Bracket Watch: UConn No. 1 overall, and then chaos for 2024 NCAA Tournament

Bracket Watch: UConn No. 1 overall, and then chaos for 2024 NCAA Tournament
By Brian Bennett
Mar 17, 2024

(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.)

(Update at 5:25 p.m. ET: This is the final bracket. Duquesne has been put in the field, and UAB slides up one spot on the seed list. Everything else is the same. The Big Ten final does not affect seeding — as is tradition.)

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During the season in this space, we often like to begin with a bit of pop culture or history or some other random bit of nonsense unrelated to college basketball. So, uh, is it OK if we just do that for the entirety of this final installment?

Because we’re going to be totally transparent here. For the first time in six years of making mock brackets for The Athletic, we go into Selection Sunday with no earthly idea of what the selection committee is going to do. Oh, sure, there are always small surprises, but for the most part, the field is obvious except for maybe one slot.

Not this year. After one of the wildest Championship Week Saturdays we can remember, which included two power-conference bid thieves and a still-hard-to-believe outcome in the American, we find ourselves utterly confused by the bubble. And whether North Carolina will hold on to that final No. 1 seed or if surging Iowa State will take it. At least we’re not alone:

Here goes our best shot:

• NC State and Oregon winning their way into the field means that Virginia and Oklahoma are out.

It’s not so simple that the committee simply will replace UVa with the Wolfpack in an ACC tradeoff. Virginia was our last at-large on Saturday morning, and the Cavaliers did lose head-to-head to NC State on Friday, so it seems fair that they’re the first ones to get the boot. We then considered a de facto Pac-12 switcheroo of Oregon and Colorado, since the Buffaloes made our field for the first time after winning in the Pac-12 semis on Friday.

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But all this chaos forced us to dive deep into the resumes again, and … what’s impressive about the Sooners? No bad losses, sure, but they’re 4-12 in Quad 1 and 3-6 on the road. They beat Iowa State and BYU, but both were at home. And beyond that, there’s not a single win against a team in the field. And then there’s the matter of the No. 271 nonconference SOS. Add up the lack of wins, bad schedule, poor road performance and a No. 44 KenPom ranking, and this suddenly doesn’t look like a NCAA Tournament team. Especially as the ninth team out of the Big 12.

• OK, well, who does go to the First Four? Well, if you ever wanted to attend the games in Dayton, get tickets this year. We’ve got Colorado and St. John’s in one play-in game, and the other is … wait for it … Michigan State-Florida Atlantic. That’s right, two teams that started the season in the top 10. But the Spartans, despite their oddly glimmering metrics, are just 19-14 overall, 3-9 in Q1 and 9-14 in the first two quads. FAU, meanwhile, lost a Q3 game to Temple in the AAC semis; the Owls also have two Q4 losses and just two Q1 wins (good ones, though, over Arizona and Texas A&M). If we didn’t know what Florida Atlantic did last year and saw this resume coming out of the AAC, we probably wouldn’t blink an eye at this being a First Four team. And in another oddity, the First Four teams are No. 10 seeds.

• That means Indiana State, Seton Hall, Providence and Pitt, along with Virginia and Oklahoma, are out of our field. All those teams are good enough to win a first-round game. Some, more than that. Greg Sankey will be furious Sunday night!

• As for the top of the bracket, we’re sticking with UNC. Iowa State looked mighty impressive this weekend, but remember two things: The Cyclones were on the No. 3 line and No. 11 overall in the committee’s top-16 reveal exactly one month ago. North Carolina was No. 5 overall. It would be a pretty big jump for Iowa State to leapfrog UNC (and the Tar Heels still own the head-to-head with the other contender, Tennessee). Ultimately, it comes down to this: the Cyclones’ No. 324 nonconference SOS. No. 1 seeds simply don’t have schedules that weak, and by putting Iowa State on the 1-line, the committee could set a dangerous precedent we believe it would like to avoid.

There. Disagree, laugh, come back after the bracket reveal to make fun of how wrong we were. Just remember, even the committee knows this Gordian Knot has no real solution. Oh, do you know the Greek legend of the Gordian Knot … well, we had to try to delay some more.

This bracket will be updated shortly before the 6 p.m. ET selection show with final tweaks and automatic qualifiers. Just don’t expect it to make any more sense.

