ACC Bubble Watch (March 10-15):
Three Solid NCAA Tournament Bids,
Three Desperate Hopefuls At ACC Tournament
By David Glenn
North Carolina Sports Network
In the 1980s, when the Atlantic Coast Conference consisted of only eight schools, the league’s teams sometimes collectively earned only four invitations to the NCAA Tournament, but it still was considered a successful season.
This year, with the ACC an 18-school monstrosity for the first time, only four bids to the Big Dance would be a truly unprecedented disaster.
Since the NCAA Tournament expanded to 64 (now 68) teams in 1985, the ACC has never failed to get at least one-third of its teams into the bracket. The league hit exactly that threshold — five of 15 — in each of the past three seasons. At other times, the league’s baseline was three of nine, or four of 12.
Heading into the 2025 ACC Tournament, only three league teams — Duke, Clemson and Louisville — felt comfortable with their NCAA Tournament projections. Three more schools — North Carolina, Wake Forest and SMU — were on or near the NCAA bubble, and in each case they’re almost out of opportunities to upgrade their résumé.
This week in Charlotte, the Demon Deacons and the Tar Heels (if they win their opener) are on a collision course for a quarterfinal matchup on Thursday, as the #4 and #5 seeds, respectively. The Wake-Carolina winner likely would face #1 Duke in the semifinals.
While the only truly guaranteed path to an NCAA Tournament invitation for any of these teams would be to capture the ACC Tournament, any win over the Duke/Clemson/Louisville trio would be extremely helpful, with a head-to-head triumph over the nationally dominant Blue Devils the second-best way (behind cutting down the nets) to rise above the NCAA bubble before Selection Sunday.
Reminder: These are NOT predictions of future results/standings but rather a reflection of the teams’ “body of work” in games already played (through March 11).
1. Duke (28-3, 19-1 ACC)
Head Coach: Jon Scheyer, 37 years old, third season with Blue Devils, 2 NCAA Tournaments
Best Wins: 84-78 vs. Auburn, 69-55 at Arizona, 76-65 at Louisville, 110-67 over Illinois (n), 82-69 at UNC, 63-56 at Wake Forest, 89-62 at SMU, 87-70 vs. UNC, 93-60 vs. Wake Forest, 76-47 vs. Pitt, 68-47 vs. George Mason, 106-70 vs. Stanford
Losses: 77-72 to Kentucky (n), 75-72 to Kansas (n), 77-71 at Clemson
ACC Tournament Opener: Thursday vs. Georgia Tech-Virginia winner (noon)
BPI/KenPom/KPI/NET Team Rankings (of 364): 1/1/7/1
Offensive/Defensive Efficiency Rankings (of 364): 2/4
Starters: G Sion James, G Tyrese Proctor, G Kon Knueppel, F Cooper Flagg, C Khaman Maluach
Current Postseason Projection: NCAA Tournament (1 seed)
Duke’s 2022 coaching transition from Mike Krzyzewski to Jon Scheyer, who was only 34 years old at the time, has gone incredibly smoothly. The Blue Devils won the ACC championship in Scheyer’s first season, made the Elite Eight last year and claimed the ACC regular-season title on Saturday. Next up: the ACC Tournament (official) championship and perhaps the #1 overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. Freshman forward Cooper Flagg may be the National Player of the Year.
2. Clemson (26-5, 18-2 ACC)
Head Coach: Brad Brownell, 56 years old, 15th season with Tigers, 7 NCAA Tournaments (UNCW-2/Wright State-1/Clemson-4)
Best Wins: 77-71 vs. Duke, 70-66 vs. Kentucky, 79-69 at SMU, 73-62 vs. Wake Forest, 85-65 vs. UNC, 78-75 at Pitt, 75-67 over Penn State (n), 85-71 vs. Stanford, 70-55 over San Francisco (n)
Losses: 84-71 to Boise State (n), 87-82 vs. Memphis, 91-88 at South Carolina, 74-64 at Louisville, 89-86 vs. Georgia Tech
ACC Tournament Opener: Thursday vs. FSU/Syracuse-SMU winner (9:30 p.m.)
