Where every college basketball team ranks in each state
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The United States of College Basketball: 2017-18
The road to the Final Four requires a map. As always, CBS Sports is providing college basketball fans with a nationwide look at every state (except Alaska, which does not have a Division I team; Washington, D.C. is represented, though) and which program has bragging rights for the season ahead.
Credit: Mike Meredith / CBS Sports original
This is not a list of the 50 best teams this season. We're merely talking geographical dominance. Who owns the territory.
Many of the teams slotted within state lines will appear again come March in a much more coveted graphic: the NCAA Tournament field.
How does this year's atlas compare to last season's? Check it out. A good number of states have had their logos switched. -
Alabama
1. Alabama Crimson Tide
Credit: USATSI
The Crimson Tide have their highest expectations in a very long time thanks to an incoming outstanding freshman class, led by Collin Sexton, who has yet to be cleared to play due to eligibility concerns, Dazon Ingram (pictured) and John Petty. This is Avery Johnson's third season with Bama. The Tide are a firm top pick over Auburn, which is dealing with indefinite suspensions to two of its top four players.
The rest
2. Auburn
3. UAB
4. Jacksonville St.
5. Samford
6. Troy
7. South Alabama
8. Alabama State.
9. Alabama A&M. -
Arizona
1. Arizona Wildcats
Credit: USATSI
An easy call, even if there's uneasiness in Tucson right now. The FBI probe looms over this program, but Sean Miller's got so much talent on this team that the Wildcats are far and away the best team in the Grand Canyon State. Allonzo Trier (pictured), a junior shooting guard, will be in the thick of the Player of the Year race.
The rest
2. Arizona State
3. Grand Canyon
4. Northern Arizona -
Arkansas
1. Arkansas Razorbacks
Credit: USATSI
The Hogs are the best team in Arkansas essentially every season. Now, with the return of Jaylen Barford (pictured), Arkansas is attempting to get to its third Big Dance in four seasons. This was a 26-10 team a season ago. Arkansas State, out of the Sun Belt, is our No. 2 team in the Natural State.
The rest
2. Arkansas St.
3. Central Arkansas
4. Little Rock
5. Arkansas Pine Bluff -
California
1. Southern California Trojans
Credit: USATSI
No state has more Division I programs than California, which is home to 24 of them. In most years USC is not the best team in the Golden State, but this season looks to be different in a lot of ways. Andy Enfield's program -- also dealing with the fallout from the FBI probe -- looks to have the most talent of anyone in California. Chimezie Metu (pictured), Jordan McLaughlin, Bennie Boatwright, De'Anthony Melton, Elijah Stewart. If all are eligible, that's a tremendous quintet.
The rest
2. UCLA
3. Saint Mary's
4. Stanford
5. San Diego State
6. San Francisco
7. Fresno State
8. San Diego
9. UC Irvine
10. Santa Clara
11. California
12. UC Davis
13. Pacific
14. Long Beach State
15. Cal State Bakersfield
16. Cal State Fullerton
17. San Jose State
18. Pepperdine
19. Loyola Marymount
20. UC Riverside
21. UCSB
22. Cal Poly
23. Sacramento State
24. Cal State Northridge -
Colorado
1. Colorado Buffaloes
Credit: USATSI
The Buffs are an easy pick out of their state, even in a down year. Tad Boyle lost Derrick White, who turned into an NBA draft pick after starting his career in Division II. Colorado, led by George King (pictured), will battle to get an NIT bid, but it's far ahead of the No. 2 team in the state, Colorado State, which ranks 132nd on our 1-351 ranking of every team in the sport.
The rest
2. Colorado State
3. Northern Colorado
4. Denver
5. Air Force -
Connecticut
1. UConn Huskies
Credit: USATSI
The Huskies weren't good last season -- just 16-17 amid a load of injuries -- yet still ranked as the best team in the Nutmeg State. That's what happens when you're far and a way the strongest program within state borders. In 2017-18, UConn should make a huge return and wind up being better than a pretty solid Yale squad (the only other CT-based team that cracks our top 100). Names to know: Jalen Adams (pictured), Terry Larrier, Alterique Gilbert.
The rest
2. Yale
3. Fairfield
4. Sacred Heart
5. Hartford
6. Central Connecticut
7. Quinnipiac -
Delaware
1. Delaware Blue Hens
Credit: Getty Images
The first state in the country has just two teams, and like most seasons, UD has the better of the two. The Blue Hens are still in rebuild mode under second-year coach Martin Inglesby. Fortunately, most of the roster is back, including Ryan Daly (pictured). A realistic goal is to finish ninth in the CAA.
