(CNN) -- The Gonzaga Bulldogs have the most wins,
31, going into Thursday's NCAA tournament. They have the fewest losses,
two. They were a consensus No. 1 going into Selection Sunday and are the
No. 1 seed in the tourney's West Region.
Yet they're still underdogs.
Where's Rodney Dangerfield when you need him?
Ken Pomeroy, the hoops statistician behind kenpom.com, said he believes the Zags earned their No. 1 seed, even if he doesn't agree with the polls proclaiming them the nation's best.
"They're seeded appropriately based on my ratings," said Pomeroy. "I will vouch for Gonzaga being a very good team."
If you feel a "but" coming, your Spidey sense is well-tuned.
Pomeroy, a meteorologist
whose work on "tempo statistics" has earned him respect among many
coaches and analysts, said he believes the sportswriters and coaches who
dictate the national rankings are overvaluing the Zags' record.
The voters may even be
unduly charmed by the prospect of a small-conference school from
Spokane, Washington, winning the whole shebang, he said. It is, after
all, quixotic to think that a private, Jesuit school named for a
16th-Century saint has the same shot as Louisville or Indiana.
But (there it is!)
Pomeroy's statistics indicate there are three clear favorites in this
year's tournament, and the trio doesn't include No. 1 seeds Gonzaga or
Kansas.
Level playing field?
Hold up, wait a minute. What about the purported parity?
What about the commentators' common mantra that this is "anyone's
tournament," that there are 20 teams who could hang a championship
banner from their rafters?
Malarkey, said Pomeroy: "It was a pretty typical year."
Pit your bracket against CNN personalities'
It's true there is no
one dominant team, as there was last year when Kentucky (which sent six
players to the NBA) winning it all seemed a foregone conclusion, he
said. This year's tournament still has its favorites, however.
"The numbers say Louisville, Indiana and Florida are better than (Gonzaga) right now," he said.
The Zags come in at No. 4
in Pomeroy's rankings, but he is quick to say his "ratings represent a
team's average performance, and teams rarely put in an average
performance."
Plus, history dictates
averages don't mean much when young, hungry ballers take the court to
compete for the college hoops crown. A bad matchup can sink a clear
favorite, as can lights-out three-point shooting or a burst of
suffocating defense.
Put simply, Pomeroy said, "The tournament is wacky."
Butler and Virginia Commonwealth proved that two years ago when they upended everyone's brackets by charging into the Final Four. So, why couldn't it happen for the Zags?
They've made 15 straight
tournaments since 1999, an active streak topped only by powerhouses
Kansas (24), Duke (18) and Michigan State (16). In that span, they've
made it to the Sweet 16 four times and the Elite Eight once.
Gonzaga also hasn't lost
since January 19 -- to then-13th-ranked Butler -- and while they played
only three ranked teams, they didn't slouch during nonconference play,
picking up opponents from the Big Ten, Big 12 and ACC.
Doubting Thomases
Where, then, is the love? How can it be that only 5.6% of ESPN's millions of Tournament Challenge participants have the Zags finishing on top?
Why can you tune in to the "The Tony Kornheiser Show" and hear the host
repeatedly refer to Gonzaga not as the Bulldogs, but as the "choking
dogs"? (Kornheiser actually used the word "chokingest" during Tuesday's
show.)
A breakdown of how much money this year's No. 1 and 2 seeds spent on basketball (in millions):
Duke: $15.9
Louisville: $15.5
Kansas: $12.7
Georgetown: $10
Indiana: $9.3
Gonzaga: $6.1
Ohio State: 6
Miami: $5.8
Source: U.S. Department of Education 2011-2012 reports
Why does Las Vegas put Gonzaga's odds
at 12 to 1 to win it all? Why do those same bookies give Gonzaga and
Ohio State, the No. 2 seed in the West, near-similar odds of winning the
region?
Could it be that in a
year when commentators are harping about parity -- a year when schools
like LaSalle and St. Mary's get at-large nods over defending champion
Kentucky -- Gonzaga is just overhyped?
"It's easy to come to the conclusion that smaller schools are getting in this year," said Michael Litos, author of "Cinderella: The Rise of the Mid-Major," but he disagrees.
The Zags "ran through
their conference, have some big nonconference wins and they got the No. 1
seed," he said. "It's nothing to do with being a mid-major. They won 31
ball games, and they earned it on the court."
