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PACQUIAO VS. BRADLEY


VB3 RESTAURANT, SPORTS BAR & LOUNGE PRESENTS

pacqiauo-bradley-fight-free-admission-vb3-bar-jersey-city-600x600PACQUIAO VS. BRADLEY!

Join us at VB3 Restaurant, Sports Bar & Lounge on Saturday, April 9th as Manny Pacquiao takes on Timothy Bradley at The MGM Grand in Las Vegas, with a LIVE DJ, FREE admission*, and drink & shot SPECIALS ALL NIGHT!

The action starts at 9pm with an exciting undercard.

LIVE DJ
EDM Hits, Remixes, and Club Hits

ADMISSION
FREE Admission (until 9pm)

DRINK SPECIALS
$8 Grey Goose Cocktails
$5 House Shots
$99 Veuve Clicquot bottle SPECIAL
Ask about our other VIP Bottle Service SPECIALS

PARKING
FREE Valet or Self-parking!
Parking garage entrance located on
6th Street/Thomas Gangemi Drive
(heading eastbound on 6th St. from Luis Munoz Marin Blvd towards Washington Blvd make right into building parking entrance IMMEDIATELY after passing over the Light Rail tracks; look for the VB3 Valet Parking sign)

WHERE
Villa Borghese III is located at 475 Washington Blvd. Newport/Jersey City, New Jersey, 07310, at the base of the Monaco building. The lounge entrance is located on Thomas Gangemi Drive/6th Street, between the Westin and DoubleTree hotels

VB3 is located less than 5 minutes outside of the Holland Tunnel on the New Jersey side, a short walk from the Newport PATH Train Station, and mere steps from the Newport stop of the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail

RSVP
Please call 201.420.4823 for VIP table bottle reservations*
(*$200 minimum applies to table of 4, tax and gratuity not included and a credit card must be presented upon seating; bottle substitutions at discretion of management; not valid with any other discounts or promotions)

DRESS CODE
Ladies Casual but Classy
Gentlemen Dress to Impress
Dress code is at the discretion of management and can change at any time

CHAMPIONSHIP MONDAY: NCAA Men’s College Basketball Championship!

Let VB3 be your, "where to watch" the NCAA Men's College Basketball Championship in Newport/Jersey City!CHAMPIONSHIP MONDAY: NCAA Men’s College Basketball Championship!

Let VB3 be your, “where to watch” the NCAA Men’s College Basketball Championship in Newport/Jersey City!

Drink SPECIALS during ALL GAMES!
$3 Coors Light Drafts
$4 Budweiser and Bud Light Bottles
$12 Coors Light and Yuengling Pitchers
$4 Fireball Shots
$4 Jim Beam Picklebacks

#championshipmonday #jerseycity #vb3 #marchmadness #ncaa #basketball #bracket

TODAY’S SCHEDULE
9:18 PM (1) Wisconsin vs. (1) Duke

PARKING
FREE Valet or Self-parking!
Parking garage entrance located on
6th Street/Thomas Gangemi Drive
(heading eastbound on 6th St. from Luis Munoz Marin Blvd towards Washington Blvd make right into building parking entrance IMMEDIATELY after passing over the Light Rail tracks; look for the VB3 Valet Parking sign)

WHERE
Villa Borghese III is located at 475 Washington Blvd. Newport/Jersey City, New Jersey, 07310, at the base of the Monaco building. The lounge entrance is located on Thomas Gangemi Drive/6th Street.

VB3 is located less than 5 minutes outside of the Holland Tunnel on the New Jersey side, a short walk from the Newport PATH Train Station, and mere steps from the Newport stop of the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail.

HOOP THOUGHTS: PICKING EVERY GAME IN THE NCAA TOURNEY’S SECOND WEEKEND

Let VB3 be your, “where to watch” NCAA March Madness HQ in Newport/Jersey City!

Drink SPECIALS during ALL GAMES!

