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Ralphie Report: NCAA Tournament Roundtable: Brackets, Busts and Breakouts

NCAA Basketball: SEC Conference Tournament Second Round - Oklahoma vs Kentucky

Steve Roberts-Imagn Images

Jack, Sam and Ryland give their predictions and bracket picls.

While the Colorado Buffaloes didn’t stand much of a chance at getting into the NCAA Tournament, it doesn’t mean we can’t have fun with March Madness over here at Ralphie Report dot com.

Let’s start with something easy — which region was the most difficult for you to fill out?​


Ryland: Probably the West Region. There are some sneaky good teams in there. Colorado State and our old friend Nique Clifford are white-hot right now, while Bennett Stirtz and Drake could give Mizzou all they can handle.

Sam: The West is brutal. All my favorite seeds are there. I have the Gators as champs and it’s tough since both St. John’s and Texas Tech would be in my Final Four if they were in other regions. I’m also sad to have Maryland lose earlier than I want, as Derik Queen might be my favorite player in the country. Then there’s UConn, CSU and Drake, all of whom could crash the Sweet Sixteen and it wouldn’t surprise.

Jack: West. Every team is FUN AS HELL. Missouri might be the most fun team in the country. Dennis Gates supremacy! They run fast, they shoot the light out and Tamar Bates is Tad Boyle as it gets. AND YOU HAVE ST. JOHNS? If they play each other, that will be 40 minutes of hell.

Do you have any upset picks screaming out to you? Or any upsets that seem too easy or popular?​


Ryland: 12-seed Colorado State upsetting five-seed Memphis is something that seems inevitable. Without Tyrese Hunter, that Tigers team looks vulnerable and Nique Clifford could pick them apart. I also like Drake upsetting Mizzou and I’m taking a flyer on UC San Diego to beat Michigan.

Sam: UC San Diego might be the answer to both. The Tritons slow the pace, hit threes and draw fouls, and they generally win the possession game by forcing lots of turnovers. That’s the formula for an upset or two. That is, if they can control the game when they’re at a size and athleticism disadvantage, which Michigan poses with Danny Wolf and Vladislav Goldin.

Jack: Agree with what Sam said. UC San Diego is going to be a fun one. However, I think Louisville has a great shot at upsetting Auburn if they get there. The Cardinals play some fun basketball, and Forever Buff J’Vonne Hadley is balling out for them right now. Louisville has shot makers and they play in your face. If they knock out Auburn, that side of the bracket is wide open.

Which of the 1- or 2-seeds seems most vulnerable?​


Ryland: Duke without Cooper Flagg. After getting carted off in a wheelchair after the ACC Tournament due to injury (not a Paul Pierce situation), his status for the Big Dance is unclear. If Flagg can suit up and play for the Blue Devils, they’re undoubtedly a top-three team in the nation. If not, Jon Scheyer and company could be on upset alert for the foreseeable future.

Sam: Is Michigan State even good? Everything I read says they’re elite on defense but have a hard time scoring the basketball. They can’t shoot, don’t really care take of the ball, and most of their tough shots go to Jaden Atkins and his sub-40 field goal percentage. And yet they seem poised for an Elite Eight run with an injured Iowa State and a mid Ole Miss in their bracket.

Jack: Yes, MSU is good, ugh. So sick of Sam. MSU is going to win the whole goddamn thing. They play tough perimeter defense and have old guard. Ugh.

However, my pick is Alabama. High-variance, man. High. Variance. Lot of threes. High pace. Mark Sears is a good backstop, but I’m always worried about them if the threes aren’t falling. Grant Nelson, very good, but also, say they play Saint Mary’s. That pace is so slow it hurts to watch, let alone play against. Can Alabama capitalize on limited possessions enough? I don’t know man.

Which team do you feel irresponsibly confident in?​


Ryland: Texas Tech. In only his second year in Lubbock, Grant McCasland has turned that team into a buzzsaw. When it clicks for them, it really clicks. JT Toppin can take over games and players like Darrion Williams and Chance McMillian compliment him perfectly.

Sam: Before Jack wrote anything, I wrote (and deleted, then wrote again) the Auburn Tigers are going to collapse in the second round and Johni Broome will be outplayed by our favorite son J’Vonne Hadley. I feel this in my bones and nothing to back it

Jack: I already said it above. MISSOURI, BABY. Old, tested, fun as hell, and they have that coveted spurtability that everyone wants. They’ve had an up and down season, but Dennis Gates is a star coach, imo, and their type of ball translates. Tamar Bates season.

