KC’s Mid-Major Top 10: Murray State hangs on to top spot, plus our 2021-22 Mid-Major All-America Team

Murray State celebrates its 71-67 victory over Morehead State as it wins the Ohio Valley Conference Championship and advances to the first round of the Men’s NCAA tournament. (1:37)

Tell me you didn’t react. Tell me you didn’t spring off your loveseat or lounger. Tell me there’s no joy in watching a young man make the shot of his life — a group live out its wildest dreams. Tell me the mid-major madness is not real.

When David Jean-Baptiste hit the shot heard ’round Chattanooga on Monday it not only sent the Mocs to the NCAA tournament, it confirmed for the umpteenth thousand time, there is no month like March.

ABSOLUTE MADNESS‼️

Chattanooga wins the SoCon and a trip to the NCAA tourney AT THE BUZZER! pic.twitter.com/mQ77OIjOWM

Tell me you can’t get behind Griff Aldrich, the former Division III player, turned Division III assistant, turned law student, turned practicing lawyer, turned oil and gas company executive, turned assistant again (at UMBC for the Retrievers’ historic 2018 NCAA tournament upset of Virginia, no less) turned head coach at Longwood University. The 47-year-old followed his hoop dream, galvanized a program and a fan base, and led the Lancers to the school’s first ever Big South Conference championship on Sunday, and with it, a trip to The Big Dance.

The tickets-punched landscape is filled with incredible stories and from Newark, Delaware to Murray, Kentucky to Atlanta, Georgia to Hamilton, New York, Dayton, Ohio to Smithfield, Rhode Island and assorted colleges and universities in between, those stories are being shared. As of Thursday, 12 tickets to the NCAA tournament have been punched with the lion’s share still to come.

Of course the flip side of that reality is the end of the road for more than 250 programs that won’t be participating in postseason play. So with that in mind, we elected to celebrate the game’s top players, from the “Power 25” conferences (every mid-major conference), in the first-ever edition of KC’s mid-major All-American team:

Graham Ike, Wyoming Cowboys

The Cowboys enjoyed one of the finest regular seasons in program history and Ike — along with Hunter Maldonado — were as responsible for that as anyone. In Ike’s case, the sophomore made a gigantic leap from his freshman season, averaging 19.9 PPG (up 8.7 PPG) and 9.6 RPG (up 4.2 RPG) both among the top 25 nationally. Coach Jeff Linder’s polished lefty eclipsed 25 points in nine games and his 33-point, 10-rebound masterpiece in February — while playing 39 of 40 minutes — helped topple eventual league champ Boise State. I like Ike … and everything the Pokes star gives one of the most dangerous mid-major teams in America.

Darius McGhee, Liberty Flames

What’s left to say about one of the most prolific scorers in all of college basketball? McGhee missed out on leading Division I in scoring by 0.1 PPG (24.6 PPG, behind only Bryant’s Peter Kiss) en route to his second straight ASUN Player of the Year trophy. His 765 total points did lead the country, as did his 135 made 3-pointers. McGhee’s 48 points in a January win over FGCU were the most in a single game this season and his 47 points in a win over Kennesaw State six weeks later were the second-most. One day, when KC’s Mid-Major Hall of Fame opens its ultra-luxe handcrafted sandalwood doors, McGhee will be among its inaugural class.

Isiaih Mosley, Missouri State Bears

An All-Missouri Valley Conference first-team pick for the second year in a row, Mosley is a first-teamer here in the brightest galaxy in hoops thanks to another stellar campaign. After finishing last season a shade under 20.0 PPG (19.8) the Bears bucket-getter finished this season at 20.1 PPG, second in the MVC to only Northern Iowa’s AJ Green. Mosley was fifth in the league in rebounding (6.2 RPG) and his 43.4% mark from 3-point range was the highest in Division I among players averaging at least 20.0 PPG. Over 1,100 points in two seasons warrants a serious tip of the KC mid-major snap-back trucker cap. (merch available for order soon!)

