Feast Week guide: Can ranked Purdue avoid UConn, Gonzaga fates?

Credit to Author: ESPN| Date: Fri, 29 Nov 2024 17:46:05 EST

Enoch Cheeks seals win for Dayton with floater and transition slam. (0:19)

Every year, Feast Week presents a buffet of elite nonconference matchups that matter now, sure, but will mean a lot more once Selection Sunday arrives. Powerhouse programs can add more quality wins to their early résumés, while multiple upset-minded programs will get their shots in for at-large consideration.

This year has been no different, with many highlights to choose from.

There was Cooper Flagg, the projected No. 1 pick in the NBA draft, taking his Duke team to Las Vegas to take on No. 1 Kansas on Tuesday night. The talking point of that game was Hunter Dickinson’s ejection after he appeared to kick Duke’s Maliq Brown in the face while both were on the ground. Yet, Kansas overcame his absence to come away with a 75-72 win — with turnovers once again costing Duke in the final seconds.

Half a mile down the Las Vegas Strip, there was a new entrant to Feast Week trying to revolutionize future holiday tournaments.

The Players Era Festival, anchored by Houston, Alabama and Rutgers, plans to give $1 million in NIL payouts to every participating team. Pay-for-play events are against the NCAA’s rules, which means the Players Era Festival organizers are trying to ensure compliance even as all signs point to the games moving forward. The format, and importantly the financial benefits, could become the norm in this new era if it goes off without a hitch. If it doesn’t, it will be an anomaly in a strange time for college basketball.

Yet, the biggest highlight might have been UConn attempting to stake its claim as America’s top team by running through a strong Maui Invitational field — but losing three straight games to Memphis, Colorado and Dayton to finish last. Instead, Auburn took the title in Hawai’i. Another contender for the nation’s best team, Gonzaga, also lost surprisingly in its first game in the Bahamas.

As Feast Week wraps up this weekend, Myron Medcalf, Jeff Borzello, Joe Lunardi and Neil Paine discuss the remaining games to watch — and break down what the biggest upsets of the week mean for the sport.

Jump to:
Monday’s takeaways | Tuesday’s takeaways | Wednesday’s takeaways | Thursday preview | Friday preview | Weekend preview

2:30 p.m. ET | Columbus, Ohio | Peacock

This is neither a ranked matchup nor an early-season tournament game. Yet, this is an extremely close matchup between two teams in the KenPom top 25 that are good at both ends of the court. Defense might be the order of the day here; no team in the nation holds opponents to a lower shooting efficiency than the Buckeyes (7-foot-1 Aaron Bradshaw is a terror protecting the rim), though the Panthers aren’t far behind at No. 15 in effective FG% defense. ESPN Analytics predicts both have an 80-90% probability of making the NCAA tournament. — Paine

Battle 4 Atlantis championship game | 5:30 p.m. ET | Paradise Island, Bahamas | ESPN

Feast Week offers afterthought teams a real chance to change perceptions. New Louisville coach Pat Kelsey has sprinted around campus — literally — before big games this season and urged fans to support the Cardinals. Love it or hate it, he has infused the program with a much-needed energy. And wins over No. 14 Indiana and West Virginia in the Bahamas to earn a spot in the Battle 4 Atlantis title game — led by Wisconsin transfer Chucky Hepburn, who is averaging 15.0 PPG and 4.7 APG this season — proved Kelsey is more than a hype man.

Oklahoma coach Porter Moser entered the year amid hot seat talk after missing the NCAA tournament in his first three seasons. He also lost most of his key contributors from a year ago. Thursday’s win over No. 24 Arizona, in which Jeremiah Fears had 26 points, was a promising victory for a program that has started the year with top-50 marks in both adjusted offensive and defensive efficiency on KenPom.

Both teams could leave the Bahamas with a spot in the next AP Top 25 poll but above that, winning the Battle 4 Atlantis could be a catalyst for two programs hoping to put a messy 2023-24 campaign behind them. — Medcalf

Rady Children’s Invitational championship | 6 p.m. ET | San Diego | FOX

After a 13-0 start in his first season in Oxford, Chris Beard’s Rebels struggled down the stretch, going 4-8 against top-50 KenPom teams. Beard will now have a chance to secure a signature victory. To get here, Jaylen Murray broke out with 28 points in the 96-85 overtime win over BYU, and Ole Miss currently has the lowest turnover rate in the country.