Which mid-major are you most excited to see play? How far can they go?​


Ryland: UC San Diego. That team is FUN. If you haven’t watched the Tritons play this season, that’s your loss. They’ve got two players, Aniwaniwa Tait-Jones and Tyler McGhie, who can score like nobody’s business. If they can successfully turn games into a track race, I could see them making a Sweet Sixteen run. Oh, and they play elite defense too.

Sam: Besides than the Tritons, the New Mexico Lobos play helter skelter basketball and their matchup with Marquette is a must-watch for the sickos. I’m also excited to see Liberty lose in the first round, even if it’s to Oregon.

Jack: Well, Will Wade just announced he’s take the NC State job in public. And to his team. Before the tournament starts. Wild stuff, but if he plays that right, I’m excited to see how hard McNeese plays in their “last ride” together. That time already plays chaotic, and it’s possible this is a nice catalyst.

Who’s your breakout star in this tournament? (You can do a high, middle and lower-seed if you want)​


Ryland: My high-seed hero is going to have to be Texas Tech’s JT Toppin. That dude can ball. I’ll go with Illinios’ Kasparas Jakucionus for my mid-seed hero. With my low-seed hero, I’ll pick Aniwaniwa Tait-Jones of UC San Diego.

Sam: Go west young man, and find Walter Clayton and Kadary Richmond battling in the Elite Eight, or else Derik Queen pivoting his way to an upset win, and Nique Clifford making us all proud. (St. Mary’s isn’t in the West, but they are West, and I love Augustus Marciulionas.)

Jack: Derik Queen! He’s the best. Sam and I agree on this. Queen is a star basketball player and he’s not built like a lot of freshman I know. Maryland will ride him to the promised land. I also love Otega Oweh at Kentucky. Give me a guard that gets to the bucket at will. So fun to watch a good driver in college.

Who’s the next cult hero to emerge?​


Ryland: Aniwaniwa Tait-Jones has Jack Gohlke written all over him.

Sam: I got Clemson’s Ian Schieffelin, whose pudgy build and curly frat hair make him perfectly cast for cult status.

Jack: BYU’s Richie Saunders, who is easily the most hateable player in basketball if he doesn’t play so goddamn hard. Man, does he play hard. You’re gonna see him diving for loose balls heading into every single commercial break in slow motion.

What are we going to remember this tournament for?​


Ryland: Either SEC dominance or SEC fraud watch. With a record-breaking 14 teams making it to the dance, I don’t think there’s any in-between. We are about to learn if all that football money can turn the SEC into a basketball powerhouse, or if Big 12 hoops still reign supreme.

Sam: As Ryland pointed out, football resources might have taken over basketball. All those SEC favorites are loaded with veteran players, many of whom were paid top dollar in the portal. The SEC has depth the Big 12 can’t afford, they play a style the Big Ten can’t keep pace with, and they might be too athletic and too experienced for early upsets.

Jack: Izzo’s retirement after they win the championship.

Last one: Leave your Final Four and National Champs.​


Ryland: My final four are Auburn, Texas Tech, Alabama and Houston. I have Auburn beating the Coogs to hoist the natty.

Sam: A bit chalky, I have Florida, Alabama, Houston and then Texas A&M taking Auburn’s spot in the Final Four, then the Gators over Coogs in the national title.

Jack: I’m also chalk as hell. Florida, Michigan State, Duke, Tennessee. Michigan State beats Duke for the national championship after Tom Izzo’s son dunks on Cooper Flagg.

by Sam Metivier
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Ralphie Report: The Best Names at the Big Dance: Who can Boogie with Boogie?

NCAA Basketball: Mississippi at Arkansas

Nelson Chenault-Imagn Images

From Denver to Gibraltar, from Okey to Supreme, the Big Dance has it all.

There’s no methodology to this bracket, really. I just pulled each team’s basketball-reference pages and found my favorite name. Many of these names are deeply American, some of them a glimmer into the family’s past (whatcha doing in Argentina, Maximo Milovich?) and some of them are named Supreme Cook.

First, here are the regions with each team’s representative. After that, I’ll have the bracket filled out with no explanations for who won each bracket. I do want to apologize because some of these names aren’t good at all, but it’s not my fault Missouri has such boring names when Casmir Chavis and Ven-Allen Lubin were snubbed.