The rest
2. Delaware State -
Washington DC
1. Georgetown Hoyas
Credit: USATSI
There are only four programs in the District, but the gap between Georgetown and George Washington could be slim this season due to Patrick Ewing's first season as a head coach at any level. Jessie Govan (pictured) should star for the Hoyas, who will fight to avoid the Big East basement.
The rest
2. George Washington
3. American
4. Howard -
Florida
1. Florida Gators
Credit: USATSI
The Gators are a preseason top 10 team here at CBSSports.com, meaning KeVaughn Allen (pictured) and company are an appropriate call to be the best in the Sunshine State. But we should note that Florida only beats out Miami by one spot in our rankings. The Gators come out on top because of a really good backcourt and what should be a top-10 defense. This group came very close to making the Final Four last season.
The rest
2. Miami
3. UCF
4. Florida State
5. Florida Gulf Coast
6. South Florida
7. North Florida
8. Jacksonville
9. FAU
10. Stetson
11. FIU
12. Bethune-Cookman
13. Florida A&M -
Georgia
1. Georgia Bulldogs
Credit: USATSI
Yante Maten (pictured) is the co-SEC preseason player of the year. The Bulldogs look to have the best overall team in the Peach State, narrowly edging out a talented Georgia Tech team. Georgia coach Mark Fox is a hot-seat candidate, but Georgia fans should expect this team to battle around the NCAA Tournament bubble. Maten's an anonymous player nationally but a terrific power forward.
The rest
2. Georgia Tech
3. Georgia Southern
4. Mercer
5. Georgia State
6. Kennesaw State
7. Savannah State -
Hawaii
1. Hawaii Rainbow Warriors
Credit: Getty Images
It can only be Hawaii! Jack Purchase (pictured) is back for a team that went 14-16 last season. Eron Ganot is building something really good here. This team is on pace to be the best in the Big West in two years. -
Idaho
1. Boise State Broncos
Credit: USATSI
Chandler Hutchison (pictured) is the best player in the Mountain West, and because Boise State has him on the roster, the Broncos are the runaway choice as the best in the Gem State. BSU went 20-12 last season and should hit 20 wins again this season.
The rest
2. Idaho
3. Idaho State -
Illinois
1. Northwestern Wildcats
Credit: USATSI
There are 13 D-I teams in Illinois. How many times in program history -- well more than a century -- could Northwestern claim to have the best team in the state heading into a season? In all honesty, this could be the first. Bryant McIntosh (pictured) Scottie Lindsey, Vic Law. The Wildcats are universally accepted among local and national media as a top-25 team. There is no one even close within state borders to NU at this point. Loyola of Chicago is probably the closest, and it's not even the best team in the Missouri Valley.
The rest
2. Loyola-Chicago
3. Illinois
4. DePaul
5. Illinois State
6. UIC.
7. Southern Illinois
8. Eastern Illinois
9. Bradley
10. Northern Illinois
11. Western Illinois
12. Chicago State
13. Edwardsville -
Indiana
1. Notre Dame Fighting Irish
Credit: USATSI
As has been the case for a decade now, basically, Indiana's four big programs are all national relevant and plenty interesting. But behind preseason ACC POY pick Bonzie Colson (pictured), Notre Dame's the clearcut choice in the Hoosier State. Colson will go bingo-bango with senior point guard Matt Farrell. The Fighting Irish look to be a little bit better than Purdue, and then there's a solid drop-off before getting to Butler, Indiana and Ball State.
The rest
2. Purdue
3. Butler
4. Indiana
5. Ball State
6. Valparaiso
7. Indiana State
8. Evansville
9. Fort Wayne
10. IUPUI -
Iowa
1. Iowa Hawkeyes
Credit: USATSI
Easy pick for the Hawkeyes this season because Iowa State is in complete rebuild mode, and Northern Iowa's not near the team it was three, four years ago. For Iowa, Tyler Cook (pictured) and Jordan Bohannon will lead the charge and probably flirt with the NCAA Tournament. If Iowa keeps all its underclassmen, it will probably be a preseason top 25 team in 2018.
