What is March Madness and how does it work? (2024)

U.S.

By Faris Tanyos

/ CBS News

Millions of people across the U.S. are filling out March Madness brackets this week, taking part in one of the most anticipated annual rituals in American sports.

The odds of filling out a perfect bracket, which means getting all 67 games of the six-round slate plus the First Four play-in games correct, is about one in 120 billion, according to the NCAA, which says it hasnever been done.

Here is some background on the tournament and how it comes together every year.

What is March Madness?

The single-elimination 2024 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament consists of 68 teams.

Thirty-two of the 68 teams in this season's tournament earned automatic bids by winning each of the 32 postseason conference tournaments, which are played in the week before March Madness. Those tournaments were also single-elimination affairs.

The other 36 teams earned at-large bids. As they do every season, on Selection Sunday, which this year took place on March 17, a 10-member Selection Committee made up of various conference administrators and commissioners convened to vote on which schools would receive an invite.

The selection process is based on a variety of factors, such as a team's strength of schedule during the regular season, the quality of its wins — such as whether the wins came on the road or at home, and how the team performed statistically, both on the offensive and defensive end.

It's all part of a complex model known as the NCAA Evaluation Tool, or NET rankings, that the committee has been using since the 2018-19 season.

Going into Selection Sunday, so-called "bracketologists" will list some potential at-large teams as being "on the bubble," meaning that it is a toss-up whether the committee will include them in the 68-team field.

The major conferences, which include what is known as the Power Five conferences — the Big Ten, the Southeastern Conference, the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Big 12 and the soon-to-be dismantled Pac-12 — tend to get the most at-large bids. This year, for example, the SEC and the Big-12 lead the field with eight schools each in March Madness, followed by the Big Ten and the Mountain West with six schools each.

What are March Madness brackets?

After whittling down the 68-team field, the Selection Committee seeds them from No. 1 to 68.

Before the tournament's first round is the First Four, in which the four lowest-seeded conference winners, and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams, compete in what is essentially a single-elimination play-in. Four teams are eliminated, and the four winners of the First Four earn themselves a first-round berth.

The 64-team first-round field is divided into four regional brackets — the South, Midwest, East and West. Within each region, the teams are also seeded from one to 16.

The No. 1 seeds this year are UConn, North Carolina, Purdue and Houston.

For context, a 16-seed has only ever beaten a No. 1 seed twice in NCAA history. In 2018, the University of Maryland, Baltimore County shocked the basketball world when it soundly thumped No. 1 seeded Virginia. And last year, No. 16 Fairleigh-Dickinson did it again when it edged top-seeded Purdue.

Furthermore, only two First Four teams have ever made the Final Four: Virginia Commonwealth University in 2011 and UCLA in 2021, according to CBS Sports.

How many rounds are in March Madness?

Following the First Four, the NCAA Tournament consists of six rounds: the first and second rounds, the Sweet 16, the Elite Eight, the Final Four and the title game.

The First Four is being held on March 19-20 in Dayton, Ohio.

The first round kicks off on March 21, and the second round on March 23. The first and second rounds are being played in eight cities: Brooklyn, Charlotte, Indianapolis, Omaha, Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City, Spokane and Memphis.

The Sweet 16 and Elite Eight will be played in Boston, Dallas, Detroit and Los Angeles from March 28-31.

The Final Four and the title game will be held at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, home of the NFL's Arizona Cardinals, on Saturday, April 6 and Monday, April 8.

How long does March Madness last each year?

March Madness lasts about three weeks, starting with the First Four on Tuesday, March 19, and ending with the title game on Monday, April 8.

How long has March Madness been around?

The first men's tournament, which was won by the University of Oregon, was played in 1939 with only eight teams, according to NCAA.com. The tournament expanded to 16 teams in 1951, 32 in 1975 and 64 in 1985.

A 65th team was added in 2001 to accommodate the Mountain West Conference, and in 2011, another three teams were added to create the First Four.

According to Statista, North Carolina has the most Final Four appearances in history with 21, followed by UCLA with 18 and Kentucky with 17.

According to NCAA.com, UCLA has the most titles of any team with 11, followed by Kentucky with eight and North Carolina with six. Of those 11 UCLA titles, 10 came under the lateJohn Wooden, who many consider the greatest college coach of all time.

    In:
  • March Madness
  • College Basketball
  • Basketball

Faris Tanyos

Faris Tanyos is a news editor for CBSNews.com, where he writes and edits stories and tracks breaking news. He previously worked as a digital news producer at several local news stations up and down the West Coast.

