skip to main content
6877d63307abdc598ed5c8bb_BR1_5431

The NCAA Basketball Tournament has many misconceptions. The first one is that everyone has a chance to win the championship; even though that is mathematically true, it isn’t true in reality. The other is that, for most teams in the tournament, your seed means nothing on how easy your way to winning is.

Some quick background for you is that since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, out of the 296 teams that have played in the tournament, only 174 of those teams have actually won a game. This statistic means that 41% of those schools have not once won a game. It is obvious that within the first round, it is more likely for the first seed to have a better win rate than second seed, for second seed to have a better win rate than the third seed, and so on and so forth. But when you move onto the second round, seeds ten, eleven, and twelve actually do better and have a better win rate than the 7th, 8th, 9th, 14th, 15th, and 16th. That is most simply explained based off how poorly the NCAA tournament is designed. The problem is that, after the first round, instead of reseeding and putting the best team against the worst team just like it is in the first round, they leave it up to fate. That is then shown in the sweet 16 because an 8 seed has a 3 times better win rate than a 5 seed, and an 11 seed has almost double the win rate than the 5 seed.

Why is this so? It is because the 5 seed has to play the 1 seed, so the name of the game is if you want to win, stay away from the 1 seed. This lack of restructure in the tournament creates a major fall of in how far teams go. Going back to the information that was given about 41% of teams not winning a single game it is expanded even more. 62% of teams have never made it to the sweet 16, 75% of teams have never reached the elite eight, and 84% of teams have never made the final four. This happens because the middle-seeded teams end up having the play the 1 seed, giving them a minimal chance of moving on. All of that combined gives you the crazy statistic that, out of the 296 schools that have played in the tournament, 4% of those schools make up 58% of all final four berths.  So even though there is the idea of everyone having a chance at winning that isn’t exactly true. This tournament is meant to produce more losers than winners and so the idea that everyone has a possibility to win is true, but realistically the winner belongs to a small group way ahead of the first game even being played. I would say enjoy your Cinderella dreams, but that is all they are dreams. Hopefully your bracket isn’t too busted, but if it is just enjoy the madness that is March.

All views expressed on content written for The Shofar represent the opinions and thoughts of the individual authors. The author biography represents the author at the time in which they were in BBYO.

Explore More Stories

Group of people celebrating on stage
Identity
Parshat Korach: Leaders of the Future

Why Korach's challenge to Moses is a reminder to never take your democratic voice for granted.

Profile picture of Firstname Lastname
BBYO Weekly Parsha AZA & BBG
Group of people celebrating on stage
Opinion
How Elections Have Shaped My BBYO Journey

This post discusses how losing an election has shaped my journey within BBYO.

Profile picture of Firstname Lastname
Zelda Stebbins Berthoud, Colorado, United States
Group of people celebrating on stage
Connection
Top Ten Things I’ve Learned From Starting My Chapter

Counting down the biggest tips and tricks for new chapter leaders!

Profile picture of Firstname Lastname
Sasha Grossman Larchmont, New York, United States