Kenny Moore still away from Colts' voluntary offseason workouts
Kenny Moore still missing from Colts' voluntary offseason workouts.
Colin Cowherd strongly opposes the NCAA Tournament's proposed expansion from 68 to 76 teams, arguing it diminishes the tournament's appeal. He believes March Madness is already perfect and that the expansion addresses a non-existent problem.
Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images
The NCAA Tournamentâs expansion from 68 to 76 teams is not a popular idea across most of the sports universe. Add Colin Cowherd to the list of those opposed.
The Fox Sports host is one of the more prominent voices to come out against the proposed expansion, which ESPNâs Pete Thamel reported could be made official as early as next week. Cowherd posted a video on social media Sunday making his case, and he was careful to note that heâs not someone who reflexively hates change, since heâs on the record supporting the MLB pitch clock, the NFL extra-point adjustment, and the NBA play-in tournament. But he thinks March Madness is âone of the few things in sports that feels rightâ and that expanding it is a solution to a problem that doesnât exist.
âGod, do I hate the idea of the NCAA Tournament expanding to 76 teams,â Cowherd said. âWho wants Mastroâs to add McNuggets to the menu? We come for the steak, not the sweet-and-sour sauce.â
âCollege basketball finally has its footing again,â he continued. âStars, teams, brands, meaning. And now youâre backpedaling. Adding more games isnât a bonus; itâs dilution. Itâs subtraction by addition. Youâre not making the tournament bigger, youâre making it feel smaller.â
Cowherdâs broader point is that college basketball is actually in a good place right now, which makes expansion feel like a strange call. NIL has kept players in school longer, rosters have more continuity, and the games among the top programs are better for it. The problem is that the bottom of the tournament field is already producing blowouts, with the average first-round margin of victory at 17 points this year. Adding weaker teams isnât going to bring that number down.
âThe NIL is concentrating elite talent at the top of college basketball and football,â he said. âSo the average margin of victory this year in the first round was 17 points. What is that going to spike to? 27? 37? Thatâs not drama, thatâs a scrimmage. Fewer players are leaving early for the NBA Draft. Roster continuity is better. Teams are older. The productâs improving, especially among the top 15 to 18 teams. And letâs be honest, thatâs what America watches. So why are we expanding access to things that people already ignore?â
There have been plenty of deserving teams left out of the NCAA Tournament every year for as long as the bubble has existed, and nobodyâs pretending otherwise. But nobody wants to see the field diluted and the magic of March cheapened in the process. Your mileage probably varies on whether an extra play-in round actually does that or just adds a few games nobody remembers by April.
The NCAA appears set on finding out anyway.
The post Colin Cowherd torches NCAA Tournament expansion: âYouâre not making it bigger, youâre making it feel smallerâ appeared first on Awful Announcing.
Colin Cowherd believes the expansion diminishes the tournament's appeal and that it addresses a problem that doesn't exist.
The NCAA Tournament is proposed to expand from 68 to 76 teams, which has faced significant criticism from various sports commentators.
While Cowherd supports some changes in sports, like the MLB pitch clock and NFL extra-point adjustments, he feels the NCAA Tournament is one of the few things that feels right as it is.
Kenny Moore still missing from Colts' voluntary offseason workouts.
Hints emerge that Dianna Russini will eventually tell her story.
Detroit Tigers' Tarik Skubal could return by late August, says surgeon.
See every story in Sports â including breaking news and analysis.