David Roddy, Colorado State Rams

No team has enjoyed the posh lifestyle inside the most exclusive zip code in sports quite like Colorado State in KC’s Top 10, and no one is more responsible for it than Roddy. The Mountain West Conference Player of the Year powered the Rams to a 24-4 regular season — including an 11-0 start — and a 14-4 mark in conference play second only to Boise State, which CSU swept. Roddy was third in the MW in scoring (19.5 PPG), sixth in rebounding (7.6 RPG), 13th in assists (2.8 APG) and was far and away the league leader in FG% (57.5%). He also shot a shimmering 46% from 3-point range, 15th in Division I among qualified players, and an improvement of nearly 20% from his freshman season. “Rowdy” Roddy is the real deal.

KJ Williams, Murray State Racers

Williams joined former teammate Ja Morant (what ever happened to that guy?) by taking home Ohio Valley Conference Player of the Year following a season in which he led the OVC in scoring (18.2 PPG) and finished second in rebounding (8.6 RPG) to Morehead State’s Johni Broome. With Williams as the driving force, Murray State became just the sixth OVC team to finish the regular season unbeaten, just the second to also win the conference championship game and the first to do it all in the spotlight of a season-long Top 10 ranking in KC’s Poll of Record.

Jamaree Bouyea, San Francisco Dons

The driving on-court force behind San Francisco’s winningest season in 40 years, Bouyea led the Dons in scoring (17.1 PPG), assists (4.1 APG) and steals (1.8 SPG), all of which rank inside the top-10 in the West Coast Conference. The USF star also shot a career best 38% from 3-point range, an improvement of more than 15% from his freshman season. Most importantly, Bouyea has the Dons in position to reach the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1998. As a 5th-year graduate student he may or may not be older than his head coach, Todd Golden, but Bouyea will go down next to Bill Russell, Bill Cartwright and Quintin Dailey among the greats in program history.

Aaron Estrada, Hofstra Pride

One of the transfer portal stars of the year, Estrada elevated Hofstra to a top-3 finish in the Colonial Athletic Association in the Pride’s first season under former star Coach Speedy Claxton. Estrada averaged 18.5 PPG, 5.7 RPG and 5 APG, becoming the first Hofstra player to average 15-5-5 since … Claxton! After spending one season at Saint Peter’s, then the next at Oregon, Estrada found a home on Long Island in the 2021-2022 season, earning CAA Player of the Year honors. His 22-point, 10-rebound, 8-assist effort against Arkansas in Little Rock in December highlighted one of the most impressive wins in program history and one of KC’s most memorable mid-major coups of the year.

Ryan Rollins, Toledo Rockets

Rollins took over the keys to the Rockets’ ship from 2021 Mid-American Conference Player of the Year Marreon Jackson, and piloted Toledo to new heights this year. Coach Tod Kowalczyk’s crew wrapped up the regular season with a 25-6 record, good enough to earn the top seed in the MAC tournament. Should it run that gauntlet, UT would set a school record with 28 wins. Rollins is a pick-and-roll maestro with great size at 6-4 — size that helped him lead the Rockets in rebounding (6.1 RPG) — and his 19.2 PPG was third-best in the MAC. Toledo hasn’t been dancing since 1980, but it’s been even longer since it has had a future NBA guard like Rollins.

Malachi Smith, Chattanooga Mocs

Name a way to score, and Smith does it. Threes, drives, post-ups, floaters … they’re all part of the repertoire of possibly the most versatile headliner on KC’s cast of mid-major megastars. Along with fellow KC All-America 1st-teamer Isiaih Mosley, Smith is one of two players in Division I averaging 20 PPG on 50% FG and 40% 3-point FG. The Southern Conference Player of the Year led the league in scoring (20.4 PPG) and per Bart Torvik, is the only Division I player with 100 baskets at the rim, 50 from mid-range, and 50 from 3-point land versus Division I opposition. After a heart-stopping win in the SoCon Championship, don’t be surprised if Malachi and the Mocs Chattanooga Choo-Choo beyond the first round of The Dance.

