year, then lost Julian Jacobs and Nikola Jovanovic — their two best players — to pro dreams. So the Trojans have to take a drop. The good news is Chimezie Metu will step in for Jovanovic and should be a producer. Jordan McLaughlin takes over as lead guard. Questions abound but talent is still here.
67. Harvard
Some think Harvard’s better than Princeton, but I’m not convinced. However, Siyani Chambers is now a senior and back after missing last season to a torn ACL. Zena Edosomwan is a beast down low. Corey Johnson could be a breakout player in the Ivy League. Dangerous team, and if Chambers goes god-mode in conference play, then it gets really interesting.
68. New Mexico
The Lobos have the best player in the Mountain West, Elijah Brown. Tim Williams could be a first-teamer as well. Dangerous team if everything clicks. The intriguing dynamic here is, Cullen Neal — the head coach’s son — transferred to Ole Miss. Fans were relentless with him. Many believe UNM will be better without him. Now we find out.
69. Providence
Friars will have a scorer in Rodney Bullock and a fine replacement at point guard in Kyron Cartwright, but losing Kris Dunn and Ben Bentil seems too much for Ed Cooley to overcome by means of a tourney berth this season.
70. South Carolina
The penultimate undefeated team in college hoops last season (SMU lasted longest) did not make the NCAAs. Sindarius Thornwell and P.J. Dozier will carry a big load for a ‘Cocks team that must learn how to distribute to the post and score in the mid-range.
71. Davidson
Bob McKillop should have a rotation that’s nine deep. Will Magarity from BC should be a transfer with impact. Jack Gibbs is the star and probable A-10 POY. Peyton Aldridge is a clear No. 2. There’s this guard, Jon Axel Gudmundsson, who could be the surprise player in the league.
72. Houston
A 22-win team last season that played the 333rd-toughest non-con schedule. Kelvin Sampson will up the challenges this year. Damyeon Dotson, formerly at Oregon, will be a big player for the Cougars this season. Rob Gray Jr. will threaten to put up 14-16 per game.
73. Long Beach State
The Beach should be the Big West’s best this season. Dan Monson hasn’t had a squad this good in five years. Justin Bibbins is set up to have a fantastic, all-league season. Evan Payne, a transfer from Loyola Marymount, should pay dividends right away.
74. Arkansas
Moses Kingsley is one heck of a name for one heck of a player. He’s not alone. Mike Anderson has underwhelmed at Arkansas, but this season the Hogs will be dangerous on given nights because Kingsley has senior shooting guards Dusty Hannahs and Manuale Watkins spacing the floor. Should be a team that wins 20 games.
75. Temple
Fran Dunphy’s team will be young but have some nice pieces coming in. Ultimately, how good can Obi Enechionyia be down low, and are questions about Josh Brown’s health going to linger into the season?
76. Middle Tennessee
Giddy Potts is a name to know. The Blue Raiders were the darlings of the 2016 NCAA Tournament, and Potts was the best 3-pointer shooter in the nation last season. Reggie Upshaw is also back for this team. I’m high on Middle. It’s just such a well-rounded team.
77. Oregon State
I was probably the biggest Gary Payton II fan that was not related to GP2 or connected to the Beavers. He’s gone now, and I don’t know if Tres Tinkle and Stephen Thompson are ready to take on a really good top half of the Pac-12. Wayne Tinkle, go ahead and prove me wrong. At least this program is moving forward and has optimism like it hasn’t seen in a decade-plus.
78. Akron
The Zips appear to be the best of the MAC this season. A 26-win team from a season ago that brings back a lot, including dynamo Antino Jackson. Isaiah Johnson could grow into the best big man in the conference.
79. Alabama
The Crimson Tide outperformed all expectations from outside the program in Avery Johnson’s first season, going 18-15. Johnson son, Avery Johnson Jr., is added to the roster this season. Memphis transfer Nick King is also here. Dazon Ingram returns after an injury took him out most of last season. Good pieces, just wondering how Johnson gets them to fit into an NCAA Tournament-level team.
80. Belmont
I’m stumping for Rick Byrd again. Belmont should have the best team in the Ohio Valley. Evan Bradds will be a leading candidate for league player of the year — considering he won the award last season. The Bruins have size, efficiency on offense and consistency on the roster.
81. Arizona State
Bobby Hurley will need two more years to turn ASU into a top-50 program. The Sun Devils are unproven up front. Tra Holder is the go-guy. The Curtain of Distraction is one of the best sights in college hoops.
82. Northern Iowa
Ben Jacobson has a top-100 team almost every single year. Yes, Wes Washpun is gone, and so is Paul Jesperson ( the dude who hit one of the most amazing shots in NCAA tourney history), but In Ben I Trust. Jeremy Morgan, your time has arrived. I wonder how the guys returning on this team use that all-time, historic collapse against Texas A&M as rally fuel for the season ahead.
83. Memphis
Tubby Smith takes over here after being lured away from Lubbock, Texas, after Josh Pastner took the Georgia Tech gig. Memphis lost games it shouldn’t have under Pastner. Memphis will win games it shouldn’t under Smith. Dedric Lawson could become the best player in the American. The Tigers will also play much slower under Smith than Pastner.
84. Oakland
Greg Kampe is one of the best at cultivating pros and college standouts on an almost annual basis. Kay Felder unfortunately left for the pros, which puts the Grizzlies at No. 2 in the Horizon. Side note: The NCAA did the right thing and ruled favorably on Oakland’s appeal to make Army war veteran Isiah Brock eligible to play college basketball.
85. Iowa
If Peter Jok hadn’t opted to return, this would not be a top-100 team. Iowa is going to be low on offense overall, and its backcourt is baby-faced.
86. Northwestern
Bryant McIntosh’s moment has seemingly arrived, as Northwestern is on a PR push to get the starting point guard’s name and face out there. Hey, he’s definitely a top-15 PG heading into this season. It will be a year heavy on good point guards, too.
87. Stanford
Jerod Haase takes over. He gets Reid Travis, who will be the key to getting the Cardinal above .500 in Haase’s first year. Stanford needs shooting and long-distance threats in a bad way.
88. UAB
I’m probably lower on UAB than most, but I think Jerrod Haase (one spots above) moving to a new job puts this team back a little bit. Rob Ehsan is now the coach. The Blazers could actually help C-USA be a two-bid league if they can do damage with their schedule. Chris Cokley and William Lee should help fortify the league’s best frontcourt.
89. Mississippi State
Malik Newman bailed after a year here, opting to play at Kansas. Your name to know is Quinndary Weatherspoon, who is the most underrated player in the SEC. More recruits on the way here. I’m going to “hold” on my Howland stock here until I see dividends pay off, though. Some think this is a top-50 team in the country. I can’t be that aggressive yet.
90. St. Bonaventure
The Bonnies were robbed of an NCAA Tournament showing last season. They finished 14-4 in the league. They’ll be a threat to make noise in the A-10 tourney in March. Jaylen Adams should have a great year. I’m forced to drip BONA a little here because Marcus Posley’s graduation will leave a mark the team can’t fully fill this season.
91. Vermont
By far the best team in the America East, the Catamounts bring back almost everyone from a team that went 23-14 and had the league’s best offense and most reliable shooters. John Becker is trying to make his second NCAA Tournament appearance with UVM.
92. Fort Wayne
No longer referred to as “IPFW.” The Mastodons appear to be the class of the Summit League this season. I have them among my list of 10 Cinderella candidates come the NCAA Tournament.
93. Chattanooga
Matt McCall has got a tremendous roster here. Four starters are back, including Casey Jones, maybe the team’s best all-around player. Jones missed most of last season to an ankle injury. The Mocs won 29 games last season anyway. Justin Tuoyo and Tre’ McLean are also back, and the aforementioned three players might ranked in the top five in the SoCon. Dangerous team.
94. UT-Arlington
Should be the Sun Belt’s best team. Kevin Hervey, who should be the league’s best player, is expected to be at full strength in time for the start of the season. Hervey is getting looks from NBA scouts. Erick Neal is also one of the five best players in the conference. This was a 24-11 team a season ago.
