SelectionSunday
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Full disclosure: I'm opposed to any expansion of the NCAA Tournament field but have accepted it's likely to expand to 76 starting next season. In the interests of being open-minded, instead of complaining about it (what I usually do), I'm offering up an alternative solution (cough, cough) that might surprise you. I say let's just go right to 96, a nice and tidy first round of the bottom 64 teams playing on the weekend currently used for major conference tournaments. 32 losers, 32 winners, and presto, we'd be at the usual 64 teams for the traditional Round of 64 Thursday/Friday extravaganza.
Though I know the Power 5 conferences (most specifically the Big Ten & SEC) would continue to rig the system/NET (read: tournament) as much as humanly possible to gobble up as many bids at-large bids as they can, the bottom line is this proposal would guarantee more mid- and low-majors get their shot. Yes, it likely means it becomes much harder for them to become true "Cinderellas" (getting to at least the Round of 32), but that opportunity will still exist, and for more of them.
So here goes, some general parameters/assumptions for a 96-team field:
1. The regular season starts a week or two earlier to allow for the extra weekend needed for the tournament. The NCAA already has announced teams can schedule 32 games starting next season (currently 31), so I wouldn't be surprised if a lengthened regular season already is in the works.
2. Instead of the current set number of 37, I propose a "floating" number of at-large bids every season. To that end, all regular season and conference tournament champions from the 31 conferences receive an automatic bid. That means there would be anywhere from 34 at-large bids (if every conference produced two different champions) to 65 (if the same team wins both).
For this exercise using last season's results, my sample "Field of 96" (to follow) has 45 automatic qualifiers, as 14 conferences had two different champions (28 teams) while the other 17 conferences produced a double-champion. That leaves us to dole out 51 at-large bids. Note, I used last season's NCAA Tournament selectees and final NET rankings to determine seeding.
3. For the bracket, I'm going with a straight "S" curve using the NET rankings. In real life, the committee will seed the teams 1-96. Unlike the bracketing rules that currently exist, teams can play a conference foe at any time, so we'd have to get used to more same-conference matchups in the first couple rounds. The "BYU rule" would remain, meaning the Cougars wouldn't be slotted for any Friday-Sunday sites.
4. For the new first round (Round of 96): Send 8 teams each to the sites of the highest 8 seeded teams not automatically seeded into the second round (Round of 64). This rewards "S curve" seeds 33-40 (essentially the #16 seeds) by giving them a home game, but at the same time means only the bottom 8 (the #24 seeds) are forced to play a true road game. That's reasonable. Then play a full slate of games on Saturday & Sunday with afternoon & evening sessions at each site and presto, we're down to 64.
5. The main thing I'm trying to figure out is how to incentivize winning both the regular season and conference tournament championships. My cynical side wonders if teams (especially from traditional 1- or 2-bid leagues) that win the regular-season championship (#1 seed in conference tourney) won't "bust it" for the conference tournament knowing they're already "in". Maybe they do the "load management" nonsense like the NBA does and rest players? And we know darn well conferences will pursue any avenue they can to get an extra "piece of the pie" into the NCAA Tournament. The only reasonable thing I can come up with is the NCAA rewarding teams that win both with a significant financial reward. March Madness produces a sh*tload of cash for member schools & it's now the Wild, Wild West anyways, so it shouldn't be that hard to find the money.
Enough of my rambling, here's a reasonable facsimile of what a 96-team tournament would look like using last year's field and the above parameters. An * denotes automatic qualifier.