Although Purdue looks different without Zach Edey, the Boilermakers are one of the most balanced teams in the country. They’re shooting 42% from 3, and their newest star is Trey Kaufman-Renn: He’s going 62% from inside the arc and had 22 points and eight rebounds against NC State on Thursday.

Both enter the Rady Children’s Invitational championship with something to prove. — Medcalf

9:30 p.m. ET | Lethbridge, Alberta (Canada) | ESPN+

Closing night of the inaugural Western Slam features a pair of mid-majors picked to win their respective conferences. UC Irvine owns four of the past six Big West regular-season titles, and this year Towson was voted the preseason CAA favorite for the first time. The Tigers are looking for the school’s first NCAA tournament appearance in Division I. — Lunardi

4 p.m. ET | Philadelphia | ESPN+

The winner of this one faces Saint Joseph’s for the Philadelphia Big 5 championship Dec. 7. A year ago at Temple, former La Salle and now Villanova guard Jhamir Brickus broke the Big 5 single-game scoring record with 41 points in a triple overtime loss. This year, the Explorers host at their new John Glaser Arena, where they have yet to lose. — Lunardi

4 p.m. ET | Lincoln | Big Ten Network

It’s a bit of an anticlimactic end to Feast Week, but North Florida already has a pair of road wins over power-conference competition in South Carolina and Georgia Tech, before getting another chance here. The Cornhuskers, however, just picked up a huge road win of their own by going to in-state rival Creighton and knocking off the Bluejays by 11 — holding All-America big man Ryan Kalkbrenner to 4 points and 0 made field goals. — Borzello

West Virginia comes up clutch down the stretch to force overtime and then take over to upset No. 3 Gonzaga.

Before Gonzaga suffered an 86-78 overtime loss to unranked West Virginia in the Battle 4 Atlantis’ opening round Wednesday, the Bulldogs had outscored their previous five opponents by a tally of 466-305. That lopsided number included a historic 38-point win over Baylor earlier this month, which was the largest margin of victory over a top-10 opponent in a season opener. Everything suggested the Bulldogs would cruise to a win on Wednesday, too.

But this week hasn’t made a lot of sense. A West Virginia squad that suffered a 24-point loss to Pitt just two weeks ago, overcame a 10-point deficit in the second half against a top-three Gonzaga team and then finished off the Bulldogs in overtime. How? Guard Javon Small (31 points) and Tucker DeVries (16 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 blocks, 2 steals), a versatile 6-foot-7 wing, created matchup challenges for Mark Few’s team. Graham Ike (1-for-6 shooting) struggled and Gonzaga finished 7-for-21 from the 3-point line.

Still, Gonzaga had a late five-point lead in regulation but couldn’t stop an aggressive West Virginia team that played as if it had nothing to lose. And the Mountaineers were the more efficient team in overtime, which was surprising.

And now Gonzaga has joined the long list of teams that entered the week hoping to stake their claim as America’s best team but will now try to salvage the holiday after a rough start. — Medcalf

Entering this week, UConn had lost one nonconference game over the past two seasons. It hadn’t lost two games in a row since the 2022-23 season. Since arriving in Storrs in 2018, Dan Hurley had never had a nonconference losing streak. The Huskies had been ranked in the top five of the AP poll every week since the first in-season poll of last season.

And now? It’s fair to say the Huskies are in an unfathomable freefall. They lost their third straight game — all to unranked opponents — on Wednesday, falling by 18 to Dayton in the seventh-place game of the Maui Invitational and clinching a last-place finish. UConn will fall from No. 2 to completely out of the next AP poll.

While it was easy to point at certain things when discussing what went wrong against Memphis and even Colorado, Wednesday’s performance was a mess. UConn led for less than two minutes in the game, with Dayton going on an 11-2 run in the second half to put it out of reach with four minutes to go.

The Huskies couldn’t make shots from the perimeter, going 8-for-29 on 3-pointers. Liam McNeeley, in particular, struggled from the field, finishing scoreless on 0-for-9 shooting. UConn scored only six fast-break points, failing to consistently get easy points in transition.

But the most concerning part for Hurley will be his team’s defensive performance. UConn couldn’t do anything to stop Dayton’s guards, allowing them to get into the lane at will and finish or make a play for a teammate. The Flyers shot 50% from the field and 47.1% from 3-point range, scoring 85 points — the third straight opponent to score more than 70 points against UConn. According to ESPN Research, UConn hadn’t given up 70-plus points in consecutive games vs. unranked nonconference opponents since Hurley’s first season in Storrs. And now the Huskies have done it in three straight games. — Borzello

Seth Greenberg breaks down what he’s seeing from Duke’s Cooper Flagg and what he thinks of Flagg’s NBA prospects.

