It has been a college soccer season with its share of challenges.But after figuring out which players would skip the season to focus on the FIFA Under-20 Womens World Cup that begins this weekend in Papua New Guinea and where those who remained would finish the season after the College Cup was moved out of North Carolina as part of the NCAA response to legislation in that state, the postseason is finally here.Now that 64 teams know the objective is a place in San Jose, California, what questions remain about the bracket as a whole and this weeks opening round in particular?How do you pick a favorite?When it comes to the reliability of favorites, womens college soccer is safe territory.The problem is that it isnt clear which team that is this year. All the regular season did was separate the three teams that lost just once from the chasing pack. All three enter the tournament as No. 1 seeds.West Virginia enters having just erased a two-goal deficit to win the Big 12 final against TCU, after not conceding a goal against conference opponents to that point in the season. In World Cup and Olympic veteran Kadeisha Buchanan, the Mountaineers have perhaps the best player in college soccer as their defensive cornerstone. Missing is any tournament history beyond the quarterfinals, which means they would be trying to become the third team, alongside Florida in 1998 and USC in 2007, to win a title in their College Cup debut. It doesnt help that in a part of the bracket that features No. 2 Notre Dame, No. 3 Duke and No. 4 UCLA, they will be without defender Bianca St. Georges, who is playing for Canada in the U-20 World Cup.Stanford has its own excused absences to deal with, though it will hope to survive a first-round game against Houston Baptist without captain Andi Sullivan. The midfielder was so good in her first stint with the U.S. national team earlier this fall that she earned another call-up this week. You could forgive the Cardinal for being skittish about playing less than whole. Their loss came at USC, a game played without starting goalkeeper Jane Campbell because of an earlier red card. The most potent offense of the one-loss teams, Stanford also had the most porous defense of the three. Each of the other seeds in Stanfords quarter of the bracket, No. 2 Georgetown, No. 3 Virginia and No. 4 Minnesota, ranked in the top 25 nationally in goals per game as of last week.South Carolina, meanwhile, is in much the same situation as West Virginia: seeking to turn a College Cup debut into the programs first national title. Having home-field advantage through the quarterfinals, if the team advances, should be a big deal for the Gamecocks -- all the more if they end up opposite No. 3 Clemson in a quarterfinal. They average 3,173 fans per game (though they drew fewer than 1,000 in a first-round loss a season ago). Junior Savannah McCaskill has more goals this season (16) than West Virginia and Stanfords most prolific forwards combined, and a back line comprised of seniors Paige Bendell, Kaleigh Kurtz, Evelyn Robinson and junior Anna Conklin is the cornerstone of a defense that has allowed just nine goals.Which other teams could win it all?BYU: The selection committee apparently didnt think much of the West Coast Conference. Despite a WCC title, an RPI that was solidly in the top 10 throughout October and four wins out of conference against NCAA tournament teams (including three on the road), the Cougars got stuck with a No. 4 seed in South Carolinas part of the bracket and likely just a single home game in Provo. But a team with Ashley Hatch, Nadia Gomes, Michele Vasconcelos and the fifth highest-scoring offense in the nation could fit nicely in the spoiler role.Duke: We are just a year removed from the Blue Devils playing for a national title, and they once again start as a No. 3 seed. But where the team found its identity as a counterattacking force in the postseason last year, the current version cant quite seem to find its lane. It has been competitive in almost every game but rarely dominant (injuries to Kayla McCoy and Taylor Racioppi havent helped). But time -- and talent -- remain.Florida: No team made better use of its conference tournament than Florida, even if it came by the finest of margins. Florida outlasted Missouri 8-7 in an SEC tournament quarterfinal penalty shootout (after a late penalty save in regulation), upset South Carolina 1-0 in the semifinal and beat Arkansas in overtime in the final. Ranked No. 15 in the polls and No. 8 in the RPI entering that event, the Gators soared to a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament. Loaded with young talent, the Gators might be a year away from their peak. But this is the last year they have senior forward Savannah Jordan, so they need to make it count.Florida State: The Seminoles have been difficult to break down the entire season and appear