• New here? Register here now for access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Plus, stay connected and follow BP on Instagram @buckeyeplanet and Facebook.

Coaches want NCAA tournament expanded...

tibor75

Banned
what a horrible idea. I found amusing their idea of increasing the play in games. Yeah, let's force the small schools to play-in to get into the tournament so that a 16-12 scUM team gets into the real thing. :roll1:

Coaches hope NCAA will expand tournament field

By MICHAEL MAROT, AP Sports Writer
March 30, 2006

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Jim Boeheim wants more schools playing in the NCAA tournament, and his coaching colleagues appear to agree.

The Syracuse coach believes the tournament field should expand from its current 65 teams and hopes to start lobbying for an increase Friday during a meeting with the National Association of Basketball Coaches.


"I have a number in mind, I think it should probably be about four to six, somewhere in there," Boeheim said Thursday. "The problem really is that it shouldn't come down to logistics."

The field expanded from 48 to 64 in 1985, then added a 65th team to the field in 2001 when the NCAA increased the number of automatic bids from 30 to 31.

Boeheim believes the rapid increase in Division I schools, to more than 300, and increased parity, as demonstrated by George Mason reaching the Final Four, indicates its time to include more teams.

It's a proposal Boeheim said he has long supported, but he has not been able to convince those on the NCAA's selection committee in the past.

NCAA president Myles Brand said he has not much support to implement Boeheim's wish.

"There was some discussion of it in the last couple of years, and there hasn't been much enthusiasm for it at this point," Brand said. "I think that discussion needs to continue, but I don't see any movement in that direction."

Coaches, whose success is often measured by how often they make the tournament and how well they do in it, disagree.

After Boeheim discussed his plan during a news conference, Rice coach Willis Wilson and Clemson coach Oliver Purnell, both said they would support expansion. NABC executive director Jim Haney acknowledged it's an issue that warrants debate.

"At this point, I think the topic of expansion is a fairly new one, but clearly it's come up," Haney said. "I feel confident that it will need to be addressed."

Boeheim, who won the national championship in 2033, believes the primary reason against expansion is logistics.

NCAA officials may try to avoid playing more often than the current four-day schedule over three weekends, and it would be nearly impossible to place more than eight teams at one site.

One possible solution would be increasing the number of play-in games. Under the current structure, two teams play Tuesday night. One advances to a first-round game played on Friday.

But by adding six teams, the NCAA could have four play-in games at the same site, providing more of a tournament atmosphere.

"Even though you wouldn't want to be in that play-in game, you're still in the tournament," Boeheim said. "That's a lot better feeling than not being in the tournament."

Another factor in favor of expansion is George Mason's success.

The Patriots (27-7) of the Colonial Athletic Association became the first No. 11 seed to reach the Final Four since LSU in 1986, yet they were no lock to be in the field on selection Sunday.

Coaches believe the number of good teams has grown significantly. And why, they argue, should a team like George Mason be left out?

"There are deserving teams," said Purnell, who previously coached at Dayton. "George Mason could easily have been left out of the tournament. Obviously, they're a deserving team. If you expand it, you decrease the possibility of leaving out more deserving teams."
 
It is a horrible idea. The stuff about doing it for the little guy is a bunch of bunk. 4 play-in games means a bunch more low-conference teams that don't get to play in the "real tournament" because all of the teams in the play-ins would not be at-larges from major conferences, that's for sure. I'm not saying anything about Boeheim in particular, but it seems like another way to protect the power conferences to me, by giving several more at-large bids, and sending teams like Murray State, Coppin State, and Valparaiso (all of whom have sent coaches like Boeheim packing in round 1 before) to have to knock each other out before they even get there.

The only way they should expand is if they take 2 games out of the regualr season and add another full round (128). Then, the at-large pool gets watered down to the point that if you don't make it, you have no complaint. And even that is a terrible idea.
 
Upvote 0
It is a horrible idea. The stuff about doing it for the little guy is a bunch of bunk. 4 play-in games means a bunch more low-conference teams that don't get to play in the "real tournament" because all of the teams in the play-ins would not be at-larges from major conferences, that's for sure. I'm not saying anything about Boeheim in particular, but it seems like another way to protect the power conferences to me, by giving several more at-large bids, and sending teams like Murray State, Coppin State, and Valparaiso (all of whom have sent coaches like Boeheim packing in round 1 before) to have to knock each other out before they even get there.

The only way they should expand is if they take 2 games out of the regualr season and add another full round (128). Then, the at-large pool gets watered down to the point that if you don't make it, you have no complaint. And even that is a terrible idea.

You are completely right-this is just Boeheim getting scared, since he was a missed 3 ball by McNamara from not even getting in the tourney. Let teams like Delaware State and Sam Houston and Albany take their shots against the big boys-I enjoy that in the 1st round. Also, as a coach from a power conference, who can recruit against anyone in the country, does he really want mid-majors getting another chance to bite him in the ass? Tibs is right-don't reward scUM or UC or Missouri State at the expense of the real little guys.
 
Upvote 0
Nearly 20% of the teams playing Division 1 basketball are allowed in the tournament. Granted, it's not the NBA, who allows over 53% of their teams in the playoffs, but I think that the number of teams allowed in is more than fair.
 
Upvote 0
The tournament is already such a grind...how can anyone expect any more out of college kids? You already have to win six games in a row against quality opponents.

Maybe they can have the #1 and #2 seeds have byes in the first round and do some stuff like that to add additional teams...personally I am not against adding more teams but why now? I think it is fine at this point.
 
Upvote 0
I know that the season already is long, but I would argue that it would be better to give teams at least ten days from the end of their conference tournaments until the start of the NCAA.

I don't believe for one minute that the Buckeyes deserved to go out when they did or that the Big Ten were not among the top 16 teams. Instead, I think that the closeness at the end of the season and a brutally physical tournament meant that the Big Ten players, and especially ours, had nothing left.

I think that the NCAA would be better off if they focused on giving the team's a bit of a chance to catch their breath and get more ready for the tournament.
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top