The NCAA Tournament has expanded from 68 to 76 teams, allowing more teams to participate. Former BYU coach Dave Rose shares his thoughts on this significant change.
Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News
The NCAA Tournament just became available to just about everyone and their dog.
Well, thatâs a little exaggeration, but the NCAA did expand its March Madness field from 68 to 76 teams earlier this week.
Thatâs a lot of free team flights, a ton of butts in arena seats and a lot of teams that maybe do not deserve to play in this event, one of the most popular sporting events in the world.
But, it also means more commercial breaks which means more TV money. And ultimately, thatâs the bottom line.
If you have a golden goose, push out more eggs.
The reactions have varied, both pro and con.
Retired BYU basketball coach Dave Rose, who worked 40 years in the business, likes the idea of more teams.
âComing from my background as a coach at BYU, the more teams in the tournament means more opportunities for these players to keep playing, and I know how much it means to those players,â he said.
âItâs a very big deal, a precious memory they wonât forget.â
Rose said the other factor is a team like Miami (Ohio) out of the MAC, which went 31-0 in the regular season before losing in its conference tournament to a 17-16 UMass team. The RedHawks had to sweat out not having an automatic berth before ultimately getting an 11-seed and having to face SMU in a play-in game.
Rose believes there has to be a way to get regular season conference champions in the NCAA Tournament if they lose in the conference tournament on a night some other team caught lightning in a bottle for two hours. A season of elite play should stand for something.
Others agree with Rose.
Alan Huss (Creighton coach): He views it as âthe more the merrier,â believing it will have minimal overall impact but give more teams a chance to experience March Madness.
Rick Barnes (Tennessee coach): âIâm in favor of three weeks... Iâm all in favor of the smaller teams having a chance to be in this tournament... itâs going to impact the country in every state.â
Jake Diebler (Ohio State coach): âItâs such an unbelievable experience that I think if you can create that experience for a few more kids, at the end of the day thatâs probably what Iâd [do]... letâs provide the opportunity to be in the best sporting event in the world to a few more kids.â
Tennessee AD Danny White: Called the expansion âappropriate,â noting the large number of Division I schools and the low percentage that make the postseason.
Others such as Rick Pitino, Kelvin Sampson, Dusty May and Greg Gard have voiced support for giving more teams/players a shot at the experience.
But this move to 76 teams in the field hasnât settled well with others, such as longtime media voice of college basketball Dick Vitale. On X, Vitale didât hold back.
âYes it sickens me that they water down the tournament by expanding - more teams that are MEDIOCRE at best will be added - the real chaos of college hoops instability - no controls of NIL are just left alone - is that leadership?â asked Vitale.
Joining ESPN legend Vitale are a host of major voices in the college game.
Mark Few (Gonzaga coach): "I am adamantly opposed. Itâs totally unnecessary... Itâs the dumbing down of the regular season, which is sad. Weâre out here trying to generate more interest in the regular season and expansion doesnât help... Donât screw with something when you already know itâs great."
Dan Hurley (UConn coach): âWhat I think makes the tournament special is the qualification for it... You donât want the regular season to be rendered meaningless... It should be a privilege to play in the tournament, not a right.â
John Calipari (Arkansas coach): âI am a big believer in the idea that if itâs not broke, donât fix it, and I think that applies to the NCAA Tournament... As someone who has been both David, and won some, and Goliath, and lost some, thatâs what makes this tournament special. We canât afford to lose that special piece of our sport.â
Matt Painter (Purdue coach): âMy knee-jerk reaction is you shouldnât do it. I just think we have something thatâs pretty special.â
Rose has always viewed the NCAA Tournament and Final Four a special experience as both a player and coach. He said expansion has been talked about for a long time. He remembers when playing for Houston as a college player and the NCAA expanded to 48 then 64.
Back then there wasnât much chatter about such a move or momentum.
âIt depends how you look at it. Like at BYU, if you look at it now as a member of part of the (Power Four) conferences, theyâd probably want to keep it as it is, but if you look back at it from a BYU perspective 25 years ago, youâd want it expanded,â he said.
âMy opinion is kind of from an old school BYU spot, that the more opportunity for the more players, student athletes, the better. There is so much more to the logistics people donât understand, but for me, it is such an amazing experience for these players, they should be given every opportunity to play in it.â
March Madness?
Really, this expansion just brought more madness to spread around.
Dave Rose has expressed his views on the NCAA tournament's expansion, highlighting both the opportunities and challenges it presents.
The NCAA expanded the tournament to 76 teams to increase participation and enhance the excitement of March Madness.
The expansion to 76 teams alters the tournament format by adding more teams, which may impact the selection process and overall competition.
The expansion may provide smaller programs with a greater chance to compete in the NCAA tournament, potentially increasing their visibility and opportunities.
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