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2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

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2022 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
File:2022 NCAA NCAA Men's Final Four logo.png
Teams68
Finals siteCaesars Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
«2021 2023»

The 2022 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament will involve 68 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the men's National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college basketball national champion for the 2021–22 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The 83rd annual edition of the tournament is scheduled to begin on March 15, 2022, and will conclude with the championship game on April 4 in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Big South Conference champion Longwood and NEC champion Bryant will make their NCAA Tournament debuts.

Tournament procedure

Pending any changes to the format, a total of 68 teams will enter the 2022 tournament. 32 automatic bids shall be awarded to each program that wins their conference's tournament. The remaining 36 bids are "at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.

Eight teams (the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams) will play in the First Four. The winners of these games advance to the main draw of the tournament.

The top four teams outside of the ranking (commonly known as the "first four out" in pre-tourney analyses) will act as standbys in the event a school is forced to withdraw before the start of the tournament due to COVID-19 protocols. Once the tournament starts, any team that is forced to withdraw would not be replaced; the bracket was not reseeded, and the affected team's opponent would automatically advance to the next round.

Any single-bid automatic champion would have to designate a replacement from within their own conference if they need to withdraw. Otherwise, the replacement teams are as follows, in order:

First Four Out[1]
NET School Conference Record
58 Dayton Atlantic 10 23–10
40 Oklahoma Big 12 18–15
44 SMU AAC 23–8
42 Texas A&M SEC 23–12

The Selection Committee will also seed the entire field from 1 to 68.

2022 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues

2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
Dayton
Dayton
Portland
Portland
Buffalo
Buffalo
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Fort Worth
Fort Worth
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Greenville
Greenville
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
San Diego
San Diego
2022 First Four (orange) and first and second rounds (green)
2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
San Francisco
San Francisco
San Antonio
San Antonio
Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Chicago
Chicago
New Orleans
New Orleans
2022 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2022 tournament:[2]

First Four

First and Second Rounds (Subregionals)

Regional Semifinals and Finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National Semifinals and Championship (Final Four and Championship)

New Orleans will host the Final Four for the sixth time, having previously hosted in 2012, 2003, 1993, 1987, and 1982.[4]

Qualification and selection teams

Automatic qualifiers

Conference Team Appearance Last bid
America East Vermont 8th 2019
American Houston 23rd 2021
Atlantic 10 Richmond 10th 2011
ACC Virginia Tech 13th 2021
ASUN Jacksonville State[A] 2nd 2017
Big 12 Kansas 50th 2021
Big East Villanova 41st 2021
Big Sky Montana State 4th 1996
Big South Longwood 1st Never
Big Ten Iowa 28th 2021
Big West Cal State Fullerton 4th 2018
CAA Delaware 6th 2014
C-USA UAB 16th 2015
Horizon Wright State 4th 2018
Ivy League Yale 6th 2019
MAAC Saint Peter's 4th 2011
MAC Akron 5th 2013
MEAC Norfolk State 3rd 2021
Missouri Valley Loyola–Chicago 8th 2021
Mountain West Boise State 8th 2015
NEC Bryant 1st Never
Ohio Valley Murray State 18th 2019
Pac-12 Arizona 36th 2018
Patriot Colgate 5th 2021
SEC Tennessee 23rd 2021
Southern Chattanooga 12th 2016
Southland Texas A&M–Corpus Christi 2nd 2007
SWAC Texas Southern 10th 2021
Summit League South Dakota State 6th 2018
Sun Belt Georgia State 6th 2019
WCC Gonzaga 24th 2021
WAC New Mexico State 26th 2019

Tournament seeds

The tournament seeds and regions were determined through the NCAA basketball tournament selection process and were published by the selection committee after the brackets were released.[6]

