Albuquerque’s downtown neighborhoods, like those in many metro areas across the nation, are a study in contrasts.
Close to the interchange of Interstate 25 and Interstate 40, the area is dotted with distilleries and other trendy businesses, as well as large manufacturing yards and a Creamland Dairies garage.
Amid the affluence and industry, homeless people gathered throughout the area on a brisk, sunny day in late January, congregating on city sidewalks in makeshift tents and flanked by shopping carts full of gear. Many had canine companions with them, some wearing dog vests in the cold weather.
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The sight has become familiar in communities throughout New Mexico, but is particularly prominent in the state’s most populous city.
How many people are homeless in Albuquerque and across the state? Accurate estimates are hard to come by. But teams of volunteers set out during a four-day period late last month to count those who are perhaps most visible and vulnerable — the street homeless — as well as those living in shelters.
A homeless man who wished to remain unidentified organizes his collection of remote control car tires after answering questions for the annual Point in Time Count on the corner of McKnight Avenue and First Street in Albuquerque on Jan. 28. The man told The New Mexican how he lost many of his personal items during an encampment sweep done by the city, and he was only able to keep a handful of his personal belongings.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
The annual Point in Time Count, conducted nationwide, is the largest data collection effort focused on the homeless population. It found 771,000 homeless people across the U.S. in 2024, the most ever recorded. That compares with nearly 4,700 counted in New Mexico in 2025 — with almost 3,000 in Albuquerque alone. While the PIT Count’s numbers largely are considered a significant undercount of the true homeless population, advocates say it’s the best method available to assess a growing problem.
“The PIT is a deeply flawed survey, but it is one of the best tools we have,” said Sara Lucero, a development director for Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, who coordinated an outing Jan. 28 to count — and connect with — the city’s homeless.
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The volunteer power
A small group of volunteers and staff members departed from the headquarters of Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless — at 1217 First St., about a mile north of the Alvarado Transportation Center on Central Avenue — with a rolling cart full of snacks, water, hygiene kits, socks and other cold-weather gear.
While distributing the supplies, gratefully received, volunteers also asked homeless people where they had spent the night and if they would be willing to fill out a survey offering more details on their experiences.
One woman said she had slept on the street in downtown Albuquerque. She had previously spent time at one of the city’s shelters, she said, but left after being harassed. She would rather be on the street, she told a surveyor.
One man asked if there was any reimbursement for participating, which there is not.
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“Time is money!” he said with a laugh.
A man with the street name Buffalo, who said he has been homeless for 23 years, said he had been surveyed by PIT Count volunteers a day earlier but accepted some snacks and a hand warmer. He was playing music he had recorded on a portable stereo and said he dreamed about producing an album and performing for record executive and TV personality Simon Cowell.
Dr. Elizabeth “Bee” Cumby visits with a homeless man while collecting information for the annual Point in Time Count on the corner of McKnight Avenue and First Street in Albuquerque on Jan. 28.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
One of the volunteers in the group was Dr. Elizabeth “Bee” Cumby, who came from her home in Los Lunas that morning to pitch in. It was her first time volunteering for the PIT count, but she had worked at Health Care for the Homeless during her career as a medical doctor, much of which had been spent as a contractor with the federal Indian Health Service.
Cumby was troubled by the increase in visible homelessness in her community following the coronavirus pandemic, saying many more people seem to be living in recreational vehicles on other people’s property or along the bosque of the Rio Grande than she recalls seeing previously.
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She also wondered about the connection between mental health and homelessness, a question with no easy answers.
Part of her medical training involved going to the New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute in Las Vegas, which she described as “a sad place.”
Still, she said, people living on the street are vulnerable to many of the same problems as those who are institutionalized, including physical and sexual violence, neglect and theft, and she wondered if the shuttering of residential mental health facilities in decades past was wise.
“On a cold night like last night, I keep thinking if we had kept all these facilities going, at least these people would be housed, and getting food,” she said.
Lucero encouraged people the group encountered to come to Health Care for the Homeless if they needed help with medical conditions.
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One woman said she had a prescription for arthritis in her hands, but the medication was discarded during a city sweep of a homeless encampment. She was one of several people the volunteers encountered during a shift who said they had lost items during a sweep.