The rest
2. Iowa State
3. Northern Iowa
4. Drake -
Kansas
1. Kansas Jayhawks
Credit: USATSI
The Jayhawks are our pick, but we have to admit that it's a very tight race between KU and Wichita State. In fact, Wichita State ranks fifth (vs. Kansas' third) in our preseason rankings. Ultimately, it's Bill Self -- so how can you deny? Devonte' Graham (pictured) will be one of the most valuable players in the country. Kansas was very good last season, but failed to make the Final Four. It also lost national player of the year Frank Mason III.
The rest
2. Wichita State
3. Kansas State -
Kentucky
1. Kentucky Wildcats
Credit: USATSI
The Wildcats have to be the pick, but only Louisville could challenge UK for the title of Best in the Bluegrass this season. (Then again, that's been the case almost every season in the history of college basketball in Kentucky.) Be sure to check out this piece as to why Kentucky has promise -- but could also collapse under the weight of its youngest team ever. Wenyen Gabriel (pictured) is the only UK player returning who played a major role last season.
The rest
2. Louisville
3. Northern Kentucky
4. Western Kentucky
5. Murray State
6. Eastern Kentucky
7. Morehead State -
Louisiana
1. Louisiana Tech Bulldogs
Credit: USATSI
Nope, not LSU. The Tigers are in year No. 1 under Will Wade. The Bulldogs at La. Tech are coming off a 23-10 season and have most of their roster back. This should definitively be the best team in the Pelican State in 2017-18. Jacobi Boykins (pictured) is the name to know. Eric Konkol's team could help Conference USA get two NCAA Tournament bids this season.
The rest
2. LSU
3. Louisiana-Lafayette
4. Tulane
5. Southeastern Louisiana
6. Northwestern State
7. New Orleans
8. Southern
9. Nicholls State
10. Louisiana Monroe
11. McNeese State
12. Grambling State -
Maine
1. Maine Black Bears
Credit: USATSI
The only D-I program in the Pine Tree State. Andrew Fleming (pictured) returns, but this team isn't expected to finish in the top half of the America East. -
Maryland
1. Maryland Terrapins
Credit: USATSI
Maryland's got more Division I programs than you think (nine), but this is another state where there's one program that's going to be the best 95 percent of the time. No one can come close to the Terps here, as Maryland ranks 30th on our overall 1-351 list. A pretty solid Towson team, probably No. 2 in the CAA this season, is the second-best squad in the state but is all the way down at 111. Justin Jackson (pictured), Kevin Huerter and Anthony Cowan will be a tremendous trio of sophomores for the Terps.
The rest
2. Towson
3. UMBC
4. Mount St. Mary's
5. Navy
6. Loyola (MD)
7. Morgan State
8. Maryland Eastern Shore
9. Coppin State -
Massachusetts
1. Harvard Crimson
Credit: USATSI
Harvard and Tommy Amaker (pictured) will get a push from a solid Boston College team (with a very good backcourt) for the honor of best in the state, but we're pretty comfortable slotting the Crimson as tops her. Seth Towns and Bryce Aiken should have this team pushing Yale for the auto bid out of the Ivy -- and then Harvard almost certainly will again best the best team in the Bay State come 2018.
The rest
2. Boston College
3. Boston University
4. Massachussetts
5. Northeastern
6. UMass-Lowell
7. Holy Cross -
Michigan
1. Michigan State Spartans
Credit: USATSI
The Spartans are firmly again the best team in their state, as many believe popular preseason POY pick Miles Bridges (pictured) can push Tom Izzo to a second national championship. Bridges returns alongside the best sophomore group in the country, plus a handful of vets are back as well. The Spartans, a proud program with plenty of Final Four banners, have seldom started seasons with this much expected of them.
The rest
2. Michigan
3. Oakland
4. Western Michigan
5. Eastern Michigan
6. Detroit
7. Central Michigan -
Minnesota
1. Minnesota Golden Gophers
Credit: USATSI
Always amazing to realize that a state the size of Minnesota, with such a major metropolis, only has one Division I school. The Gophers win by default, though it must be noted that this team is top-20 good this season and could have a sleeper Second or Third Team All-American in Amir Coffey (pictured). -
Mississippi
1. Mississippi State Bulldogs
Credit: USATSI
Quinndary Weatherspoon (pictured) is among the nation's few truly underrated outstanding talents. The Bulldogs, at their best, should prove to be the best team in the Magnolia State. Ole Miss is right there, though. Andy Kennedy's got a lot returning, and plenty of size. A very tough call, but MSU is due to have that long-awaited breakout season under Ben Howland.