$3 Coors Light Drafts
$4 Budweiser and Bud Light Bottles
$12 Coors Light and Yuengling Pitchers
$4 Fireball Shots
$4 Jim Beam Picklebacks

THURSDAY! MARCH MADNESS! ROUND FOUR - THE SWEET SIXTEEN NCAA MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL!

FRIDAY! MARCH MADNESS! ROUND FOUR: PART TWO - THE SWEET SIXTEEN NCAA MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL!

#marchmadness #sweetsixteen #roundfour #ncaa #basketball #tourney #brackets


Hoop Thoughts: Picking every game in the NCAA tourney’s second weekend

By Seth Davis of si.com

The first week of the NCAA tournament had everything—crazy endings, wonderful storylines, powerhouse performances.

The second week? Not so much.

Georgia State? Gone. UAB? Toast. Wichita State? Not exactly Cinderella. Yes, we have one double-digit seed remaining, but that’s UCLA. When your biggest underdog is a program that owns 11 NCAA tournament titles, your bark far exceeds your bite.

But that’s O.K., because this time of year, we want to see the titans clash. Five of the eight top seeds are still alive, and two of the remaining sleepers are coached by a current Hall of Famer (Rick Pitino) and a very-near-future one (Tom Izzo). So savor these four days and let the hoops fall where they may. Given the way things have gone, I hope you don’t mind if I keep it chalky, for the most part. Just callin’ them as I see ‘em.

MORE CBB: NCAA tournament live bracket with scores, schedule

Midwest

Kentucky vs. West Virginia (Thursday, 9:45 p.m., CBS)

It’s hard to say anything about the Wildcats is underrated, but how come no one is talking about how this team has performed at the free throw line? On Saturday, UK made 71.% of its foul shots and out-scored Cincinnati from the line, 20-9. That’s an 11-point margin in a game they won by 13 points. This has been a recurring theme for a team that is ranked 30th in the country in free throw rate and makes 72.2% overall from the line. Four of Kentucky’s top five scorers are shooting 77% or better.

Why is that so relevant in this game? Because West Virginia is ranked dead last in the entire country in defensive free throw rate. That’s a tough deficiency to overcome. This will be the first time all year that Kentucky is playing a team with more depth. The Mountaineers’ fullcourt pressure may be unrelenting, but after surviving the meat grinder against Cincinnati, I think the Wildcats will be salivating at the chance to get out and run, run, run.

Kentucky 78, West Virginia 64

Fast Breaks: (1) Kentucky vs. (5) West Virginia preview

The Kentucky Wildcats will take on the West Virginia Mountaineers on Thursday in a Sweet Sixteen matchup in the Midwest region.

Notre Dame vs. Wichita State (Thursday, 7:15 p.m., CBS)

This is the most intriguing game of the Sweet 16—and also the hardest to pick. Playing in the ACC, Notre Dame lost to a very efficient defensive team in Virginiaback on Jan. 10, but Wichita State will be the most disruptive D the Irish have gone up against. Plus, because the incomparable Fred VanVleet pilots the Shockers, they do an excellent job of taking care of the ball. Wichita State ranks seventh in the country in turnover percentage, but on defense they are 26thnationally in steals percentage. They’re also sixth in the country in assist-to-turnover ratio, with VanVleet’s 3.21 ratio ranking seventh.

Still, Notre Dame is one of the few teams in the country that can score frequently and efficiently in the halfcourt. The Irish are third nationally in offensive efficiency, and for all their three-point prowess they lead the country in two-point field goal percentage (58.3). They are a demonstrably better defensive team than they were even a month ago; you don’t beat Duke and North Carolina to win the ACC tournament if you’re weak defensively). And in 6’10” junior forward Zach Auguste, they will have the only bona fide post scorer in this game. That should be enough—barely.

Notre Dame 67, Wichita State 66

Kentucky vs. Notre Dame

The Irish might have the inside edge on Wichita State, but if they face Kentucky they will be overwhelmed up front. Auguste has height but not a lot of strength, and he has shown a tendency to get into foul trouble (though he was much better in that category during the second half of the season). The Elite Eight would be the furthest Notre Dame has gone during Mike Brey’s 15 years as head coach, but his team won’t go any further. This is Kentucky’s tournament. The rest of us are just watching it.

