North Carolina lifted a Tar Heel family to victory in the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA pool Monday night.
Jason Strutz, who lives in the Chapel Hill area with his North Carolina grad student wife, clinched the pool when UNC crushed Michigan State, 89-72, in the national championship game.
Strutz, an illustrator and the designer of this year's pool logo, lives in Carrboro, North Carolina with his wife Kelly Strutz (née LaPlante), who is a Ph.D. student in Maternal & Child Health at UNC.
As the pool champion, Jason Strutz will receive a t-shirt (or similar CafePress prize) displaying the pool logo that he designed.
Meanwhile, MSU grad student Mike Wiser just can't seem to get across the finish line. For the second time, he came into the title game with a chance to win a Living Room Times pool -- and for the second time, a Big Ten team couldn't pull out the victory that he needed to secure the pool championship. (Wiser nearly won the 2001 women's pool, but finished second because Purdue blew a big early lead and lost to Notre Dame.)
With the Spartans' loss, Wiser dropped all the way to tenth place in the final standings. Finishing above him: Strutz, with 367 out of a possible 477 points, the third-highest winning total in Times men's pool history; Lauren Barkmeier, with 364 points; Jennifer Elam, with 357; Nick Genco, with 354; Matt Scarborough, with 352; Arash Markazi, with 351; Joe Hiegel, with 346; Derek McDonald, with 343; Kevin Curran, with 342; and, tied with Wiser at 341 points, Kevin Curran. The pool is scored on a 5-7-10-15-20-25 basis.
An amusing aside: Jason Strutz, the champion of the men's pool, will finish dead last in the women's pool. I believe that's the first time a winner of one LRT pool has finished last in the other.
Complete standings are here and after the jump.
Top-ranked, undefeated UConn's blowout win over Stanford in the Final Four secured the championship of the 12th annual Living Room Times women's NCAA pool for Michael Holtsberg of Broomall, Pennsylvania.
Holtsberg, a 1993 alumnus of the University of Pennsylvania and a longtime blog reader, has 337 out of a possible 452 points. He picked UConn to win the national championship, and no one in the pool picked Louisville, so there is no chance of anyone gaining ground on him.
Complete standings here.
P.S. Here are the final standings if UConn wins the title, and if Louisville wins.
Louisville's stunning, thrilling comeback win over Oklahoma means the 12th annual Living Room Times women's NCAA pool will be decided tonight.
If UConn defeats Stanford in tonight's second Final Four game, Michael Holtsberg of Broomall, Pennsylvania, a 1993 U. Penn alum, will clinch the pool championship, regardless of what happens in the UConn-Louisville title game Tuesday night.
On the other hand, if Stanford pulls the stunner tonight, Yvette Webster of Round Hill, Virginia, a Shenandoah University alum who works at Hood College -- and who stated on the pool signup form that "I am completely uneducated on sports and my cat Benjamin isn't very helpful either" -- will clinch the pool, regardless of what happens in the Stanford-Louisville title game.
Andrew Long (who needed Oklahoma to win the national championship) and Michael Walsh (who needed Stanford to beat OU in the title game) were eliminated by the Sooners' loss.
In a rare case of symmetry between tournament and pool, a resident of the Chapel Hill area, whose wife attends UNC, will battle a Michigan State student for the championship of the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA pool when the Tar Heels play the Spartans for the national title Monday night.
If North Carolina wins, Jason Strutz, who lives in Carrboro, North Carolina and is married to UNC Ph.D. student Kelly Strutz, will win the pool. Jason Strutz is an illustrator and the designer of this year's pool logo, and if he wins, his prize will be a championship t-shirt or similar CafePress item displaying the logo that he designed.
If Michigan State wins, Mike Wiser, a Ph.D. student at MSU -- who, by his own admission, knows nothing about basketball (though he almost won the 2001 women's pool) -- will win the pool. It would be Wiser's second victory in a BrendanLoy.com contest; he won the 2004 Electoral College Contest with his perfect electoral map.
Strutz's wife Kelly is the sister of Brendan and Becky Loy's good friend Kristy LaPlante. Wiser is a 2003 USC alum, a friend and classmate of the Loys, and a longtime blog and LRT pool regular.
Strutz is currently in first place with 342 points out of a possible 452 points. Wiser is three back with 339 points, which ties him for second place with Lauren Barkmeier. Neil Waechter and Jennifer Elam are tied for fourth with 332 points.
