Toronto Star

NCAA: FIVE POTENTIAL CINDERELLA SQUADS

- ANDREW LIVINGSTON­E STAFF REPORTER

Reinventin­g a long-standing, evolutiona­ry storyline isn’t easy.

But what the George Mason Patriots did in 2006 changed what it means to be a Cinderella team in the NCAA tournament. Just ask Raptors star Rudy Gay.

Gay was playing for Connecticu­t, a favourite to win that year, when the Huskies ran up against George Mason in the Elite Eight. Led by a hodgepodge of players, the small school was virtually unknown before the tournament began.

The 11th-seeded Colonial Athletic Associatio­n team beat sixth-ranked Michigan State, third-seeded North Carolina and No. 7 Wichita State to reach the Elite Eight. By the time Connecticu­t and George Mason met at the Verizon Centre in Washington for a chance to play eventual champs Florida in the Final Four, the Patriots had become America’s team. George Mason would beat Gay and the powerhouse Huskies 86-84 in overtime in what is widely considered one of the best games in tournament history.

So who looks to put on this year’s slipper and make a run for the Final Four? In a year when parity is the buzzword — and recent Cinderella teams VCU and Butler are ranked as fifth and sixth seeds, respective­ly — there are a number of teams that could send higher seeds packing.

AKRON: Owners of a 19-game winning streak this year, the 12th-seeded Zips could upset a former Cinderella squad in No. 5 Virginia Commonweal­th. However, the task is more daunting than it might have been before the Zips lost guard Alex Abreau to injury. The team will rely heavily on sevenfoote­r Zeke Marshall to escape the Rams’ HAVOC defence, ranked in the top 10 in the nation.

BELMONT: The Bruins (11th seed, West) play a defensivel­y focused team in Arizona in the first round. However, the Wildcats have dreadful defence against the long ball and Belmont shoots almost 40 per cent from beyond the arc, not to mention nearly 50 per cent from the field. Arizona has lost three of its last six, while Belmont is on a six-game winning streak.

BUCKNELL: The Bison (11th seed, East) aren’t prone to turnovers and are a tall, strong team that rebounds well. Centre Mike Muscala averaged 19 points, 11.2 rebounds, 2.4 blocks and 2.4 assists this season for the Patriot League conference champs. If he dominates as he has all season against a smaller Butler team, Bucknell has the ingredient­s to make a run for the Sweet Sixteen.

MISSISSIPP­I: When they’re hot, they can beat anyone — just ask Florida, who lost to Ole Miss 66-63 in the SEC championsh­ip game, giving the Rebels an automatic bid. Since a enduring a skid in which they lost five of seven earlier this year, Rebels guard Marshall Henderson has been on a rampage, averaging 22 points a game. The Rebels face No. 5 Wisconsin in the first round, and the pesky Badgers will be no easy task. However, if the focused Ole Miss shows up, upset city could be just around the bend.

SAINT MARY’S: The Gaels, who won their play-in game handily over Middle Tennessee on Tuesday night, haven’t lost to anyone not named Gonzaga since Dec. 23. They’ve won 20 of 23 since then, with the three losses coming at the hands of the No. 1 team in the nation, the last two both by four points.

Led by Matthew Dellavedov­a’s lights-out shooting, the Gaels (No. 11, Midwest) could easily upset sixthseede­d Memphis and give Michigan State a run for its money in the second round. And having made it to the Sweet Sixteen last year, another trip isn’t impossible.

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