I looked at the tournament for the last ten years, feeling this was a healthy enough sample, particularly given how college basketball has evolved over the years. Some of what I found surprised me... so hopefully you find it interesting as well.
***LAST TEN YEARS***
4 SEEDS
Round 1: 31-9 (basically three out of four each year... two years of 4-0, one of 2-2... so bank on one round one upset by a 13 seed).
Advancing to the sweet 16: 13 teams. Frankly, this stunned me. 4 seeds are 13-18 in the second round the last ten years!! It's only a little better than 1 a year for a seed that is supposed to advance to the second weekend.
Advancing to the elite 8: 4 teams and only 1 since 2006 (Kentucky, last season). So these seeds rarely pick up more than two wins. But...
Advancing to the final 4: 3 teams (though again, only UK since '06). So when they get three wins, they often grab 4.
Advancing to the title game: nobody.
5 SEEDS
Round 1: 24-16. Ah, yes... the 'curse' of the 5-12 upset. This is an exceptionally susceptible seed line. But if you get by round 1....
Advancing to the sweet 16: 17 teams. So two out of every three 5 seeds who win their first game win another. And, if you look above... 5 seeds are more likely to escape the first weekend than 4 seeds!
Advancing to the elite 8: 5 teams. Running into a 1 seed to open the second weekend usually proves fatal. But this seed again fares ever so slightly better than the line above it (at least in quantity).
Advancing to the final 4: 4 teams. Maybe it is a first game of the weekend thing. Much like the higher survival rate from round one to round two... teams that make it past round three most often head to the final four! So much for a 'letdown' after taking down a 1 seed.
Advancing to the championship game: 2 teams, with a bit of a burp in the data. As many of us remember, 5 seeds Michigan State and Butler faced off in a 2010 national semifinal. So that guaranteed that one of those four 5 seeds would move on... but it also guaranteed one would lose. Both 5 seeds (Butler in '10 and Indiana in '02) would fall in the title game.
***LAST TEN YEARS***
4 SEEDS
Round 1: 31-9 (basically three out of four each year... two years of 4-0, one of 2-2... so bank on one round one upset by a 13 seed).
Advancing to the sweet 16: 13 teams. Frankly, this stunned me. 4 seeds are 13-18 in the second round the last ten years!! It's only a little better than 1 a year for a seed that is supposed to advance to the second weekend.
Advancing to the elite 8: 4 teams and only 1 since 2006 (Kentucky, last season). So these seeds rarely pick up more than two wins. But...
Advancing to the final 4: 3 teams (though again, only UK since '06). So when they get three wins, they often grab 4.
Advancing to the title game: nobody.
5 SEEDS
Round 1: 24-16. Ah, yes... the 'curse' of the 5-12 upset. This is an exceptionally susceptible seed line. But if you get by round 1....
Advancing to the sweet 16: 17 teams. So two out of every three 5 seeds who win their first game win another. And, if you look above... 5 seeds are more likely to escape the first weekend than 4 seeds!
Advancing to the elite 8: 5 teams. Running into a 1 seed to open the second weekend usually proves fatal. But this seed again fares ever so slightly better than the line above it (at least in quantity).
Advancing to the final 4: 4 teams. Maybe it is a first game of the weekend thing. Much like the higher survival rate from round one to round two... teams that make it past round three most often head to the final four! So much for a 'letdown' after taking down a 1 seed.
Advancing to the championship game: 2 teams, with a bit of a burp in the data. As many of us remember, 5 seeds Michigan State and Butler faced off in a 2010 national semifinal. So that guaranteed that one of those four 5 seeds would move on... but it also guaranteed one would lose. Both 5 seeds (Butler in '10 and Indiana in '02) would fall in the title game.
Comment