Nick Genco is sixth with 329 points; Ian Marenna and Sören Hammerschmidt are tied for seventh with 328; Matt Scarborough is ninth with 327; and SI writer Arash Markazi is tenth with 326.
Philadelphia resident and Villanova fan Marty West, who would have won the pool if the Wildcats had won the title, fell all the way to 18th and was mathematically eliminated by their loss to UNC.
Strutz and Wiser are two of seven contestants out of 199 in the pool who predicted a UNC-MSU title game. The others are Pat Caplin (T-12th), Esteban Coca (20th), Jessica Osborne (T-33rd), Kelly Strutz (T-119th) and Janice Colvin (T-158th). Osborne, Coca and the Strutzes predict a Tar Heels victory; Caplin, Colvin and Wiser predict a Spartan triumph. Caplin would jump from 12th to second place if MSU wins.
After Michigan State's "home" upset of UConn at Ford Field today, the Final Four is down to a Terrific Three -- and so is the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA pool.
If the Spartans win the national championship, MSU grad student Mike Wiser will win the pool. If North Carolina wins the title, Jason Strutz of Carrboro, NC -- whose wife, Kelly, is a UNC grad student -- will win. If Villanova wins the title, Philadelphia resident and Nova fan Marty West will win.
For now, University of Edinburgh alum and UCSB grad student Sören Hammerschmidt, currently living in the Netherlands, has the lead. But he cannot win the pool because his predicted national champion, Oklahoma, has already been eliminated. Hammerschmidt cannot gain any more points, while others currently behind him in the standings still can, and someone will pass him in any scenario.
Previous leader Lauren Barkmeier was mathematically eliminated by UConn's loss, as was Neil Waechter.
Penn State won the NIT title Thursday night, earning Gordon College alum Robert Dokes the championship of the 5th annual BrendanLoy.com NIT Pool.
Dokes, of Beverly, Massachusetts, finished with 233 out of a possible 317 points. He went 14-2 in the first round, 6-2 in the second round, 2-2 in predicting the Final Four, 1-1 in predicting the finalists (he had Penn State vs. SDSU) and 1-0 in predicting the champion.
Marty West of Lansdowne, PA finished second with 226 points, followed by Mike Marchand of South Bend, IN with 223 points, pool administrator Brendan Loy of Denver, CO with 204, and Sören Hammerschmidt of Leiden, NL with 202.
Jon Caplin of Chicago, who would have won the pool if Baylor had defeated Penn State, finished with 201 points, tied for sixth with Lauren Taylor of Atlanta.
Eight contestants correctly predicted Penn State as the NIT champion: Dokes, West, Marchand, Scott Schmidt (8th), Mark Gardner (T-10th), Trisha Neudorff (T-15th), Brandon Minich (24th) and Mike Wiser (48th).
Here are the full final standings. See also after the jump.
Tonight's NIT Championship Game at 7:00 PM EDT between Baylor and Penn State will decide the winner of the 5th annual BrendanLoy.com NIT Pool.
If Penn State wins, Robert Dokes will win the title. If Baylor wins, Jon Caplin will win the title. (Dokes has PSU beating San Diego State, which lost to Baylor on Tuesday, in the final. Caplin has Baylor beating PSU.)
Dokes is a resident of Beverly, Massachusetts, and a 2001 alumnus of Division III Gordon College (home of the Fighting Scots!) who knows pool administrator Brendan Loy through Loy's lifelong friend Diane Krause. Caplin, a Chicago resident and a 1999 Wisconsin alum, is Becky Loy's cousin.
Here are the final standings if Penn State wins, and the final standings if Baylor wins.
Meanwhile, I've been lazy about posting the scenarios for the 12th annual Living Room Times women's NCAA pool, heading into the Final Four (UConn vs. Stanford, Oklahoma vs. Louisville), but here they are:
• Michael Holtsberg wins if UConn wins the title, or loses the title game to Louisville.
• Andrew Long wins if Oklahoma wins the title.
• Michael Walsh wins if Stanford beats Oklahoma in the title game.
• Yvette Webster wins if it's a Stanford-Louisville title game (no matter who wins).