95. Auburn
Bruce Pearl is going to have the Tigers roaring in a year, but this team is going to stall a bit thanks to losing Cinmeon Bowers and Tyler Harris. Mustapha Heron will be a top-25 freshmen this year in terms of stats produced and value to his team.
96. UNC Wilmington
The best team in the CAA this season. What a turnaround for this program, which ranked at the bottom of the league just two years ago. That’s Kevin Keatts’ coaching, recruiting and ability to bring in impact transfers. Chris Flemmings will star and be all-league.
97. Siena
Will be one of the surprise teams this season, the kind of club I think has a good chance to pick off one or two major-conference teams in November/December. Brett Bisping is legit and the starting five returns. The MAAC is poised to be very good at the top again.
98. Winthrop
The diminutive Keon Johnson and the powerful Xavier Cooks could both be All-Big South players for the best team in the league. Pat Kelsey should finally break through and make his first NCAA Tournament.
99. George Washington
It’s unlike any other team due to Mike Lonergan’s firing. That happened in September, which you almost never see in college basketball. Now a young interim takes control. Maurice Joseph, all of 31, will try to keep the locker room together. GW has a top-60 player in college hoops, Tyler Cavanaugh.
100. LSU
Is this now Antonio Blakeney’s team, and is that a good thing? LSU was a mystery no one could turn away form last season, and now the Tigers hand the reins to Blakeney, a sophomore with a lot of potential but a habit of taking bad shots. Ben Simmons, Tim Quarterman and Keith Hornsby are gone. Craig Victor should be pivotal. It is not lost on me how ironic it would be if LSU was better this year, but I’m gonna say it won’t be. Simmons was amazing and the team did win 19 games last year.
101. Wake Forest
Will Danny Manning figure it out this season? Bryant Crawford is getting real looks from NBA scouts, but the ACC is so loaded that Wake has almost no chance of breaking through the top eight teams in the league. This was an 11-20 group last season that still has to grow into its clothing, if you will.
102. Iona
I can’t put the Gaels lower than this, in part because I trust Tim Cluess’ gorgeous offense too much. A.J. English, an NBA prospect, is gone, but Iona reloads annually. Biblically named Schadrac Casimir is going to be the comeback player in the league.
103. Tennessee
Rick Barnes loses an unexpected star in Kevin Punter and Armani Moore’s graduation means I can’t vault UT higher than this. Those guys were really good for a 15-19 team. A very good young corps here, though. Should be a top-75 team a year from now.
104. Green Bay
Linc Darner’s got a scheme going that is a lot of fun. He coaches the fastest offense in the league without totally sacrificing defense. The Phoenix lose a couple of important pieces but so many others return. Won’t be the Horizon favorite but will again be a threat to poach the auto bid, which is what happened last season.
105. Yale
The Bulldogs finally made an NCAA Tournament last season, doing so for the first time since the early 1960s. But Justin Sears, Brandon Sherrod and Jack Montague are gone. Makai Mason is a top-100 player in the game, though. Yale’s capable of taking the Ivy auto bid now that the league has (foolishly) gone to a four-team conference playoff format.
106. UC Irvine
Russell Turner has a solid defensive squad returning, even if Mamadou N’Diaye (all 7 feet and 6 inches of him) is no longer on the squad. Expect a huge year from lead guard Luke Nelson, and a moment to shine for 7-foot-2 Ioannis Dimakopoulos.
107. Nebraska
Tim Miles is going to have a team that’s good in the passing lanes and should have a reliable point guard in Louisville transfer Anton Gill. Losing Andrew White to Syracuse is a devastating blow.
108. Ole Miss
Andy Kennedy’s team loses Stefan Moody and in the process loses one of the most entertaining players in the sport. There’s hope and revival in Oxford, as new facilities have the program feeling a charge. I don’t see this team having the defense to stop top-five SEC competition, however.
109. Grand Canyon
I might have the Lopes too low. This team should be the clear-cut best in the WAC.
110. UCF
Johnny Dawkins was fired at Stanford, but he takes over here for the fired Donnie Jones. This is the team with the 7-foot-6 guy with the funny name (Tacko Fall). A.J. Davis also up front makes this team one of the tougher scouts in the AAC.
111. TCU
Jamie Dixon takes over at his alma mater. This was a 12-21 team last season. The offense was a puddle of muck. Malique Trent should be the standout, but this will take some time.
112. Murray State
Bryce Jones is a player that should make any OVC coach’s top-five list for all-league. He could pop to 16 ppg. The Racers have a very good coach in Matt McMahon.
113. Richmond
T.J. Cline is the goods. Richmond had the worst defense in the Chris Mooney era last season, but if the Spiders can shore that up, and Cline plays at an all-league level, they could sneak into the NCAAs.
114. Little Rock
Wes Flanigan takes over the program. Josh Hagins — who was an awesome college player — is gone. Roger Woods, a big-time asset, is also gone. But this team should start five seniors. Plenty of experience left.
115. Ohio
Better call Saul. Saul Phillips is one of the funniest coaches in the game (definitely funnier than Tim Miles), but it doesn’t overshadow his ability to coach and coach with perspective. The Bobcats have Antonio Campbell to lead the way.
116. Old Dominion
Jeff Jones coaches one of the slowest offenses in the country. The Monarchs will be in the mix near the top of the conference, but they’ll have to overcome losing Trey Freeman, who was the most valuable all-around player for this team last season in C-USA.
117. Santa Clara
Herb Sendek takes over for Kerry Keating — and this is a roster Keating built to truly threaten Gonzaga, Saint Mary’s and BYU. Jared Brownridge needs to keep getting a green light. He might average 24 a game this season and threaten to win WCC POY. He’ll probably get four boards and almost three dimes per game, too. If the defense improves, then this is your WCC sleeper.
118. Minnesota
I’ll go aggressive on Minnesota here. This was an 8-23 team last season, but Amir Coffey will have pop right away and the team is not going to have the same offensive issues from last year. It’s not an NIT team still, but it’s going to be markedly better. Nate Mason, junior guard, is going to have a breakout year.
119. Saint Joseph’s
I look around the A-10 and I see a league that vexes me. I wouldn’t/couldn’t fault you if you wanted to slot Phil Martelli’s team closer to 180, considering DeAndre Bembry and Isaiah Miles have left, but the young guys got enough reps last year to keep the Hawks around .500 in league play this season. It could come down to Shavar Newkirk’s shooting consistency.
120. East Tennessee State
Steve Forbes is about to unleash a lot of talent on the SoCon. I’m bullish on this team because Forbes brings in Tevin Glass from Wichita State, Hanner Mosquera-Perea from Indiana, and T.J. Cromer’s already a stud at the mid-major level.
121. Boise State
A lot of people are selling Leon Rice’s team this season, but I’m not expecting the Broncos to be considerably worse than last year’s 20-12 team. Nick Duncan is very good. BSU oozes offense. It won’t be an at-large candidate, but it will be a sleeper team to steal the Mountain West auto bid.
122. St. John’s
Shamorie Ponds, a four-star freshman right out of New York City, will fill it up for a Johnnies team that has plenty of room to grow from last season’s poor start in Chris Mullin’s first year. Expect another shot-block fest for St. John’s, as Kassoum Yakwe and Yankuba Sima will be a joy to watch.
123. Fresno State
It’s not often that teams like Fresno State land top-125 players, but that’s what the Bulldogs have on the roster this season in William McDowell. This team made the NCAAs last season. It did so for two simple reasons: No team turned the ball over less in the MWC than Fresno State, and no team stole the ball more frequently than Fresno State. Losing Marvelle Harris presents a big void, but this is still a top-five team in the MW.
124. Georgia State
I would be shocked if Georgia State didn’t win 20 this season. It went 16-14 a year ago, has Indiana transfer Jeremy Hollowell ready to step in and perform, and five of the six biggest volume production guys are back on the roster. College hoops can always use more Ron Hunter. Yes, the Sun Belt is good enough at the top to have three teams in the top 125 in college hoops.
