The NCAA tournament distributes money to conferences based upon how many games the member teams play in the tournament. Then the conference divides that money equally among the member teams.
NCAA Tournament: The annual competition between 64 college teams. This is also called the March Madness because the three-week-long event is held during March; see also Final Four.
NCAA Tournament - an annual competition between 64 college teams to crown a national champion; also called march madness because the three-week-long event is held during march; see also Final Four.
NCAA Tournament -- A yearly competition to determine the national college championship team from 64 eligible college teams. Referred to as “March Madness' because it occurs in March. See “Final Four' ...
See NCAA Tournament. Match-Ups Any pairing of players on opposing teams who guard each other.
The NCAA tournaments are an American tradition that sends millions of fans into a synchronized frenzy each year. Find out how teams get a ticket to the "Big Dance" and how the match-ups are selected. See more » ...
In the 1992 NCAA Tournament, Georgia Tech's legendary coach Bobby Cremins led an inexperienced Tech team to the Sweet 16, ...
In the 1990s, the NCAA Tournament included so-called play-in games, which would feature teams playing for the right to advance to the field of 64. Point Shaving ...
Final Four: the 4 regional champions (West, East, Midwest and Southeast) remaining from the 64 college teams that compete in the annual NCAA Tournament; they play one another to determine the national champion.
It's my favorite time of year, the NCAA tournament is here, and the first two rounds have brought nothing less than some March Madness. My bracket has been completely destroyed.
Pete Newell and his University of California Golden Bears first used this offense in the 1960 NCAA Tournament. St Louis University used a modification and Ohio State introduced it to the Big Ten during the 1961-62 season.
As coach of the 2002 NCAA championship team, 25 wins in the NCAA tournament, and an overall winning percentage of .641, Gary Williams has learned to master and implement a winning offense: The Flex.
There once was a college coach who wanted to win the NCAA tournament. He was going to be playing some teams that each had an almost unstoppable superstar on their team. If he went m-2-m, his players weren't good enough to stop them.
See also: Basketball, Basket, Post, Court, Ball
 
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