Kentucky 74, Notre Dame 65

West

Wisconsin vs. North Carolina (Thursday, 7:47 p.m. ET on TBS )

It’s often said and always true: The NCAA tournament is about matchups. North Carolina got a favorable one in the third round against Arkansas. The Razorbacks are largely ineffective unless they are running at a breakneck pace, and the Heels were happy to play along. That will not be the case against Wisconsin, which is ranked first nationally in both defensive free throw rate and turnover percentage, and is 346th in tempo. These Badgers give you absolutely nothing. You have to beat them to beat them, and you have to do it their way.

Sure, the Tar Heels can win if Marcus Paige goes off—but Wisconsin has one of the best perimeter defenders in the country in Josh Gasser. North Carolina has a deep frontline—but Wisconsin has four guys 6’7” and taller whom Bo Ryan can rotate alongside 7-foot senior Frank Kaminsky. The Heels have the biggest X-factor in the game in 6’8” forward Justin Jackson—but is a freshman really mentally ready to carry his team past a No. 1 seed? I’m not saying it’s impossible, but it sure ain’t likely.

Wisconsin 71, North Carolina 64

Fast Breaks: (1) Wisconsin vs. (4) UNC preview

The Wisconsin Badgers will take on the UNC Tar Heels on Thursday in a Sweet Sixteen matchup in the West region.

Arizona vs. Xavier (Thursday, approx. 10:07 p.m. ET on TBS )

The hallmark of a great NCAA tournament team is the ability to play well when it’s not playing well. Arizona is as good as it gets in this department. Wildcats forwards Stanley Johnson and Rondae Hollis-Jefferson shot a combined 4-for-24 in the second round against Ohio State, yet this team is so good defensively (the Wildcats held the Buckeyes to 39% shooting) and at the free throw line (20-for-24), that it didn’t matter. Gabe York’s season-high five three-pointers off the bench were a huge help. You can be sure that at some point this weekend, York will make a timely three-pointer or two that will give the Wildcats just enough breathing room to advance.

Xavier, on the other hand, has drawn a bad matchup here. The Musketeers’ biggest weapon, literally and figuratively, is 6’10” senior center Matt Stainbrook. Xavier was able to win a lot of games because of Stainbrook’s size and feel, but in 7’0” junior center Kaleb Tarczewski, Arizona has someone who exceeds Stainbrook in both those areas. Throw in the Wildcats’ withering defensive pressure on the wing, and you’ve got the makings of a decisive victory.

Arizona 75, Xavier 60

Wisconsin vs. Arizona

If this game is half as good as last year’s meeting in the regional final (won by Wisconsin in overtime), then it may be twice as good as any other game this week. When teams are this evenly matched, it will come down to the vagaries that decide such games—lucky bounces, lucky whistles, that sort of thing. For me, the difference is Arizona’s Brandon Ashley, the 6’9” junior forward who missed last season’s meeting because of a broken foot. Frank Kaminsky was so unguardable in that game that Arizona coach Sean Miller had to park Tarczewski on the bench. Ashley, however, has both the size and the agility to stick with Kaminsky wherever he goes. He won’t be able to shut down the Tank totally, but he’ll be able to bother him just enough to let Arizona’s athletic advantage decide the game. Can’t wait to watch.

Arizona 70, Wisconsin 69 (overtime)

Photo: Ethan Miller/Getty

East

Louisville vs. N.C. State (Friday, 7:37 p.m. on CBS​)

The meeting between these teams in Louisville on Feb. 14 offers a template for what we might expect. The Wolfpack won the game because their perimeter trio of Anthony “Cat” Barber, Ralston Turner and Trevor Lacey combined for 45 points. And that was before Louisville’s best perimeter defender,Chris Jones, was dismissed from the program. Barber and Lacey have shown a maddening tendency to play up or down to the level of their competition, but in the upset over Villanova, the Wolfpack’s big men provided the difference. They out-rebounded the Wildcats by 13 and held their center, Daniel Ochefu, to a single field goal.

