Current:Home > MyNCAA presents options to expand March Madness tournaments from current 68 teams, AP source says -Wealth Momentum Network
NCAA presents options to expand March Madness tournaments from current 68 teams, AP source says
View
Date:2025-04-18 23:40:02
The NCAA has presented a plan to Division I conference commissioners that would expand the lucrative men’s and women’s basketball tournaments by four or eight teams alongside an option to leave each field at 68 teams, according to a person familiar with the details.
The proposals were outlined to the commissioners this week by NCAA Senior Vice President of Basketball Dan Gavitt and NCAA Vice President for Women’s Basketball Lynn Holzman, the person told The Associated Press on Thursday on condition of anonymity because no official announcements have been made. The news was first reported by Yahoo! Sports.
Under the proposal, expansion of the 68-team field included both four- and eight-team models. The NCAA would keep its 64-team bracket but would add play-in games involving the 10 through 12 seeds.
If the men’s tournament were to expand it is expected the women’s tourney would as well.
There are many in college basketball who have said they believe the 68-team fields and three weekends of play are ideal but pressure has grown to add teams and games to one of the most popular sports events on the U.S. calendar. Last year, the NCAA Division I board of directors approved recommendations that included allowing one quarter of teams in larger sports to compete in championship events; in that scenario, March Madness tourneys could expand to nearly 90 teams.
The NCAA is currently in the midst of an eight-year extension of its TV deal for the men’s tournament worth $8.8 billion that runs through 2032. That would not be expected to change if a handful of teams are added.
More games would provide a small boost through ticket sales and merchandise, but the pool of money the NCAA uses to pay out conferences and member schools would essentially stay the same. What could change, however, is how that money would be divided up if the tournament broadens.
Expansion would also mean the men’s tournament would have to find an additional site besides Dayton for its First Four games. The Ohio city already has games on Tuesday and Wednesday and wouldn’t be able to host additional play-in games ahead of the tourney’s traditional first-round opening on Thursday. Women’s play-in games are at the same campus sites as the first two rounds of the tournament.
Expansion is largely backed by larger conferences and smaller leagues do not want to lose the automatic bids that come with a conference tournament championship or face the prospect of always being slotted for the play-in games.
The earliest the NCAA Tournament could expand would be the 2025-26 season, the person told AP. The NCAA basketball oversight committee meets next week and the tournament selection committee has a meeting next month.
The men’s tournament last expanded in 2011 when it went from 64 to 68 teams. The women’s tournament matched that in 2022.
The women’s tournament is coming off its most successful year ever that included a record audience of 18.7 million for the title game win by South Carolina over Iowa, the highest for a basketball broadcast of any kind in five years. It outdrew the men’s championship game — UConn winning its second consecutive title with a win over Purdue — by nearly 3 million viewers. The women’s tournament also had record attendance.
___
AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Warren Sapp's pay at Colorado revealed as graduate assistant football coach
- Target announces new name for its RedCard credit card: What to know
- Love Is Blind Star Chelsea Blackwell Shares Her Weight-Loss Journey
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Video shows Savannah Graziano shot by San Bernardino County sheriff's deputies
- Everything you need to know about how to watch and live stream the 2024 Masters
- Andy Cohen regrets role in Princess Kate conspiracy theories: 'Wish I had kept my mouth shut'
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- This fungus turns cicadas into 'zombies' after being sexually transmitted
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- New sonar images show wreckage from Baltimore bridge collapse at bottom of river
- Jonathan Majors' motion to dismiss assault, harassment conviction rejected by judge
- Ford to delay production of new electric pickup and large SUV as US EV sales growth slows
- 'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
- 'Nuclear bomb of privacy' or easy entry? MLB's face recognition gates delight and daunt
- 'Reborn dolls' look just like real-life babies. Why people buy them may surprise you.
- Regina Hill: What to know about the suspended Orlando city commissioner facing 7 felonies
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Rangers-Devils game starts with wild line brawl, eight ejections and a Matt Rempe fight
Police say JK Rowling committed no crime with tweets slamming Scotland’s new hate speech law
Are whales mammals? Understanding the marine animal's taxonomy.
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Oklahoma prepares to execute Michael DeWayne Smith for 2002 murders
Lawsuit challenges $1 billion in federal funding to sustain California’s last nuclear power plant
Black Residents Want This Company Gone, but Will Alabama’s Environmental Agency Grant It a New Permit?