More stringent enforcement of bans on camping on public property has impacted the PIT count, advocates say, making it more difficult for volunteers to locate and survey homeless people. The New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, which oversees the state’s PIT Count each year, cites the city of Albuquerque’s “aggressive decommissioning policy” of homeless encampments in its 2025 report as an impediment to the effort.
Federally mandated survey
The Point in Time Count, an annual survey of the nation’s sheltered and unsheltered homeless people on a single night in January, is mandated by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development for organizations that receive funding through the federal Continuum of Care program.
While the count is for a single night — Jan. 26 this year — the department gives organizers up to a week to do outreach, and the New Mexico coalition conducted a four-day count this year.
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The nationwide endeavor largely is carried out by volunteers who venture into city streets, parks and out-of-the-way places to find and survey those living without shelter. It’s not an easy task.
William Bowen, a program director for the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness, said several factors lead to depressed numbers.
The midwinter count is contingent on volunteer participation, which widely varies by location. The Department of Housing and Urban Development’s narrow definition of homelessness, which does not include people who are couch-surfing or families doubled up in a home, also fails to capture a large number of homeless people.
More recently, the PIT Count has been affected by encampment sweeps.
Still, Bowen and other coalition officials say the count is the best system of collecting large-scale data on homelessness and can be used to identify trends.
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“No one else is trying to do this,” noted Axton Nichols, a director with the coalition’s Continuum of Care team.
Bowen said the Point in Time Count data, as the name implies, is only intended to capture a snapshot in time and reflects the transitory nature of the homeless experience. If the count was taken again several months later, even if the numbers were similar, there’s no guarantee it would be tallying the same people.
“People cycle in and out of homelessness, I think, a lot more rapidly than the public maybe understands,” he said.
Nichols noted measures are in place to prevent the same people from being counted more than once.
How much of the homeless population remains uncounted is unclear.
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Bowen said the coalition believes the PIT Count is capturing about 50% to 60% of the Albuquerque’s true homeless population, but the statewide numbers are harder to estimate.
The survey is not conducted in every county in New Mexico, as it relies on volunteers being available and willing to organize it in their communities. It was administered in 18 of New Mexico’s 33 counties in 2025.
About 200 volunteers participated this year in the Albuquerque count, Bowen said.
A study last year by the New Mexico Department of Health, based on hospital data, found the state’s homeless population could be two to four times higher than numbers reflected in the PIT Count, at more than 9,000.
Data collected under the requirements of the federal McKinney-Veto Act, a law that requires public schools to serve homeless children, shows 10,533 homeless students in New Mexico during the 2024-25 school year.
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The McKinney-Veto Act uses a broader definition of homelessness than the federal government, which includes only people who are living in shelters or on the streets.
Nichols said that leads to homeless youth and women being particularly underrepresented in the PIT Count, as they are both hard-to-reach populations.
That contributes to a perception that the average homeless person is a man, Nichols said, which makes it more difficult to prove there is a need for resources for some of the most vulnerable groups of homeless people, including those engaging in sex work.
He provided an example: A person who “used sex work to pay for a hotel one night, but otherwise they’d be on the street — HUD considers them housed.”
Who are the homeless?
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Along with asking people where they were sleeping on a designated night, PIT Count surveys ask how long they have been homeless and inquire about their race and gender, if they have a disability, substance addiction or mental illness, and what barriers they have experienced when it comes to accessing housing.
Some of the questions can bring up painful emotions for people. Lucero reminded volunteers people can decline to answer questions, even after they’ve agreed to take the survey.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development requires certain questions, but survey coordinators can add additional questions. One added by the New Mexico Coalition to End Homelessness inquires about where a person is originally from, and if they were homeless when they arrived in their current city.
Half of the people surveyed in Albuquerque in 2025 reported being from the city, and 58% were from somewhere in New Mexico. Of those originally from out of state, 64% were not homeless when they arrived. Surveys of people in Santa Fe and other areas of the state showed similar numbers.
The majority of out-of-staters were from the Western U.S., including Texas, California, Arizona and Colorado.