During Louisville’s second-round win over Northern Iowa, the Cardinals executed their halfcourt offense as well they have all season. Part of that is due to the ascent of freshman guard Quentin Snider, who made two three-pointers and scored 10 points in the win. (He also scored 16 points in the second-round win over UC Irvine.) The Cardinals were able to overwhelm Northern Iowa with their team speed, but they won’t have that advantage here. I have a feeling Louisville will revert to where it played down the stretch of the regular season, which will allow the Pack to prevail.

N.C. State 67, Louisville 64

Fast Breaks: (4) Louisville vs. (8) N.C. State preview

The Louisville Cardinals will take on the N.C. State Wolfpack on Friday in a Sweet Sixteen matchup in the East region.

Oklahoma vs. Michigan State (Friday, 10:07 p.m., CBS)

For most of the season, Virginia has been one of the top defensive teams in the country. On Sunday, however, the Cavaliers were the second-best defensive team on the court. Michigan State was that good, but the Spartans also performed on the offensive end well above what they had done during the regular season. Looking back, it’s apparent this engine has been gaining steam for several weeks. The Spartans have now won six of their last seven games, including a road win at Indianaand a victory over Maryland in the Big Ten tournament. The lone defeat came in overtime against Wisconsin in the final. The Spartans don’t have great pieces, but they are peaking at just the right time. Perhaps we shouldn’t be so surprised, given who coaches them.

Oklahoma is a good team with a great player in 6’4” junior guard Buddy Hield, who led the Big 12 in scoring (17.5 ppg) and was named the league’s player of the year. But I don’t believe the Sooners are prepared to deal with Michigan State’s physical and mental toughness. Throw in the pinpoint three-point shooting of Denzel Valentine and Travis Trice, and you’ve got the makings of a Spartan victory.

Michigan State 71, Oklahoma 65

Michigan State vs. N.C. State

Nothing like a regional between a No. 7 seed and a No. 8 seed to make you realize that March Madness has struck again. If the Spartans remain locked in defensively, then that should help negate the effectiveness of the Wolfpack’s perimeter trio. Nor should we expect N.C. State to be able to beast Michigan State on the boards the way it was able to do to Villanova. A lot of people have gone broke betting against Tom Izzo in March. It would be wise to avoid that mistake again here.

Michigan State 72, N.C. State 68

South

Duke vs. Utah (Thursday, approx. 9:35 p.m. on CBS)

Is it possible that Duke will only have the second-best freshman center in this game? O.K., that’s a stretch, but I do like the chances for Utah’s 7’0” Austrian pivotman Jakob Poeltl to present a unique challenge. Jahlil Okafor can count on one (very large) hand the number of times he has gone up against a player who as big and athletic as he is. And if Poeltl should falter, Larry Krystowiak can bring in the bigger (but slower) 7’0” senior center Dallin Bachynski off the bench. If you like big guys battling in the paint, then this is the game for you.

Still, even if the Utes are able to neutralize Okafor (big if), they will still face the challenge of locking down the Blue Devils’ three-point snipers, Quinn Cook andTyus Jones. And even if they do that (or hope those guys have an off-shooting night), they will still have to contend with Justise Winslow’s flights of fancy in transition. And even then Utah may find itself having trouble scoring enough points to keep up. This is going to have the feel of a heavyweight fight, but Duke is far more accustomed to being in those. The few times Utah has stepped into the ring under such bright lights (twice vs. Arizona, and at UCLA), the Utes faltered. I expect them to do so again here.

Duke 75, Utah 65

Fast Breaks: (1) Duke vs. (5) Utah preview

The Duke Blue Devils will take on the Utah Utes on Friday in a Sweet Sixteen matchup in the South region.

Gonzaga vs. UCLA (Thursday, 7:15 p.m. on CBS)

Did you happen to see the video of Gonzaga coach Mark Few celebrating in the locker room with his players after his team’s second-round win over Iowa? He looked like a man who had just gotten a new lease on life. As much as Few tried to dismiss the pressure of falling short in the NCAA tournament, it is obvious that he and his team are very much relieved to be back in the Sweet 16. I think they will play footloose and fancy free in Houston, which should mean lots and lots of buckets.