THE FIELD = 45 Automatic Bids, 51 At-Larges
East Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ Georgia
#64 San Francisco vs. #65 North Texas; winner plays #1 *Duke
#96 *Saint Francis @ #33 Georgia; winner plays #32 UConn
#49 *Memphis vs. #80 *Wofford; winner plays #16 Missouri
#48 Vanderbilt vs. #81 *Robert Morris; winner plays #17 Illinois
@ Arkansas
#57 Santa Clara vs. #72 *Akron; winner plays #8 *Gonzaga
#89 *Quinnipiac @ # 40 Arkansas; winner plays #25 BYU
#56 *Drake vs. #73 *Grand Canyon; winner plays #9 Iowa State
#41 Ohio State vs. #88 *Southeast Missouri State; winner plays #24 Louisville
West Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ North Carolina
#61 Pitt vs. #68 George Mason; winner plays #4 *Florida
#93 *American @ #36 North Carolina; winner plays #29 Oregon
#52 San Diego State vs. #77 *Northern Colorado; winner plays #13 *Saint John's
#45 Xavier vs. #84 *Towson; winner plays #20 Kansas
@ Utah State
#60 *Liberty vs. #69 *Yale; winner plays #5 Tennessee
#92 *Southern U @ #37 Utah State; winner plays #28 Ole Miss
#53 Northwestern vs. #76 *Utah Valley; winner plays #12 Arizona
#44 Boise State vs. #85 *Omaha; winner plays #21 *Saint Mary's
South Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ Mississippi State
#63 Iowa vs. #66 Penn State; winner plays #2 *Auburn
#95 *Alabama State @ #34 Mississippi State; winner plays #31 *VCU
#50 Cincinnati vs. #79 *South Alabama; winner plays #15 Wisconsin
#47 *Colorado State vs. #82 *Bryant; winner plays #18 Texas A&M
@ Texas
#58 *McNeese vs. #71 *Lipscomb; winner plays #7 Texas Tech
#90 *Bucknell @ #39 Texas; winner plays #26 Marquette
#55 Villanova vs. #74 *Troy; winner plays #10 Maryland
#42 *New Mexico vs. #87 *Norfolk State; winner plays #23 *Michigan
Midwest Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ UC-San Diego
#62 *UC-Irvine vs. #67 Dayton; winner plays #1 *Houston
#94 *Mount Saint Mary's @ #35 *UC-San Diego; winner plays #30 Baylor
#51 West Virginia vs. #78 *Chattanooga; winner plays #14 Kentucky
#46 SMU vs. #83 *Montana; winner plays #19 Purdue
@ Creighton
#59 Nebraska vs. #70 *High Point; winner plays #6 Alabama
#91 *SIU-Edwardsville @ #38 Creighton; winner plays #27 UCLA
#54 Indiana vs. #75 *UNC-Wilmington; winner plays #11 *Michigan State
#43 Oklahoma vs. #86 *Central Connecticut; winner plays #22 Clemson
Last 4 At-Larges (with 2024-25 record)
#65 North Texas (27-9)
#66 Penn State (16-15)
#67 Dayton (23-11)
#68 George Mason (27-9)
Final Read: The 1st round absolutely has to be on home courts. That would add some flavor to the 1st round, like it does for the College Football Playoff. The 1st round could have a lot of duds, but it's glaring how much more competitive the tournament likely becomes on the first Thursday/Friday of the tournament. The downside is -- though we'd have a lot more mid- and low-majors in the field (good) -- it'll be more difficult to produce true Cinderellas that advance beyond the Round of 64 (bad).
Again, not an endorsement, but offering another option (along these lines) to consider.
Though I know the Power 5 conferences (most specifically the Big Ten & SEC) would continue to rig the system/NET (read: tournament) as much as humanly possible to gobble up as many bids at-large bids as they can, the bottom line is this proposal would guarantee more mid- and low-majors get their shot. Yes, it likely means it becomes much harder for them to become true "Cinderellas" (getting to at least the Round of 32), but that opportunity will still exist, and for more of them.
So here goes, some general parameters/assumptions for a 96-team field:
1. The regular season starts a week or two earlier to allow for the extra weekend needed for the tournament. The NCAA already has announced teams can schedule 32 games starting next season (currently 31), so I wouldn't be surprised if a lengthened regular season already is in the works.
2. Instead of the current set number of 37, I propose a "floating" number of at-large bids every season. To that end, all regular season and conference tournament champions from the 31 conferences receive an automatic bid. That means there would be anywhere from 34 at-large bids (if every conference produced two different champions) to 65 (if the same team wins both).
For this exercise using last season's results, my sample "Field of 96" (to follow) has 45 automatic qualifiers, as 14 conferences had two different champions (28 teams) while the other 17 conferences produced a double-champion. That leaves us to dole out 51 at-large bids. Note, I used last season's NCAA Tournament selectees and final NET rankings to determine seeding.
3. For the bracket, I'm going with a straight "S" curve using the NET rankings. In real life, the committee will seed the teams 1-96. Unlike the bracketing rules that currently exist, teams can play a conference foe at any time, so we'd have to get used to more same-conference matchups in the first couple rounds. The "BYU rule" would remain, meaning the Cougars wouldn't be slotted for any Friday-Sunday sites.
4. For the new first round (Round of 96): Send 8 teams each to the sites of the highest 8 seeded teams not automatically seeded into the second round (Round of 64). This rewards "S curve" seeds 33-40 (essentially the #16 seeds) by giving them a home game, but at the same time means only the bottom 8 (the #24 seeds) are forced to play a true road game. That's reasonable. Then play a full slate of games on Saturday & Sunday with afternoon & evening sessions at each site and presto, we're down to 64.
