Came across this article by John Smallwood in the Philadelphia Daily News while stuck in Philly waiting for a connecting flight. If it appeared in the Eagle, I apologize. Key points which I agree with are:
The tournament has expanded ten times from its initial eight teams and every time it has gotten better.
The only difference between now and the earlier expansions is that there is no practical reason for it. Past expansions were tied to the fact that the growth of college BB significantly deepened the field of quality teams that legitmately could compete for a national championship.
This is still a top-heavy field as no #16 seed has ever reached the 2nd round; only two teams as low as 14 (Cleveland St and Chattanooga) made the Sweet 16; and only two teams (LSU and GMU) seeded as low as 11, have ever reached the Final Four.
Villanova, a #8 seed is the lowest seed ever to play for and win the championship. This means that since the seeding process began with 40 teams in 1979, no worse that the 32nd rated team has ever won the tournament and that happened only once.
If the singular goal is to crown a champion, then there is no need for the field to even be at 65.
But it is more than winning. It's about the test, about finding out how far you can go. The NCAA Tournament is one of the rare events in which the greatest fairy tales happen at the beginning, not at the end.
The most memorable moments have come during the first two rounds, when the little fish most said didn't belong proves it did. :yahoo:
Many of the things we love most about the NCAA Tournament would not have happened if not for expansion of the field. There is nothing wrong with the 65-team format.
Still, don't try to tell me expansion would somehow ruin it, when history shows it has only made it better.
The tournament has expanded ten times from its initial eight teams and every time it has gotten better.
The only difference between now and the earlier expansions is that there is no practical reason for it. Past expansions were tied to the fact that the growth of college BB significantly deepened the field of quality teams that legitmately could compete for a national championship.
This is still a top-heavy field as no #16 seed has ever reached the 2nd round; only two teams as low as 14 (Cleveland St and Chattanooga) made the Sweet 16; and only two teams (LSU and GMU) seeded as low as 11, have ever reached the Final Four.
Villanova, a #8 seed is the lowest seed ever to play for and win the championship. This means that since the seeding process began with 40 teams in 1979, no worse that the 32nd rated team has ever won the tournament and that happened only once.
If the singular goal is to crown a champion, then there is no need for the field to even be at 65.
But it is more than winning. It's about the test, about finding out how far you can go. The NCAA Tournament is one of the rare events in which the greatest fairy tales happen at the beginning, not at the end.
The most memorable moments have come during the first two rounds, when the little fish most said didn't belong proves it did. :yahoo:
Many of the things we love most about the NCAA Tournament would not have happened if not for expansion of the field. There is nothing wrong with the 65-team format.
Still, don't try to tell me expansion would somehow ruin it, when history shows it has only made it better.
Comment