Jordan Walker, UAB Blazers

A superstar, pure and simple, “Jelly” tied a UAB program record with nine made 3-pointers against Louisiana Tech on January 22nd — then two weeks later, on February 5th, established a program record with 42 points against Middle Tennessee. The Conference USA Player of the Year (and Newcomer of the Year) finished third in the league in both scoring (19.3 PPG) and assists (5.1), while finishing first in made 3-pointers (101). The spark to the Blazers’ mid-February rise to No. 3 in The Poll of Record, when Jelly’s on a roll ‘U Ain’t Beatin’ UAB.

Fardaws Aimaq, Utah Valley Wolverines
Tevin Brown, Murray State Racers
Ryan Davis, Vermont Catamounts
Hunter Maldonado, Wyoming Cowboys
Baylor Scheierman, South Dakota State Jackrabbits

Honorable Mention: Max Abmas, Oral Roberts; Justin Bean, Utah State; Matt Bradley, San Diego State; Johni Broome, Morehead State; AJ Green, Northern Iowa; Hyunjung Lee, Davidson; Kenneth Lofton Jr., Louisiana Tech; Alex Morales, Wagner; Norchad Omier, Arkansas State; Mark Sears, Ohio

KC’s Mid-Major Top 10 for this week:

Last week: tie-2nd

To paraphrase coach Matt McMahon following his squad’s 71-67 win over Morehead State in the OVC championship Saturday: No team in college basketball won more games this season and no team lost fewer. Hard to argue with, something The Committee has been preaching since the initial release of KC’s mid-major Poll of Peak Brilliance. MSU became just the sixth program in OVC history to run the table during the regular season and only the second to also win the OVC tournament championship. The Racers haven’t lost since Christmas and their only defeat since Thanksgiving came at AP No. 4 Auburn. With OVC Player of the Year KJ Williams, fellow first-team OVC selection Tevin Brown and McMahon, the league’s Coach of the Year, “KC’s mid-major Team of the Year” will be a single-digit seed in the NCAA tournament and will win at least one tournament game. Next up: NCAA tournament

Last week: 1

Having already registered the biggest win in college basketball this season, Coach Randy Bennett’s bunch fell short of a repeat performance Tuesday against Gonzaga in the WCC championship game. But Saint Mary’s late February regular season win over the Zags proved to the wine and cheese crowd that this team can beat anyone, anywhere (the enlightened mid-major fans knew this in June.) Bracket enthusiast and friend of the “Power 25” conference teams (the mid-majors) Joe Lunardi currently has Saint Mary’s as a 6-seed in the NCAA tournament, a product of five Quadrant 1 wins and Top 20 standing in all respected metrics-based rankings.

Next up: NCAA tournament

Last week: 5

To best put into perspective what coach Niko Medved’s men have done this season, consider this: The Rams have as many Quadrant 1 wins as Arizona and Duke! CSU also swept the season series from Mountain West regular season champion Boise State, lost just one home game all year and celebrated David Roddy’s MW Player of the Year honor in arguably the most competitive race in any conference. Colorado State has been smoother than the complete catalogue of Curtis Mayfield with a snifter of Courvoisier, all season long, and stands as good a chance as anyone to cut down the nets in Vegas.

Next up: vs. Utah State in Mountain West tournament (Thursday)

Last week: 4

Only a consistent residence in the penthouse suite of the finest high-rise in mid-major hoops — KC’s Top 10 — matched the Broncos’ Mountain West regular season title this season, the program’s first outright since the 1987-1988 season. But the feting of Boise State hardly ended there. Leon Rice claimed MW Coach of the Year honors, Abu Kigab and Marcus Shaver Jr. were second-team All-MW selections, and Tyson Degenhart was the MW Freshman of the Year. A season sweep of San Diego State highlights a glittering résumé. A season sweep at the hands of Colorado State is all that’s keeping BSU outside the top 3.

