2024 NCAA Tournament Bracket Watch: Answers from the selection committee chair

2024 NCAA Tournament Bracket Watch: Answers from the selection committee chair
By Brian Bennett
Feb 23, 2024

The full NCAA Tournament bracket has been released with UConn leading the way as No. 1 overall

(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.)

Charles McClelland’s first vote as a member of the men’s NCAA Tournament selection committee was whether to cancel the 2020 event because of COVID-19. In his second year on the committee, much of his time was spent discussing protocols to play the tournament without fans in the Indiana bubble.

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So now that McClelland is the 2024 selection committee chairman and has to lead the group in sorting out a chaotic season, he can put things in perspective.

“Debating bubble teams is so much better than saying, ‘If somebody catches COVID, will we allow that team to participate or not?’” said McClelland, who is also the SWAC commissioner. “We’re actually talking basketball now, which is what we all enjoy.”

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The committee convened last week and talked a lot of basketball before releasing its initial top 16 seeds. “The only problem,” McClelland joked, “is that the teams then went out and played games.”

Nine of the top 16, including the No. 1 and No. 2 overall seeds Purdue and UConn, have lost since the reveal. But that’s the 2023-24 season in a nutshell. While the committee didn’t clash much over their choices — the top four were unanimous, and the No. 2 seeds were all agreed upon but in differing orders — that will change when it goes deeper into the field. “I anticipate some debate coming up because there’s a lot of parity this year,” McClelland said “There are going to be a lot of similar resumes, a lot of blemishes that we’re going to have to take into consideration.”

Men’s NCAA Tournament selection committee chairman Charles McClelland, left, and NCAA senior vice president of basketball Dan Gavitt. (Courtesy of SWAC Athletics)

We caught up with the chairman this week to discuss some pertinent issues (and nominate ourselves for future committee membership … still waiting to hear back on that one).

How about the notion that certain leagues, like the Big 12, have gamed the system by playing soft nonconference schedules and then simply racking up quality wins against one another? Iowa State, for example, played the No. 323 nonconference schedule per the NET, yet had five Quad 1 wins before the reveal. (The Cyclones added another Saturday against Texas Tech before losing to Houston on Monday.) They were awarded an early No. 3 seed by the committee, 12th overall.

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“We spend a significant amount of time discussing this exact topic,” McClelland said. “It’s always good for the game to play good nonconference schedules. If teams are going to play a weak nonconference schedule, it makes it critically important for them to do well in their league games. Even in the loss at Houston, it was a hard-fought game, and I think the nation could see, even if they watched just that one game and not the entirety of the season like we do, that Iowa State is a very good team and certainly deserving of the seed we gave them.

“But if you do play a weak nonconference schedule and then you get into the league and don’t win those games against the best teams and are just kind of floating there at let’s say 9-9 … just because you have a tremendous amount of wins doesn’t necessarily guarantee you a way into the tournament.”

This week provided more evidence that winning on the road is extremely difficult. McClelland said the stats provided to the committee show that top-10 teams are winning on the road against unranked teams at about half the rate they have in the previous several years. So will road wins be extra valuable on Selection Sunday?

“It’s a red flag when almost all of your quality wins come at home,” he said. “So it’s paramount that teams prove they can win away from their home court.

“But we look at several metrics. We have tons and tons of data. Who you play, where you played and what the outcome was will always be the fundamental core of what we do.”

The quad system always creates confusion and controversy. A team can get a Quad 1 win by beating the 75th-best team (on the road) or by beating the No. 1 team. McClelland said the committee puts all results of those in context; team sheets are set up so that there are both Quad 1A-1B and Quad 2A-2B wins that separate truly high-end victories from more pedestrian ones.

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“It’s not just a matter of counting Quad 1s and Quad 2s,” McClelland said. “There’s no such thing as a bad win because winning is winning especially in those first two quadrants, but they are not all created equally. Having a Quad 1 win against a team that’s not seriously considered for a spot in the tournament is still a good win, but it’s not as good as a road win over a team we have on top four lines.”

Or how about those wins that once looked good but now aren’t so much, or vice versa? We presented McClelland the example of UCLA. The Bruins were as low as No. 209 in the NET after a brutal start, but a recent hot streak has them near the top 100, meaning what was once a Quad 3 win for somebody early in the season could be a Quad 2 at the end of it.

“There could be any number of reasons why a team is struggling — injuries, transfers, the coach not being there — so we have to take the entirety of the season into consideration,” McClelland said. “We also do that with the wins and the quads. We know this was a Quad 3 in November, but because UCLA has increased its overall level of competitiveness, it’s now a Quad 2 win. We take all that into consideration, absolutely.”

