Just a year and a half ago, the Mountain West conference looked like it was on its way out of college basketball relevance. Brigham Young, which had earned a No. 3 seed in the NCAA tournament, was leaving along with Utah. The only replacement at the time? Lowly Boise State basketball.
The way things were shaping up, it appeared that the small league was becoming less of a high mid-major collection of talent, and instead just another mid-major.
Instead, 18 months later, the conference looks stronger than ever. While the past couple weeks have realistically settled the league's top core a bit, the talent among the Mountain West remains undeniable. No. 19 San Diego State and No. 20 New Mexico both grace the AP top 25, while the conference has four teams ranked in the top 31 of Ken Pomeroy's version. The latest RPI rankings show six of the nine MWC teams in the top 55, the highest percentage of any conference, helping make the argument that the Mountain West no only has overcome power conferences such as the SEC and the Pac-12 in strength, but it also can be called the best conference in the west.
With the entertaining play of New Mexico, San Diego State, UNLV and undefeated Wyoming leading the show, there's plenty to watch. That includes the star performances of the Aztecs' Jamaal Franklin and the Rebels' Mike Moser (who is coming off a dislocated elbow), the four interesting top-50 freshmen who entered the pool, or the solid state of the bottom of the league keeping the start of league play on Wednesday intriguing.
The Mountain West very well could send a high percentage of its teams -- up to six -- to the NCAA tournament this year, potentially filling out the field with not-so-lowly 11-2 Boise State (the only team to defeat No. 16 Creighton this year) and 12-2 Colorado State, which is anchored by former Gophers center Colton Iverson (14.5 points and a hefty 8.9 rebounds a game) in his first eligible season there.
The challenge will be to keep that momentum going as January gives way to March. The Mountain West has had impressive starts before -- last season three different teams touched the top 25 -- but as a whole, the tournament efforts have been lackluster and the general consensus was that teams have peaked too early. From 2008 forward, the Mountain West has gone 8-15 in NCAA tourney play, with three of the four teams that made it a year ago failing to play past their first day.
With Boise State announcing it would stay put -- it was originally in a package deal with San Diego State to move to the Big East in football and the Big West in all other sports -- on New Year's Eve, there is potential again to keep the league together, and even grow.
Just how the league will blossom has been hinted to early, but remains to be seen.