The rest
2. Ole Miss
3. Southern Miss
4. Alcorn State
5. Jackson State
6. Mississippi Valley State -
Missouri
1. Missouri Tigers
Credit: USATSI
Missouri State could threaten the Tigers here, but there's no way to go against Mizzou at this point. Michael Porter Jr., Terrence Phillips (pictured), Jeremiah Tilmon, Jontay Porter -- the Tigers feel like a lock to double their win total (at least) from last year's 8-24 ending.
The rest
2. Missouri State
3. Saint Louis
4. Southeast Missouri State
5. UMKC -
Montana
1. Montana Grizzlies
Credit: USATSI
The Grizzlies, led by Ahmaad Rorie (pictured) have been steady since Travis DeCuire took over for Wayne Tinkle. We've got Montana 48 spots (162 vs. 210) ahead of Montana State in our 1-351 rankings. Both pay their rent in the Big Sky.
The rest
2. Montana State -
Nebraska
1. Creighton Bluejays
Credit: USATSI
Marcus Foster (pictured) and Khryi Thomas have Creighton in firm control of the title of Nebraska's best. The Bluejays are set up to compete for another NCAA Tournament bid. Foster might be a top-five scorer in college hoops this season.
The rest
2. Nebraska
3. Nebraska Omaha -
Nevada
1. Nevada Wolfpack
Credit: USATSI
UNLV is on its way back, but Nevada is here. It's the best team in the Mountain West, and it could have a future pro in Jordan Caroline (pictured). Eric Musselman could easily parlay this season, and another NCAA Tournament showing, into a bigger job come 2018.
The rest
2. UNLV -
New Hampshire
1. New Hampshire Wildcats
Credit: USATSI
Tanner Leissner (pictured) is the star player on a UNH team that's a bit better than its only in-state competitor, Dartmouth out of the Lvy League. UNH is a top-half squad in the America East.
The rest
2. Dartmouth -
New Jersey
1. Seton Hall Pirates
Credit: USATSI
A Jersey-sized gap between the Pirates and the next-closest team, No. 127. Rutgers. The Pirates have a dynamic backcourt duo in Desi Rodriguez and Khadeen Carrington. Then there's Angel Delgado (pictured) in the frontcourt. No reason to believe he can't be the POY candidate that Caleb Swanigan was last season.
The rest
2. Rutgers
3. Princeton
4. Monmouth
5. Fairleigh Dickinson
6. Rider
7. Saint Peter's
8. NJIT -
New Mexico
1. New Mexico State Aggies
Credit: USATSI
The Aggies will again be the better of the two D-I teams in the Land of Enchantment. Jemerrio Jones (pictured) will star for NMSU, which has a new coach (Chris Jans). New Mexico hired Paul Weir away from NMSU, but he might need two full years to catch up and pass his former team.
The rest
2. New Mexico -
New York
1. St. Bonaventure Bonnies
Credit: USATSI
For the first time since the Bob Lanier days, the Bonnies have the best team of the 22 that call New York state home. That's due in large part to the outstanding backcourt of Matt Mobley and Jaylen Adams (pictured). Bona's looking to improve from a 20-win season in 2016-17, and it's probably going to be the No. 2 team in the A-10.
The rest
2. St. John's
3. Syracuse
4. Iona.
5. Buffalo
6. Manhattan
7. Hofstra
8. Albany
9. Niagara
10. Wagner
11. Colgate
12. Stony Brook
13. Fordham
14. Cornell.
15. Columbia
16. Siena
17. Canisius
18. Army
19. LIU Brooklyn
20. Marist
21. Binghamton
22. St. Francis (NY) -
North Carolina
1. Duke Blue Devils
Credit: USATSI
Our preseason No. 1 team is 10 spots ahead of UNC, at No. 11. Duke's got an incredible amount of raw basketball talent on its roster. Combine that with the return of Grayson Allen (pictured), Mike Krzyzewski's coaching and Duke's pedigree, and you have a team with a claim to have the highest ceiling of any in the sport. UNC is the only squad in Duke's zip code this season, as our third-best North Carolina-based team is Davidson, which ranks 60th.