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Sara Lucero, development director for Albuquerque Health Care for the Homeless, fists bumps a homeless man after speaking with him about the annual Point in Time Count in Albuquerque on Jan. 28.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
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Nichols said a popular sentiment, especially in major cities, that homeless people travel there from other places to take advantage of resources is not reflected in the numbers: “The data has never borne that out.”
The coalition’s 2025 report points to a slight increase in homelessness in Albuquerque compared to the past year and a slight decrease in the numbers from other areas of New Mexico.
Something shown in the count’s data over time are “persistent racial disparities,” Bowen said. The percentage of Indigenous people who were homeless in 2025 was more than double the percentage of Indigenous people in the state’s population. For Black people, the rate of those who were homeless was more than triple.
More than half of homeless Indigenous people surveyed in 2025 were from the Navajo Nation, with small numbers from New Mexico pueblos and a few from out-of-state tribes.
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In recent years, Bowen said, reports also have identified a rise in the homeless senior population, mirroring a national trend that has been seen in Santa Fe.
About one-third of women surveyed said their homelessness was due to domestic violence, according to the 2025 report, and 9% of unsheltered homeless people reported having served in the U.S. military.
For all its shortcomings, Bowen said one advantage of the PIT Count is that it gives people the opportunity to meet with those in their community in need and other people who want to make a difference.
“Even if the general systemic benefit of PIT Count is maybe debatable, it’s an opportunity to connect with people,” he said. “And I think that that has value as well.”
LAS VEGAS, N.M. — The approaching desert dusk did nothing to settle Travis Regensberg’s nerves as he and a small herd of stray cattle awaited the appearance of a state livestock inspector with whom he had a 30-year feud.
This was Nov. 3, 2023, and, as Regensberg tells it, the New Mexico Livestock Board had maintained an agreement for almost a decade: Livestock Inspector Matthew Romero would not service his ranch due to a long history of bad blood between the two men. False allegations of “cattle rustling” had surfaced in the past, Regensberg said.
A dramatic standoff that evening, caught on lapel camera video, shows Regensberg at the entrance gate of his ranch. Defiant, Regensberg says anyone but Romero can pick up the stray cattle he had asked state livestock officials to pick up earlier in the day. Romero, who is backed up by two New Mexico State Police officers, directs Regensberg to open the gate or he will be arrested.
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“You guys can send somebody who is not Matthew Romero,” Regensberg says in the video, which The New Mexican received through a public records request.
Then-New Mexico Livestock Board Deputy Director Darron “Shawn” Davis can be heard in the video during a call on Romero’s phone, saying, “Matthew, go ahead and arrest Mr. Regensberg for obstruction.”
Regensberg, a contractor and rancher, filed a civil rights lawsuit in February against the New Mexico Livestock Board, Romero and Davis, alleging an “appalling misuse” of power from the state agency. Initially filed in the state District Court in San Miguel County, the suit has been moved to U.S. District Court.
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Travis Regensberg, rancher and contractor, practices his throw on a roping dummy in his barn in Las Vegas, N.M., on Feb. 17, 2025.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
Regensberg, 60, maintains the incident that evening and the criminal charges later filed against him marked a “conspiracy” on the part of state livestock officials to use the weight of the agency to ruin his reputation amid a long-standing grudge held by Romero.
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The District Attorney’s Office in San Miguel County filed criminal charges against Regensberg after the incident, although he was not arrested that night. The counts included unlawful dispossession of animals, livestock running at large and use of a telephone to intimidate and harass — all of which were dismissed “with prejudice,” meaning prosecutors could not refile them, in late 2024. An unlawful branding charge also did not stick.
Regensberg’s suit asserts the board pursued charges of cattle dispossession against him, even though he had called livestock officials and told them to pick up the stray cattle that had wandered onto his property. It says the agency also pursued a charge of cattle running at large, after state officials left a gate open on his property, allowing some of his own cattle to get loose that night.
Romero and Davis both declined to comment on the case.
Davis said he retired in July after 25 years with the agency, noting his retirement was unrelated to the case.
Romero has also retired from the agency; the livestock board did not answer a question about whether his retirement had any connection to the lawsuit.
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Legal counsel for the defendants filed a 30-page motion Feb. 16 seeking to dismiss the case, arguing the defendants had cause to charge Regensberg.