West Regional – Chase Center, San Francisco, California
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
1 Gonzaga West Coast 26–3 1 Automatic
2 Duke ACC 28–6 8 At-Large
3 Texas Tech Big 12 25–9 12 At-Large
4 Arkansas SEC 25–8 15 At-Large
5 UConn Big East 23–9 17 At-Large
6 Alabama SEC 19–13 21 At-Large
7 Michigan State Big Ten 22–12 27 At-Large
8 Boise State Mountain West 27–7 29 Automatic
9 Memphis American 21–10 36 At-Large
10 Davidson Atlantic 10 27–6 40 At-Large
11* Rutgers Big Ten 18–13 44 At-Large
Notre Dame ACC 22–10 47 At-Large
12 New Mexico State WAC 26–6 50 Automatic
13 Vermont America East 28–5 53 Automatic
14 Montana State Big Sky 27–7 58 Automatic
15 Cal State Fullerton Big West 21–10 62 Automatic
16 Georgia State Sun Belt 18–10 63 Automatic
East Regional – Wells Fargo Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
1 Baylor Big 12 26–6 4 At-Large
2 Kentucky SEC 26–7 6 At-Large
3 Purdue Big Ten 27–7 11 At-Large
4 UCLA Pac–12 25–7 13 At-Large
5 Saint Mary's West Coast 25–7 19 At-Large
6 Texas Big 12 21–11 23 At-Large
7 Murray State Ohio Valley 30–2 26 Automatic
8 North Carolina ACC 24–9 30 At-Large
9 Marquette Big East 19–12 35 At-Large
10 San Francisco West Coast 24–9 37 At-Large
11 Virginia Tech ACC 23–12 46 Automatic
12* Wyoming Mountain West 25–8 43 At-Large
Indiana Big Ten 20–13 45 At-Large
13 Akron MAC 24–9 54 Automatic
14 Yale Ivy 19–11 56 Automatic
15 Saint Peter's MAAC 19–11 60 Automatic
16 Norfolk State MEAC 24–6 64 Automatic
South Regional – AT&T Center, San Antonio, Texas
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
1 Arizona Pac–12 31–3 2 Automatic
2 Villanova Big East 26–7 7 Automatic
3 Tennessee SEC 26–7 10 Automatic
4 Illinois Big Ten 22–10 14 At-Large
5 Houston American 29–5 18 Automatic
6 Colorado State Mountain West 25–5 24 At-Large
7 Ohio State Big Ten 19–11 28 At-Large
8 Seton Hall Big East 21–10 32 At-Large
9 TCU Big 12 20–12 34 At-Large
10 Loyola Chicago Missouri Valley 25–7 39 Automatic
11 Michigan Big Ten 17–14 42 At-Large
12 UAB C-USA 27–7 48 Automatic
13 Chattanooga Southern 27–7 51 Automatic
14 Longwood Big South 26–6 55 Automatic
15 Delaware Colonial 22–12 59 Automatic
16* Wright State Horizon 21–13 65 Automatic
Bryant Northeast 22–9 66 Automatic
Midwest Regional – United Center, Chicago, Illinois
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
1 Kansas Big 12 28–6 3 Automatic
2 Auburn SEC 27–5 5 At-Large
3 Wisconsin Big Ten 24–7 9 At-Large
4 Providence Big East 25–5 16 At-Large
5 Iowa Big Ten 26–9 20 Automatic
6 LSU SEC 22–11 22 At-Large
7 USC Pac–12 26–7 25 At-Large
8 San Diego State Mountain West 23–8 31 At-Large
9 Creighton Big East 22–11 33 At-Large
10 Miami (FL) ACC 23–10 38 At-Large
11 Iowa State Big 12 20–12 41 At-Large
12 Richmond Atlantic 10 23–12 49 Automatic
13 South Dakota State Summit 30–4 52 Automatic
14 Colgate Patriot 23–1 57 Automatic
15 Jacksonville State ASUN 21–10 61 Automatic
16* Texas Southern SWAC 18–12 67 Automatic
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi Southland 23–11 68 Automatic

*See First Four


Tournament bracket

All times are listed as Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−4)
* – Denotes overtime period

First Four – Dayton, OH

The First Four games involve eight teams: the four overall lowest-ranked teams, and the four lowest-ranked at-large teams.