What the win means for Kansas’ grip on the No. 1 spot: Despite Kansas’ unbeaten record and preseason No. 1 status, there were questions over whether it truly deserved the top spot currently. The Jayhawks didn’t look overwhelming in wins over North Carolina and Michigan State. Auburn has a pair of top-five wins, and Gonzaga has been blowing the doors off its opponents. But, beating Duke on a neutral floor is impressive, especially given the Jayhawks played the final 10-plus minutes without their All-American big man Dickinson. If Auburn comes out of the Maui Invitational with a championship, there’s a legitimate argument for the Tigers to move to No. 1, but Kansas’ win cements its place in the conversation.

How Kansas found success against the No. 1 defense in the country: Duke entered Tuesday with the No. 1-ranked defense in KenPom’s adjusted efficiency metric, thanks to a combination of elite rim protection from Khaman Maluach and do-everything defense from Cooper Flagg. Kansas, however, was able to find success by making timely outside shots — early from Zeke Mayo and AJ Storr, late from Rylan Griffen. Dickinson struggled against the length of Maluach and Maliq Brown at the rim, but he was able to get some easy buckets off Dajuan Harris Jr.’s penetration. KJ Adams Jr. also caused problems with his unorthodox, one-dribble midrange pull-ups early in the second half. It was a truly balanced effort from the Jayhawks at that end of the floor.

Kon Knueppel heaves up a three at the buzzer that rattles out as Duke’s comeback vs. Kansas falls short.

Are we concerned about Duke’s inability to close out big games? Flagg and Kon Knueppel are two of the best players in the country, so I wouldn’t say “concerned” just yet. But Flagg has now had turnover issues against Kentucky and fumbled late possessions against Kansas. Jon Scheyer said after the Kentucky game he still wanted the ball in Flagg’s hands at the end of games. On Tuesday night, he doubled down, saying he was fine with Flagg and Knueppel trying to make plays late. “You want the ball in your best players’ hands,” he said. “I’m taking the ball in their hands any day of the week. We just have to execute better.”

What did Kansas do to slow down Flagg? Adams was the best player on the floor for a majority of Tuesday’s game, and his defense on Flagg was a key factor in the star freshman having only two points at halftime. It took a difficult left-handed layup in traffic to eventually get Flagg going, but Adams’ physicality made things tough for Flagg, especially off the ball. He was aggressive against the Duke freshman when he tried to make cuts, and he closed out and didn’t allow Flagg any room on the catch. Simply put, he didn’t allow Flagg to get comfortable and get to his spots. “I think KJ showed a lot of people tonight that you can be an elite player at this level and not be a prolific scorer, because he did it all,” Bill Self said after the game. — Borzello

UConn forces overtime with a late burst, but Dan Hurley’s technical foul proves costly in overtime as Memphis earns the upset victory.

If UConn losing to Memphis on Monday was concerning, the Huskies falling to Colorado on Tuesday is downright catastrophic. At the very least, Memphis has aggressive, explosive guards who can score and a veteran high-major big man. Colorado simply isn’t close to UConn’s talent level. And the Huskies couldn’t get any separation in the second half.

On Monday, UConn needed career games from Tarris Reed Jr. and Jaylin Stewart just to stay in the game against Memphis. Against Colorado, Reed Jr. and Stewart regressed to the mean, and once Liam McNeeley cooled off in the second half, UConn again fell short of playmakers. Defensively, the Huskies got torched from behind the arc… again. Colorado shot 9-for-16 from 3, one day after Memphis went 12-for-22 from the perimeter.

According to ESPN Stats & Information, UConn is just the fifth top-two team in AP poll history to lose to unranked opponents on consecutive days.

UConn, which entered the week ranked No. 2 in the country, will now finish no better than seventh in the Maui Invitational. A third loss in three days would be unfathomable. — Borzello

Colorado hands No. 2 UConn its second loss in a row with a late game-winning shot from Andrej Jakimovski in the Maui Invitational.

An all-time Maui classic to start off the week.

There was unbelievable shotmaking from Memphis’ guards — starting with Tyrese Hunter, then PJ Haggerty, then Colby Rogers in overtime once Hunter cooled off and Haggerty fouled out.

There was UConn’s 15-3 run in the final three minutes of regulation to force the overtime. There was Dan Hurley’s meltdown and accompanying technical foul with 40 seconds left. There was No. 2 UConn’s first loss since February of last season.