“In this view, Plaintiff appears to argue that his history of conflict with Defendant Romero legally permits him to obstruct the performance of Defendant Romero’s duties. No facts support that this unlawful obstruction was anticipated,” the motion states.
“Just like any individual would not be able to choose which [state police] officer could pull them over for a traffic infraction, Plaintiff is not allowed to unilaterally decide which [livestock] Inspector would show up to a call,” the motion continues.
Unlawful impound?
The dislike between the two men evidently started when they were teenagers or in their early 20s. The suit states the pair had once shared rides to bull-riding events at rodeos, but the relationship soured when Regensburg made a certain pointed comment to Romero.
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The lawsuit lays out subsequent flare-ups between the two men, including at a Wagon Mound rodeo and at a state park in San Miguel County where Romero was working as a ranger.
A small herd of Travis Regensberg’s cattle eat feed on his property in Las Vegas, N.M.
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Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
Belinda Garland, executive director of the New Mexico Livestock Board, declined to comment on the case.
“This matter is currently before the courts,” she wrote in an email. “Out of respect for the legal process, we cannot comment further. We intend to vigorously defend against the allegations and are confident in our position.”
State police officers were able to defuse the situation that night and convince Regensberg to let officials onto his property after they promised to manage any conflicts between him and Romero.
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Someone left a gate open when they entered, allowing about 20 of Regensberg’s cattle to escape. All of those cattle were gathered back onto his ranch, except for a steer.
He alleges state officials later impounded the steer and sold it for just $75 at the Belen livestock auction without telling him.
In the motion to dismiss the case, lawyers for Romero, Davis and the livestock board say officials had informed Regensberg earlier in the day the cattle belonged to a neighbor.
“Plaintiff refused to allow [his neighbor] to pick up the cattle and demanded that NMLB come get the cattle, even though he was told that the cattle were [his neighbor’s] cattle by a NMLB Inspector,” the motion states. “Plaintiff fed and watered the cattle, without consent of the owner.”
Regensberg said he did not turn the cattle over to his neighbor because the receipt his neighbor presented to him from a Valencia County livestock auction showed they had been purchased at 2:56 p.m. that day, while the stray cattle had turned up on his property that morning.
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“The invoice shown to him was for cattle purchased only minutes earlier at location more than a two-hour drive from Regensberg’s ranch in Las Vegas,” his lawsuit says.
Legal counsel for the livestock board have offered up a different narrative.
“By refusing to allow Defendant Romero on his property, and by knowingly herding, locking away, feeding, and watering [his neighbor’s] cattle, there was more than enough probable cause to charge Plaintiff with unlawful disposition of an animal,” states the motion to dismiss.
“I’m just going to go with obstruction, failure to comply,” Romero says in the lapel camera video, talking to two state police officers about Regensberg, who by that time in the evening had gone into his own residence on the property. “I can get him on unlawful impound, too.”
The history
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What occurred Nov. 3, 2023, could have been a fairly routine job for state livestock agents, according to the lawsuit. Stray cattle had wandered onto Regensberg’s land that morning through a gate opened by a family member who had driven onto his property.
Regensberg, the suit states, herded the strays into an enclosure around 11:15 a.m. and then called a state livestock inspector to remove the animals, following what he believed to be correct protocol.
Eventually Regensberg, according to the lawsuit, fed the cattle as the day lengthened and as no state inspectors had come to remove the animals. Regensberg was told Romero was the only agent available to get the stray cattle, even as he insisted the agency send someone else.
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Travis Regensberg takes a bag of feed out to his cattle followed by his dog Rooster in Las Vegas, N.M., on Feb. 17, 2025.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
The suit states Romero had previously accused Regensberg in a 2014 lawsuit of threatening to kill him, so Regensberg was concerned Romero would try to shoot him that night.
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In the late 1980s or early 1990s, according to the lawsuit, Regensberg was riding a motorcycle on a park roadway heading to a July 4 family gathering when he was stopped by Romero, who told him motorcycles were prohibited from the park and he would have to leave. Regensberg sought to explain he was on his way to a family gathering and would only ride on the road.