March 15 – Midwest Region
   
16 Texas Southern 6:40 p.m.
16 Texas A&M–Corpus Christi TruTV
March 15 – East Region
   
12 Wyoming 9:10 p.m.
12 Indiana TruTV
March 16 – South Region
   
16 Wright State 6:40 p.m.
16 Bryant TruTV
March 16 – West Region
   
11 Rutgers 9:10 p.m.
11 Notre Dame TruTV

West Regional – San Francisco, CA

First Round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional Semifinals
Sweet 16
March 24
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 26
            
1 Gonzaga 4:15 p.m.
16 Georgia State TNT
 
Portland – Thu/Sat
 
8 Boise State 1:45 p.m.
9 Memphis TNT
 
 
5 UConn 6:50 p.m.
12 New Mexico State TNT
 
Buffalo – Thu/Sat
 
4 Arkansas 9:20 p.m.
13 Vermont TNT
 
 
6 Alabama 4:15 p.m.
11 Rutgers/Notre Dame TNT
 
San Diego – Fri/Sun
 
3 Texas Tech 1:45 p.m.
14 Montana State TNT
 
 
7 Michigan State 9:40 p.m.
10 Davidson CBS
 
Greenville – Fri/Sun
 
2 Duke 7:10 p.m.
15 Cal State Fullerton CBS

West Regional Final

March 26
Chase Center – San Francisco, California

West Regional all-tournament team

East Regional – Philadelphia, PA

First Round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional Semifinals
Sweet 16
March 25
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 27
            
1 Baylor 2:00 p.m.
16 Norfolk State TBS
 
Fort Worth – Thu/Sat
 
8 North Carolina 4:30 p.m.
9 Marquette TBS
 
 
5 Saint Mary's 7:20 p.m.
12 Wyoming/Indiana TBS
 
Portland – Thu/Sat
 
4 UCLA 9:50 p.m.
13 Akron TBS
 
 
6 Texas 4:30 p.m.
11 Virginia Tech TBS
 
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
 
3 Purdue 2:00 p.m.
14 Yale TBS
 
 
7 Murray State 9:40 p.m.
10 San Francisco CBS
 
Indianapolis – Thu/Sat
 
2 Kentucky 7:10 p.m.
15 Saint Peter's CBS

East Regional Final

March 27
Wells Fargo Center – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

East Regional all-tournament team

South Regional – San Antonio, TX

First Round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional Semifinals
Sweet 16
March 24
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 26
            
1 Arizona 7:27 p.m.
16 Bryant/Wright State TruTV
 
San Diego – Fri/Sun
 
8 Seton Hall 9:57 p.m.
9 TCU TruTV
 
 
5 Houston 9:20 p.m.
12 UAB TNT
 
Pittsburgh – Fri/Sun
 
4 Illinois 6:50 p.m.
13 Chattanooga TNT
 
 
6 Colorado State 12:15 p.m.
11 Michigan CBS
 
Indianapolis – Thu/Sat
 
3 Tennessee 2:45 p.m.
14 Longwood CBS
 
 
7 Ohio State 12:15 p.m.
10 Loyola–Chicago CBS
 
Pittsburgh – Fri/Sun
 
2 Villanova 2:45 pm
15 Delaware CBS

South Regional Final

March 26
AT&T Center – San Antonio, Texas

South Regional all tournament team

Midwest Regional – Chicago, IL

First Round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional Semifinals
Sweet 16
March 25
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 27
            
