March Madness

March Madness

 informal term that refers to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's and women's basketball championship tournaments and the attendant fan interest in—and media coverage of—the events. The single-elimination tournaments begin each March and consist of fields of 64 (for the women's tournament) and 65 (for the men's) teams that qualify either by winning their conference title or by being chosen as an at-large entry by the NCAA's selection committee.

 The first men's tournament was held in 1939, but it was overshadowed for most of the first two decades of its existence by the National Invitation Tournament (NIT), which was considered more prestigious and usually featured the best teams in the country. The NCAA tournament gradually began to draw the top teams and more television revenue, and, by the time the University of California, Los Angeles (California, University of) (UCLA), began its record run of seven consecutive titles in 1967, the tournament was firmly established as the premier college basketball postseason championship series in the United States. The size of the tournament field increased incrementally from 8 teams in 1939 to 64 teams in 1985. A 65th team and corresponding “play-in game” were added in 2001, when a new conference with an automatically qualifying champion was created and the NCAA did not want to lower the number of high-profile at-large schools it could invite to the tournament. The first women's tournament was a 32-team event held in 1982, and it expanded to its current field of 64 in 1994.

      The tournament format (not including the play-in game) consists of four subsets known as regions, each of which contains 16 teams that are seeded number 1 to number 16 by the selection committee and then matched up according to seed, with the number 1 seed playing number 16, number 2 playing number 15, and so on. (The selection committee generally comprises university athletic directors and conference commissioners.) The first- and second-round games take place during the first week of the tournament at eight geographically dispersed sites, and the 16 teams that move on to the second week (having won both their first- and second-round games) are referred to as the “Sweet Sixteen.” These remaining teams then proceed to four regional sites and are further winnowed to an “Elite Eight” and a “Final Four,” the last of which advances to yet another location for the national semifinals and finals in the third week of the competion. The sizable field often produces pairings of large schools from highly regarded conferences with smaller automatic qualifiers that may result in first-round upsets, which can then lead to underdog teams (known as “Cinderellas”) advancing far in the tournament.

      It is a common practice for fans to fill out tournament brackets with their predictions before the event begins and to enter their brackets into office pools (or on the Internet) with friends and coworkers. Studies have shown that American workers become less productive during March Madness, as large numbers of basketball fans frequently monitor the status of their brackets or discuss the tournament (or even watch the games) while on the job.

       Division I National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championship-men Division I National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championship-women Division I National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championship-men Division I National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Championship-womenWinners of the men's and women's NCAA Division 1 basketball tournaments are provided in the tables.

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Universalium. 2010.

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