BPI/KenPom/KPI/NET Team Rankings (of 364): 15/19/18/22
Offensive/Defensive Efficiency Rankings (of 364): 18/21
Starters: G Jaeden Zackery, G Chase Hunter, F Chauncey Wiggins, F Ian Schieffelin, C Viktor Lakhin
Current Postseason Projection: NCAA Tournament (4/5 seed)
After making only two NCAA Tournament appearances in his first 10 seasons at Clemson, 15th-year coach Brad Brownell is poised to take the Tigers to the Big Dance for the third time in five years. Home-grown stars Chase Hunter (a sixth-year senior) and Ian Schieffelin (a fourth-year senior) have blended extremely well with transfer additions Jaeden Zackery (Boston College) and Viktor Lakhin (Cincinnati), who were multi-year starters at their previous schools.
3. Louisville (25-6, 18-2 ACC)
Head Coach: Pat Kelsey, 49 years old, first season with Cardinals, 5^ NCAA Tournaments (Winthrop-3/Charleston-2)
Best Wins: 74-64 vs. Clemson, 79-70 over West Virginia (n), 89-61 over Indiana (n), 98-73 at SMU, 82-78 at Pitt, 72-59 vs. Wake Forest, 83-70 vs. UNC, 79-68 vs. Pitt, 68-48 vs. Stanford
Losses: 77-55 vs. Tennessee, 69-64 to Oklahoma (n), 86-63 vs. Ole Miss, 76-65 vs. Duke, 93-85 at Kentucky, 77-70 at Georgia Tech
ACC Tournament Opener: Thursday vs. VT/Cal-Stanford winner (7 p.m.)
BPI/KenPom/KPI/NET Team Rankings (of 364): 27/23/16/23
Offensive/Defensive Efficiency Rankings (of 364): 30/19
Starters: PG Chucky Hepburn, G Reyne Smith, G Terrence Edwards, F J’Vonne Hadley, F James Scott
Current Postseason Projection: NCAA Tournament (6 seed)
First-year Louisville coach Pat Kelsey is a strong ACC Coach of the Year candidate (along with Scheyer and Brownell), in part because he had to build his entire 13-man roster from scratch, after every scholarship player transferred out in the aftermath of the disastrous two-year tenure of his predecessor, Kenny Payne. Senior point guard Chucky Hepburn, formerly a three-year starter at Wisconsin, has been absolutely brilliant as a leader, scorer, passer and defender.
4. North Carolina (20-12, 13-7 ACC)
Head Coach: Hubert Davis, 54 years old, fourth season with Tar Heels, 2 NCAA Tournaments
Best Wins: 76-74 over UCLA (n), 82-67 vs. SMU, 67-66 vs. Pitt, 92-90 over Dayton (n), 96-85 at Florida State, 74-73 at Notre Dame
Losses: 92-89 at Kansas, 85-72 to Auburn (n), 94-91 to Michigan State (n), 94-79 vs. Alabama, 90-84 to Florida (n), 83-70 at Louisville, 72-71 vs. Stanford, 67-66 at Wake Forest, 73-65 at Pitt, 87-70 at Duke, 85-65 at Clemson, 82-69 vs. Duke
ACC Tournament Opener: Wednesday vs. Notre Dame-Pitt winner (2:30 p.m.)
BPI/KenPom/KPI/NET Team Rankings (of 364): 28/37/55/40
Offensive/Defensive Efficiency Rankings (of 364): 20/71
Starters: PG Elliot Cadeau, G RJ Davis, G Seth Trimble, F Drake Powell, F Jalen Washington
Current Postseason Projection: NCAA Tournament bubble (“First Four Out”)
For the third time in coach Hubert Davis’ four seasons as the head coach in Chapel Hill, UNC occupied a precarious position in February. This year’s Tar Heels still have only one victory over a surefire NCAA Tournament team (UCLA), and they’ve already lost 12 times, albeit against a very difficult schedule. Their challenge now is two-fold; they must win at least two — and perhaps three — games at the ACC Tournament, and (absent a victory over Duke) they must hope for a minimal number of bid-stealers and extended conference tournament runs by fellow bubble teams.