125. Loyola (IL)
Milton Doyle is an all-league talent. I’m taking a leap here and putting Porter Moser’s team this high, making him the coach of the year in the Valley and getting the program closer to what it was two years ago when it finished 24-13. Doyle should be tremendous this season if he avoids further injury.
126. Marshall
Will be well-oiled and capable of scoring with any team in C-USA. Jon Elmore and Ryan Taylor will compete with each other to lead the team in scoring.
127. Manhattan
The Jaspers (I do love that nickname) should have a good season after a 13-18 campaign derailed by injuries. Steve Masiello has averaged 18 wins per season in five years at Manhattan.
128. Weber State
Randy Rahe should have the Big Sky’s best overall team this season — even after losing Joel Bolomboy to the NBA. Jeremy Senglin is now set to star in Ogden. The Wildcats are another team I have listed as a prime Cinderella candidate.
129. North Dakota State
Paul Miller should star for the Bison in Dave Richman’s third season in Fargo. NDSU will be Fort Wayne’s top competition in the Summit League. Offense must improve.
130. Sam Houston State
Absolutely will be a threat to take the Southland title from Stephen F. Austin. Aurimas Majauskas and Dakarai Henderson will pace Jason Hooten’s squad. Between points and assists, they’ll combine for 35-40 percent of the Bearkats’ scoring.
131. DePaul
The Blue Demons need to keep playing with the responsible nature they grew into near the end of last season. I expect baby steps this season. Billy Garrett Jr. is a top-10 Big East player, without question. Would love to see him have a few dominating games in what will be a challenging year to even reach the NIT for DePaul.
132. Morehead State
This team went 23-14 last season and appears to be the threat to Belmont in the OVC for the campaign ahead. To beat the likes of Belmont you’ll need four-year players and 3-point shooting. Morehead State has both — and it’s really good at crashing the glass.
133. La Salle
Shoutout to fellow Chicago Bears fan, John Giannini. His Explorers are expected to pop this season. Jordan Price is one of the best players in the A-10, and then you’ve got Pookie Powell (via Memphis), Demetrius Henry (via South Carolina) and B.J. Johnson (via Syracuse). I’m playing it conservative by putting La Salle here, which is a 133-spot jump from where it landed at the end of the season in KenPom.
134. Louisiana Tech
The loss of Alex Hamilton is something La. Tech won’t be able to replace with just one player this season. Miami transfer Omar Sherman will have to step in and produce to keep the Bulldogs in the thick of Conference USA’s race.
135. Cal State Bakersfield
The Roadrunners might have a backcourt that grows into the best in the WAC by the time we get to February. Bakersfield takes care of the ball and has a fun point guard in Dedrick Basile.
136. Loyola Marymount
An influx of transfers should bump LMU up considerably, especially when you take into account this is Mike Dunlap’s third season, and he’s gone from eight to 14 wins. They’ll flirt with 20 Ws in 2016-17. Brandon Brown is a top-10 WCC player.
137. Washington State
Ernie Kent’s Cougars got off to a solid start in conference play last year, going 1-1! Then WSU lost 17 straight to end the season at 9-22. But this is unquestionably going to be a better team this season. A trunkload of seniors return. Fifteen wins is doable.
138. Western Kentucky
I’m going to pump the brakes just a bit on WKU here. This is a team that will probably be in the top 60 next year, but Rick Stansbury takes over the program and there’s work to be done. It will be a factor in C-USA, but I doubt it threatens to steal a bid. Justin Johnson is the name to know.
139. Albany
The Great Danes should be terrific on the boards and will probably be the only team to threaten Vermont in the America East. Question is, who becomes to the go-to guy?
140. South Dakota State
Fear the Ears. The Jackrabbits lost longtime coach Scott Nagy to Wright State (Nagy was overdue for a promotion), and now T.J. Otzelberger steps in with a team that features the best player in the conference — and he’s just a sophomore. Mike Daum has come out of nowhere to become one of the best 120-or-so players in the country.
141. East Carolina
Caleb White, B.J. Tyson, Kentrell Barkley. That’s the three-headed apparatus that needs to get East Carolina out of the dregs and competing in the American. This program is in need of a jolt in the worst way. I think it improves from last year’s 12-20 mark, absolutely.
142. Missouri State
Make foul shots and guard the 3-point line. Mo State was the worst Valley team in both aspects last season. If Paul Lusk can flip a switch and get his team to defend the perimeter and hit 72 percent (up from 68) of its foul shots, then this can be the dark horse in the conference. Probably a top-three MVC team a year from now.
143. Utah State
Jalen Moore is aces. He’ll lead the Aggies, who have the second-best home-court advantage in the Mountain West to SDSU. USU was 7-11 in league play last season — I think the record will be flipped in 2016-17.
144. Rice
The Owls are going to make moves this season because A) Mike Rhoades is a very good coach and B) Marcus Evans will be a top-15 point guard in the country by the time we get to February. I think Rice finishes in the top half of C-USA.
145. William & Mary
Would think we’ll be in for a lot of 81-77 games with Bill+Mary this season. Omar Prewitt is the name to know for the Tribe, a group that will be fun to watch and threaten to win the auto bid in the CAA.
146. Northern Illinois
The Huskies were a 21-win team last season, and yeah, fairly anonymous. They should be in the mix and a threat to steal a bid in the MAC tournament. Name to know: Marin Maric, who sounds like the alternative identity of a Marvel underground superhero.
147. Tennessee State
Tahjere McCall is the best defensive player in the Ohio Valley. TSU won 20 games last season and will be a top-three team in the conference in 2016-17. Wayne Martin is another name to know. Young Dana Ford is setting himself up to thrive in Nashville.
148. UC Santa Barbara
The Big West had four teams in KenPom’s top 105 by the end of last season, so putting No. 4 in the league as low as 148 could be a missed throw on my part. The Gauchos should be top-two in the conference on D and respectable from deep. Gabe Vincent will be an all-league player.
149. Ball State
I expect Ball State to tussle with Northern Illinois in the West division of the MAC. Losing Bo Calhoun could be the piece that prevents the Cardinals from repeating as division champs. I do like the way this team plays with method but doesn’t totally grind out in boring fashion.
150. Pepperdine
The Waves lose Stacy Davis, and that’s a big blow. Jett Raines is also out. Can PG Jeremy Major be a huge factor? We’ll see. Expect positive gain from Lamond Murray, too.
151. Tulsa
The shocking at-large selection from last year’s NCAA Tournament. Frank Haith has to start all over with this roster, so it’s going to be a rebuilding year. Most believe this team is bottom-four in the AAC for 2016-17.
152. Illinois-Chicago
The biggest jump of any team on the list. This was a 5-25 team last season. How do I justify putting it in the top half of the rankings? Dikembe Dixson and Tai Odiase are both tremendous, the flames will have excellent freshmen coming in, and the offense is going to be an absolute jolt. You gotta have fun with these rankings and not be so predictable with everything. UIC is a team with plenty of potential, so let’s throw a dart here.
153. Fairfield
The Stags have a solid coach in Sydney Johnson, and now the program is on the upswing again. They can and will push the pace. Tyler Nelson is an overlooked gem by everyone but the coaches who scout FU.
154. Mercer
Bob Hoffman’s team lost a player to murder last season. A very strange, sad case. Stephon Jelks could be a SoCon First Team guy in 2016-17.
155. Hofstra
Rokas Gustys is a hoss. Juan’ya Green is gone, though. The Pride have a good coach in Joe Mihalich, but the offense is sure to take a tick down this season. Brian Bernardi will need to be a breakout player.
156. Fordham
Jeff Neubauer took a program that averaged less than nine wins per year in five years under Tom Pecora and produced a 17-14 team in his first year with the Rams. They’ll be better this year, too. Joseph Chartouny is one of the really good second-year players in the A-10.
157. Stephen F. Austin
Former Texas A&M assistant Kyle Keller takes over due to Brad Underwood signing on at Oklahoma State. Underwood tied Brad Stevens for the best start to a head-coaching career in D-I history. Keller has a nice roster, but this team is not going to be what it was the past three seasons. The most important player, Thomas Walkup, has graduated.