The rest
2. North Carolina
3. Davidson
4. North Carolina State
5. Wake Forest
6. UNC Asheville
7. Elon
8. UNC Wilmington
9. UNC Greensboro
10. Campbell
11. Charlotte
12. East Carolina
13. High Point
14. North Carolina Central
15. Gardner Webb
16. Appalachian State
17. Western Carolina
18. North Carolina A&T -
North Dakota
1. North Dakota State Bison
Credit: USATSI
The Bison have Paul Miller and A.J. Jacobson (pictured) back, and this is probably a top-three team in the Summit League this season. Dave Richman's already coached this program to one NCAA Tournament appearance (2015) and figures to keep NDSU in the thick of the Summit in the years ahead. North Dakota will be middle-of-the-pack in the Big Sky.
The rest
2. North Dakota -
Ohio
1. Cincinnati Bearcats
Credit: USATSI
Xavier fans aren't going to like it, but this Cincinnati team is legit. Jacob Evans (pictured) is the Bearcats' leading returning scorer, but UC has five players who, all together, make up the strongest offensive club Mick Cronin's ever had. Xavier's got the best player (Trevon Bluiett), but Cincinnati's a better all-around team. The Cincy-area rivalry is greatly overshadowing Ohio State and Dayton, which are in down seasons and have new coaches.
The rest
2. Xavier
3. Ohio State
4. Dayton
5. Toledo
6. Ohio
7. Wright State
8. Kent State
9. Bowling Green
10. Akron
11. Youngstown State
12. Miami (Ohio)
13. Cleveland State -
Oklahoma
1. Oklahoma Sooners
Credit: USATSI
The Sooners took a big step back last season, after making the Final Four with Buddy Hield in 2016. But now Oklahoma should firmly be the best team in the Sooner State thanks to incoming ball-out frosh Trae Young. Senior Khadeem Lattin (pictured) also is set up to finally have the type of all-around offensive season Lon Kruger's been waiting on the past two years.
The rest
2. Oklahoma State
3. Tulsa
4. Oral Roberts -
Oregon
1. Oregon Ducks
Credit: USATSI
Plenty of leg room between the Ducks and our No. 2 team in the Beaver State, Oregon State. We've got four Ducks on our list of the top 100 (and one) players in college basketball. In light of that, it's right to wonder if ranking this team 34th was 10 spots too low. Payton Pritchard (pictured) is the breakout candidate in Eugene.
The rest
2. Oregon State
3. Portland
4. Portland State -
Pennsylvania
1. Villanova Wildcats
Credit: USATSI
Villanova is the no-brainer pick here. Junior point guard Jalen Brunson (pictured) will be in the mix for Big East, and national, Player of the Year awards. Jay Wright's program is the preseason favorite to win the Big East for the fifth straight season. Nova's four consecutive regular season conference titles are a Big East record.
The rest
2. Saint Joseph's
3. Temple
4. Penn State
5. Bucknell
6. La Salle
7. Pitt
8. Lehigh
9. St. Francis
10. Penn
11. Duquesne
12. Drexel
13. Robert Morris
14. Lafayette -
Rhode Island
1. Rhode Island Rams
Credit: USATSI
Like a few other states on our list, the margin is razor thing between the team that won out and the one that came in second. Rhody's No. 25 on our list of rankings -- Providence is No. 26. Hard to split the difference between the two. URI, led by E.C. Matthews (pictured), will attempt to make consecutive NCAA Tournament after going almost two decades without a bid.
The rest
2. Providence
3. Brown
4. Bryant -
South Carolina
1. Charleston Cougars
Credit: USATSI
Earl Grant's in line to have his best team yet. Charleston's starting five will, led by Joe Chealey (pictured) probably be better than South Carolina's this season. That's why we've got the Cougars firmly ahead of the Gamecocks. The state of South Carolina's got three top-100 teams this season; Furman, out of the SoCon, could get its first NCAA bid in almost four decades.
The rest
2. South Carolina
3. Furman
4. Winthrop
5. Clemson
6. Wofford
7. The Citadel
8. USC Upstate
9. Coastal Carolina
10. Charleston Southern
11. South Carolina State
12. Presbyterian -
South Dakota
1. South Dakota Coyotes
Credit: USATSI
Close battle between the two D-I programs in the Mount Rushmore State. South Dakota just barely gets the edge -- Matt Mooney (pictured) is a solid player to know -- but Mike Daum and South Dakota State are going to battle the Coyotes in the Summit League. One of the toughest toss-ups of any two teams on our list.