Next up: vs. Nevada in Mountain West tournament (Thursday)

Last week: 7

Drew Valentine is the youngest coach in Division I college basketball and next week, when the NCAA tournament tips, the 30-year-old (!!!) will lead his team into the Dance thanks to the Ramblers’ run through the Missouri Valley Conference tournament. Loyola toppled Bradley and Northern Iowa, then avenged a pair of regular season losses to Drake by dumping the Bulldogs in the championship game to claim victory at Arch Madness. Resplendent in their designer pima cotton MVC Championship t-shirts, Sister Jean and company await a destination in the NCAA tournament and a date with a dance partner that undoubtedly wants nothing to do with these Ramblers.

Next up: NCAA tournament

Last week: 6

Coach Brian Dutcher’s squad was 12-6 on February 5th and holding a first class ticket to Nowheresville. Then came a victory over Nevada followed by a road win at San Jose State, and faster than you can say Ron Burgundy, San Diego State had won nine of 10 to finish the regular season. The Aztecs will upload a PDF file of their résumé to the powers that be and highlight wins over Saint Mary’s (neutral site), vs. Colorado State and at Wyoming, not to mention a 13-4 mark in Mountain West play. Of course it never hurts to win a game in Vegas, but from this Committee to the NCAA tournament committee, any bracket needs to include second-team All-MW selection Matt Bradley, MW Defensive Player of the Year Nathan Mensah and SDSU.

Next up: vs. Fresno State in Mountain West tournament (Thursday)

Last week: 8

Like 24 consecutive teams before them, the Dons’ run in the West Coast Conference tournament came to an end in the semifinals, at the paws of Gonzaga. USF fell into a 47-27 halftime hole and, despite pulling within eight late, failed to dig out. Still, the body of work is undeniable: double-digit wins in the Alcatraz-tough WCC, a 24 ranking in the NET, 21 in KenPom and three Quadrant 1 Ws including a neutral-site victory over Davidson. Coach Todd Golden’s group has earned its exclusive access to the plush velvet sectionals and faux chinchilla fur rugs of the swankiest speakeasy in sports, all season. An at-large invite to the NCAA tournament should be an absolute given.

Next up: NCAA tournament

Last week: tie-2nd

It’s easy for the good folks in Denton to be disappointed with the outcome of Saturday’s regular season finale at UTEP. But for the love of “Stone Cold” Steve Austin, Mean Joe Greene and Meat Loaf … do not lose sight of what coach Grant McCasland’s men have done this season. The Mean Green were 2-3 before winning 22 of the next 23 games, including a program record 15 in a row. The Conference USA regular season champs may head into tournament play in Frisco on a sour note, but The Committee is hardly rescinding its preferred tee times at the most exclusive club in mid-major hoops.

Next up: vs. Rice in Conference USA tournament (Thursday)

Last week: 10

Upgraded to four-diamond status in the Ritz-Carlton of mid-major polls in mid-February, coach Eric Henderson’s club has more than held up its end of the bargain. Tuesday night, behind 21 points and 11 rebounds from Summit League Tournament MVP Douglas Wilson, the Jackrabbits downed North Dakota State 75-69 to win their sixth championship in 11 seasons. Already the first Summit League team to run the table in-conference during the regular season, SDSU also became the first team in conference history to reach 30 wins. The Jacks will take the nation’s longest win streak — 21 games — into the NCAA tournament next week, music to the ears of the entire Brookings community.

Next up: NCAA tournament

Last week: 9

Arguably the greatest coach in mid-major history, Bob McKillop claimed his 10th Coach of the Year award (eight in the Southern Conference, two in the Atlantic 10) following a 25-5 season which included an A-10 regular season title. Wildcats senior Luka Brajkovic was named A-10 Player of the Year after averaging 14.6 points on 58.7% FG shooting, with Hyunjung Lee and Foster Loyer also earning all-conference accolades. Nothing is guaranteed, though you have to think the NCAA selection committee has the Cats in the field no matter what. Still, a long weekend in D.C. would make the folks in Mecklenburg County feel a little better about their chances.

Next up: Atlantic 10 tournament (Friday)

Others receiving votes: Wyoming, UAB, Dayton, BYU

Dropped out: None

ESPN Stats & Information researcher Jared Berson contributed to this article.

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