The amazing thing about Stutz is that he stops fouling and others start fouling him the moment he hits post-season play outside the MVC. Against all those "legitimate" BCS centers in the NIT last year, Stutz absolutely dominated because the officials let him play and didn't let two players grab his arms, shoulders, shirt, or anything else every time he tried to shoot or maneuver for a shot.
One of the problems Stutz has in Valley play is that he can't flinch or allow players to jump into him while he's standing motionless. The only way he can stay in games in the Valley is to not allow opponents to touch him while he's defending. Those calls don't go against him in post-season play. It's been that way for the last two years.
Getting TO the S16 depends a lot on the draw. CU is staring an 8-9 seed straight in the face. That's a tough route to get to the S16. You've just about got to have a 1 seed that overlooks you to get there from that seed. It can be a good seed for a "mid major" because the arrogant BCS teams are certain they've won the game before it starts. But, you have to get a really arrogant 1 seed to pull that off (KU won't have a 1 seed this year, but they are a good example of an arrogant team).
WSU looks like a potential 5/6 seed, which is fairly favorable for getting to the S16, but it still depends on specific player matchups with the drawn opponents.
Getting past the S16 is an absolute crap shoot. "Any given night" is every night because the matchups are that close and parity rears its head. Lesser teams get on roll and go nuts. Great teams have an off night and go home. That's the entire basis of the tournament and one of the main reasons it gets the TV viewers it always draws.