158. Coastal Carolina
If you missed it (as most did), the Chanticleers have moved from the Big South to the Sun Belt. Elijah Wilson should be the alpha dog.
159. Lehigh
Brett Reed hasn’t made the NCAAs since C.J. McCollum was on his roster, back in 2012, but this team should be the best in the Patriot League this season. It went 13-5 last year, and it brings back Tim Kempton (17 PPG) and three other key starters. Should be a 20-win team.
160. Liberty
The Flames will have a shot at being No. 2 in the Big South thanks in large part to John Dawson. Plenty of talent returns, and this is the toughest scout in the conference. Very good defense for a mid-major club.
161. UMass
I’m pegging the Minutemen as the surprise team in the Atlantic 10. I’ve talked to folks who think this is a bottom-three team, but I don’t see it. A strong freshmen class bolstered by good defense and a terrific junior, Donte Clark. UMass went 14-18 last season. I think this is an above-.500 group in 2016-17.
162. Missouri
Still dark days at Mizzou. Kim Anderson is trying as best he can, but this team is still so young. One could argue a 162nd ranking is optimistic. I do think the team will be relatively tough at home this season. Five league wins is attainable.
163. New Mexico State
With Marvin Menzies taking the UNLV job, I have to drop NMSU down a considerable amount. New coach Paul Weir will have big shoes to fill, as NMSU was the class of the WAC for most of Menzies’ tenure.
164. Buffalo
The Bulls can move, and their personnel fits Nate Oats’ scheme very well. I don’t think the team has top-four talent in the MAC, but it’s going to outwork teams to a batch of wins.
165. Penn
A young team that will play above its talent level thanks to Steve Donahue. The Quakers are two years away from trading blows with Harvard at the top of the conference.
166. Montana
Once again, the Grizzlies are respected and a threat to take down a Big Sky title. Be on the lookout for Ahmaad Rorie, a transfer from Oregon who could pop. Travis DeCuire has the most dynamic platoon of guards in the conference.
167. Wright State
The firing of Billy Donlon still doesn’t sit well with me. He deserved better. But here we are, a Wright State team with 22-win talent a year ago. Scott Nagy is now the coach, and I trust he’ll keep this program consistently in the top four of the Horizon.
168. Florida Gulf Coast
The top of the Atlantic Sun is a coin flip between Dunk City and North Florida. I lean with Joe Dooley’s team. There’s a lot of talent back, the team has swagger, and it’s bringing in some quality talent by way of the transfer wire. I’ve got FGCU finishing the season with 23 wins.
169. Southern Illinois
Brings back three starters on a 22-win team that was dangerous yet streaky in Missouri Valley play last season. Tweener forward Sean O’Brien is the Salukis’ best player.
170. UTEP
The Artis and the Omega. Dominic Artis and Omega Harris will lead Tim Floyd’s fast-paced team. Rebounding, rebounding, rebounding.
171. New Hampshire
The Wildcats won 20 games last season, and can do that again, but it’s hard to suddenly find a lot of offense when you’ve got everyone coming back from a team that struggled to score in the mid-range. Will be a top-three team in the America East, though.
172. Colorado State
Gian Clavell is one of the oldest players in college basketball. He’s a sixth-year guy who will be the leader of CSU’s offense. And if you’re going to root for any player in college basketball, root for Emmanuel Omogbo.
173. Georgia Southern
Tookie Brown is one of the best players in the Sun Belt. He’ll need an unreal year in order to lift Mark Byington’s team into the top two in the conference.
174. North Florida
UNF has a stud in Dallas Moore, who could be the league’s POY. He’s getting real NBA looks, which is something you can say about A-Sun players only so often. VERY fun player. But the Ospreys lose just enough from last year’s team that I’m slotting them ever so slightly below the reigning league champs, Florida Gulf Coast.
175. North Texas
One of the real mystery teams to me. I’d say it could finish anywhere from fourth to 10th in Conference USA this season. The defense is sure to improve. Jeremy Combs will be the standout.
176. Fairleigh Dickinson
This group, led by the charming coach, Greg Herenda, made a stunning push to the NCAAs last season. And it was a young team. Everybody’s back. Mike Holloway, you’re good. They should maintain their course and be a top-two team in the NEC.
177. UNLV
Marvin Menzies fell into this job after Chris Beard accepted, then left, for Texas Tech. I might be ranking the Runnin’ Rebels too high. The roster is void of anything resembling what UNLV should have. Menzies will be rubbing sticks together to make fire this season, but he should be able to recruit top-50 classes to Sin City within two years.
178. Towson
Pat Skerry knows this team has a lot of promise. They’re big and bruising, and probably will be the least-fun team to play in the CAA. I might have the Tigers ranked too low.
179. Charlotte
Young, fun, but very prone to letting other teams fill it up. Mark Price needs a couple more years to get the 49ers in position to reclaim mojo from the glory days of the 1990s.
180. Eastern Kentucky
Nick Mayo is the most talented player in the Ohio Valley. He’s only a sophomore. EKU needs another year before it can make a run at the top of the standings, but I’d rank this team now as something between a threat and a sleeper.
181. South Alabama
Ken Williams will have a chance to bust through and be a Sun Belt first-teamer. South Alabama went 14-19 a year ago. I think it’s got a good chance of flipping that record this season.
182. Detroit
Ray McCallum is out and former Michigan assistant Bacari Alexander is in. Paris Bass is gone, and that’s a huge player to replace. Chris Jenkins should be the alpha.
183. St. Peter’s
The Peacocks! The program has been faithful to John Dunne, who enters his 11th season here. It should be the third time Dunne’s coached a team above. 500. Antwon Portley is a stud, and Quadir Welton can bang with anyone in the league.
184. Bucknell
The Bison won the Patriot League last season, then got upended in OT by No. 8 Holy Cross in the conference tournament, which stunned its way to the NCAAs. Nathan Davis is now in his second year as coach, and he’ll find winning this conference to be tough as Lehigh and Boston should be ready to take their jabs. This team’s got a guy named Nana Foulland who is pretty good.
185. Wofford
Shooting guard Fletcher Magee will be the standout for a Wofford team you can count on to be better defensively and finish above .500. Magee was the No. 2 free throw shooter in D-I last year (94.3 percent) and top-10 from 3-point range.
186. Wagner
Probably the best squad in the Northeast Conference. Bashir Mason is one of the best young coaches in mid-major basketball, and if the Seahawks make the NCAAs this year, he’s got to get a bigger job. Name to know: junior shooting specialist, Corey Henson.
187. Air Force
The Falcons play a style that’s a tough scout, but they’re unlikely to have the size and depth to keep up with the top of the Mountain West. C.J. Siples is a Mountain West breakout player.
188. Cal State Northridge
Reggie Theus in year No. 4 at Northridge. The Matadors get it done down low. No program has taken fewer 3-pointers over the past three seasons than C-SUN. That will continue this season, as Theus’ team has a solid front line and five key guys returning, the most important maybe being sophomore shooting guard Michael Warren.
189. Nebraska-Omaha
The Mavericks have the best thief in college basketball. Tra-Deon Hollins led the nation in steals last season (4.0 per game). Unfortunately the rest of the team isn’t nearly as his level as a defender, though I expect Derrin Hansen’s team to be improved on that end of the floor this season.
190. Indiana State
Greg Lansing made the NCAAs in his first season at ISU, in 2010-11, but the Sycs have been chasing the top half of the conference most seasons since. It’s likely that Larry Bird’s alma mater finishes in the bottom half of the Valley again. Brenton Scott is the best MVC player you don’t know about.
191. Columbia
The Lions had the personnel last season to steal the Ivy title, but it never truly came together. Jim Engles has built more from less. I’m putting the over/under on Engles finishing top two in the Ivy in the next five seasons at 1.5 — and taking the over. Right now, it’s a question of who steps up to be a go-to guy for Columbia.
192. Central Michigan
Ranked No. 158 in KenPom last season. CMU will probably take a dip because it was the best team in the country at not turning the ball over last season, but loses guard Rayshawn Simmons, who was a big part of the offense and distribution therein.