South Region

1. Denver Jones (Auburn) vs. 16. Jerquarius Stanback (Alabama State)
2. Gehrig Normand (Michigan State) vs. 15. Frankie Vassalluzzo (Bryant)
3. Tamin Lipsey (Iowa State) vs. 14. Grant Asman (Lipscomb)
4. Zhuric Phelps (Texas A&M) vs. 13. Jeannot Basima (Yale)
5. Phat Phat Brooks (Michigan) vs. 12. Maximo Milovich (UC San Diego)
6. Jaemyn Brakefield (Ole Miss) vs. 11. Tyzhaun Claude (North Carolina)
7. Ben Gold (Marquette) vs. 10. Atiki Ally Atiki (New Mexico)
8. Aidan McCool (Louisville) vs. 9. Jackson McAndrew (Creighton)

East Region

1. Kon Knueppel (Duke) vs. 16. Gibraltar Coleman (American)
2. Labaron Philon (Alabama) vs. 15. Antallah Sandlin’El (Robert Morris)
3. Jack Janiki (Wisconsin) vs. 14. Money Williams (Montana)
4. Luke Champion (Arizona) vs. 13. Rich Brisco (Akron)
5. Supreme Cook (Oregon) vs. 12. Kai Yu (Liberty)
6. Townsend Tripple (BYU) vs. 11. Alphonzo Billups III (VCU)
7. Andrew McKeever (St. Mary’s) vs. 10. Devin McGlockton (Vanderbilt)
8. Kanye Clary (Mississippi State) vs. 9. Norchad Omier (Baylor)

West Region

1. Urban Klavzar (Florida) vs. 16. Sin’cere McMahon (Norfolk State)
2. Zuby Ejiofor (St. John’s) vs. 15. Valentino Simon (Omaha)
3. Federiko Federiko (Texas Tech) vs. 14. Khamari McGriff (UNC Wilmington)
4. Selton Miguel (Maryland) vs. 13. Styles Phipps (Grand Canyon)
5. Dain Dainja (Memphis) vs. 12. Bowen Born (Colorado State)
6. T.O. Barrett (Missouri) vs. 11. Joey Matteoni (Drake)
7. Rakease Passmore (Kansas) vs. 10. Boogie Fland (Arkansas)
8. Solo Ball (UConn) vs. Kobe Elvis (Oklahoma)

Midwest Region

1. Ja’Vier Francis (Houston) vs. 16. Cham Okey (SIUE)
2. Darlinstone Dubar (Tennessee) vs. 15. Kyler Filewich (Wofford)
3. Ansley Almonor (Kentucky) vs. 14. Randarius Jones (Troy)
4. Fletcher Loyer (Purdue) vs. 13. Kezza Giffa (High Point)
5. Chauncey Wiggins (Clemson) vs. 12. Quadir Copeland (McNeese)
6. Ben Humrichous (Illinois) vs. 11. Dailyn Swan (Xavier) or Ze’Rik Onyema (Texas)
7. Lazar Stefanovic (UCLA) vs. 10. Aubin Gateretse (Utah State)
8. Dusty Stromer (Gonzaga) vs. 9. Blue Cain (Georgia)



Here’s the final bracket:



by Sam Metivier
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Ralphie Report: Deion Sanders wants to play another team for Colorado’s spring game

Oklahoma State v Colorado

Photo by Andrew Wevers/Getty Images

Coach Prime wants to rethink spring games.

With Colorado’s spring game scheduled for exactly one month away, Deion Sanders is challenging the status quo.

During his media availability this week, Coach Prime took the podium and told reporters that he wants to rethink what a spring game can be by bringing in another college team for the Buffs to play on April 19.

“Actually, I’d like to play against another team in the spring,” Sanders said. “That’s what I’m trying to do right now.

Why, you ask? Simple answer: I’d be fun!

The main reason Sanders stated for wanted to bring another team to Boulder this spring is that it gets boring scrimmaging against the same players every day. Coach Prime wants to mix it up and keep things fresh for his players. Honestly, it makes complete sense.

“To have it be competitive, playing against your own guys is kinda getting monotonous,” Sanders said. “You really can’t tell the level of your guys because it’s the same old, same old. Everybody kinda knows each other towards the end. I would like to style it like the pros. I’d like to practice against someone for a few days and play against them in the spring game.”

Bringing NFL-style joint practices to college is a genius idea and it’s a bit shocking that no one has at least floated that idea out as publically as Coach Prime has. It’s a win-win situation for everyone. The players get to keep things fresh and practice against someone new, while the fans get to watch an entertaining spring game that isn’t just the ones scrimmaging against the twos.

Someone has actually taken up Sanders on his proposal too. Syracuse head coach Fran Brown publically chimed in, saying he’d fly his team out to Boulder for three days of joint practices and to be CU’s opponent in their spring game.