“Romero flared, insisting Regensberg’s motorcycle was prohibited and demanded he leave the Park,” the lawsuit says. “Regensberg left, which meant he missed the family gathering. After becoming a livestock inspector, Romero began confronting and harassing Regensberg at various events.”
‘A matter of principle’
It is not the first such lawsuit the agency has recently faced.
A suit filed in a little over a year ago in state District Court by Mike Archuleta, a Rowe cattleman, accuses the board of violating his civil rights by relying on false accusations made by a Texas-based rancher as the basis for seizing five unbranded calves from their home in 2023 and selling them at auction before the couple could prove through DNA testing the animals belonged to them.
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Travis Regensberg gathers his rope while practicing his throw on a roping dummy in his barn in Las Vegas, N.M., on Feb. 17, 2025.
Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican
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Regensberg, a team roper, reflected on how the whole affair has hurt his reputation in the small communities where he has spent his whole life.
He thinks the power of the state should not be used to settle what is, in his view, a personal score. Bringing feed pelts out to the pasture on a recent day — the wind tearing across the landscape and tearing at his clothing — Regensburg said he had to sell about 30 head of cattle just to pay legal fees.
“It’s about accountability,” he said of the lawsuit. “It’s a matter of principle.”
A retired US Air Force general was reported missing in New Mexico, with authorities warning that medical concerns have heightened fears for his safety.
Retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, 68, was last seen around 11 a.m. Friday near Quail Run Court NE in Albuquerque, the Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office said.
Officials said they do not know what McCasland was wearing or in which direction he may have traveled. The sheriff’s office has issued a Silver Alert.
“Due to his medical issues, law enforcement is concerned for his safety,” the sheriff’s office said.
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McCasland was a longtime leader at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico and previously commanded Kirtland’s Phillips Research Site and Air Force Research Laboratory.
Col. Justin Secrest, commander of the 377th Air Base Wing at Kirtland, told the Albuquerque Journal that the base is coordinating with local authorities.
Retired Maj. Gen. William Neil McCasland, a longtime leader at Kirtland Air Force Base in New Mexico, has gone missing. United States Air Force1st Lt. Steven McNamara (left) and McCasland cut the cake celebrating 100 years of heritage for the Air Force Research Laboratory at the Heritage Annex. Jim Fisher / United States Air Force“Due to his medical issues, law enforcement is concerned for his safety,” the sheriff’s office said. Bernalillo County Sheriff’s Office
“Our thoughts are with his family during this difficult time,” Secrest said.
McCasland was commissioned in 1979 after graduating from the US Air Force Academy with a degree in astronautical engineering and held multiple leadership roles in space research, acquisition and operations, including work with the National Reconnaissance Office.
Authorities asked anyone with information about McCasland to text BCSO to 847411 or call the sheriff’s Missing Persons Unit at +1 (505) 468-7070.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Three thoughts on San Diego State’s 81-76 loss at New Mexico on Saturday afternoon:
1. Kudos
No loss is a happy occasion within SDSU’s basketball program, but it was mitigated somewhat by the how and who:
The how: A 3-pointer from the left wing with 43 seconds left that broke a 74-74 tie.
The who: Luke Haupt, a sixth-year senior from St. Augustine High School and Point Loma Nazarene University who is one of those classy, genuine guys you can’t help but root for.
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Aztecs coaches know him and his family well, his father Mike being the longtime head coach at Saints who sent Trey Kell to them. Aztecs players know him from the Swish summer league and open gyms during the summer.
Coach Brian Dutcher: “Kudos to Luke, known him a long time. Coaches are a little different than fan bases, where sometimes (fans) get too hard on the opposition. I wanted to win in the worst way, trust me when I tell you that. But … tip your hat to guys who make important and timely plays.”
Junior guard Miles Byrd: “Credit to Luke Haupt. He’s a San Diego kid. He’s going to (get) up for these type of games. You respect that. Players show up in games like this, and he showed up.”
There’s respect for the moment and respect for what it took to get there.
Haupt grew up, like most kids in San Diego, watching the Aztecs and dreaming of maybe one day playing in Viejas Arena. He went to Division II PLNU instead and toiled in relative anonymity for five seasons, one of which was abbreviated by the pandemic and 1½ of which was wiped out by knee surgery.