5. Wake Forest (21-10, 13-7 ACC)
Head Coach: Steve Forbes, 59 years old, fifth season with Demon Deacons, 2^ NCAA Tournaments (ETSU-2)
Best Wins: 72-70 over Michigan (n), 77-66 at SMU, 67-66 vs. UNC, 76-74 vs. Pitt, 79-73 at Stanford, 80-67 vs. Stanford, 57-51 over Minnesota (n)
Losses: 75-60 at Xavier, 75-58 to Florida (n), 57-44 at Texas A&M, 73-62 at Clemson, 63-56 vs. Duke, 72-59 at Louisville, 72-70 vs. Florida State, 85-73 at NC State, 83-75 vs. Virginia, 93-60 at Duke
ACC Tournament Opener: Thursday vs. ND/Pitt-UNC winner (2:30 p.m.)
BPI/KenPom/KPI/NET Team Rankings (of 364): 62/73/58/69
Offensive/Defensive Efficiency Rankings (of 364): 140/37
Starters: PG Ty-Laur Johnson, G Hunter Sallis, G Cameron Hildreth, F Tre’Von Spillers, C Efton Reid
Current Postseason Projection: NCAA Tournament bubble (“Next Four Out”)
Coach Steve Forbes probably has the best team of his five-year tenure at Wake Forest, but the Demon Deacons remain in a familiar, uncomfortable place — squarely on the NCAA bubble. Unlike last season, the Deacons have a high-caliber victory (Michigan) away from home, but they desperately need another marquee victory or two at the ACC Tournament. Led by All-ACC guard Hunter Sallis, they also have gone 5-0 against their fellow ACC bubble teams, and four of their seven league losses are to those in the top tier (Duke twice, Clemson, Louisville).
6. SMU (22-9, 13-7 ACC)
Head Coach: Andy Enfield, 55 years old, first season with Mustangs, 7^ NCAA Tournaments (FGCU-1/Southern Cal-6)
Best Wins: 85-61 vs. Stanford, 83-63 vs. Pitt, 74-64 over LSU (n), 97-73 at Notre Dame, 77-60 over Washington State (n)
Losses: 81-70 at Butler, 84-79 vs. Mississippi State, 89-62 vs. Duke, 82-67 at UNC, 98-73 vs. Louisville, 77-66 vs. Wake Forest, 79-69 vs. Clemson, 73-68 at Stanford, 76-69 at Florida State
ACC Tournament Opener: Wednesday vs. FSU-Syracuse winner (9:30 p.m.)
BPI/KenPom/KPI/NET Team Rankings (of 364): 46/52/61/49
Offensive/Defensive Efficiency Rankings (of 364): 32/85
Starters: PG Boopie Miller, G BJ Edwards, F Matt Cross, F Yohan Traore, C Samet Yigitoglu
Current Postseason Projection: NCAA Tournament bubble (“Next Four Out”)
Many February projections had SMU in this year’s NCAA Tournament field, but as expected that turned out to be an illusion, because the Mustangs — unlike every other team on this list — simply don’t have a single outstanding victory on their résumé so far this season. Even their highest-profile victims look more like NIT candidates, and when they’ve played tougher competition, they’ve almost always lost by double-digit margins. The ACC Tournament once again looms large here, because the Mustangs hope to upgrade quickly from zero major-impact victories to two, with Clemson and Louisville both looming on their side of the bracket.
^—also would have coached in 2020 NCAAA Tournament (cancelled/COVID)
NOTE: (n) = neutral court; vs. = home game; efficiency rankings from KenPom.com.