Entering the season, the Huskies knew their three-peat hopes rested on their backcourt. But on Monday, they were thoroughly outplayed by Memphis’ perimeter trio. Hassan Diarra is a tough-minded defender, but he’s not a great creator. Aidan Mahaney really struggled to defend. And Solo Ball made big shots, but he’s not a threat to go off the bounce. That has to change moving forward.

Memphis has quietly strung together a nice collection of wins already this season — and will now be favored to get to the Maui title game against likely another top-15 team in Auburn, Iowa State or North Carolina. There’s a real chance at a statement week for Penny Hardaway’s program, which looks like the clear favorite in the AAC this season. — Borzello

Well, the Maui Invitational took the main stage, again, in another thriller — this time between a pair of top-five teams.

The Tigers won their opening matchup with the same resilience they showed in a come-from-behind win over Houston earlier this month. In Maui on Monday, Auburn was down by 16 points at halftime and it seemed as if the game was over — and then Johni Broome stepped in. Broome went 5-for-7 in the second half, including a game-tying 3-pointer in the final minutes and the game-winning tip-in. But their defense was their most impressive trait. The Cyclones recorded only a 7-for-22 clip in the second half.

This team has connected on 68% of its shots inside the arc — ’90s arcade numbers — and 37% of its 3-point attempts. These Tigers have the potential to be Pearl’s best defensive team, too. The win was an undeniable sign that Bruce Pearl is coaching another serious contender for the national title — and Broome is a real star. — Medcalf

It felt impossible to follow up UConn vs. Memphis and Auburn vs. Iowa State, but North Carolina’s comeback win over Dayton to end the night found a way to match them both — and maybe even top them. Three all-time Maui Invitational classics in one day.

North Carolina trailed by as many as 21 points early in the second half, but the squad erased it with an incredible display of shot-making down the stretch. It was the second-largest comeback in UNC history, according to ESPN Research.

All season the Tar Heels have been led by their guards, one of the deepest and most talented perimeter groups in the country. And they were desperately needed in the second half on Monday. RJ Davis and Seth Trimble combined for 57 points and 17 rebounds, with 37 of those points coming after halftime. Elliot Cadeau has been so good all year, but he struggled with turnovers in the first half. UNC will live and die with its guard play this season, but if it’s as good as it was late against Dayton, Hubert Davis’ team will be fine.

Meanwhile, Dayton showed it might be the favorite in a talented Atlantic 10. The Flyers’ defense caused huge issues for Carolina in the first half, and Anthony Grant’s team had seven players with at least nine points. One name to monitor: Amael L’Etang. The 7-foot-1 freshman from France had 13 against the Tar Heels and has now scored in double-figures in three straight games. — Borzello

Battle 4 Atlantis | Noon ET | Paradise Island, Bahamas | ESPN

Get exclusive access to thousands of premium articles a year from top writers.
Men’s hoops: How Kentucky has leveled up »
1 big move for 30 MLB teams this winter »
NBA: Why Philly’s goal is just 33 wins »
More ESPN+ content »

Gonzaga, America’s best offensive team, has another chance to add a quality win to its résumé. Mike Woodson considers this Hoosiers roster his best as their head coach. A Thanksgiving victory over the elite Bulldogs — who are second in adjusted offensive efficiency on KenPom after losing to West Virginia on Wednesday — would certainly validate Woodson’s lofty talk. Both teams are coming off losses in their first games in the Bahamas. — Medcalf

CBS Thanksgiving Day Game | 4 p.m. ET | Kansas City, Missouri | CBS

This early battle between teams that hope to be contenders in their respective conferences features five projected draft picks — three of whom could go in the first round. The names to watch here are Illinois point guard Kasparas Jakucionis (10.2 PPG, 6.6 APG), who will face the Razorbacks’ Boogie Fland. If you’d like to see a couple of young point guards who could compete at the next level soon, this is a game for you. — Medcalf

Rady Children’s Invitational | 3 p.m. ET | San Diego | FS1

Both teams look different than when they met in the Final Four eight months ago and the Boilermakers walked away with the 63-50 victory. This meeting is a chance for Jayden Taylor (14.8 PPG) and the undefeated Wolfpack to legitimize their strong start and secure a top-25 ranking, while Braden Smith (12.3 PPG, 9.3 APG, 5.3 RPG) and Purdue aim to, once again, avoid an upset loss. — Medcalf

http://www.espn.com/espn/rss/news