The season-ending Top 25 poll is easily the most inconsequential of the season. The only numbers anyone is thinking about right now are regional seedings. But, gotta do what you've gotta do.
Of perhaps more interest is my AP All-America teams, as well as Player of the Year and Coach of the Year selections:
1. Kentucky 2. Syracuse 3. Missouri 4. North Carolina 5. Kansas 6. Michigan State 7. Ohio State 8. Baylor 9. Florida State 10. Duke 11. Marquette 12. Murray State 13. Georgetown 14. Wisconsin 15. New Mexico 16. Creighton 17. Indiana 18. Michigan 19. Wichita State 20. St. Mary’s 21. San Diego State 22. Louisville 23. Gonzaga 24. Temple 25. UNLV
All-America First Team Anthony Davis, Kentucky Thomas Robinson, Kansas Jared Sullinger, Ohio State Jae Crowder, Marquette Draymond Green, Michigan State
Second Team Doug McDermott, Creighton Kevin Jones, West Virginia Marcus Denmon, Missouri Harrison Barnes, North Carolina Isaiah Cannon, Murray State
Third Team Perry Jones III, Baylor Terrence Jones, Kentucky Austin Rivers, Duke Tyshawn Taylor, Kansas Andrew Nicholson, St. Bonaventure
Coach of the Year: Frank Haith, Missouri Player of the Year: Anthony Davis, Kentucky
Here's what Napier had to say about his teammates:
"I've got to question a lot of these guys' hearts. Just simple stuff like allowing alley-oops at the end of the game, just quitting ... it doesn't look like UConn basketball. You don't quit. It doesn't look like basketball at all. Where I'm from, you ain't getting that alley-oop at the end of the game. You won the game, you won the game. Don't try to embarass us. That's just a measure of your heart. If you've got to knock somebody out of the air, you knock them out of the air. The other team's not going to beat you up physically. It can't happen. It looked like we gave up at the end. That's tough to say, because we're a great team. For those words to be coming out of my mouth, it's just horrendous."
He continued:
"When push comes to shove, it's who's out there and who's not giving it back. Some guys don't want to give it back. Some guys get punched and want to throw a pillow at somebody. It's basketball, you're supposed to go out there and give it your all. This is team basketball, it's not tennis, it's not golf, it's not a one-player sport. You get punched, and some guys are throwing pillows back. You're not supposed to throw pillows back, you're supposed to lock up on defense and do the necessary things to get the win."
"I'm blunt. I told guys all the time what I feel, but sometimes I hold a lot back in ... I don't want to say the wrong things. But at the end of the game, I told the guys, 'I've got to question a lot of your hearts.' You're not giving your all. I make mistakes, but at the same time, I learn from my mistakes, I make sure I apologize for my mistakes, and I tell guys, 'I'm not perfect.' The only reason I'm speaking out is because I'm the captain, and at the end of the day, I"m the only one who wants to speak out. Everybody else, when they get in the locker room, they're so quiet, like we just died."
Napier specifically called out Tyler Olander.
"Tyler can be real good for this team. He can knock that mid-range shot down. I don't think any other big can shoot like him. He gets out there and plays timid. We try to tell him all the time, 'Do the things you do in practice, you'll be a good player.' He's timid. We don't understand why he wants to throw a bounce pass three feet away from his other teammate, rather than shoot that mid-range shot."
So there you have it, from UConn's captain. A lot of what he says is true (though defending late-game alley-oops is the least of the Huskies' problems; stopping Marquette's early-game fast break would have been far more vital).
I don't think UConn lacks heart, but when compared to the fire and heart and veteran leadership and smarts displayed by Marquette today, the Huskies sure fell short on just about all counts.
And it should be noted: Marquette is good. A team that can defend like that, with two terrific senior players in Darius Johnson-Odom and Jae Crowder, with the ability to shoot (10 3-pointers) and run the floor, has got to be dangerous come NCAA tourney time.
I know I'll have them advancing pretty far in my bracket, for whatever that's worth.
As for UConn: Yeah, they're still in the Big Dance, based on their RPI and strength of schedule. But do they really pass the eye test right now? Are they truly a deserving tourney team, after losing nine of their last 13 games?