5. The main thing I'm trying to figure out is how to incentivize winning both the regular season and conference tournament championships. My cynical side wonders if teams (especially from traditional 1- or 2-bid leagues) that win the regular-season championship (#1 seed in conference tourney) won't "bust it" for the conference tournament knowing they're already "in". Maybe they do the "load management" nonsense like the NBA does and rest players? And we know darn well conferences will pursue any avenue they can to get an extra "piece of the pie" into the NCAA Tournament. The only reasonable thing I can come up with is the NCAA rewarding teams that win both with a significant financial reward. March Madness produces a sh*tload of cash for member schools & it's now the Wild, Wild West anyways, so it shouldn't be that hard to find the money.
Enough of my rambling, here's a reasonable facsimile of what a 96-team tournament would look like using last year's field and the above parameters. An * denotes automatic qualifier.
THE FIELD = 45 Automatic Bids, 51 At-Larges
East Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ Georgia
#64 San Francisco vs. #65 North Texas; winner plays #1 *Duke
#96 *Saint Francis @ #33 Georgia; winner plays #32 UConn
#49 *Memphis vs. #80 *Wofford; winner plays #16 Missouri
#48 Vanderbilt vs. #81 *Robert Morris; winner plays #17 Illinois
@ Arkansas
#57 Santa Clara vs. #72 *Akron; winner plays #8 *Gonzaga
#89 *Quinnipiac @ # 40 Arkansas; winner plays #25 BYU
#56 *Drake vs. #73 *Grand Canyon; winner plays #9 Iowa State
#41 Ohio State vs. #88 *Southeast Missouri State; winner plays #24 Louisville
West Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ North Carolina
#61 Pitt vs. #68 George Mason; winner plays #4 *Florida
#93 *American @ #36 North Carolina; winner plays #29 Oregon
#52 San Diego State vs. #77 *Northern Colorado; winner plays #13 *Saint John's
#45 Xavier vs. #84 *Towson; winner plays #20 Kansas
@ Utah State
#60 *Liberty vs. #69 *Yale; winner plays #5 Tennessee
#92 *Southern U @ #37 Utah State; winner plays #28 Ole Miss
#53 Northwestern vs. #76 *Utah Valley; winner plays #12 Arizona
#44 Boise State vs. #85 *Omaha; winner plays #21 *Saint Mary's
South Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ Mississippi State
#63 Iowa vs. #66 Penn State; winner plays #2 *Auburn
#95 *Alabama State @ #34 Mississippi State; winner plays #31 *VCU
#50 Cincinnati vs. #79 *South Alabama; winner plays #15 Wisconsin
#47 *Colorado State vs. #82 *Bryant; winner plays #18 Texas A&M
@ Texas
#58 *McNeese vs. #71 *Lipscomb; winner plays #7 Texas Tech
#90 *Bucknell @ #39 Texas; winner plays #26 Marquette
#55 Villanova vs. #74 *Troy; winner plays #10 Maryland
#42 *New Mexico vs. #87 *Norfolk State; winner plays #23 *Michigan
Midwest Regional (1st Round/Round of 96)
@ UC-San Diego
#62 *UC-Irvine vs. #67 Dayton; winner plays #1 *Houston
#94 *Mount Saint Mary's @ #35 *UC-San Diego; winner plays #30 Baylor
#51 West Virginia vs. #78 *Chattanooga; winner plays #14 Kentucky
#46 SMU vs. #83 *Montana; winner plays #19 Purdue
@ Creighton
#59 Nebraska vs. #70 *High Point; winner plays #6 Alabama
#91 *SIU-Edwardsville @ #38 Creighton; winner plays #27 UCLA
#54 Indiana vs. #75 *UNC-Wilmington; winner plays #11 *Michigan State
#43 Oklahoma vs. #86 *Central Connecticut; winner plays #22 Clemson
Last 4 At-Larges (with 2024-25 record)
#65 North Texas (27-9)
#66 Penn State (16-15)
#67 Dayton (23-11)
#68 George Mason (27-9)
Final Read: The 1st round absolutely has to be on home courts. That would add some flavor to the 1st round, like it does for the College Football Playoff. The 1st round could have a lot of duds, but it's glaring how much more competitive the tournament likely becomes on the first Thursday/Friday of the tournament. The downside is -- though we'd have a lot more mid- and low-majors in the field (good) -- it'll be more difficult to produce true Cinderellas that advance beyond the Round of 64 (bad).
Again, not an endorsement, but offering another option (along these lines) to consider.
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