INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. — I've been covering college basketball for nearly 50 years now, and I feel like I know the sport pretty well. I can't tell you the backup power forward at Louisiana Tech or anything, but I feel like I've stayed in the loop with the power conferences pretty well.
But when a graphic went viral on social media on Tuesday that used team logos to show where every Sweet 16 teams starting five began their college basketball careers, It was stumped. A few easy ones — Purdue, of course, with five homegrown starters, the only school to say so —jumped out, but at least half of them had me completely baffled.
I had to scratch my bald head for a while.
Here's a tweet of the graphic I'm talking about. And see what I mean? The 16 teams playing this weekend don't jump out at all.
Like, not at all.
Where every Sweet 16 Team's Starting-5 began playing college basketball.
— NCAA Buzzer Beaters & Game Winners (@NCAABuzzerBters) March 25, 2025
(Try to figure out which teams are which) pic.twitter.com/MPomf1dyuT
It took a minute or two, but when the first six or seven schools jumped out at me, I realized the bracket was created in order of the games played. (Hlouston and Purdue side by side was my first tip.) That made it much easier going forward. Tennessee and Kentucky, the other two. teams in the Midwest Regional here in Indianapolis, are the two teams to the right of Purdue
But I'll admit it, I had no on five or six of them. (OK, seven). i had to go to Google and thoroughly evaluate all their rosters. It wasn't easy.
Spoiler alert: Here are the 16 teams, from left to right, then top to bottom:
You can see something of a trend here with Purdue and Michigan State. Both Matt Painter and Tom Izzo aren't a real fan of building a program through the portal. They recruit high school guys and build around them, only using the portal to fill a gap our two.
But the portal has changed the game completely, and it's made it much easier to start over. Michigan hired Dusty May after only winning eight games last year, firing Juwan Howard. He brought in basically an entirely new roster, with five new starters, and are 27-9 and Big Ten Tournament champions heading into Friday's game against Auburn.
John Calipari left Kentucky for Arkansas and joked at his introductory press conference that he had a meeting with the players — and there was no one there. He built a brand new roster too, mostly with former Kentucky palyers and recruits.
it's the norm now, and it's only going to get worse. With no limits to transfers and NIL money flowing freely across the country, it's mass market free agency. It's changed the game completely, and not for the better.
For many coaches like Painter, it's a no-win situation. He's old school, and loves developing players and building a program with four-year guys. He's grabbed a few portal guys — Lance Jones was a big help during their Final Four run a year ago — but he was an outlier. They have no transfers with impact this year.
"It's a really unique deal,'' Painter said last week about all the roster movement. "When we win, people say we're great at developing players, and when we lose, we don't go in the portal enough. It's kind of like being married, right? Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
"Where's the answer where everyone is happy? That's what I want. That's part of competitive sports. Some of the losses we had, he was our guy, but the major wins we have had, he's been our guy. And so I think loyalty is a two-way street, and so when we have struggled and he's been running the show for us, we've stayed by him and stuck with him. But he's also stuck by us, and I think that's a special bond. It doesn't mean things can't happen and people break off and people go and do different things, but that loyalty is pretty important. It's pretty important to success.''
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