March Madness is always the featured attraction, but there isn't a busier schedule of meaningful games than when conference tournaments begin.
As high-major programs have a final regular-season week to play, most of the unheralded leagues in Division I are entering postseason action. And in most situations, the teams know a trip to the Big Dance hinges entirely on these conference tournaments.
Win, you're in.
Lose, though, and the national stage disappears.
Considering there are 368 D-I teams, these upcoming games may be your introduction to this season's small-school standouts. First, no shame in that. Keeping track of a favorite team is hard enough sometimes. Still, it's valuable to know where and when to find these players. We're not hitting every league but have included most mid-major and one-bid leagues.
Midweek Madness
The first notable names are slated to open postseason play March 1 in the Atlantic Sun Conference and Horizon League.
A-Sun front-runner Liberty has Darius McGhee, who ranks second nationally at 23.8 points per game. Right behind him on the scoring leaderboard is Detroit guard Antoine Davis. The senior has averaged 23.5 points per game, keeping the Titans afloat in a conference topped by Cleveland State.
The next day, Wagner's Alex Morales and Bryant's Peter Kiss headline the Northeast Conference's top teams. Morales has provided 17.9 points, 7.6 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 1.9 steals per game, while Kiss leads the nation with an average of 24.8 points.
Also on March 2, the Big South and Ohio Valley begin their tourneys.
Longwood and Winthrop are the prime Big South contenders, but UNC Asheville has an under-the-radar star. Drew Pember, a Tennessee transfer, has notched 15.5 points and 3.1 blocks per game. He put up 41 points on Radford in January.
Even if Murray State loses in the OVC tournament, the 26-2 Racers will probably be a part of March Madness. They have two 16-plus-point-per-game scorers in KJ Williams and Tevin Brown. Murray State's top competition is Belmont, which boasts one of the nation's most versatile centers. Nick Muszynski is recording 16.4 points, 5.3 rebounds, 2.6 assists and 1.8 blocks per game.
Jumping ahead to March 4 in the Missouri Valley Conference, the quarterfinal round will be the opening day for Missouri State's Isiaih Mosley. Although he's encountered a cold streak lately, only three players have scored 30-plus points in more than Mosley's five outings this season.