The committee reconvenes in three weeks to make the real bracket, and McClelland said the members will throw last week’s exercise out and start with fresh eyes. But they won’t need to catch up on things. McClelland told us that committee members are looking at the metrics and results every day. They are aware when a Quad 1 win slides down to the next quad or the other way around. They each have access to Synergy and can watch every game.

“A tremendous amount of work goes into making sure we’re prepared when we go into the committee room,” McClelland said. “This is what we eat and live, starting in November.”

It’s reassuring to know that the people in charge of selecting the NCAA Tournament are as obsessive about this stuff as we are.

Some other quick notes on this week’s bracket, now just 23 days until Selection Sunday:

• McClelland confirmed a few geographic questions for us. The committee would have no problem putting BYU in the Salt Lake City pod or Nebraska in Omaha — or possibly Gonzaga in Spokane — if that’s where those teams would go according to bracketing principles and they’re not top-4 seeds. And if Tennessee has geographic priority and no conflicts, it would go to Charlotte (230 miles according to Google Maps) rather than stay in state and play in Memphis (390 miles) for the first round. “We don’t jeopardize our bracketing principles, and we go based upon what those principles dictate,” McClelland said.

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• We tried to keep the committee’s top 16 intact as much as possible here — not that it was too much of a change from our, ahem, 16-for-16 showing last Friday (we did have Duke as a No. 4 and Illinois as a No. 3, while the committee flipped those). But obviously, we had to adjust based on another week’s results. One major change: Creighton, coming off an upset of No. 1 UConn and a Q1 road win at Butler, zooms to the top of the No. 4 line, while struggling Wisconsin drops a seed line. Arizona remains the fourth No. 1 despite Thursday’s home loss to Washington State — but the door is now wide open for another team to grab that final spot on the top line. Washington State remains one of the best stories in college basketball and is now up to No. 25 overall on the seed list.

• New to the field this week: Wake Forest. The Demon Deacons had been lingering on the cut line and finally got a Quad 1 win — for beating Florida on Nov. 29. They can thank the Gators’ recent surge for changing their team sheet. Wake is also up to 21st in KenPom and BPI and 27th in NET heading into Saturday’s crucial home game against Duke. The chairman’s comments about the importance of road wins and nonconference scheduling made us dubious of Ole Miss and Utah, two teams we had in last week but lack those assets.

Villanova remains our last team in — that road win against Creighton is looking better and better, to go along with the neutral-court victory against North Carolina. But the Wildcats will have to deal with an angry UConn team on Saturday so …

• Questions? Gripes? We’re not as well-informed as the chairman, but we’ll do our best to provide some insight in the comments.

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
Gonzaga
Drake
Wake Forest
Providence
Butler
Virginia Tech
Texas A&M
Nevada
Ole Miss
Cincinnati
Seton Hall
Nebraska
Utah
James Madison
Villanova
Virginia
Multi-bid conferences
LeagueBids
Big 12
9
SEC
8
Big East
6
Big Ten
6
Mountain West
6
ACC
5
Pac-12
2
AAC
2
Seed list
1
UConn
AQ
2
Purdue
AQ
3
Houston
AQ
4
Arizona
AQ
5
North Carolina
AQ
6
Tennessee
AQ
7
Marquette
8
Kansas
9
Alabama
10
Baylor
11
Iowa State
12
Duke
13
Creighton
14
San Diego State
AQ
15
Illinois
16
Auburn
17
Clemson
18
BYU
19
Dayton
AQ
20
Wisconsin
21
Texas Tech
22
Colorado State
23
Saint Mary's
AQ
24
Kentucky
25
Washington State
26
South Carolina
27
Utah State
28
TCU
29
New Mexico
30
Florida Atlantic
31
Texas
32
Florida
33
Mississippi State
34
Oklahoma
35
Northwestern
36
Boise State
37
Michigan State
38
Providence
39
Nevada
40
Nebraska
41
Virginia
42
Grand Canyon
AQ
43
Wake Forest
44
Seton Hall
45
Texas A&M
46
Villanova
47
Indiana State
AQ
48
South Florida
AQ
49
Appalachian State
AQ
50
McNeese Sate
AQ
51
Samford
AQ
52
UC Irvine
AQ
53
Yale
AQ
54
Akron
AQ
55
Louisiana Tech
AQ
56
Vermont
AQ
57
High Point
AQ
58
Charleston
AQ
59
Eastern Washington
AQ
60
Oakland
AQ
61
Morehead State
AQ
62
Colgate
AQ
63
Quinnipiac
AQ
64
South Dakota State
AQ
65
Eastern Kentucky
AQ
66
Merrimack
AQ
67
Norfolk State
AQ
68
Grambling
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.

(Top photo of Iowa State’s Tamin Lipsey and Houston’s Joseph Tugler: David J. Phillip / AP)

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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