Every March Madness bracket needs a few Cinderella picks, and this year's field is loaded with mid-majors and lower seeds that can make some noise. Here are the teams you need to circle before you fill out your bracket.
Hofstra (13 seed, Midwest): The Pride are making their first NCAA Tournament appearance in over a decade, and they're doing it with one of the most balanced offenses in the mid-major ranks. They face an Alabama team that can be wildly inconsistent, and if Hofstra can control the tempo and keep this game in the 60s, they have a legitimate shot at pulling off one of the tournament's biggest upsets. Don't let the 13 seed fool you. This team can play.
Cal Baptist (13 seed, East): This is historic. Cal Baptist is making their first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance after completing their transition to Division I, and they draw a Kansas team that's been up and down all season. Cal Baptist plays with an intensity born from having something to prove, and their three-point shooting can stretch any defense. Even if they don't win, they'll make Kansas sweat for 40 minutes, and sometimes that's all a 13 seed needs to create magic.
Akron (12 seed, Midwest): The Zips are one of the best three-point shooting teams in the entire country, ranking in the top 15 nationally from beyond the arc. They face Texas Tech in the first round, and the Red Raiders' defense is going to be tested by a team that can absolutely fill it up from deep. In a single-elimination format, a team that can get hot from three and ride that wave for 40 minutes is always dangerous. Akron has the shooting to hang with anybody on a good day.
High Point (12 seed, West): Another first-time tournament team, High Point dominated their conference tournament and earned a 12 seed against Wisconsin. The Panthers play with fearless energy and have a balanced scoring attack that doesn't rely on any single player. Wisconsin's methodical pace can backfire in March if the shots aren't falling, and High Point has the depth and shooting to exploit any cold stretch. This is a classic 12/5 upset setup.
Miami (OH) (11 seed, Midwest, First Four): The most controversial selection of the entire bracket. Miami of Ohio went 31-1 this season and got placed in the First Four, which means this 31-win team has to play an extra game just to get into the main bracket. That's the kind of disrespect that fuels tournament runs. If the RedHawks survive the First Four, they'll carry an enormous chip on their shoulder into the first round, and a 31-1 team with something to prove is a dangerous opponent for anyone. The committee may have made a mistake putting them in the play-in round instead of rewarding their incredible season with a proper seed.