193. Texas Southern
Few teams look to be as clear-cut a top team in their respective league as Texas Southern in the SWAC. Derrick Griffin is the stud here, and Mike Davis’ team should be the class of the conference on D.
194. Portland
Terry Porter, a beloved local basketball figure due to his career with the Trail Blazers, takes over the Pilots’ program after a nice, decade-long run by Eric Reveno. Reveno never got Portland into the tourney, but all told, he did a solid job. Now the Pilots will rely on senior do-it-all point guard Alec Wintering.
195. UNC Asheville
Nick McDevitt’s a good young coach. He took this program to the 2016 NCAAs. But Asheville continues to lose talented guys via transfer to bigger programs. Dylan Smith left for Arizona and Dwayne Sutton bolted for Louisville. Had those guys returned, Asheville would have been a borderline top-100 team.
196. Boston College
Jim Christian failed to coach his team to a single win in the ACC last season. This is a faith pick. The Eagles have hopefully grown into a more well-rounded team that’s capable of moving the ball and finding some semblance of an offense. It has to be better this year.
197. Kennesaw State
Kendrick Ray is the sleeper pick for A-Sun player of the year. He’s going to threaten to score more than 20 points per game. The Owls should be able to continue as the league’s best team at shooting and defending the 3, on the whole.
198. Duquesne
Love Jim Ferry’s offense. The Dukes were 17-17 last season, went 6-12 in the league and ranked 156 in KenPom. I have to drop the Dukes here because Micah Mason, one of the best shooters in program history, is gone, and so is heady PG Derrick Colter.
199. McNeese State
Jamaya Burr will be the go-to guy for a Cowboys club that’s a sleeper in the Southland. The defense HAS to get better, but I will note this club played the third-hardest non-conference schedule in America last season. It was better than its 9-20 mark suggested.
200. Evansville
The Purple Aces are destined to take a drop with the departures of D.J. Balentine and Egidijus Mockevicius. Both of those guys are 10-year overseas pros. Jaylon Brown now has to step in and be the guy.
201. Idaho
The Vandals! Plenty of balance here and six important players return for a team that’s a dark horse to steal the Big Sky auto bid.
202. UNC Greensboro
Wes Miller’s team has a lot coming back. I’d love to see Francis Alonso, a sophomore, expand his game further. Will probably be a top-150 team next year if Miller doesn’t lose players to transfer.
203. UT Martin
Tied with Murray State in the OVC West a season ago. But it should be a rebuild to an extent here, as the team lost its three best players.
204. High Point
The Panthers will take a step back, as they lose the best player in the league, John Brown. And when Brown wasn’t able to play for High Point throughout his career, Scott Cherry’s team was markedly different. It could not beat top-150 competition without him. Plus, three other starters are gone, too. Miles Bowman Jr. might be the new heavy usage player.
205. Boston University
Joe Jones brings back a lot to a team that was 19-15 a year ago. Eric Fanning a dark horse pick for Patriot League’s best.
206. Troy
Remember DeVon Walker at Florida? He’s now with Troy. He’ll be one of the best players in the conference if things fall together just right. This team finished 282nd in KenPom last season, so a substantial jump here for a group with so much coming back and an offense I project to be in the top half of the league.
207. Charleston
A 17-14 team last season that loses Canyon Barry to Florida — so that hurts — and also is tough to pinpoint based on the injury issues it went through. I think Earl Grant wins a league title or two at Charleston in the next five years, but this season seems like it will hover around the .500 mark.
208. Rider
The slowest team — with the best blocking percentage — in MAAC play last season. Rider has not made the NCAAs since 1994.
209. James Madison
Matt Brady: Out. Louis Rowe: In. The Dukes have a lot coming back from a 21-win team, but losing Ronald Curry will leave a big dent.
210. Campbell
The Camels are one of my picks to make a surge this season. Chris Clemons might average 20 points, and the defense is a lock to get better.
211. South Florida
The Bulls are a program in some flux right now, as the program is under investigation for academic fraud. The coach’s brother, an assistant, resigned. Talent-wise, Jahmal McMurray will probably lead the team in scoring and put up more than 230 3-point attempts this season.
212. Dartmouth
Has anyone ever been higher on an Ivy League program with a new coach than me? Dartmouth brings in David McLaughlin. Gimme the Big Green to improve from 4-10 to 6-8 in the Ivy this season.
213. Kent State
Jimmy Hall is going to be the leader for a Golden Flashes team that looks mercurial. The MAC in general is mercurial. Kent State’s window of wins this season could be as low as 13 and as high as 22.
214. Stony Brook
The program made its first NCAA Tournament last season, but that prompted Steve Pikiell to take the Rutgers job. And Jameel Warney, the best player in program history, has graduated. New coach Jeff Boals, a longtime assistant with Ohio State, inherits a top-four roster in the America East.
215. Holy Cross
Still can’t get over me asking every coach in last year’s NCAA Tournament what their favorite musical artist and/or band was … and Bill Carmody picked Bach.
216. UC Davis
Jim Les’ Aggies were just horrendous on offense last season, one of the worst teams with the ball in the nation. All defense for this team, and it’s probably going to follow a similar theme this season. I expect the D to be a little better on the whole.
217. Cornell
Bill Courtney could never get as much momentum as I thought he would at Cornell, but he did recruit a stud in Matt Morgan, and the sophomore will make Brian Earl’s first season a lot easier than it otherwise would be. Morgan’s a ridiculously good player. He’ll average north of 20 points this season if Earl runs the offense through him.
218. Georgia Tech
It’s entirely possible I’m listing Tech too high. Josh Pastner does not have a roster he can work a lot with right now. He’ll need at least two years to recruit and rebuild, and he’s hired a very solid staff. But it’s going to be a long year for the Bees.
219. North Dakota
Will be the fourth- or fifth-best team in the Big Sky. But whatever. I’m still bothered by the fact that UND settled on “Fighting Hawks” as its nickname after bailing on “Fighting Sioux.” You had NoDaks, Roughriders, Sundogs and North Stars there for the taking … and went with the worst moniker of the bunch.
220. Furman
Did not lose a game at home in league play last season. Four starters are back, but Stephen Croone — best player in the SoCon throughout the year — is gone. Devin Sibley is the team’s best player. Kris Acox played with Iceland’s national team over the summer — he could blossom in his final year.
221. Texas A&M-Corpus Christi
One of those programs that should be better year by year than it is given its location. You ever been to Corpus Christi? It’s a step removed from recruiting at a Florida Gulf Coast or Pepperdine. (OK, nothing is Pepperdine.) The Islanders made the Southland tourney final last year — they can get back in 2017.
222. Louisiana-Lafayette
Shawn Long — one of the best players in conference history — leaves, and so ULL is going to take a drop. It’s inevitable. But Bryce Washington should be able to produce at a solid clip. The offense overall shouldn’t be quite as efficient.
223. Northern Kentucky
Still transitioning as a member of the Horizon. NKU went 9-21 last season, but it should flirt with 15 Ws in 2016-17. Alabama transfer Jeff Garrett will step in, and the team has enough depth to compete against most of the league.
224. NJIT
Jim Engles brought this program from nothing and got it out of independent, into a conference … and now he’s coaching at Columbia. So Brian Kennedy, Engles assistant, takes over. Damon Lynn and Tim Coleman will be heavy producers for a Highlanders team that I suspect scoots back without Engles.
225. Canisius
New coach, as Reggie Witherspoon takes over for Jim Baron, who retired. Phil Valenti should lead the way for a team in rebuild mode.
226. Wyoming
Larry Shyatt got out of town — retired — and left little in the cupboard for new coach Allen Edwards. Wyoming’s a really cool place, and the Pokes pop as a top-100 team every few years. It’s going to be a few years before we see that again.
227. Howard
Should be the best of the MEAC. The Bison are going to have a huge turnaround this season (12-20 last year). James Daniel III led the nation in scoring, all five starters are back. This should be their year, but I do think the MEAC’s going to be a three-team jam at the top.
