Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - March Madness
Episode Date: March 19, 2025Every March, the United States experiences a period known as March Madness. It is the time when college basketball teams compete for a national championship. The process of crowning a national ch...ampion is a months-long process where teams vie for a chance to make the national tournament. From there, in theory, every team that makes the big dance has a shot at becoming a champion. All you have to do is win five, or maybe six, consecutive games. Learn more about March Madness and how the NCAA Basketball tournament works on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Stitch Fix Go to stitchfix.com/everywhere to have a stylist help you look your best Tourist Office of Spain Plan your next adventure at Spain.info Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase and to view important disclosures. Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Every March the United States experiences a period known as March Madness.
It's the time when college basketball teams compete for a national championship.
The process of crowning a national champion is a month's long process where teams vie for a chance to make the national tournament.
Once there, in theory, every team that makes the big dance has a shot at becoming a champion.
All you have to do is win five or maybe six consecutive games.
Learn more about March Madness and how the NCAA basketball basketball basketball
Tournament Works on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
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It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
If you don't happen to live in North America, there is some of the world.
there is something peculiar about North American sports.
We really like to crown our champions on the field.
For example, the English Premier League crowns its champion after a glorified round-robin.
It's a perfectly acceptable method of determining a champion,
but the fact that somebody can become a champion before the season is complete just doesn't sit right with us.
College football and NASCAR used to have systems where they had champions not determined on the field,
and they ultimately changed it so champions were crumptioned.
ground in championship matchups.
To put it more succinctly, in the immortal words of the great Rick Flair,
do be the man, you've got to beat the man.
The NCAA basketball tournament is in some ways the ultimate manifestation of this philosophy.
Before I go any further, just for those of you who don't live in the United States or follow sports,
the NCAA stands for the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
They are the governing body for most intercollegiate sports in the United States.
They set rules and declare champions in a host of sports, including track and field, baseball, softball, gymnastics, volleyball, swimming, golf, and others.
When I'm referring to the NCAA basketball tournament, which is what the term March Madness is referring to,
I'm referring to the Division I, men's and women's basketball tournaments.
So with that, what we now call March Madness began with the first NCAA men's basketball tournament in 1939.
The tournament was organized by the National Association of Basketball Coaches with strong support from Ohio State coach Harold Olson.
The first championship game was played in Emerson, Illinois, and the Oregon Webfoots, now called the Ducks, defeated Ohio State 46 to 33 to win the inaugural title.
During these formative years, the National Invitation Tournament, or NIT, was considered more prestigious than the NCAA tournament.
teams that were invited to both would often choose the NIT over the NCAA tournament.
These early tournaments were primarily regional affairs with limited national attention.
World War II impacted the tournament with many college-aged men serving in the military.
The 1943 to 1945 tournaments featured depleted rosters, but the competition continued throughout
the war despite the lack of players.
These early tournaments consisted of just eight teams.
Each of the eight teams was selected to represent.
at different regions of the country to participate.
The 1950s saw the tournament begin to gain prominence.
The field expanded to 16 teams in 1951, marking the first significant expansion.
The tournament started to establish itself as the premier college basketball championship,
gradually surpassing the NIT in prestige and media coverage.
The NIT, by the way, still exists today.
However, it doesn't get very much attention anymore because the teams that participate are those
who weren't given invitations to the NCAA tournament.
So the entire affair is really just a consolation prize
for teams to be declared the 69th best team in the country.
The game that really brought the tournament to greater prominence
was the 1957 championship game between North Carolina and Kansas.
Played on March 23rd, 1957 in Kansas City,
the game featured an undefeated North Carolina team,
coached by Frank McGuire,
facing off against a heavily favored Kansas squad
led by its star player, Will Chamberlain.
Despite Chamberlain's dominance, North Carolina employed a strategy of double and triple teaming him, limiting his effectiveness.
The game remained tightly contested with both teams struggling to score, taking the game into a third overtime.
Ultimately, North Carolina edged out Kansas, 54 to 53, sealing their first national title.
1964 saw the start of the greatest dynasty in men's collegiate basketball, the UCLA Bruins.
Under the guidance of the great coach John Wooden, during a 12-year period from 1964 to 1975,
UCLA won 10 championships, including a record seven in a row.
These UCLA teams produce some of the greatest players ever, including the likes of Lou Al-Sinder,
later known as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Bill Walton.
because the teams participating in the tournament were selected by a committee,
there were always teams who missed out and felt like that they should have been included.
To address this, and to generate more TV money,
the tournament expanded to 32 teams in 1975, allowing for more schools to participate.
The field grew again to 40 teams in 1979, 48 teams in 1980, and finally 64 teams in 1985.
The 1979 championship game between Michigan State, led by Magic Johnson, and Indiana State, led
by Larry Bird, remains a landmark moment in the history of the tournament.
The game drew a record television audience, and the Johnson Bird rivalry would carry into the NBA
well into the 80s.
The 1970s also saw the rise of women's basketball.
With the passage of the Title IX act in 1972, women's sports were given greater attention.
beginning in 1972, the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women, or AIAW, organized a national women's championship.
The AIAW hosted the tournament because women's basketball wasn't yet recognized as an NCAA sport.
In 1981, the NCAA announced that it would begin sponsoring a women's basketball tournament, leading to competition with the AIAW.
This culminated in 1982 when the NCAA held its first women's division.
1 basketball tournament, marking the end of the AIAW era.
The inaugural 1982 women's tournament had 32 teams.
That year, Louisiana Tech won the first NCAA title by defeating Cheney State.