1 Kansas 9:57 p.m.
16 Texas Southern/Texas A&M–Corpus Christi TruTV
 
Fort Worth – Thu/Sat
 
8 San Diego State 7:27 p.m.
9 Creighton TruTV
 
 
5 Iowa 3:10 p.m.
12 Richmond TruTV
 
Buffalo – Thu/Sat
 
4 Providence 12:40 p.m.
13 South Dakota State TruTV
 
 
6 LSU 7:20 p.m.
11 Iowa State TBS
 
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
 
3 Wisconsin 9:50 p.m.
14 Colgate TBS
 
 
7 USC 3:10 p.m.
10 Miami (FL) TruTV
 
Greenville – Fri/Sun
 
2 Auburn 12:40 p.m.
15 Jacksonville State TruTV

Midwest Regional Final

March 27
United Center – Chicago, Illinois

Midwest Regional all-tournament team

Record by conference

Conference Bids Record Win % FF R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC
Big Ten 9 0–0
Big 12 6 0–0
Big East 6 0–0
SEC 6 0–0
ACC 5 0–0
Mountain West 4 0–0
WCC 3 0–0
Pac-12 3 0–0
American 2 0–0
Atlantic 10 2 0–0
Missouri Valley 1 0–0
Summit 1 0–0
C-USA 1 0–0
MAC 1 0–0
Southland 1 0–0
MEAC 1 0–0
SWAC 1 0–0
America East 1 0–0
Atlantic Sun 1 0–0
Big Sky 1 0–0
Big South 1 0–0
Big West 1 0–0
Colonial 1 0–0
Horizon 1 0–0
MAAC 1 0–0
Ohio Valley 1 0–0
Patriot 1 0–0
Southern 1 0–0
WAC 1 0–0
Northeast 1 0–0
Sun Belt 1 0–0
Ivy League 1 0–0
  • The R64, R32, S16, E8, F4, CG, and NC columns indicate how many teams from each conference were in the round of 64 (first round), round of 32 (second round), Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four, championship game, and national champion, respectively.

Media coverage

Television

CBS Sports and Turner Sports have US television rights to the tournament.[7][8] As part of a cycle that began in 2016, TBS will televise the 2022 Final Four and the National Championship Game.

Television channels

  • Selection Show – CBS
  • First Four – TruTV
  • First and Second Rounds – CBS, TBS, TNT, and TruTV
  • Regional Semifinals and Final (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight) – CBS and TBS
  • National Semifinals (Final Four) and Championship – TBS

Number of games per network

  • CBS: 21
  • TBS: 21
  • truTV: 13
  • TNT: 12

Studio hosts

  • Greg Gumbel (New York City and New Orleans) – First Round, Second Round, Regionals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Ernie Johnson (New York City, Atlanta, and New Orleans) – First Round, Second Round, Regional Semi-Finals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Nabil Karim (Atlanta) – First Four, First Round and Second Round
  • Adam Lefkoe (New York City) – First Round and Second Round (game breaks)

Studio analysts

  • Charles Barkley (New York City and New Orleans) – First Round, Second Round, Regionals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Rex Chapman (Atlanta) – First Four, First Round, Second Round and Regional Semi-Finals
  • Seth Davis (Atlanta and New Orleans) – First Four, First Round, Second Round, Regional Semi-Finals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Clark Kellogg (New York City and New Orleans) – First Round, Second Round, Regionals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Candace Parker (Atlanta and New Orleans) – First Four, First Round, Second Round, Regional Semi-Finals and Final Four
  • Kenny Smith (New York City and New Orleans) – First Round, Second Round, Regionals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Gene Steratore (New York City and New Orleans) (Rules Analyst) – First Four, First Round, Second Round, Regionals, Final Four and National Championship Game
  • Wally Szczerbiak (New York City) – First Round, Second Round and Regionals
  • Dwyane Wade (Atlanta) – First Four, First Round, Second Round and Regional Semi-Finals

Commentary teams

Radio

Westwood One has exclusive radio rights to the entire tournament.

Internet

Video

Live video of games is available for streaming through the following means:[9]

  • NCAA March Madness Live (website and app, no CBS games on digital media players; access to games on WarnerMedia channels (TBS, TNT, truTV) required TV Everywhere authentication through provider)
  • Paramount+ (only CBS games, service subscription required)
  • CBS Sports website and app (only CBS games)
  • Watch TBS website and app (only TBS games, required TV Everywhere authentication)
  • Watch TNT website and app (only TNT games, required TV Everywhere authentication)
  • Watch truTV website and app (only truTV games, required TV Everywhere authentication)
  • Websites and apps of cable, satellite, and OTT providers of CBS, TBS, TNT, and truTV (access required subscription)

In addition, the March Madness app offered Fast Break, whiparound coverage of games similar to NFL RedZone.

