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No upset, though, had a bigger impact than Northern Iowa's 69-67 win over Kansas.
The Jayhawks were the tournament's overall No. 1 seed. Though placed in what was widely regarded as the toughest region, they had the coach (Bill Self), the experience (2008 national title) and the talent (Sherron Collins, Cole Aldrich, Xavier Henry and the Morris twins) to be a Final Four heavyweight.
Instead, Ali knocked them out.
That's Ali Farokhmanesh, the Northern Iowa guard who hit the game-icing 3-pointer Saturday after Kansas had whittled its deficit to one. Typical of an underdog, Farokhmanesh concedes that when he was in high school, he wasn't even sure he'd play Division I basketball.
"To go from that to, we're in the Sweet Sixteen, we just beat the No. 1 team in the country," Farokhmanesh said. "I mean, if someone would have told me that back then I would have laughed at them probably. But I think it shows that hard work really does pay off."
The NCAA selection committee awarded eight at-large spots to teams from small conferences. That was double the number of last year. Instead of portraying that as a celebration of the come-one-come-all nature of the tournament, pundits widely derided the field as being one of the weakest in memory.
Debatable, though the number of underdogs making it through highlighted some of the selection committee's less-than-perfect work -- all issues that were pointed out when the bracket came out last Sunday.
Yes, the Pac-10 had an awful year, though sticking Washington, the tournament champion of a power conference, on the No. 11 line was clearly a misread. The Huskies blew out No. 3 New Mexico, the Mountain West regular-season champion, 82-64.
Cornell won 28 games, won the Ivy League title by two games and, with a handful of players who had tournament experience, was widely viewed as a scary team to play. Certainly Temple and Wisconsin would agree. They lost to the No. 12 seed by a combined 31 points. Cornell became the first Ivy League team to make it this far since Penn made the Final Four in 1979.
Though any team beating Kansas would have made big news, Northern Iowa probably shouldn't have been playing the Jayhawks so early. The Panthers were seeded ninth despite being ranked No. 17 in the latest RPI, which would correspond to a No. 4 or 5 seed. Their odds to win the championship have improved from 200-1 to 40-1.
"I'm sure that bandwagon has a few wheels on it," said Jay Kornegay, who runs the sports book at the Las Vegas Hilton. "If they win a couple more games, that thing's gonna be fully loaded."
[Associated Press;
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