This would seem to make Holtsberg, a Broomall, PA resident and 1993 Penn alum, an overwhelming favorite to win the pool, considering that UConn is the overwhelming favorite to win the national championship.
The scenarios also mean that someone will clinch on Sunday (when the national semifinals are played) unless Oklahoma beats Louisville in the 7pm EDT game.
The Final Four is set in the men's NCAA Tournament, but five contestants are still alive to win the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA pool.
Here are the scenarios for how the pool could end, depending on who beats whom in the national championship game. The links go to the "what-if" final standings for that scenario.
• MSU over UNC: Mike Wiser wins
• MSU over Villanova: Mike Wiser wins
• UConn over UNC: Neil Waechter wins
• UConn over Villanova: Neil Waechter wins
• UNC over MSU: Jason Strutz wins
• UNC over UConn: Lauren Barkmeier wins
• Villanova over MSU: Marty West wins
• Villanova over UConn: Lauren Barkmeier wins
Right now, Barkmeier has the lead. Meanwhile, congratulations are in order for Matt Scarborough, who is the only contestant in the pool to correctly predict all four teams in the Final Four. Alas, Scarborough can finish no better than third place because his remaining picks are identical to two contestants above him in the standings -- Barkmeier and Nick Genco.
P.S. Here are the latest women's pool standings. Heading into the Elite Eight, which starts tomorrow, Nate Evangelista has the lead despite a 4-for-8 Sweet Sixteen. (The best scores in the round belonged to Kristy LaPlante, Dave Whelan and Gary Atkinson, all of whom were 6-for-8.) Ten contestants are still alive to win.
With half of the Final Four decided, 13 contestants are still mathematically alive to win the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA pool -- but that number will decrease to somewhere between three and five after Sunday's games.
To stay alive, current leader Michael Walsh needs Oklahoma to beat North Carolina in the late game. So does Shaun Sullivan, presently in second place. Marty West, tied for third with already-eliminated Dan Dinunzio, needs North Carolina to win.
The other 10 still-alive contestants each need both of Sunday's games to go a certain way, or they'll be eliminated. Specifically:
• Ian Marenna, Geoff Brookes, Jennifer Elam and Kevin Curran need Louisville and UNC to win.
• Nick Surmacz needs Louisville and OU to win.
• Mike Wiser, Neil Waechter, Lauren Barkmeier and Jason Strutz need Michigan State and UNC to win.
• Sören Hammerschmidt needs Michigan State and OU to win.
Here is what the endgame scenarios would look like heading into the tournament's final weekend, after each of tomorrow's four possible combinations of outcomes:
If Louisville and UNC win:
• Ian Marenna wins if UConn wins title
• Marty West wins if Villanova wins title or loses title game to Louisville
• Geoff Brookes wins if Louisville beats UNC in title game
• Jennifer Elam wins if UNC beats Louisville in title game
• Kevin Curran wins if UNC beats UConn in title game
If Louisville and Oklahoma win:
• Shaun Sullivan wins if UConn wins title
• Michael Walsh wins if Oklahoma wins title or if Villanova beats UConn in title game
• Marty West wins if it's a Louisville-Villanova title game
• Nick Surmacz wins if Louisville beats Oklahoma in title game
If Michigan State and UNC win:
• Mike Wiser wins if Michigan State wins title
• Neil Waechter wins if UConn wins title
• Lauren Barkmeier wins if UConn reaches title game but loses
• Jason Strutz wins if UNC beats Michigan State in title game
• Marty West wins if Villanova beats Michigan State in title game
If Michigan State and Oklahoma win:
• Sören Hammerschmidt wins if Michigan State beats UConn in Final Four
• Michael Walsh wins if UConn beats MSU but then loses in title game
• Shaun Sullivan wins if UConn wins national title
...for the lack of full-fledged pool updates in this space. It's been tough to keep up during the work week, and this weekend promises to be busy too. But I'll certainly post NCAA Pool scenarios when they get a little more manageable. (Right now, 33 contestants are still alive to win. Surprisingly, they do NOT include the current #2 through #4 in the standings.)
In the mean time, check out the "microblog" posts at right for the latest, as well as (of course) the pool standings links at left.