228. IUPUI
The Jags will have one of the better bounce-back seasons in all of college basketball. This is a program that won just 13 games a season ago. Ron Patterson, who is a transfer from Syracuse, is eligible. Usually top-200 prospects who bail out from top-50 programs wind up showing their worth at the mid-major level.
229. Mount St. Mary’s
The Mountaineers went 14-19 a season ago, and they’ll probably be in that neighborhood again, if not a little better. This team can get freshmen production this season the way Dickinson did in the NEC last year.
230. Louisiana-Monroe
The best team from 2-point range in the Sun Belt last year, the Warhawks will have a chance at bumping up in the standings if they can remain exceptional from the mid-range while getting to the line and making a lot more foul shots.
231. Eastern Illinois
Demetrius McReynolds and Cornell Johnston will set the pace for the Panthers in the OVC. The program hasn’t made the NCAAs since 2001.
232. Drake
Will battle with Bradley at the bottom of the Missouri Valley. Reed Timmer’s a fun player, and he’ll be asked to do a lot for the worst defensive team, considerably, in the league last season.
233. Idaho State
Ethan Telfair, the younger brother of NBA player Sebastian Telfair, is the focal point for the Bengals. This is one of the most nondescript programs in college hoops. Hasn’t made the NCAAs since the ’80s, and randomly broke through to the Elite Eight in ’77. I’m fascinated by Idaho State.
234. San Francisco
Kyle Smith moves from Columbia to the West Coast. The Dons are in full-fledged rebuilding mode, but Smith is the right personality for this group and program. He cut his teeth for a decade as an assistant at nearby St. Mary’s.
235. Northeastern
Give this program two years and it should be set up to be top-three in the CAA once again. There’s not a lot for Bill Coen to work with this season.
236. George Mason
Dave Paulsen’s defense had no pressure to it at all last season, rating as the least effective turnover producer in the country. Two senior starters are gone, while Otis Livingston II will bloom as a sophomore lead guard.
237. Houston Baptist
Baptist is going to be a tough out in the Southland this season. Colter Lasher is a stretch hybrid forward. There’s no one in the league quite like him. Experience will give Baptist a good chance at getting to .500 in the conference.
238. Eastern Michigan
Raven Lee and James Thompson should be big production guys, a tandem capable of putting up 30 points per game. But the defense won’t be above average, and 3-point shooting will be OK at best, meaning EMU is unlikely to compete for a MAC bid.
239. Samford
Scott Padgett’s program actually had more success earlier in the season against non-conference competition than it did in the SoCon. And injuries weren’t a major factor. The backcourt duo of Christen Cunningham and Darius Jones-Gibson will be one of the best in the conference.
240. Lipscomb
My expectation is guards Garrison Matthews and Nathan Moran lift the Bison into the top half of the A-Sun. It’s a team with momentum.
241. Seattle
Cameron Dollar keeps pushing forward. To me, of all the mid-major programs that would be in that 250-351 tier, Seattle is the sleeping “giant,” if you will. Good area, can start to win more consistently now that it’s in stride and in its fifth year as a member of the WAC.
242. Youngstown State
Can the Penguins just be good already? We need a team named the Penguins to be more prominent. Here’s what’s in store: Cameron Morse is a top-five player in the Horizon, and YSU loves to run for 40 minutes. Fastest team in the league.
243. Bradley
A 5-27 team last season. Brian Wardle will need three full years to get the Braves into the middle of the pack in the Valley. The good news is he kept the roster together, and so I’d expect Bradley to double its win total.
244. FIU
Anthony Evans is trying here, but the transfer market is still lending him some projects. Donte McGill should be given the green light from deep this season. No team was more unlikely last season than FIU when it came to expected outcomes vs. actual outcomes.
245. Binghamton
It’s been a long way back for the Bearcats, who just need to somehow create offense this season. Not one player averaged more than one point per shot last season, which is incredibly hard for a team to fall into. Tommy Dempsey has the respect of coaches in the America East.
246. Gardner-Webb
Tyrell Nelson is 6-foot-7 but plays with the impact of a 7-footer in the Big South. He’ll be vital to G-W’s chances at stealing the auto bid in the Big South. This team could opt to run a four-guard lineup with Nelson on the floor. That would be really interesting to see.
247. Bryant
An unexpected dip (8-23) last season has me thinking Bryant will bounce back and get to 12 or 13 wins this year. Marcel Pettway is a sleeper to be an all-league guy in the NEC.
248. Elon
By KenPom ratings, the Phoenix had their best Matt Matheny team last season, but it was just a 16-16 club that was never a threat in a solid CAA. This team loves to move the ball, push the pace and lure defenses out. But it doesn’t have the beef down low or consistency all around to be a top-half CAA team.
249. Western Carolina
Coaches I spoke with in the SoCon think this group, which went 10-8 in the league, is going to fall back this season. Three significant players leave, and now sophomore Elijah Pughsley will take on a big load.
250. Cal State Fullerton
Has the potential to be the streakiest team in the Big West. At least from beyond 15 feet. They do get to the line more frequently than any other team in the league. Tre’ Coggins, in from Air Force, is the X-factor of the league.
251. Maine
Recruiting to Orono is one of the hardest jobs in D-I hoops. They’re up there, those Black Bears. But expect more grown in Bob Walsh’s third year. From three wins to eight wins to, I’d say, 12.
252. Denver
Rodney Billups steps in to replace Joe Scott. It will be a change of styles, certainly. Ade Murkey should prove to be one of the best freshmen in the Summit League.
253. Rutgers
Steve Pikiell will need time. The odds are stacked against Rutgers, but firing Eddie Jordan was the right move.
254. Tulane
The Green Wave have brought in Mike Dunleavy, former NBA coach, to get this thing going. It’s an interesting experiment. Dunleavy has X-and-O acumen but not college experience. This looks like the worst roster in the American this season.
255. Marist
Khallid Hart can be the star here, but the Red Foxes are looking to go from seven wins in 2015-16 to, hopefully, 12 or 13.
256. Toledo
A good team down low, one that can bang at the rim. Nathan Boothe was the best all-around player in the MAC last season, and he’s moved on. Should be an inconsistent campaign for the Rockets.
257. Abilene Christian
Only in its fourth year of transition to D-I, this is yet another team with the way-too-common Wildcat moniker. On the whole, ACU is doing a very nice job of fitting in in the Southland. Jaylen Franklin will face many a double team.
258. Jackson State
Chace Franklin and Paris Collins lead the way for a strong Tigers team within the SWAC, a group looking to make its first NCAA Tournament in a decade.
259. Arkansas State
Grant McCasland takes over for John Brady. If he lets Devin Carter (top-tier Sun Belt guy) go wild, Carter could average 20 points.
260. San Diego
Small gains but positive, big-picture gains for the Toreros in year No. 2 under Lamont Smith. The team is still rebuilding in a big way and Brett Bailey should contribute a hell of a lot.
261. Cleveland State
Rob Edwards is a bright spot for the Vikings, who I am taking a big chance on here by putting them so high, relatively speaking. Gary Waters has done a lot with a little before.
262. Robert Morris
Andy Toole doesn’t have a stacked team, but I think his coaching acumen will get the team to steal a couple of games in the wobbly NEC. Billy Giles, show us what you got.
263. Hartford
I wonder if this is the show-it-or-see-you-later year for John Gallagher. The Hartford coach is yet to threaten in the America East, and this is his seventh season. Had Pancake Thomas not transferred, the Hawks would be a top-200 team.
264. Montana State
Get ready for Tyler Hall, who could be the best player in the Big Sky in two years. This is probably an 11-7 team in the conference this season.
265. South Carolina State
The Bulldogs were a top-three team in the MEAC last season, and that could well be the case again. On their best nights, Eric Eaves and Ed Stephens comprise the best backcourt in the conference.
266. Charleston Southern
Can take a bump up in the Big South standings. There was a four-way tie (5-12) at the bottom of the league last season. The Buccaneers have a promising sophomore point guard in Armel Potter.
