Being a sports fan, one of my favorite times of the year is March
Madness. Some things that I am always asked is what is March Madness and how do
I fill out the best bracket possible? To start with let’s explore the structure
and history of this famous tournament.
Tournament History
The first NCAA
Basketball tournament was in 1939 and was created by the National Association
of Basketball Coaches. UCLA has won the tournament champion 11 times, the most
in history. In 2001, the tournament was
expanded from 64 to 65 teams with the addition of a place in game. In 2011, the
field was again expanded this time to 68 teams and three additional play in
games were added. The expansions over the last decade or so have only increased
the madness. For example, last year Florida Gulf Coast University, a 15 seed,
made it all the way to the round of 16 and busted everyone’s bracket. The
excitement generated by FGCU’s run to the Sweet Sixteen was riveting. Everyone
was glued to their televisions to see how far FGCU would go.
Selection Process
The tournament contains 68 teams in a single elimination
tournament. The 32 division 1 conference champions receive an automatic bid to
the tournament. 31 of the 32 conferences host a post-season conference tournament
to determine the conference championship. The Ivy League is the only conference
that does not host a tournament. Rather, it selects tournament bid goes to the
regular season conference champion. An NCAA Selection Committee made up of
athletic directors and conference commissioners selects the remaining 36 teams
on an at-large basis. Some times the teams selected on an at-large basis have
the most success. For example, in 2006, George Mason University was selected as
an at-large team. That year, they made it all the way to the Final Four. It was
thrilling to watch a small school like George Mason make it so far in the
tournament.
Tournament Structure
The 68 teams are sorted into four regions within a single
elimination bracket and each team is seeded from 1 through 16 within its region.
This year the regions are: South, Midwest, West, and East. The tournament
begins with four games on the first two days of the tournament. Known as the
First Four, eight teams compete for four lower seeded spots within the
tournament. These four games are played in Dayton, OH. Once the four games have
been played, and four teams victorious, the tournament officially begins. Each
round of the tournament reduces the number of teams by half, from 64 to 32 to
16 to 8 to 4 to 2 to 1. Each round is played out over the course of a weekend
from three consecutive weeks. Each round also has its own unique name. For
example, the round of 16 is known as the Sweet Sixteen, the round of is the
Elite Eight, and the round of four as the Final Four. Pre-seeding within the
regions adds to the excitement of the tournament because, as the tournament
progresses, you can have matchups like happened in 2011 when a 3 seed,
University of Connecticut battled 8 seeded Butler University for the National
Championship. Even the matchup was between lower seeds, the game was still
exciting because both teams had an equal change to win the game.
Madness
Every year, millions of people fill out a tournament bracket
and attempt to pick the overall winner. Everyone has their own unique method
for picking the winner of each of the games. Some people pick based on logic.
Others pick based on mascot or uniform or the location of the school. As a
sports fan, and someone who follows NCAA Basketball, I fill out my bracket
based on what I know about the teams and when I can’t pick one over the other,
I either flip a coin or go with my gut. In all of my years of filling out March
Madness Brackets, here are a few things I have learned:
§
The higher seed doesn’t always win. There are
always upsets, that’s what makes the tournament so crazy; you never know which
team will win any given game. Just because a team was ranked #1 all season
doesn’t mean they will be the tournament champion and win all of their
games.
§
As great as upsets are, one game is certain a #1
seed verses a #16. In the history of the tournament, a #16 seed has never
beaten a one seed EVER. Meaning stay clear of picking this upset on your
bracket.
§
Avoid
picking all four #1 seeds to advance to the Final Four. This has only happened
one time, the 2008 tournament. With upsets permeating the tournament, you never
know who the final four teams will be.
§
Games between an #8 seed and a #9 seed can go
either way so just go with your gut when picking the winner of these games.
This years tournament bracket looks like this:
-Kevin Petroccione, Resident
Assistant
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