To be sure, the Bulldogs will be facing a very different UCLA team than the one they manhandled in Westwood back on Dec. 13. That was the first of five straight losses for the Bruins, and not even the most optimistic UCLA fan would have guessed the teams would meet again in the Sweet 16. For example, UCLA center Tony Parkeronly played five minutes in that game because of foul trouble. Parker has grown into a much more disciplined and effective weapon—witness his 28-point, 12-rebound, nice-bracelet-by-the-way performance in the win over UAB—but he is going to have a much harder time running roughshod over Gonzaga’s front line of Przemek Karnowski and Domantas Sabonis. It is truly remarkable that UCLA is in the Sweet 16, but keep in mind the Bruins squeaked by SMU partly because of a really bad late goaltend call, and they were fortunate to draw the fourth-place team from Conference USA in the Round of 32. The level of competition will rise dramatically here.

Gonzaga 78, UCLA 68

Duke vs. Gonzaga

Once again, we will have two evenly matched teams playing with a chance to go to the Final Four. I like Duke because I think Okafor can get Karnowski into early foul trouble, and because of the Blue Devils’ overall speed on the perimeter. Duke has looked beatable at times this season, but the bigger the game, the bigger the possession, the better this team has played. I say the Devils have at least one more big-stage performance in them.

Duke 77, Gonzaga 74

 

MARCH MADNESS! Round of 64: NCAA Men’s College Basketball

ncaa-march-madness-logo-450wIt’s here! MARCH MADNESS! Round of 64: NCAA Men’s College Basketball!

Let VB3 be your, “where to watch” NCAA March Madness HQ in Newport/Jersey City!

Drink SPECIALS during ALL GAMES!

$3 Coors Light Drafts
$4 Budweiser and Bud Light Bottles
$12 Coors Light and Yuengling Pitchers
$4 Fireball Shots
$4 Jim Beam Picklebacks

#marchmadness #64

TODAY’S SCHEDULE

12:15 PM (14) Northeastern vs (3) Notre Dame* CBS
12:40 PM (14) UAB vs (3) Iowa State* truTV
1:40 PM (14) Georgia St vs (3) Baylor* TBS
2:10 PM (15) Texas Southern vs (2) Arizona* Turner Network Television
2:45 PM (11) Texas vs (6) Butler* CBS
3:10 PM (11) UCLA vs (6) SMU* truTV
4:10 PM (11) Ole Miss vs (6) Xavier* TBS
4:40 PM (10) Ohio State vs (7) Virginia Commonwealth* Turner Network Television
6:50 PM (16) Lafayette vs (1) Villanova* TBS
7:10 PM (9) Purdue vs (8) Cincinnati* CBS
7:20 PM (13) Harvard vs (4) North Carolina* Turner Network Television
7:27 PM (12) Stephen F. Austin vs (5) Utah* truTV
9:20 PM (9) LSU vs (8) NC State* TBS
9:40 PM (16) Hampton vs (1) Kentucky* CBS
9:50 PM (12) Wofford vs (5) Arkansas* Turner Network Television
9:57 PM (13) Eastern Washington vs (4) Georgetown* truTV

Villa Borghese III is located at 475 Washington Blvd. Newport/Jersey City, New Jersey, 07310, at the base of the Monaco building. The Restaurant entrance is located on Thomas Gangemi Drive/6th Street.

This location provides an ideal location for guests coming from New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania. It is easily accessible from Central and Southern New Jersey via the New Jersey Turnpike. Simply enter ‘VB3′ into your navigation/GPS for easy directions.

We offer both FREE Valet and Self-parking (look for the VB3 Valet Parking sign right over the Light Rail tracks).

VB3 is located less than 5 minutes outside of the Holland Tunnel on the New Jersey side, a short walk from the Newport PATH Train Station, and mere steps from the Newport stop of the Hudson-Bergen Light Rail.

