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Five bold NCAA Tournament predictions
Bryant Bulldogs guard Rafael Pinzon. Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

Five bold NCAA Tournament predictions

March Madness is a time for upsets and Cinderellas, but it's tough to predict where the surprising results will come from. Let's try to crack the code with five bold predictions for the 2025 NCAA Tournament. 

1. A 15 seed will upset a 2 seed

No. 15 seeds are just 11-145 in the NCAA Tournament, but three of those wins have come in the last four years. The most likely candidates this year are Bryant (vs. Michigan State) and Omaha (vs St. John's), which both face 2 seeds that struggle to shoot the ball.

Michigan State (30.8 percent) and St. John's (30.4 percent) rank 328th and 338th, respectively, in the country in three-point shooting percentage. One of these 15 seeds can pull off the upset with a hot shooting performance. 

2. None of the 2 seeds will make the Elite Eight

As good as the 1 seeds are this season, the 2 seeds all have glaring weaknesses. As we just mentioned, Michigan State and St. John's don't shoot the three-ball well enough to make a deep run. As for Alabama, it relies too heavily on three-pointers and doesn't shoot them well enough (35.0 percent) to keep up with its volume (29.8 attempts per game). The Crimson Tide's 350th-ranked scoring defense is also a huge red flag. 

Tennessee is the biggest threat to reach the Elite Eight, but UCLA, Kentucky and Illinois pose serious threats in the bottom of the Midwest region. 

3. North Carolina will make the Sweet 16

College basketball fans and experts spent the last few days bashing the Selection Committee for giving North Carolina an at-large bid. Well, the Tar Heels shut everyone up with a dominant 95-68 win against San Diego State in the First Four. 

UNC might not have the Quad 1 wins on its resume, but Hubert Davis' squad ranks ninth in the country in Bart Torvik's T-rank over the last month. This is one of the hottest offenses in college basketball, and the motivation to prove the doubters wrong is clearly there. 

4. UC San Diego will make the Sweet 16

UC San Diego is one of the most impressive mid-majors we've seen this century, as it ranks 37th in the country in KenPom heading into March Madness. The Tritons rank fourth in turnovers per game (9.0), second in turnovers forced (20.5 percent of opponent's possessions) and 12th in made threes per game (10.4).

Michigan is one of the most turnover-prone teams in college basketball, making this a great matchup for UCSD. If the Tritons can take down the Big 10 champs, they can also knock off Texas A&M or Yale to reach the Sweet 16.

5. Texas Tech will make the Final Four

Picking a 3 seed to make the Final Four isn't normally a hot take, but everyone seems to be penciling Florida in as the West region champions. There hasn't been much buzz about Texas Tech this year, but this is one of the 10 best teams in college basketball.

The Red Raiders rank seventh in KenPom, ninth in average score margin (+13.3) and 20th in three-point shooting percentage (37.9 percent). Texas Tech faded down the stretch due to injuries, but starters Chance McMillian and Darrion Williams should be back in the lineup for the Round of 64. JT Toppin (18.1 points, 9.2 rebounds and 1.3 blocks per game) is a dominant force in the paint, and he's surrounded by sharpshooters at every other position. This offense can go toe-to-toe with Florida's. 

Jack Dougherty

Jack Dougherty has been writing professionally since 2015, contributing to publications such as GoPSUSports. com, Centre Daily Times, Associated Press, and Sportscasting. com

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