Audio

Live audio of games is available for streaming through the following means:

  • NCAA March Madness Live (website and app)
  • Westwood One Sports website
  • TuneIn (website and app)
  • Websites and apps of Westwood One Sports affiliates

Local announcers

Region Seed Teams Flagship station Play-by-play announcer Color analyst(s)
S 1 Arizona
S 2 Villanova
S 3 Tennessee
S 4 Illinois
S 5 Houston KPRC Jeremy Branham
S 6 Colorado
S 7 Ohio State WBNS & WBNS-FM
S 8 Seton Hall
S 9 TCU WBAP
S 10 Loyola Chicago
S 11 Michigan WWJ (AM) & WXYT-FM
S 12 UAB
S 13 Chattanooga
S 14 Longwood
S 15 Delaware
S 16
MW 1 Kansas KLWN 1320 AM Brian Hanni Greg Gurley
MW 2 Auburn WTGZ Andy Burcham Sonny Smith
MW 3 Wisconsin
MW 4 Providence
MW 5 Iowa
MW 6 LSU WWL (New Orleans) & WDGL (Baton Rouge) Chris Blair John Brady
MW 7 USC KABC (AM) Jordan Moore
MW 8 San Diego State
MW 9 Creighton
MW 10 Miami (FL)
MW 11 Iowa State
MW 12 Richmond
MW 13 South Dakota State
MW 14 Colgate
MW 15 Jacksonville State
MW 16
W 1 Gonzaga
W 2 Duke
W 3 Texas Tech
W 4 Arkansas
W 5 UConn
W 6 Alabama
W 7 Michigan State WJR
W 8 Boise State
W 9 Memphis
W 10 Davidson
W 11
W 12 New Mexico State
W 13 Vermont
W 14 Montana State
W 15 Cal State Fullerton
W 16 Georgia State
E 1 Baylor
E 2 Kentucky
E 3 Purdue
E 4 UCLA KLAC
E 5 Saint Mary's
E 6 Texas
E 7 Murray State
E 8 UNC
E 9 Marquette
E 10 San Francisco
E 11 Virginia Tech
E 12
E 13 Akron
E 14 Yale
E 15 Saint Peter's
E 16 Norfolk State

International

ESPN International had international rights to the tournament. Coverage uses CBS/Turner play-by-play teams until the Final Four.[10]

Most-watched tournament games

All times Eastern. Tournament seedings and region are in parentheses.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Jacksonville State, the ASUN regular season champion, was awarded the ASUN's NCAA tournament bid because Bellarmine, which won the conference tournament, is ineligible due to a transition from Division II.[5]

References

  1. ^ Jeff Borzello (March 13, 2022). "Dayton, Oklahoma, SMU, Texas A&M are top seeds in NIT bracket". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 13, 2022.
  2. ^ "Future Division I Men's Basketball Championship sites". NCAA. April 21, 2017.
  3. ^ Page, Fletcher (December 11, 2019). "2022 NCAA Tournament moving away from Cincinnati, Heritage Bank Center, to Indianapolis". cincinnati.com. Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  4. ^ "Five future Final Four sites announced". NCAA. November 14, 2014. Archived from the original on March 30, 2016. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  5. ^ "Division I newcomer Bellarmine wins Atlantic Sun championship but ineligible for NCAA tournament". ESPN. March 8, 2022. Bellarmine defeated Jacksonville 77–72 in the Atlantic Sun Conference tournament final on Tuesday, handing the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament to regular-season champion Jacksonville State.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ https://twitter.com/MarchMadnessMBB/status/1503189533554315264/photo/1
  7. ^ Bonesteel, Matt (April 12, 2016). "CBS and Turner Sports lock down NCAA tournament through 2032". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  8. ^ "CBS Sports and Turner Sports announce 2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship commentator teams". NCAA.com. March 8, 2022. Retrieved March 8, 2022.
  9. ^ Maiman, Beth (March 8, 2017). "March Madness TV schedule: How to watch and live stream every game in the NCAA men's basketball tournament". NCAA. Retrieved March 9, 2017.
  10. ^ "ESPN's College GameDay Covered by State Farm Headlines Men's College Basketball Studio Programming this Weekend". ESPN Press Room U.S. April 2, 2021. Retrieved April 4, 2021.