I've started my annual pre-March Madness stat crunching and this is a tough year to pick a "best team", at least at this point.
Syracuse is the obvious answer, but they have one of the lowest scoring margins a one seed has ever had. (SM is one of the more reliable indicators of tourney success.) Also, in a year where scoring is up across the board, Syracuse has a shockingly low PPG, again lower than any one seed in history. There's a lot to like about Syracuse, but I see them as potentially vulnerable.
Wichita State has about a 75% chance to stay undefeated through the regular season according to kenpom and if they do, it will be talked about a lot and a lot of brackets will have them advancing far because of it. The concern here is that high seeded mid-majors historically do poorly in the tourney, and their SOS is pretty bad. Remember Gonzaga last year? Yeah...
Arizona's PPG took a huge hit once Ashley went down and I fear they will be seeded based on what they did prior to that than how they are performing now. Their kenpom efficiency numbers are also pretty bad for a top seed.
Florida is probably my choice right now, since they currently have the most balanced offensive and defensive efficiency stats. They have a similar PPG problem that Syracuse has, however. Duke is probably my number 2 based on a combination of their offensive output and SOS, but their defense is suspect and defense matters in March.
Syracuse's best win away from the Carrier Dome is at Pittsburgh last weekend on that half-court miracle buzzer beater. Pitt has lost 4 of their last 6, by the way. Their next best non-home win is a 5 point "road" win over St. Johns at MSG. They go to Duke this weekend and UVa next weekend; if they win one and keep the other close I might think more of them, but until them I wonder if they've been more lucky than good.
They also play at an
extremely slow tempo- adjusted tempo is 61.0. Nobody who plays anywhere near that slow for all the season that KenPom has data has won a national title. I think the slowest was UConn at 65.4 in that weird 2011 season where all the 1 seeds were gone before the Final Four. IMO playing slow makes high seeds more vulnerable to upsets- fewer possessions means more variance.
Pretty much every team SU has played doesn't initiate their offense until the shot clock is under 10. When SU has been down they've been able to hurry teams up with a press but they haven't really had to do it much. Then they get late in games and boehiem takes the air out of the ball. I just don't buy the slow tempo is the reason they lose argument. If they lose it's going to be because they run into a great defensive team on the wrong night. That and it's really hard to win the whole thing. The win at Pitt was a great win because that is THE team that knows exactly how to beat SU and has the ability to execute the blueprint. If Cuse beats Duke we'll hear it was because Duke had to play that makeup game. if they beat Virginia it'll be because Virginia isn't that good. Whatever. They'll lose eventually and it's going to be tough to win a title but this team is loaded and arguably the best the school has ever had.
It's the history.

Teams with that slow a tempo simply have never won the tournament and as such it's hard to include them in the discussion.
Does history not come with context? I think what Nipsey is pointing out is that this is less 'Cuse's tempo than their opponents, largely due to 'Cuse's defense. It's not as if the Orange look to take a slow down approach at all... and when needed, they have ramped it up and can score in bunches.
You can make arguements for other teams, and you can validly point out that the Orange may be vulnerable (who isn't?) - but to say "its hard to include them in the discussion" for an undefeated #1 ranked team in the country (unanimous, mind you), that seems a bit ludicrous.
So if their zone is causing the slow tempo, how is that not attributable to their team as a whole? Whatever the reason, Syracuse plays less possessions per game than most teams, and that can cause more variability in the tournament. They also have a low PPG, so if they really can ramp it up, it doesn't show in the numbers, and this is all during a year where scoring is up pretty much across the board.
Yes, all teams are vulnerable but when you look at the numbers, Syracuse is about 4th or 5th most likely to win the tournament at this point going by history.
AP rankings are an incredibly poor indicator of anything. Remember, Gonzaga was ranked number 1 for over a month last year.