A year ago, when we should have been watching the NCAA tournament to see who would win the Glimm 2020 Memorial Pool, most of us were instead stuck at home, locked down at the start of the pandemic.
Not Shannon Ceglinsky. Ceglinsky, a registered nurse who works at Baylor, Scott & White Hospital in the DFW area, continued working, treating patients – including many with COVID. She got COVID herself in June, and made a successful recovery.
So when the Glimm returned in 2021, she knew what to do.
“My strategy this year?” Ciglinsky said. “Easy really: Pick my hospital’s namesake and never look back.”
When Baylor beat Gonzaga in the championship game on Monday night, the strategy paid off — and the Glimm 2021 NCAA Tournament Pool couldn’t have a more deserving champion.
Ceglinsky’s self-titled bracket finished with 132 points, a half-point ahead of Michael Hermann’s Pancakes bracket. Paul Mordarski’s Mordyusa2 finished in third with 129.5 points.
Ceglinksy’s bracket appeared to be busted early: After the first round, she was in 42nd place, and one of her Final Four teams, Texas, had already lost. In the second round, Oklahoma State, another Final Four team, fell.
But Baylor and Gonzaga kept winning. All top-three finishers picked Baylor over Gonzaga in the championship game.
Shannon is the second Ceglinsky to win the Glimm. In 2015, her then-two-year-old daughter, Sophia, won.
Seth Rubinroit wasn’t as fortunate as Ceglinsky – he put too much faith in his alma mater, USC. The Trojans made a surprising Elite Eight run, but Rubinroit picked them to win the whole tournament, and he finished in 248th place.
Luckily for Rubinroit, USC didn’t make the women’s tournament, or he likely would have made the same mistake. Instead, he titled his women’s bracket Why isn’t USC in this??, and picked Stanford to win. That worked out pretty well: Top-seeded Stanford edged Arizona in the championship game, and Rubinroit won the inaugural Women’s Glimm.
Jack Otter’s Olives2 and Lauren Kimball’s LK3 finished second and third.
In other awards:
Eli Lester pulled off a double win: Baylor’s win put his Eli bracket in 10th place overall — good enough to beat Hana Miller for the Kids Championship and to beat all of his family members to win the Glimm Scholarship.
The Orlov, awarded to the 139th place finisher, came down to the tiebreaker: Jason Eckerling’s Eck #2, Adam Gould’s Mitchapalooza and Christian Mordarski’s dowski bracket all finished with 80.5 points, tied for 137th place. To determine 139th, we had to look at who did worst in the tie-breaker — and Mordarski’s 100-point tiebreaker gets those honors.
Full standings for the men’s tournament are available here, and full standings for the women’s tournament are here.