Europeans to watch in NCAA March Madness

19/Mar/19 12:05 March 19, 2019

Giannis Askounis

19/Mar/19 12:05

Eurohoops.net

What do 26 colleges of the 2019 NCAA Division I Tournament have in common?

By John Askounis/ info@eurohoops.net

Numerous matches all around the United States from the beginning of the 2018-19 season resulted to the best time of the NCAA season. Thirty-two colleges earned an automatic tournament bid winning their conference championship and a total of sixty-eight made out the postseason field. The 2019 NCAA Division I Tournament featuring the most of the next generation’s top talents is set to begin Tuesday night.

Among all the young upstarts ready to shine, thirty-seven are from Europe. France has the most representatives with five. Serbia and Great Britain follow with four each. The European bunch carries brothers of professional players, sons of former stars, NBA prospects and many more young athletes that have the opportunity to showcase their abilities at the highest level of competition for players of their age.

Looking for the next European NBA star, don’t search any further. Eurohoops gathered every European player of the NCAA tournament all of them prepared to extend their March Madness campaign until April 8th and the National Championship Final at Minneapolis.

The Bulldogs

First-seeded Gonzaga is among the favorites to go all the way and counts on three Europeans. Killian Tillie, brother of Herbalife Gran Canaria’s Kim, certainly catches the eye with his raw but intriguing attributes. The young French forward faced numerous injuries during his junior NCAA season and only averaged 6.2 points when available, but seems ready to take on the challenge of the NCAA tournament.

The Bulldogs need Tillie at his best to achieve their full potential. However, they have two more Europeans, Filip Petrusev and Joel Ayayi. The Serb forward averaged 6.5 points and 2.7 rebounds during his freshman season. The freshman French guard scored 1.7 points and grabbed 1.4 boards per contest.

Portugal strong

Three Portuguese players made it to the NCAA Tournament, two of them with Mountain West Champion team Utah State. Freshman center Neemias Queta is the one to watch. The NBA hopeful has rejected 2.4 shots per match this season, but his ability to stop opponents isn’t all he offers to the Aggies. His 11.9 points, 8.9 rebounds, 1.7 assists averages prove as much.

The giant from Barreiro with his jaw-dropping wingspan has not reached his full potential, but has junior guard Diogo Brito at Utah State to keep him in touch with his homeland and also helps out the team with 8.3 points per contest so far. Colgate’s Francisco Amiel is the third Portuguese player of the tournament.

The Brazdeikis effect

Soon-to-be Lithuanian citizen Ignas Brazdeikis is among the top NCAA talents. He’s represented Canada at junior levels, but was born in Kaunas and his compatriots want him to follow in his mother’s footsteps and play for the Lithuanian National Team. However, Michigan’s NCAA tournament is first up.

With 15.1 points and 5.2 rebounds per match, Brazdeikis quickly established himself among the Wolverines’ main weapons. Michigan 2018-19 goals don’t end with the tournament bid and will rely on the Big Ten Freshman of the Year’s all-around effectiveness to march even further.

The next generation

Davide Moretti made sure Texas Tech secured a third-seed position in the NCAA tournament. The sophomore Italian guard, son of former player and current coach Paolo, is averaging 11.6 points this year sinking 47.8% of his shots beyond the arc. His biggest chance to date is here and he seems ready to turn even more heads.

Paolo Moretti isn’t the only proud father of a European player in the tournament. Stojko Vrankovic will have the chance to see his son Antonio, member of the Duke squad. The senior Croatian center had 1.4 points and 1.3 rebounds playing in sixteen 2018-19 matches.

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