267. FAU
Lost seven of its final eight last season, and the offense just evaporated. I think the Owls will be a little better this year, but not by much.
268. Hawaii
Eron Ganot got a contract extension after Hawaii made the NCAAs — and beat Cal en route to a second-round appearance. But this team is actually ineligible for the postseason this year, and losing Stefan Jankovic because of that fact means Hawaii will be considerably worse than last season.
269. Quinnipiac
This is the 10th season for Tom Moore at QU. The Bobcats have yet to break through to the NCAAs in his tenure, but the team usually has a top-five player in the league and has been respectable in its transition from the NEC to the MAAC. Peter Kiss is one of the best young players in the conference.
270. North Carolina Central
A letdown 2015-16 shouldn’t mean a hangover for the Eagles. LeVelle Moton’s team brings in a bevy of transfers. Can be a top-three defensive team in the MEAC.
271. Southern
Roman Banks is one of the best coaches in the SWAC, and his team is the reigning rep in the Big Dance from this league. The Jaguars lose some key pieces, but they’ve still got enough size and 3-point ability to be a top-four team in the league.
272. Austin Peay
They’ll have a chance because Josh Robinson is an all-league-level player in the OVC. Remember, this team stormed through the OVC tournament last year and took the auto bid. In the offseason, longtime coach Dave Loos had a malignant tumor removed. He’s on the road to rehab. We wish only the best for a true gentleman of the sport.
273. Western Michigan
Finishing at the bottom of the West division in the MAC last season, WMU has been trending down since 2012. I expect one more year of challenges before things swing back their way.
274. Brown
Likely the worst team in the Ivy. A key defensive force, Cedric Kuakumensah, graduated. They do have some experience. On the whole, should be better than last season, but the league overall will be better, too.
275. UC Riverside
So many UCs in the Big West. The Highlanders were 5-11 in conference play last season but had the league’s best foul shooters. Senior Secean Johnson is the do-it-all utility star for Dennis Cutts’ team.
276. LIU-Brooklyn
The Blackbirds have a stud in Jerome Frink. They also can lure you into foul trouble. Expect a bump for Jack Perri’s crew this season.
277. Northwestern State
Nothing to say here except this team would be 60-80 spots higher if Jalan West — the best player in the Southland — was healthy. But he has another torn ACL and the Demons are lost without him. Really good kid, too. College hoops is poorer for not having him in the mix.
278. Saint Louis
It really was a heavy offseason of turnover. Jim Crews was fired — he took over for Rick Majerus following his death — and Travis Ford gets his chance to try and turn this program into something it can be, a top-75 program. It has the location and facilities to compete.
279. Navy
The Midshipmen have a value piece in Shawn Anderson, a guy who could be all-league. This is the best interior defensive team in the Patriot League.
280. Jacksonville State
Ray Harper comes over from Western Kentucky. Coaches in the Ohio Valley think the team’s talent will grow and get out of the conference’s cellar in a hurry.
281. Bowling Green
Not a ton to work with. This was the worst team in the MAC last season, and it starts with needing playmakers and shot-takers.
282. Tennessee Tech
You’d be surprised by how many solid teams the Ohio Valley had last season and this team could take a step back this season. Steve Payne loses two key seniors, and I want to see if the defense can be top-200. It was nowhere close to that last season.
283. Portland State
Going to lose its footing because of Cameron Forte’s departure. No Big Sky team was better at foul shooting and not fouling.
284. Prairie View A&M
Byron Smith takes over a program that actually should maintain its speed after winning six games when Smith took the interim job. Jayrn Johnson could be an All-SWAC player.
285. SIU Edwardsville
The question here: Will two eligible players who sat out last season (Tre Harris, Glen Pierre, Jr.) push Edwardsville up the standings in the Ohio Valley? Complete mystery team.
286. Pacific
Damon Stoudamire is in his first season as coach. The team isn’t going to be very good, but I think Stoudamire makes for an interesting coach. I picture Pacific reaching an NCAA Tournament with him on the bench.
287. North Carolina A&T
Jay Joyner will step in, replacing Cy Alexander. He gets Sam Hunt, who should be the star for the Aggies.
288. Radford
Probably going to be an inconsistent year for the Highlanders. Sophomore Ed Polite’s going to have to play mean to keep this team from falling back in the Big South pack.
289. Miami (Ohio)
Few teams are losing more heading into this season than the RedHawks. Probably the MAC’s worst team, but can it win 13 games for the fourth season in a row? No team in D-I can match that pattern. Hey, that’s a thing, right?
290. St. Francis (NY)
Unfortunately this team is moving further away from the level of play that put it in the 2015 NEC title game. The Terriers are one of five “original” D-I teams that have never made the NCAA Tournament.
291. Stetson
Derick Newton is the best sophomore in the A-Sun. A dangerous team here, potentially, but it’s still young. The Hatters made the league title game but were felled by Florida Gulf Coast.
292. UMass Lowell
Will play above their talent, almost certainly. And Pat Duquette will wind up coaching at a bigger school one day. It’s hard putting a list like this together; inevitably you wind up having some teams higher or lower than you’d really like. If you told me Lowell finished the season in KenPom around 230, I would not be surprised.
293. South Dakota
A lot of transfers eligible this season, but this is a group that won only 14 games a year ago and wasn’t effective in getting to the foul line. Many pieces from that team are gone.
294. Utah Valley
Going to be really good come 2018. For now, Mark Pope is building the program up and doing a good job on the recruiting trail. This team loves to play fast. It’s so much different from all others in the WAC in that regard.
295. Eastern Washington
Crazy but true how Eastern has produced to NBA-level players in Tyler Harvey and Venky Jois the past four years. Now the Eagles will be challenged to get to .500 this season. But they’ll push the pace, as always.
296. Drexel
The Dragons will try to break through with Zach Spiker, who was the second best coach in Army’s history (to some guy named Knight). The Dragons look to be the thinnest roster in the CAA, but Spiker’s done more with less before.
297. New Orleans
The Privateers play fast and fun, loose but dangerous. They don’t have the horses to keep up with the top of the Southland, but they’ll probably steal one or two games in the conference.
298. Hampton
Last year’s MEAC rep in the NCAA Tournament goes into rebuild mode in a hurry, as most of this roster’s production will come from a robust sophomore class.
299. Southern Miss
The postseason ban has been lifted, the effects of Donnie Tyndall’s tenure. But the roster will need another two years to develop into something close to an average college team. Doc Sadler will do his best to coach beyond the talent he’s got.
300. VMI
The Keydets no longer play a wild style and try to put up 90 per game. It’s a program that’s still going to be at the bottom of the SoCon this year, but will be in a lot more close games. QJ Peterson will be the standout.
301. Army
Army had its moments last season, but it was a letdown ultimately, and you couldn’t blame Zach Spiker for taking another job. He did a great job overall at Army, which looks like an 11-win team, probably. The new coach is Jimmy Allen.
302. Norfolk State
A 12-4 team in the MEAC last season, Norfolk State loses so much (top three scorers) this team can’t crack the top 300.
303. Cal Poly
The Mustangs lose a lot, and the defense has to get better. Will be fighting to break out of the Big West cellar. Best feature: They’re one of the best teams at not turning the ball over in the nation.
304. Loyola (MD)
Not enough pressure defense and not enough toughness inside to put the Greyhounds higher. They’ll be battling at the bottom of the Patriot League.
305. Appalachian State
Young backcourt will hit some walls against many Sun Belt teams with experience. App. State hasn’t finished above .500 since 2011.
306. Western Illinois
Not enough on either side of the floor to warrant putting Western Illinois much higher than this. Garret Covington will be asked to carry the team.
307. Sacred Heart
I’d have Sacred Heart in the top 220 if Cane Broom had not left for Cincinnati. Broom was the NEC’s best player last season and will probably go on to be an all-league player at the AAC level. Quincy McKnight, a sophomore, now steps in as the most important player for the Pioneers.
308. Texas-San Antonio
Steven Henson helped Lon Kruger turn Oklahoma into a top-five team. Now Henson will try to dig out of C-USA’s cellar. He’ll have a three-man backcourt to work around, which benefits Henson’s style, as Oklahoma did well with a similar scheme.