The annual NCAA Division 1 men's basketball tournament commences with Sunday night's selection show. 68 teams will vie for the national championship, to take place in Indianapolis in April.

March Madness 2015: Time to fill out those NCAA basketball tournament brackets

With Sunday’s NCAA men’s basketball tournament selection program now upon us, the inevitable discussions of where teams stand in the bracket are heating up. After the program, that begins Sunday night at 6 p.m. Eastern time on CBS, millions of fans will start filling out their brackets in the hope that they will choose the ultimate winner from the remaining four teams, who will meet in Indianapolis next month to decide the national champion.

The biggest “target” this year is the undefeated Kentucky Wildcats (32-0, as of Friday afternoon), who will likely receive the number one overall seed. As of this moment, the other three number ones will probably include theVirginia Cavaliers (29-2), the Duke Blue Devils (29-3), and the Villanova Wildcats (30-2). With the so-called “power conference” tournaments entering their semifinal rounds, this could change; but the body of work each of these teams has put in over the season virtually guarantees they will head up the four regions within the bracket (East, West, Midwest and South).

The annual NCAA Division 1 men's basketball tournament commences with Sunday night's selection show. 68 teams will vie for the national championship, to take place in Indianapolis in April.
The annual NCAA Division 1 men’s basketball tournament commences with Sunday night’s selection show. 68 teams will vie for the national championship, to take place in Indianapolis in April.

The tournament consists of 68 Division 1 NCAA teams, with four so-called “play-in” games (two among the four lowest, or 16th seeds, and two involving the four 11th seeded contenders). Though the conference tournaments that immediately precede “March Madness” can determine seeding, they can also determine who gets into the tournament. Winners of the power conference championships, as well as those from twenty smaller conferences (for example, the Patriot League, won by Lafayette College, and the Southern Conference, won by Wofford), receive automatic bids for the 12th through the 16th  seeds, as do the top 25 highest ranked teams in the country.

Recommended: NCAA basketball tournament: Pop quiz about men’s ‘March Madness’

One of the greatest challenges for the NCAA selection committee that determines those teams receiving “at large” bids for the remaining slots is to weigh a potpourri of complex statistics that include strength of schedule (SOS) and the Ratings Percentage Index (RPI). “Bubble” or borderline teams are closely scrutinized and discussed, and perceived “snubs” of those schools excluded from the “Madness” quickly become the obsession of partisan fans and analysts alike, and spread like wildfire on social media—only fueling the excitement and passion that the annual “Big Dance” is well-known for.

Typically, power conference teams outlast their smaller foes; although in recent years, “mid-major” squads such as Butler University from the Horizon League, the Wichita State Shockersfrom the Missouri Valley Conference, andVirginia Commonwealth University from theAtlantic 10 Conference have all made “Final Four” appearances.

Over the past several seasons, some of the more intriguing matchups in the brackets have been between 12  and 5 seeds. Since 1985, when the tournament expanded to 64 teams, there have been 44 incidents of 12th seeds upsetting their higher-seeded opponents. The matchups are typically between the most accomplished smaller Division 1 clubs and often a vulnerable higher seed. These pairings should be watched closely once announced on Sunday.

Also during the past few seasons, there has been furious activity involving teams migrating from smaller conferences to larger ones. Additionally, as of last year, 36 schools joined Division 1. Financial considerations – including revenue and greater visibility from TV broadcasts, and the more robust alumni donations and student applications that often follow – are important factors determining these decisions; but such a phenomenon also has implications for the landscape of the tournament itself. “David and Goliath” matchups such as those between a  No. 16 and a No. 1seed (in the history of the tournament, a 16-seed has never beaten a 1) are watched with ever greater interest as the win streak of 1-seeds builds by the year.

The likelihood of one person filling out a perfect bracket from the tournament’s first tip-off to the cutting down of the nets in Indianapolis is infinitesimally small. But, like the swallows returning annually to Capistrano, the yearly salmon run, or Sisyphus continually forever pushing his boulder uphill, college basketball fans will keep dreaming of besting the experts at determining which is the best team in the country.