What is March Madness and how does it work? (2024)

FAQs

How do you explain March Madness to someone? ›

The single-elimination 2024 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament consists of 68 teams. Thirty-two of the 68 teams in this season's tournament earned automatic bids by winning each of the 32 postseason conference tournaments, which are played in the week before March Madness.

How do you explain March Madness to a child? ›

The NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is a single-elimination tournament of 68 teams that compete in seven rounds for the national championship. The penultimate round is known as the Final Four, when (you guessed it) only four teams are left.

How many games do you have to win in March Madness? ›

Throughout March Madness, the winning team needs to win six games in a row to be victorious, and there's no way that happens without a shutout defense.

How do you qualify to play in March Madness? ›

The selection committee must first decide which teams will compete in the tournament. As of the 2016–17 season, thirty-two teams receive automatic bids to the tournament by winning their conference tournament. The selection committee only selects the teams (36 for men and women) who receive at-large bids.

What is the history behind March Madness? ›

March Madness was first used to refer to basketball by an Illinois high school official, Henry V. Porter, in 1939, but the term didn't find its way to the NCAA tournament until CBS broadcaster Brent Musburger (who used to be a sportswriter in Chicago) used it during coverage of the 1982 tournament.

Why is March called Madness? ›

Turns out, the phrase "March Madness" was first coined in 1939 when Henry V. Porter, assistant executive secretary of the Illinois High School Association (IHSA), referred to the annual IHSA basketball tournament by that moniker.

What does 3 seed mean in basketball? ›

Each seed value is assigned to four teams, and each of these teams is placed into a different region (the winner of the play-in game is given a seed of sixteen). Seed values of three or less are herein referred to as high seeds, while seed values of four or more are referred to as low seeds.

Why is March Madness the best sporting event? ›

March Madness stands as a pinnacle of athletic competition, captivating viewers each spring with its high-stakes, unpredictable outcomes. Every year, millions fill out brackets attempting to guess the winner and tune in to games, hoping for a “Cinderella” team to emerge and upset powerhouse programs.

How do you calculate March Madness? ›

Here is a scoring breakdown for each round of play:
  1. First Round: 1 point.
  2. Second Round: 2 points.
  3. Sweet 16: 4 points.
  4. Elite 8: 8 points.
  5. Final Four: 16 points.
  6. Championship: 32 points.

What does it mean to be a Cinderella team? ›

In the context of March Madness, a Cinderella team refers to an underdog or lesser-known team that unexpectedly achieves significant success by outperforming higher-seeded opponents.

What does First Four mean in March Madness? ›

When selecting the teams for the NCAA tournament, the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Committee ranks every team from No. 1 through No. 68. In its current format, the First Four consists of eight teams — the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams.

How many times can you lose in March Madness? ›

All potential matchups in all rounds are established clearly before the first game tips off. The NCAA tournament is a single elimination bracket, meaning teams are eliminated from the tournament after a single loss. Win or go home. Other sports tournaments employ multiple-elimination brackets.

How many teams are chosen for March Madness? ›

Generally speaking, the NCAA Tournament selection committee seeds teams 1-68, placing the top four teams as a 1 seed, teams 5-8 as a 2 seed, teams 9-12 as a 3 seed, and so on to fill out the 68-team field. That sequence will be uninterrupted as the committee builds out the 68-team bracket.

What does March Madness mean? ›

1. “ a form of madness or uncharacteristic behaviour said to affect people in March” 2. a period during the month of March when the annual NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) basketball tournament takes place. Additional Information.

Who won March Madness last year? ›

What sport does March Madness usually refer to? ›

The NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, branded as March Madness, is a single-elimination tournament played in the United States to determine the men's college basketball national champion of the Division I level in the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

Why was the tournament named March Madness? ›

Henry V. Porter, the Illinois High School Association (IHSA) assistant executive secretary, wrote an essay titled “March Madness” in the Illinois Interscholastic in 1939 to commemorate the tournament. Other outlets embraced the term as the tournament continued to thrive in the 1940s and 1950s.

What is the meaning of the March Madness bracket? ›

March Madness refers to the championship tournaments for NCAA Division I men's and women's basketball, respectively. All teams are placed within a “bracket," in which they face off against an opponent (based on seeding) in a single-elimination game. Win and advance. Go home if you lose.

What is defined as an upset in March Madness? ›

We're using the official NCAA record book definition of an upset: "Upsets are defined as when the winner of the game was seeded five or more places lower than the team it defeated."

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