309. Delaware
An elongated coaching search (because the school had no full-time athletic director) had this program in limbo for months in the offseason. Martin Inglesby, former Notre Dame assistant, gets his shot.
310. Alcorn State
The Braves are one of the few teams ineligible for postseason play because of an APR penalty. And it loses four seniors on what was one of the really reliable rebounding teams in all of America.
311. Presbyterian
They had a good one in DeSean Murray. So good that Murray decided to transfer to Auburn. That’s a devastating blow to a team that will put out a completely revamped starting five.
312. Sacramento State
The Hornets get Justin Strings back, and that’s going to be the key to dodging the bottom of the Big Sky. Strings averaged 15.5 points and 6.7 boards.
313. Milwaukee
It’s a complete wipe job here, as Rob Jeter was fired and a fire sale ensued. The Panthers will need a couple of years. LaVall Jordan is the new coach.
314. Colgate
The Raiders lose a huge production guy in Austin Tillotson, so let’s see how they can replace him. This program hasn’t made the Big Dance since 1996.
315. Niagara
Niagara is as sure a thing to finish last in its conference (MAAC) as almost anyone. Won seven games last season and will probably struggle to be a top-300 offense again.
316. Incarnate Word
The dirty-bird Cardinals will take a step back after losing four starters from a team that went 17-12.
317. UMBC
The Retrievers! That’s a top-15 moniker. New coach (Ryan Odom), new philosophy. Let’s see how it works in the America East. Expect this team to be much sharper with the ball. It could be the surprise group in the league.
318. Texas State
Lose a heck of a lot, and so the Bobcats are expected to take a big dip in the league — per the coaches I spoke with. Kavin Gilder-Tilbury will carry the load.
319. Northern Arizona
Jack Murphy starts year No. 5 knowing it will be similar to his 5-25 campaign from last season. The Lumberjacks won’t be that bad, as Marcus DeBerry can be a breakout player in the Big Sky.
320. Jacksonville
Losing Kori Babineaux hurts, as the Dolphins will lean on Darien Fernandez and Marcel White. Concerning sign: 25 percent of Jacksonville’s wins last season came against teams outside D-I.
321. Texas-Rio Grande Valley
Still a weird name to get used to. This was previously Texas-Pan American. I’m projecting a minor boost here, as Rio Grande was one of the five worst teams in the sport last season.
322. Maryland-Eastern Shore
The Hawks were one of the worst defensive teams in the country last season, and they also lose their top two scorers. They finished the season ranked 318th in KenPom, so a slight drop is reasonable.
323. S.C. Upstate
Wouldn’t be a shock if the Spartans proved me wrong, as a lot comes back with this roster, but it was a rough team last season and it never got into a rhythm with its rotation.
324. American
The Eagles had the worst, and slowest, offense in the Patriot League last season. Hard to see them breaking through the 300s with a roster that’s still fermenting.
325. Southern Utah
If you’ve made it this far down the list, I’m willing to guess at least half of you did not even realize Southern Utah was a thing. But it is! With a new coach, Todd Simon.
326. The Citadel
The Bulldogs are coached by Duggar Baucom and have the distinction of the fastest team in college basketball. Eighty possessions per game. That’s was The Citadel’s average last year. It opened the season with a 144-71 loss to Butler. Fun, but the defense is not even on the table. The worst in D-I.
327. Nicholls State
A coaching change here, too. (We had more than 50 of them in the offseason.) J.P. Piper is out, Richie Riley is in. Liam Thomas is the best shot-blocker in the Southland.
328. Southeast Missouri State
Rick Ray is probably going to make me regret putting Southeast Missouri State so low, but in talking with league coaches, this is the team expected to be last in the OVC again. What wouldn’t shock me: SEMO turning into a top-four OVC team by 2018.
329. Lamar
We’ll see how this group does with an influx of JUCO players. Lamar was definitively the worst team in the Southland last season. The program has had one season above .500 in the past decade.
330. Alabama State
The Hornets had the best 3-point offense in the SWAC last season. Unfortunately, their best player is gone. This was a 9-9 team in the league last season, but it’s probably going to land around five or six wins in conference this season.
331. Morgan State
Tough to see the Bears making too much improvement this year, as the group was the worst-shooting team in the MEAC last season. It can still be one of the best on-ball defensive teams in the league, though.
332. Longwood
The Big South’s most careless team with the ball, and a weak one from 3-point range, will likely struggle to get to double-digit wins, as the four biggest production guys have moved on.
333. St. Francis (PA)
The Red Flash are probably going to be one of the 10 worst teams on defense in America. This team lost its final six games in NEC play a season ago, and is rebuilding. Rob Krimmel will face challenges similar to his first season in 2012-13, when SF-PA won five games.
334. Bethune-Cookman
The Wildcats should take a steep step down because the team loses a vital defensive force in Mario Moody.
335. Southeastern Louisiana
A 12-21 team last season, the Lions did not win one game against D-I competition outside of the Southland.
336. San Jose State
The program is out of place in the Mountain West. Now in its fourth year in the league after leaving the WAC, the Spartans will again finish at the bottom of the standings. Sophomore Brandon Clarke is a bright spot for the future, at the very least.
337. Oral Roberts
Scott Sutton is a reliable coach, but he has to figure this year’s group will struggle to find consistency. Obi Emagano left college to play pro overseas. There’s a lot of inexperience here.
338. Missouri-Kansas City
Few players as small as Martez Harrison (he’s 5-foot-11) are asked to do as much for their team. The Kangaroos have one of the toughest assignments and placements in college hoops, given the league they’re in (WAC), the travel and their budget.
339. Northern Colorado
The B.J. Hill Era ended in disaster. This team isn’t even eligible for the postseason this season because of self-imposed sanctions ahead of an NCAA Committee on Infractions hearing. Jeff Linder takes over as coach.
340. Mississippi Valley State
A lot of turnover here, so it’s hard to project what to expect from the Delta Devils. The offense is in dire need of improvement, and that starts with star Marcus Romain improving shot selection.
341. Coppin State
Unfortunately the bottom of the MEAC tends to find its way near the bottom of the overall list, and Coppin State is a team that’s in full-fledged learning mode.
342. Lafayette
A six-win team a season ago, I’m thinking the Leopards can be better, but need to see them prove it. Man, it gets depressing once this list hits the 340s. Dark, really.
343. Grambling State
Not last! Grambling State has averaged 3.4 wins over the past five years, going through three coaches in that span. It’s been the worst program in America. But I’ve got the Tigers bumping up ever so slightly this season in the third year of Shawn Walker’s tenure.
344. Florida A&M
Loaded with freshmen. The Rattlers should creep up to the top half of the MEAC in two years.
345. Alabama A&M
Rakiya Battle is a name almost no college hoops fan knows, but he’s a point guard talented enough to start for about 300 teams in the country. Battle will be low on help, though.
346. Delaware State
Rebounding remains a concern. The team had five wins against D-I competition last season and did not rank in the top 180 in any major tempo-free offensive category.
347. Central Connecticut State
Donyell Marshall — yep, him! — will now be coaching the other Blue Devils after Howie Dickenman retired. He was one of the longest-tenured coaches in the game. This program needs a few years to find its footing.
348. Central Arkansas
Scottie Pippen. Every time I see Central Arkansas, that’s what I think. This is Scottie Pippen’s alma mater. The program has been D-I for a decade and is yet to have a season above .500.
349. Savannah State
The Tigers had the third-worst offense in D-I last season and still lost two pieces in the starting lineup that accounted for more than 500 shots.
350. Arkansas Pine Bluff
The worst offense in the SWAC probably won’t be much better. I think this team will be at the bottom of the conference, and as these things go, that usually means at the bottom of the overall rankings.
351. Chicago State
Someone’s gotta be last. I’d love to be wrong here, but I have to put some team as the caboose. The school in general is having budget issues. It would be a great story if this team could outperform expectations, but it’s unlikely it will win more than six games.