The rest
2. South Dakota State -
Tennessee
1. Vanderbilt Commodores
Credit: USATSI
The Commodores played an extraordinarily tough schedule last season -- but made the NCAA Tournament. Matthew Fisher-Davis (pictured), Jeff Roberson and Riley LaChance all return. Bryce Drew's team beats out Middle Tennessee as the top squad in the Volunteer State.
The rest
2. Middle Tennessee
3. Belmont
4. Tennessee
5. Memphis
6. Lipscomb
7. East Tennessee State
8. Tennessee State
9. Tennessee Tech
10. UT-Martin
11. Chattanooga
12. Austin Peay -
Texas
1. Baylor Bears
Credit: USATSI
Twenty-three D-I teams come from the Longhorn State. We think six are top-50 quality this season, but Baylor sets up as the best for now. The Bears return all-important floor general Manu Lecomte (pictured). Scott Drew's zone defense, combined with BU's personnel, should amount to a top-15 D in college basketball. Contenders on Baylor's heels include Texas A&M, Texas and TCU.
The rest
2. Texas A&M
3. Texas
4. TCU
5. SMU
6. Houston
7. Texas Tech
8. UT Arlington
9. UTEP
10. Sam Houston State
11. Stephen F. Austin
12. Texas Southern
13. Lamar.
14. Abilene Christian
15. UTSA
16. Texas State
17. Corpus Christi
18. UT Rio Grande Valley
19. Houston Baptist
20. Rice
21. Incarnate Word
22. North Texas
23. Prairie View A&M -
Utah
1. BYU Cougars
Credit: USATSI
The return of Nick Emery (pictured) is just enough to put the Cougars ahead of a Utah team that's going to miss Kyle Kuzma (currently a Los Angles Laker). For BYU, the question is: Can this team get near the level of Saint Mary's and Gonzaga? If so, it will be a bubble team. If not, it will be in WCC purgatory, doomed to be an NIT lock but nothing more.
The rest
2. Utah
3. Utah Valley
4. Utah State
5. Weber State
6. Southern Utah -
Vermont
1. Vermont Catamounts
Credit: USATSI
Only D-I team in the Green Mountain State. And Vermont's going to be pretty good again. Anthony Lamb (pictured), Trae Bell-Haynes, Ernie Duncan, Payton Henson. Was a No. 13 seed last season. Probably going to be a No. 13 again. -
Virginia
1. Virginia Tech Hokies
Credit: USATSI
With Chris Clarke (pictured), Justin Robinson and Ahmed Hill back, Virginia Tech's likely to improve on a 22-win season from a year ago. And you read right: VPI is going to be better than Virginia, which hasn't been the case since Tony Bennett got to Charlottesville. Buzz Williams' best season yet in Blacksburg is set to start. Sleeper Sweet 16 team.
The rest
2. Virginia
3. VCU
4. Richmond
5. George Mason
6. Liberty
7. Old Dominion
8. Norfolk State
9. William & Mary
10. Radford
11. Hampton
12. James Madison
13. Longwood
14. VMI -
Washington
1. Gonzaga Bulldogs
Credit: USATSI
It's got to drive Washington fans crazy that Gonzaga's owned the title of best program in the state for most of the past 10 years. Mark Few's coming off his first Final Four, and now he's got enough incoming talent and returning starters to easily distance his team from UW, which starts anew with new coach Mike Hopkins. For Gonzaga, Josh Perkins and Johnathan Williams III (pictured) will star.
The rest
2. Washington
3. Washington State
4. Seattle
5. Eastern Washington -
West Virginia
1. West Virginia Mountaineers
Credit: USATSI
As always, West Virginia outpaces Marshall as the best team in the Mountain State. Jevon Carter (pictured) is a true, fair pick as a complete sleeper to be in the National Player of the Year race. WVU could be the No. 2 team in the Big 12.
The rest
2. Marshall -
Wisconsin
1. Wisconsin Badgers
Credit: USATSI
The Badgers have a lot of question marks, but with the return of top-10 player Ethan Happ (pictured) that mans we still like UW to be better than in-state rival Marquette. For Wisconsin, will Happ's expanded offensive game and a new-look backcourt be enough to land a single-digit seed? An interesting coaching challenge lies ahead for Greg Gard.
The rest
2. Marquette
3. Green Bay
4. Milwaukee -
Wyoming
1. Wyoming Cowboys
Credit: USATSI
Could be a surprising team in the Mountain West, in good part to the critical return of Justin James (pictured). Overall, the Cowboys have so much coming back that they're going to be a tough out almost every night in league play.
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