Every March, there is always an NCAA tournament team that is glaringly more dangerous than the others on its seed line.
It might be a juggernaut No. 1 seed that is the overwhelming favorite to cut down the nets. Or a mid-tier team that struggled early in the season but surged into March. Or a tournament-proven but criminally underseeded mid-major with a history of making life miserable for highly touted teams from a power conference.
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