.@DeionSanders we will come to Boulder for 3 days https://t.co/RFkyveLPv1

— Fran Brown (@FranBrownCuse) March 17, 2025​

Brown’s team is no pushover either. In his first year in Upstate New York, he led the Orange to 10-3 season with a win in the Holiday Bowl over Washington State. They also beat Cam Ward’s Miami Hurricanes team in the final week of the season to squash their bid for the College Football Playoffs.

Deion has responded publicly to Brown, calling him “his dawg,” but rumor has it that he’s aiming even higher: Bill Belichick and his UNC Tar Heels. Both coaches are rethinking how a college football program can be run, so it makes perfect sense for the two coaches to convene in Boulder next month.

As of now, there’s no word from Belichick and nothing is officially in stone. Scrimmaging another team in your spring game is undeniably an entertaining idea. If any more news breaks about a potential spring game opponent for CU, we’ll be right here to update you at Ralphie Report.

by RylandScholes
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Ralphie Report: Examining LaJohntay Wester’s Draft Stock: A Slot Weapon with a Clutch Gene

Oklahoma State v Colorado

Photo by Andrew Wevers/Getty Images

Wester made an impact for the Buffs, but how will he fair in the NFL?

The young man behind Colorado’s miraculous Hail Mary against Baylor had his shot to impress at the NFL Combine, and LaJohntay Wester made the most of it.

After stepping into the starting slot role midseason following Jimmy Horn Jr.’s injury, Wester became one of the Buffs’ most reliable playmakers. Now, with the NFL Draft approaching fast, his stock is starting to take shape.

NFL Combine Performance​


Wester’s 40-yard dash time of 4.46 seconds was solid, though some expected him to be slightly quicker given his short-area burst. His 10-yard split (1.53 seconds) was just 0.05 off the fastest time among all receivers, showing how quickly he can accelerate off the line.

His vertical jump (32 inches) was on the lower end for receivers, but Wester has never been known for his leaping ability. His strength lies in his quickness, change of direction and ability to shake defenders in tight spaces.

One number that stood out was his broad jump, which measured 10-foot-1 — it’s not elite, but respectable for a shifty slot receiver who wins with his route running and separation rather than pure athleticism.

NFL Combine Grades and Draft Projection​


Here’s where Wester ranks based on the official NFL Combine grading system:

  • Production Score: 30th among WRs
  • Athleticism Score: 38th among WRs
  • Projected Draft Range: Late Day 3

Wester isn’t a freak athlete, which isn’t helped by his small size, and he likely won’t be a Day 1 or Day 2 pick. However, that doesn’t mean he can’t make an impact at the next level. His hands, quickness and route running fit the modern slot receiver mold that NFL teams love.

NFL Outlook​


Wester’s best path to an NFL roster is as a slot receiver and return specialist. He has the crafty route running and intangibles to contribute in the right system and teams looking for a reliable slot option with special teams value will give him a serious look.

If Wester aces his Pro Day, especially by improving his 40-yard dash, he could sneak into the later rounds of the draft. Even if he goes undrafted, he’s the type of player who can earn a roster spot and surprise people at the next level—just like he did all year at Colorado.

by Jacob.Thompson
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Ralphie Report: Colorado accepts bid to play in College Basketball Crown

NCAA Basketball: Big 12 Conference Tournament First Round - Colorado vs TCU

William Purnell-Imagn Images

The Buffs aren’t done yet.

The Colorado Buffaloes’ season isn’t done quite yet. Tad Boyle and his squad have accepted a bid to play in the College Basketball Crown tournament in Las Vegas.

With a regular season conference record of 3-17, it shouldn’t be surprising that the Buffs have missed out on both March Madness and the NIT. However, winning two games in the Big 12 Tournament last week was enough for Colorado to earn a spot in the brand-new, Fox-backed third-tier tournament.

After a disappointing season, nobody would’ve faulted the Buffs for staying home and not rubbing salt in their wounds by having to play in a third-tier tourney, but they probably didn’t have a choice. The Big 12 is one of three conferences that agreed to send two auto-qualifiers to The Crown, so they may have been contractually obligated to accept the bid.

Regardless, playing in The Crown will provide good developmental opportunities for Colorado’s youngsters like Bangot Dak, Sebastian Rancik and Felix Kossaras. CU’s first game in “The Crown” will be against Villanova on April 1 at the MGM Garden Arena. If they beat Nova, they’ll play the winner of Tulane and USC on April 3.

by RylandScholes
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