After tonight's wins by Notre Dame (GO IRISH!!!) and San Diego State (WOOO!!! Perfect Final 4 for me!!!), here is where things stand in terms of NIT Pool scenarios, looking ahead to next Tuesday's semifinals (SDSU vs. Baylor at 7pm Eastern, ND vs. Penn State at 9pm Eastern) and next Thursday's title game:
* Scott Robertson wins if San Diego State wins the title
* Robert Dokes wins if Penn State wins the title
* Jon Caplin wins if Baylor beats Penn State in the title game
* Brendan Loy (hey, that's me!) wins if Notre Dame wins the title or loses to Baylor in the title game
If you're wondering, the only time I've ever won one of my own pools was in 1997, when I won the first annual women's basketball pool -- which had only ten contestants. That victory was less than joyful, as I clinched when UConn lost in the Elite Eight. This time, if I win, I'll be clinching with a Notre Dame victory, so it'll be a lot sweeter if it happens. :)
Anyway, here are the current standings. I'm first with 204 points. Dave Whelan is second with 193, but is mathematically eliminated because both of his finalists (St. Mary's and Florida) are gone. Dokes is third with 188. Robertson is fourth with 186.
Two-time defending champ Gary Kirby is fifth with 182, but he too is eliminated (his finalists were St. Mary's and Kentucky). The only other contestant still alive, Caplin, is currently tied for 25th with 161 (but his finalists, Baylor and Penn State, are still alive).
Here is where things stand right now in the NIT Pool, in terms of who is still alive to win, and how many of the 32 remaining scenarios they would win in:
Jon Caplin (8)
Gary Kirby (5)
Robert Dokes (4)
Brendan Loy (3)
Lauren Taylor (2)
Mark West (2)
Steve Ivey (2)
Scott Robertson (2)
Jeremy Gist (1)
Chris Wachtel (1)
Brian Putorak (1)
Kelly Strutz (1)
David Kreutz (1)
Kevin Hauschulz (1)
Dave Whelan (1)
As you can see, the current leader, Dave Whelan, is just barely alive to win: he only prevails in one scenario. That's because his predicted champion, Florida, is out. Whelan will be mathematically eliminated unless St. Mary's and Kentucky both win tonight -- and he then will need Penn State and St. Mary's to reach the championship game, and Penn State to win.
Meanwhile, Jon Caplin, although currently in 12th place, actually has the best chance of winning the pool -- in fact, he's the only contestant who is completely "safe" tonight. He cannot be mathematically eliminated, no matter what happens in the Notre Dame-Kentucky and St. Mary's-San Diego St. games. (Though his best-case scenario would be wins by St. Mary's and Kentucky, which would give him a perfect Final Four.)
In any event, here is a look at who will still be alive to win at the end of tonight, and how many of the remaining 8 scenarios they'd win in, depending on how the games turn out:
If ND & SDSU win:
Brendan Loy (3)
Scott Robertson (2)
Robert Dokes (2)
Jon Caplin (1)
If Kentucky & SDSU win:
Jon Caplin (2)
Robert Dokes (2)
Gary Kirby (2)
Kelly Strutz (1)
David Kreutz (1)
If Kentucky & St. Mary's win:
Jon Caplin (3)
Gary Kirby (3)
Steve Ivey (1)
Dave Whelan (1)
If ND & St. Mary's win:
Mark West (2)
Jon Caplin (2)*
Lauren Taylor (2)*
Kevin Hauschulz (1)*
Steve Ivey (1)*
Chris Wachtel (1)*
Jeremy Gist (1)*
Brian Putorak (1)
*Note: The apparent total number of scenarios here is 11, rather than 8, because of three possible ties: between Gist and Wachtel if ND beats St. Mary's in the title game; between Ivey and Hauschulz if Penn State beats St. Mary's in the title game; or between Taylor and Caplin if Baylor beats ND in the title game.
So, to summarize...