The 1985 NCAA men's basketball championship game played on April 1st, 1985, is considered
one of the greatest upsets in college basketball history.
The game featured the Velanova Wildcats, an eight-seed, against the heavily-favor
Georgetown Hoyas, the defending national champions led by Patrick Ewing.
Villanova, coached by Raleigh Massimino, played a near-perfect game, shooting an astonishing
78.6% from the field, the highest ever in a championship game. Using a patient, offensive
approach and disciplined defense, Villanova managed to neutralize Georgetown's dominant presence
inside. In the final minutes, Villanova's clutch free throws sealed a 66 to 64 victory,
making them the lowest-seeded team ever to win the national championship.
In the 1980s, the women's tournament began to grow in size.
There were 36 teams invited in 1983, 40 in 1986, 48 teams in 1989, and 64 teams in 1994
when it finally reached parity with the men's tournament.
The development of the 64-team tournament and its perfect symmetry began the tradition
of people filling out a tournament bracket.
more on that in a bit.
As the tournament became more popular and television rights brought in more money,
there was more pressure to increase the size of the tournament.
In 2010, rumors began to circulate that they were considering expanding the tournament
by another full round to 128 teams, or if not that, at least 96 teams.
Instead, they just added four more teams, for a total of 68.
These four extra teams would have to play another round,
round to make it into the main tournament of 64. The women's tournament eventually expanded to 68
teams as well in 2022. So how exactly does the tournament work today? As of the 2024-25 season,
there are 364 NCAA Division 1 men's basketball teams and 362 NCAA Division 1 women's basketball
teams. There are currently 34 men's programs that have never made it into the NCAA tournament
in any given year. So at the outset of the season, there's approximately an 18% chance for
any team to make the tournament, assuming everything is equal. Almost every team is a member
of a conference. There are currently 31 Division I NCAA conferences for basketball for both
men and women. Each conference will crown its own champion, which is determined
by a conference tournament. Every conference champion is given an automatic entry into the tournament.
The remaining 37 spots are determined by a selection committee. The selection committee
not only picks the remaining 37 teams, but also gives each team a seed. The tournament consists
of four different regions. Each region is seated 1 through 16. The regions are only loosely
assigned on the basis of geography. The regions have more to do with the location of where the games are played
than the teams that are seated.
The selection committee will pick teams
and make seatings based on a team's record
and strength of schedule.
Both the men's and women's selection committee
consists of approximately 12 members,
consisting of athletic directors from schools
and commissioners of athletic conferences.
All conference tournaments take place
during the first or second weekend in March.
After the finals of all the conference tournaments,
the full tournament bracket is released
in what is known as Selection Sunday.
The end of the end.
NIT also releases their bracket on the very same day.
Each subsequent weekend, two rounds of the tournament are held at locations around the country,
with the play-in round for the 65th through 68th teams being played a few days beforehand.
The tournament takes place over three weekends.
The round of 16 is known as the Sweet 16, the round of 8 is known as the Elite 8,
and the final weekend of the tournament has the winner of each region meeting in what's known as the final four.
The men and women's tournaments generally overlap, but the games are not scheduled at the same
times, especially in the later rounds.
Given that there are so many teams in the tournament, in theory, every team has a chance
of winning.
However, the odds of lower seed teams winning are minuscule.
In the 40 years since the men's tournament expanded to 64 teams, there have been 160
matchups between a number one seed and a number 16 seed.
In those 160 matchups, the record of number one seeds is 158 and 2.
In 2018, the University of Maryland-Baltimore County defeated number one-seed Virginia,
and in 2023, 16-seed Fairleigh Dickinson upset the number one-seed Purdue.
In the women's tournament, it's only happened once.
In 1998, number 16-seed Harvard defeated number one-seed Stanford.
Generally speaking, underdogs have had a much harder time,
in the women's tournament. The lowest seed to have reached the final four was the nine-seed
Alabama in 1998. The lowest seed to win the women's tournament was only a three-seed, which has
happened three times, North Carolina in 1994, Tennessee in 1997, and LSU in 2023. In the men's
tournament, the lowest seed to make the final four was an 11-seed, which has happened six times.
And as previously mentioned, Villanova was the lowest seed to win the tournament at an eight-seed.
As slim as the odds might be of a low seed winning the tournament, the odds of someone picking
a perfect bracket are astronomical.
Picking every single game correctly in the 64 team field is approximately 1 in 9.22 quintillion.
And if you include the full 68 team field, that increases to 1 in 147 quintillion.
And this is assuming that every team.
a 50-50 chance of winning every game, which is, of course, not true.
However, it's impossible to take the odds of winning, given the relative strength of the
teams into consideration, because you don't know what the matchups will be beforehand.
And even if you could, the odds would still probably be in at least the quadrillions.
Needless to say, no one has ever selected a perfect bracket.
In 2014, Warren Buffett offered a $1 billion prize to anyone who could pick a perfect bracket.
The best performance ever was in 2019 by Greg Nigel of Columbus, Ohio.
He correctly picked the winners of the first 49 games of the tournament,
becoming the only person to ever correctly pick the winner of every game in the first two rounds.
One of the reasons why March Madness is so popular is because of the sheer number of games,
you're always guaranteed to have some sort of drama.
There will be last second buzzer-beaters, underdog wins,
and some sort of human interest story.
With so many schools across the country
and so many people with an interest in the outcome of the tournament,
there is a pretty good reason why it's called March Madness.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Oakden and Cameron Kiefer.
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