Longtime loyal readers know that for the past seven years I’ve gone where no person had previously gone before. I marched into the marshy bottoms of college basketball’s ecosystem to provide the most exhaustive single piece of college hoops preview content on the internet. There I was in the bogs like a maniac, splitting the difference between the 245th- and the 246th-best teams. I scrutinized rotation players for bottom-end programs in the Southland, SWAC and Big Sky. Normal behavior.What came out amounted to a map of the season ahead and, proudly, a capsule for every team to go with it. I know there are some sickos out there who read every one. You’re my people. But all exhaustive/ill-advised/soul-straining endeavors must end. It’s time to change up the format. A major catalyst for this is the transfer portal. Men’s D-I basketball had 3,616 players in the portal the last two years. Coaches have expressed they don’t know half as much about their leagues now vs. how it was even five years ago, when transfer numbers were vastly lower and proven returning talents in conferences were more easily identifiable. Because so many teams now flip at least half their rosters, tiering out leagues and predicting who will be good, average or bad has never been tougher. Here’s the fun part: I’ve homed in on the teams that matter most — college basketball’s top table, if you will. And what a huge table it is. We are still providing you with an in-depth inspection of college basketball’s eclectic landscape. But for the sake of my sanity, my family and your outrage capacity, my preseason rankings are getting a healthy hack. I always strive to provide readers with the type of things that I too would want to see covered or written about. You’re here because you really like or downright love college hoops and can’t WAIT for the games to start. Tell me what I need to know and who I need to know about. And please give me many reasons to sneer at how you put basketball teams in order.That’s exactly what I’ve built. Instead of a 1-363 (yes, we’re now up to 363 teams), it’s a beefed-up Top 100 And 1. You’re getting an early blueprint on almost every team that will wind up playing in the NCAA Tournament. By ranking out the 101 best, every logical Big Dance candidate is covered — your locks, hopefuls, we’ll-sees, bubble teams and an inevitable NIT invitees. My list also includes more than two dozen mid-major schools, so the Cinderella candidates and big-time small-school squads are also highlighted. These are the programs that will matter most over the next five months. Plus, at the very bottom, you’ll see my predictions for every regular-season champion in the 32 leagues. November is nearly here and with it another amazing season awaits. I hope this hearty preview spikes your anticipation levels even more. After an offseason of mulling, researching and more re-ranking tweaks than I can count, here is my list of 2022-23’s 101 best teams in men’s college basketball. 2022-23 Top 100 And 1 college basketball teams Projected champions for all 32 conferences