Jon Caplin: Cannot be eliminated tonight
Gary Kirby: Eliminated if Notre Dame wins
Robert Dokes: Eliminated if St. Mary's wins
Steve Ivey: Eliminated if SDSU wins
Brendan Loy: Eliminated if either Kentucky or St. Mary's wins
Scott Robertson: Eliminated if either Kentucky or St. Mary's wins
Lauren Taylor: Eliminated if either Kentucky or SDSU wins
Mark West: Eliminated if either Kentucky or SDSU wins
Jeremy Gist: Eliminated if either Kentucky or SDSU wins
Chris Wachtel: Eliminated if either Kentucky or SDSU wins
Brian Putorak: Eliminated if either Kentucky or SDSU wins
Kevin Hauschulz: Eliminated if either Kentucky or SDSU wins
Dave Whelan: Eliminated if either Notre Dame or SDSU wins
Kelly Strutz: Eliminated if either Notre Dame or St. Mary's wins
David Kreutz: Eliminated if either Notre Dame or St. Mary's wins
Dan Dinunzio, a 2008 Newington High School graduate and soon-to-be UConn student, leads the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA Pool heading into the Sweet 16 after following up a 26-for-32 first round with a 15-for-16 second round.
Dinunzio, who is currently enrolled at Central Connecticut State and is a contributor to the sports blog Bleacher Report, made only one error in picking the Sweet Sixteen: he had #6-seed West Virginia going instead of #3-seed Kansas. WVU lost in the first round to Dayton, which in turn lost to Kansas today.
Dinunzio has 235 out of a possible 272 points. Hot on his heels are 1991 USC Law alum Michael Walsh with 233 points and 2007 Notre Dame Law alum Charles Franz with 230 points.
Franz, like Dinunzio, correctly predicted 15 of the Sweet 16, missing only on West Virginia. Two others, Dean Thor (in 23rd place) and Marty West (44th), also went 15-for-16, with Wake Forest their only incorrect pick. Nobody was 16-for-16.
Marlene Saviola is in fourth place with 228 points. Scott Schmidt, a.k.a. "Boi From Troy," who briefly had the lead earlier today, is fifth with 226. Jason Cowans, who led after Day 2 and Day 3, is now sixth with 224 points. Complete standings here.
Meanwhile, thanks in part to the mostly "chalk" nature of the tournament so far, a whopping 117 of the pool's 199 contestants are still mathematically alive to win. The Possible Outcomes page shows these contestants, ranked in the order of their likelihood of winning, assuming that each of the 32,768 remaining scenarios have an equal chance of happening.
Dinunzio and Walsh are the top 2 contestants in this scenario-based ranking, but they are followed by Neil Rampal (currently tied for 9th place), Greg Shtraks (tied for 20th), Rick Port (T-9th), Leanna Loomer (T-20th) and Vinny Jankowski (T-65th).
Jason Cowans maintained sole possession of first place in the men's NCAA Pool with a 7-for-8 day -- his only mistake being one that was guaranteed on the tournament's first day, as he had Illinois going to the Sweet 16 -- but eight contestants are nipping at his heels, just 3 points back, after 8-for-8 days. Standings here.
Cowans is guaranteed to get at least two games wrong tomorrow, as he has Wake Forest and Florida State going to the Sweet 16.
Meanwhile, in the women's pool, Matt Wiser, Rachel Wetherill, Justin Vale, Brendan Loy (hey, that's me!), Dan Dinunzio and Tyler Condon are in a six-way tie for first after a 15-for-16 day.
There were three upsets in Saturday's first-round action, by #10 San Diego State, #11 Mississippi State and #12 Gonzaga. Loy and Vale predicted all three.
Last but not least (OK, maybe least), Dave Whelan leads the NIT Pool.
The deadline to enter the 12th annual Living Room Times women's NCAA Pool is noon EDT today (Saturday). You can enter using the regular entry form or the Mascot Bracket entry form. Either way, sign up now!
UPDATE: Entries are now closed. I'll get the women's standings and brackets online, and update all links etc., after I get back from ESPN Zone.
UPDATE 2: Done. We have 89 contestants in the women's pool.
Jason Cowans, a financial planner in Phoenix, leads the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA pool at the end of the first round with a 28-4 prediction record.
Cowans took sole possession of the lead -- becoming the first contestant this year to do so -- when Siena completed its dramatic double-overtime victory over Ohio State. Previous co-leaders Michael Walsh and Tyler Condon had picked the Buckeyes.
Cowans' four incorrect picks in the first round were Wake Forest over Cleveland State, Florida State over Wisconsin, Butler over LSU and Illinois over Western Kentucky. Unfortunately for him, he had three of those teams -- Wake, FSU and Illinois -- going to the Sweet 16.