Litos, who also does
radio color commentary for Virginia Commonwealth basketball games, said
he feels the term mid-major is "hollow and shallow and fairly irrelevant
these days."
Gonzaga's sustained success has allowed the school to spread its wings in recruiting, attracting prospects from as far away as Tennessee, Minnesota, Canada, Germany and Poland -- a geographic reach similar to that of the Indiana Hoosiers.
The Zags pay their head coach of 15 years, Mark Few, more than $1 million, putting him just behind the coaches at historically solid basketball schools like Cincinnati and North Carolina State.
Consider also that Gonzaga's basketball expenses
have risen from $1.9 million in 2005 to $6.1 million last year,
according to the U.S. Department of Education, which means better
facilities and players.
That doesn't keep them
in the company of Duke ($15.9 million) and Louisville ($15.5 million),
but it does put them ahead of Miami ($5.8 million) and Ohio State ($6
million).
'A whole lot of ingredients'
When you combine these
factors -- money, recruits, nonconference schedule, years of success --
it's tough to call a team like Gonzaga a mid-major, even if they do hail
from the West Coast Conference, Litos said.
Still, there's some prejudice, he said.
"When people get into
their office, close the door and stare down at that piece of paper, they
see Louisville, Duke, Kansas," Litos said, explaining that those teams'
histories have more sway than they should.
"History doesn't matter.
All that matters is what this team can do," he said. "But we use that
to shape our mindset, and that is part of that mid-major bias. It's
similar to why the pundits aren't picking the Zags to go to the Final
Four."
Asked where they had the
Zags in their own brackets, Litos said he had them losing in the Elite
Eight to Ohio State, and Pomeroy said he doesn't do brackets; he just
likes to watch basketball.
The consummate
statistician, Pomeroy noted that the odds were against the Zags winning,
but that holds true for any team. On average, No. 1 seeds win only
three games in the tourney. You need six for the trophy.
But Gonzaga has "a whole
lot of ingredients that go into postseason success," Litos said. They
have an experienced backcourt, they rebound well, they're athletic and
can run the floor.
Their three-point
shooting is decent at 37.1%, but their team 50.4% shooting places them
second among tournament teams. Their 77.6 points a game is 12th-best in
college hoops.
We're ranked No. 1 in the polls. The next step is the Final Four, right?
Spokane Councilman Ben Stuckart
Add to that the consistency that comes with Coach Few.
"If you need a sailboat
to be guided through a storm, you want the best doggone captain out
there, and that's Mark Few," Litos said.
Few's ability to adapt
to situations and coach his players in the style he's crafted over 15
years gives Gonzaga the "steady guiding hand" that any team -- big or
small -- needs in the tournament, Litos said.
Underdog? Ha, bring it
Spokane Councilman Ben
Stuckart, a second-generation Gonzaga alum whose parents had season
tickets in the John Stockton days (1980-1984, when the Hall of Famer
played guard), said the team also has moxie.
"They're a special team.
When they get their backs up against the wall, they push though," he
said, pointing to the Oklahoma State game when a final-minute Gary Bell
three-pointer helped Gonzaga topple the No. 22 Cowboys.
When the Zags take the
floor at Salt Lake City's EnergySolutions Arena on Thursday, Stuckart
expects his birthplace to be a "dead town." Everyone will be watching
Gonzaga-Southern, he said.
Spokane is abuzz with
Gonzaga's success. "Go Zags" and "Love Our Zags" signs adorn homes,
yards, storefronts and car windows. During a city meeting on Tuesday, no
business was addressed for 20 minutes because everyone wanted to talk
Zags basketball, Stuckart said.
As for the "no-respect" talk, Stuckart brushes it off.
The second-smallest city
to host the World's Fair, Spokane welcomes underdog status, and you
won't hear from residents any "indignation about not getting respect,"
Stuckart said. "We're just happy to be from Spokane."
Since the 1999 run to
the Elite Eight, Gonzaga "has been central to our identity as a city,"
he said, and it's been common in years past for people to have high
hopes, idealistically jotting down Gonzaga as a Final Four team in their
brackets.
"But this year, people
are picking them to go all the way," Stuckart said. "We're ranked No. 1
in the polls. The next step is the Final Four, right?"
Said Litos, "Lord forbid they win it all. Then, party on."