Still would love to have Fred's team beat down the Hawks.
If that happens even once (and they play twice), then Iowa is in even worse shape that we might imagine. Iowa is #68 on BT; Nebraska is #144 and sinking fast.
Wow, that's a stretch and a half. Would've loved to have seen what would've happened vs. UConn, but 1. That was So. Niang, who was great, but not the dominant player he was as a Jr. and Sr.; 2. As a result of the injury Hogue had a huge role, and was HUGE with 34 points. With both guys healthy if you would've said you'd get 34 points between Niang and Hogue you'd take it every time.; 3. ISU made a bit of a push to get close late, but they handled ISU pretty well wire to wire; and 4. There's no way to know what would've happened in subsequent games. UConn caught absolute fire that tournament.
As for the Babb injury, saying that 10 seed team was going to get past Arizona and Wichita St. is a pretty big assumption.
Ding ding ding we have a winner.
The legend of Fred Hoiberg in Ames far exceeds his actual accomplishments. I know he was a favorite son returning to save his alma mater, but he benefited greatly from a glow of nostalgia around Johnny Orr and a fan base
starving for anything to hang their hat on after the awful frustrations of the Morgan and McDermott eras.
I hope his tenure at Nebraska helps bring us back down to Earth about what he accomplished in Ames. He had some high highs and some big wins, but he also had numerous perplexing losses against bad teams that held the program back from truly elite circles. His record in the NCAA tournament was modest -- only made the second weekend once, and perhaps his best team lost to an awful #14 seed.
Any decent team in the NCAA tournament can construct a narrative of "if XYZ, we are in the Final Four," but you have to take the results for what they were. You are completely right that UConn ways playing out of its mind that month, too, and there was a very good Michigan State team waiting for us in the next round, plus Florida and Kentucky after that, both of which were much higher in the computer and net efficiency rankings than ISU.
I doubt we go 4-0 against that even with Georges. Giving Fred credit for two "mental Final Fours" when he never even made an Elite Eight is absurd.