to be playing their best soccer of the year coming off an ACC tournament title. But the travel alone makes them a risky pick. If the seeds hold, Florida State would travel to Los Angeles for second- and third-round games, return for a quarterfinal at Florida (an annual rivalry game wiped out by inclement weather in the regular season) and then head back to California for the College Cup.USC: Although a loss to rival UCLA the final week of the regular season might have cost it a No. 1 seed, the bracket wasnt brutal to the Trojans. If they have to play Florida State in what would be the marquee Sweet 16 matchup, at least it will be at home. Much of the core of the team -- Morgan Andrews, Mandy Freeman, Katie Johnson, Savannah Levin, Kayla Mills and Sammy Jo Prudhomme -- are in their final season and play with the mental poise and tactical balance that suggests.What are the best first-round games?California at Pepperdine: Given the selection committees focus on geography, one of the surest bets in bracketing is that there will be a first-round game of second-round quality somewhere in the Pacific time zone. In this case, its the Pac-12 team sent on the road to play at Pepperdine, which enjoys a longstanding home-field advantage in Malibu. Thats a rough assignment for Cal, which had to be in the running for a national seed until two overtime losses down the stretch.Dayton at Ohio State: The team with one of the brackets worst records has the most momentum. Dayton entered the Atlantic-10 tournament with a losing record, then routed its three opponents by a combined 12-0 margin to secure the automatic bid. That included a 7-0 win over regular-season champion Saint Josephs. Flyers forward Alexis Kiehl was the first in the nation to reach 20 goals. Ohio State leads the all-time series 10-3-1 but could have its hands full here.Memphis at Arkansas: Both teams rank in the top 25 in scoring. That never hurts. Arkansas has the distinction of more all-time tournament appearances than losses, having compiled an impressive 3-1-1 record in its two trips (2013 and 2014). But Memphis has the best Canadian pipeline this side of West Virginia. Even without Marie Levasseur, called away to the U-20 World Cup, Valerie Sanderson and Jessica Lisi fuel an attack that will test the Razorbacks.South Alabama at No. 4 Auburn: Regular-season rematches in the first round are a bad idea, but at least South Alabama and Auburn played an original that was worthy of a sequel. The Tigers claimed a 1-0 overtime win in August, with the Jaguars forced to play the final 26 minutes with 10 players because of a red card to Charde Hannah. Auburn is a team with the potential to make a run behind Kristen Dodson and the Ramsier sisters, Brooke and Casie, but its a tricky first step.Will we see a star born this November?The U-20 World Cup siphoned some of the best young talent that might otherwise be playing in the NCAA tournament -- but only some. The players below are thriving as freshmen and could use Novembers stage to announce themselves to wider audiences.Bridgette Andrzejewski, No. 2 North Carolina: The list of first-team all-ACC honorees included 10 seniors (or beyond) and Andrzejewski. That isnt bad company for a freshman. Her team needed a goal scorer this season, and the tall, speedy Andrzejewski responded with nine. The Tar Heels had a great closing kick without her scoring, beating Florida State, Virginia and Notre Dame in succession. If she gets going again, the run might not stop until California.Deyna Castellanos, No. 3 Florida State: While some internationals are leaving for the U-20 World Cup, Castellanos is getting back from a wildly successful run with Venezuela in the U-17 World Cup. Both unafraid to and capable of shooting from just about anywhere inside of 30 yards, shes a creative, aggressive, attacking talent on a team loaded with defense.Jessie Fleming, No. 4 UCLA: Signee Mallory Pugh skipped the season to focus on the U-20 World Cup, but the Bruins are happy to have another emerging star with international experience. Not part of Canadas U-20 roster after proving her worth in the Olympics, Fleming will be around throughout the postseason. Without Darian Jenkins because of injury, she is all the more important to everything the Bruins do in pursuit of goals.Jennifer Westendorf, No. 2 Notre Dame: Although she has competed for Brazil at the U-20 level in the past, Westendorf will be with Notre Dame throughout the postseason. That is bad news for opposing goalkeepers, repeatedly left helpless by one of the freshmans wondrous free kicks. The question for the Fighting Irish is if they can score enough to complement a tenacious defense. On raw talent alone, Westendorf means there is a chance the answer might be yes.What about Georgetown?We havent even gotten to the second-seeded Hoyas yet, which seems unfair to the only team to beat West