First Four
Dayton
16
Stetson
16
Grambling
Dayton
10
St. John's
10
Colorado
Dayton
16
Wagner
16
Howard
Dayton
10
Michigan State
10
Florida Atlantic
East Region (Boston)
Brooklyn
1
Connecticut
16
Saint Peter's
Brooklyn
8
Nebraska
9
TCU
Brooklyn
4
Duke
13
Yale
Brooklyn
5
South Carolina
12
UAB
Memphis
3
Baylor
14
Vermont
Memphis
6
Saint Mary's
11
NC State
Charlotte
2
Tennessee
15
Longwood
Charlotte
7
Washington State
10
New Mexico
South Region (Dallas)
Memphis
1
Houston
16
Wagner
Howard
Memphis
8
Dayton
9
Mississippi State
Spokane
4
Kentucky
13
Akron
Spokane
5
Texas Tech
12
McNeese State
Pittsburgh
3
Illinois
14
Oakland
Pittsburgh
6
Clemson
11
Oregon
Indianapolis
2
Marquette
15
Long Beach State
Indianapolis
7
Boise State
10
Michigan State
Florida Atlantic
West Region (Los Angeles)
Charlotte
1
North Carolina
16
Stetson
Grambling
Charlotte
8
Nevada
9
Northwestern
Salt Lake City
4
BYU
13
Charleston
Salt Lake City
5
Alabama
12
Grand Canyon
Omaha
3
Kansas
14
Colgate
Omaha
6
Wisconsin
11
James Madison
Salt Lake City
2
Arizona
15
South Dakota State
Salt Lake City
7
Utah State
10
Texas A&M
Midwest Region (Detroit)
Indianapolis
1
Purdue
16
Montana State
Indianapolis
8
Texas
9
Colorado State
Spokane
4
Auburn
13
Samford
Spokane
5
San Diego State
12
Duquesne
Pittsburgh
3
Creighton
14
Morehead State
Pittsburgh
6
Florida
11
Drake
Omaha
2
Iowa State
15
Western Kentucky
Omaha
7
Gonzaga
10
St. John's
Colorado
First Four OutNext Four OutLast Four InLast Four Byes
Oklahoma
Providence
Michigan State
Colorado State
Virginia
Pitt
Florida Atlantic
TCU
Indiana State
Kansas State
Colorado
Mississippi State
Seton Hall
Ohio State
St. John's
Texas A&M
Multi-bid conferences
LeagueBids
Big 12
8
SEC
8
Big Ten
6
Mountain West
6
ACC
4
Big East
4
Pac-12
4
A10
2
AAC
2
WCC
2
Seed list
1
UConn
AQ
2
Houston
3
Purdue
4
North Carolina
5
Iowa State
AQ
6
Tennessee
7
Arizona
8
Marquette
9
Baylor
10
Creighton
11
Kansas
12
Illinois
AQ
13
Duke
14
Kentucky
15
BYU
16
Auburn
AQ
17
South Carolina
18
Alabama
19
San Diego State
20
Texas Tech
21
Wisconsin
22
Clemson
23
Florida
24
Saint Mary's
AQ
25
Utah State
26
Washington State
27
Gonzaga
28
Boise State
29
Nevada
30
Texas
31
Nebraska
32
Dayton
33
Northwestern
34
Colorado State
35
TCU
36
Mississippi State
37
New Mexico
AQ
38
Texas A&M
39
Michigan State
40
Florida Atlantic
41
Colorado
42
St. John's
43
NC State
AQ
44
Oregon
AQ
45
Drake
AQ
46
James Madison
AQ
47
Grand Canyon
AQ
48
McNeese State
AQ
49
UAB
AQ
50
Duquesne
AQ
51
Samford
AQ
52
Yale
AQ
53
Akron
AQ
54
Charleston
AQ
55
Vermont
AQ
56
Oakland
AQ
57
Morehead State
AQ
58
Colgate
AQ
59
South Dakota State
AQ
60
Western Kentucky
AQ
61
Longwood
AQ
62
Long Beach State
AQ
63
Saint Peter's
AQ
64
Montana State
AQ
65
Stetson
AQ
66
Howard
AQ
67
Grambling
AQ
68
Wagner
AQ

The Bracket Central series is part of a partnership with E*TRADE.

The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

(Photo of Tristen Newton: Sarah Stier / Getty Images)

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Brian Bennett

Brian Bennett is a senior editor for The Athletic covering National Basketball Association. He previously wrote about college sports for ESPN.com for nine years and The (Louisville) Courier-Journal for nine years prior to that. Follow Brian on Twitter @GBrianBennett