Still, for now, Cowans has 140 points out of a possible 160 to lead the pack. Condon, Walsh, Ryan Dalidowitz, Jennifer Elam, Greg Kagan, Brian Kiolbasa and Scott Schmidt are tied for second place with 135 points apiece. 18 contestants are tied just behind them, with 130 points. Standings here.
So far, each game has been worth 5 points. Starting tomorrow, however, the point totals will increase: the pool is scored on a 5-7-10-15-20-25 basis.
As a personal aside, congrats to Becky, who is among the 18 conestants with 130 points after a 26-6 first round. She's doing really well. I think I'm going to start rooting for her bracket (with the exception of Western Kentucky over Gonzaga tomorrow, of course), given how miserable mine is. I'm tied for 192nd place (and also tied with Barack Obama!), and only two contestants in the pool are doing worse than me: Allyson Perlini Teel and Todd Newton. I'm now tied with my cat Sasha, and behind my cats Toby and Butter. My prediction record is a miserable 19-13. Ugh.
Michael Walsh and Jason Cowans are tied for first place through 28 games -- but one of them could take sole possession of the lead during the first round's final quartet, depending on the outcome of the Ohio State-Siena and Wake Forest-Clevelend State games.
Walsh and Cowans both picked favorites Michigan State, Florida State, and Wake Forest tonight. But Walsh picked Ohio State, while Cowans picked Siena. Thus, that game will decide who has the lead at night's end -- unless Cleveland State pulls the upset, in which case, if Ohio State beats Siena, Tyler Condon would tie Walsh for the lead.
Walsh and Cowans are 26-2. Condon and nine others are currently tied 5 points back with 25-3 records. Standings here.
Thirteen contestants in the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA Pool -- Jennifer Elam, Greg Kagan, Neil Rampal, Michael Rosenkrantz, Nick Genco, Conor Sullivan, Derek McDonald, Ryan Dalidowitz, Todd Stigliano, Michael Walsh, Jason Gilman, Vlada Shelkova and Patrick Roach -- went 15-1 in predicting the first day of NCAA Tournament action, and are tied for the lead.
Elam, Kagan, Rampal and Rosenkrantz were perfect through the first 15 games, but failed to predict Western Kentucky's upset of Illinois. Now, nobody's perfect.
Thirty-eight others are tied 5 points behind the co-leaders, with 14-for-16 prediction records. Standings here.
Five contestants -- Jennifer Elam, Nick Genco, Greg Kagan, Neil Rampal and Michael Rosenkrantz -- are still perfect in the 14th annual Living Room TImes men's NCAA Pool through the tournament's first 12 games.
All five co-leaders picked Duke and Oklahoma tonight, and all but Genco picked UCLA and Illinois. Genco predicted upsets by VCU and Western Kentucky.
Thirty-seven others are tied 5 points behind the co-leaders, with 11-for-12 prediction records. Standings here.
After an afternoon featuring no major upsets -- #9 Texas A&M over #8 BYU being the only deviation from "chalk" -- 29 contestants in the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA Pool sport perfect 8-0 prediction records heading into the evening's octet of games. Standings here.
Note: This evening, I will add several "benchmark" brackets, for comparison purposes only, to the pool field, including the "all favorites" bracket, the "aggregate" bracket, and Barack Obama's bracket. Stay tuned for that.
Fifty-nine out of 199 contestants are tied for first place in the 14th annual Living Room Times men's NCAA Pool with 3-0 prediction records so far. Standings here.
By the way, the standings are set to update automatically, but depending on how long it takes Pachysoft to update the scores, and on when that update occurs within the overlapping cycles of automated computer activity on my end, anywhere from 10 to 50 minutes may elapse after the conclusion of each set of games before the standings update. (When I'm home and at my computer, I will of course update them manually, and thus almost immediately.)
The deadline to enter my 14th annual men's NCAA Pool is today, Thursday, at 12:20 PM Eastern Time (10:20 AM here in Colorado). As of midnight local time, we had 156 contestants and counting.
Anyway, if you haven't already, get you picks in now! Good luck! Also, don't forget to sign up for the women's pool (deadline is Saturday at noon EDT).
Although my tentative plans to do a full-fledged blog restart have fallen through, at least for the moment, I have set up a sort of mini-blog to handle "pool updates" on the NCAA and NIT pools.
Also note the "microblogging" column at right, where my latest Tweets, Facebook statuses and FriendFeed links will appear in near-real-time throughout the tournament.