Virginia in the regular season. An NCAA tournament rookie less than a decade ago, Georgetown is making its fifth consecutive appearance under coach Dave Nolan -- and its first as a national seed.A year ago, the tournament offered Rutgers, a program with a similarly undistinguished history, a stage on which to show how far continuity and good defense could take a team. The answer turned out to be the College Cup. Substitute offense for defense, and the same opportunity awaits the Hoyas this season. In addition to scoring once against West Virginia, an impressive feat in its own right, Georgetown trails only BYU in goals per game among the 16 seeded teams (though it is also in the top 20 defensively). Grace Damaska, Rachel Corboz and Crystal Thomas, all upperclassmen, have combined for 33 goals and 18 assists.If this is as wide-open a season as the past three months suggest, there would be no better representative of it in San Jose than the Hoyas. Nike Air Max Plus For Sale . If ever they start actually putting pictures beside words in the dictionary, the Blue Jays left-handers mug will appear beside “Consistency. Discount Nike Air Max Plus . JOHNS, N. http://www.cheapnikeairmaxplus.com/ . Haas said he "felt a lot of pain" in his right shoulder when he slammed his racket to the ground in frustration after losing his serve at 3-3 in the first set. Nike Air Max Plus Wholesale .ca looks back at the stories and moments that made the year memorable. Air Max Plus For Sale Cheap .C. Lions has come to an end. Banks told TSN on Jan 2 that he had no interest in playing out the option year of his contract with the Lions in 2014, and he again made that clear in a conversation with Lions GM Wally Buono last week.France hooker Dimitri Szarzewski returns from injury to captain Racing 92 when they take on Saracens in Saturdays European Champions Cup final, live on Sky Sports 2 HD from 3.45pm. Szarzewski injured his right knee in the 19-16 quarter-final victory over Toulon last month but has been deemed fit to start, with the experienced Virgile Lacombe preferred to Camille Chat on the bench.All Blacks legend Dan Carter pairs up with France scrum-half Maxime Machenaud at half-back, inside a centre pairing of Alexandre Dumoulin and in-form South African Johannes Goosen, with Henry Chavancy among the replacements on his return from a thigh injury. Brice Dulin is named at full-back with Argentinas Juan Imhoff and New Zealander Joe Rokocoko on the wings.In the pack, a third All Black lines up at No 8 in Chris Masoe, alongside Bernard Le Roux and Wenceslas Lauret. Pundit predictions Our team of experts give their predictions for Racing 92 v Saracens Welshman Luke Charteris pairs up with Francois van der Merwe in the boilerhouse behind props Eddy Ben Arous and Ben Tameifuna.Tameifuna (Chiefs 2013), Rokocoko (Blues 2003) and Carter (Crusaders 2002, 2005, 2006, 2008) can all etch their name into the history books by adding the Champions Cup to their various Super Rugby crowns, only eight other players having achieved the feat.Saracens will be captained by centre Brad Barritt, who is joined by Duncan Taylor in midfield outside England duo Owen Farrell and Richard Wigglesworth at half-back. Former Saracens hard man Jacques Burger has a message for his wolf pack ahead of the Champions Cup final South African scrum-half Neil De Kock has failed to recover from a tweaked hamstring so Ben Spencer is named among the replacements, as is England hooker Jamie George.Petrus du Plessis, Schalk Brits and Mako Vunipola form the front row ahead of England locks duo George Kruis and Maro Itoje, with Billy Vunipola continuing at No 8. Racing 92s route to the Champions Cup final Racing 92: 15 Brice Dulin, 14 Joe Rokocoko, 13 Johannes Goosen, 12 Alexandre Dumoulin, 11 Juan Imhoff, 10 Dan Carter, 9 Maxime Machenaud; 1 Eddy Ben Arous, 2 Dimitri Szarzewski (c), 3 Ben Tameifuna, 4 Luke Charteris, 5 Francois van der Merwe, 6 Wenceslas Lauret, 7 Bernard Le Roux, 8 Chris Masoe.ddddddddddddReplacements: 16 Virgile Lacombe, 17 Khatchik Vartanov, 18 Luc Ducalcon, 19 Manuel Carizza, 20 Antonie Claassen, 21 Mike Phillips, 22 Remi Tales, 23 Henry Chavancy. We take a look Saracens route to the final Saracens: 15 Alex Goode, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Duncan Taylor, 12 Brad Barritt (c), 11 Chris Wyles, 10 Owen Farrell, 9 Richard Wigglesworth; 1 Mako Vunipola, 2 Schalk Brits, 3 Petrus du Plessis, 4 Maro Itoje, 5 George Kruis, 6 Michael Rhodes, 7 Will Fraser, 8 Billy Vunipola.Replacements: 16 Jamie George, 17 Richard Barrington, 18 Juan Figallo, 19 Jim Hamilton, 20 Jackson Wray, 21 Ben Spencer, 22 Charlie Hodgson, 23 Marcelo Bosch. Jonny Wilkinson and Paul OConnell join our coverage of Saturdays Champions Cup final Watch Racing 92 v Saracens live on Sky Sports 2 HD on Saturday from 3.45pm. Catch the match for £6.99 with a NOW TV day pass ' ' '