In college basketball's offseason, I think about what the Selection Committee got wrong … But I think mostly about the NCAA tournament selection and seeding process. Is it the best that it can be? Are we using the right data? Is it fair and open and inclusive?
This summer, though, something else has come up, mostly because a number of coaches have reached out on a seemingly separate topic: the size of the NCAA tournament field. The same ad hoc National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) committee, which last summer weighed in on selection metrics, is now kicking the tires on expansion. No formal action or proposals are anticipated, at least not now. Still, it got me thinking.
We have been at 68 teams since 2011, yet there is nothing magical or even permanent about that number. It is an accident of circumstance more than anything.
"It's also outdated," one coach insisted. "Division I has grown by leaps and bounds since 1985, so we shouldn't be trapped by that number moving forward."
DudeAnon wrote:No. If anything, it needs to contract. The first four is just confusing and robs 2 schools of their spot in the real tourney.
sciencejay wrote:I think they should expand to 96 teams and give the top 32 seeds a bye in the first round. They could do the same schedule as the current first four (Tues games feeding into the Thurs/Sat group and Wed games feeding into the Fri/Sun group). The benefit to the top 8 seeds in each bracket would be that they would have an opponent that played a game two days earlier. It would give ample opportunity for mid-majors to have a seat at the table. More chance for Cinderella which the fans absolutely love--probably the general fan's favorite thing about the NCAA Tourney is the prevalence of Cinderella.
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