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The 6-foot-7 wing finally got to Division I for his sixth and final year, lured to New Mexico by former UC San Diego coach Eric Olen, and has averaged 7.2 points per game with a career high of 30 against Boise State. He had 17 on Saturday against his hometown team, the final three coming with 43 seconds left in a tie game.
The play wasn’t designed for him. Fate sent the ball his way.
“It was a big shot, but it was everything I’ve worked on my entire career and basketball life,” Haupt said. “It’s all the people who have helped me get here and all the work that’s been put in.
“These are moments you dream about.”
2. Death of Cinderella
The Aztecs have slipped off the NCAA Tournament bubble with losses in three of their last four games, yet their metrics are comparable and in some cases better than a year ago, when they didn’t win the conference tournament and sneaked into the First Four in Dayton.
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They are hanging tough at 42 in Kenpom and 44 in NET. Last year they were 46 and 52 on Selection Sunday.
The problem is that there might be historically few at-large berths available to mid-major conferences as the preposterous sums of money coursing through the sport accentuates the divide between the haves and have-nots. The latest field from ESPN’s Joe Lunardi has 11 teams from the SEC, nine from the Big Ten and eight each from the Big 12 and ACC.
The Big East, considered a power conference given its financial commitment to men’s basketball (although that is starting to wane), is expected to get only three, but do the math: Power conferences account for 34 of the 37 at-large invitations to the 68-team field.
Lunardi, and several other bracketologists, has only three mid-majors getting at-large berths: Saint Mary’s and Santa Clara from the WCC, and New Mexico from the Mountain West.
Only Saint Mary’s is in the main bracket. Santa Clara and New Mexico are in his First Four (and the Lobos are his last team in).
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“It’s harder,” Dutcher said, “because there are only so many at-large bids that are going to go to non-power conference teams. When thrown up against the power conferences, the Selection Committee is finding ways to put the power conference teams in.”
Since the tournament expanded from 65 to 68 in 2011, mid-majors have averaged a combined 6.3 at-large berths. The high was 10 in 2013, but it’s been seven as recently as 2024. Last year it slipped to four, equaling the record low, and no mid-major teams reached the Sweet 16.
If teams like Utah State, Saint Louis and Miami (Ohio) win their conference tournaments, knocking out “bid stealers,” it could be three, maybe even two.
Money is talking. It doesn’t guarantee success, but it certainly increases the chances.
3. Euros
The Aztecs have not dipped into the European professional market for players, but maybe this season will change their perspective.
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They have nine losses. Seven have come against teams with a European big.
The latest was New Mexico, which got 24 points and 18 rebounds from the 6-foot-9, 240-pound Tomislav Buljan, a 23-year-old Croatian pro granted one season of collegiate eligibility by the NCAA. He had 20 and 14 in the first meeting, when the Aztecs narrowly escaped with an 83-79 win after trailing in the final minute.
“He was a monster tonight,” Haupt said. “That was huge for us. Loved the way he played.”
The week before, the Aztecs lost to Colorado State and Rashaan Mbemba from Austria.
They’ve lost to Grand Canyon twice with 7-1 Turkish pro Efe Demirel, a 21-year-old “freshman” who has experience in the Euroleague, the continent’s most prestigious competition.
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In the December loss to Arizona where the Aztecs were crushed 52-28 on the boards, 7-2, 260-pound Lithuanian center Motiejus Krivas had 13.
Michigan, which beat SDSU in November, has 7-3 Aday Mara of Spain.
Baylor beat the Aztecs two days later with 6-9 Michael Rataj of Germany, then a few weeks later added 7-0 James Nnaji from Spanish club FC Barcelona.
Only Troy and Utah State didn’t start a European big in wins against SDSU — although Mexican forward Victor Valdes had 20 points for Troy.
“Obviously, it’s changing the game,” Dutcher said. “The European pros are coming over because they can make more money over here than they can in Europe. They come over and they’re making good money, whether it’s Demirel at Grand Canyon or it’s Buljan at New Mexico.
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“These are good players who come up through a club system and are basically professional basketball players.”