The NCAA considers a larger scale to be more advantageous for March Madness. The organization intends to broaden both the men’s and women’s university basketball contests to encompass 76 participating squads, as reported by Ross Dellenger of Yahoo Sports.
Both the NCAA men’s and women’s basketball selection panels have given their assent to this action and cast votes in favor of the expansion, per Dellenger. The proposition still requires endorsement from the basketball oversight committees, along with the DI Board of Directors and Board of Governors, but this outcome is anticipated.
This announcement brings an end to several months of reports indicating that tournament growth was imminent. In early April, a source informed Dellenger that the tournament’s enlargement “would definitely occur” during the off-season. This prediction was substantiated on Thursday.
While speculation was widespread for months, the NCAA issued a statement in late April that dampened expectations regarding the finalization of expansion. In that communication, the NCAA stated that any enlargement would necessitate endorsement from various committees, and that no judgments had been “reached at that point.”
“Enlarging the basketball competitions would demand consent from numerous NCAA bodies, encompassing both the men’s and women’s basketball committees, and no conclusive recommendations or determinations have been established currently.”
Following the dispatch of Thursday’s news, it appears the NCAA successfully brought those committees on board with the concept.
Initial proposals for extending the NCAA tournament included incorporating an additional eight matchups into the “First Four” segment, as per Dellenger. Under this framework, the “First Four” phase would involve 24 teams engaging in 12 games over a two-day period. It remains uncertain if this precise arrangement is incorporated into the expansion proposal that gained NCAA approval on Thursday.
The concept of growth garnered backing from the Big 12, ACC, and NCAA president Charlie Baker, who articulated that an excessive number of proficient teams were being left out of the competition under the previous format.
“Annually, several genuinely capable teams do not enter the tournament for numerous reasons,” Baker remarked last autumn. “One contributing factor is our 32 automatic qualifiers [for conference champions]. I appreciate that and consider it excellent, and I never want that to shift, yet this means there are merely 36 positions remaining for everyone else.”
With the selection committees’ endorsement occurring on Thursday, it seems the tournaments are set to adopt a refreshed appearance in the future.