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2024 NCAA Tournament Bracket Watch: Tennessee claims a No. 1 seed, Baylor rises

2024 NCAA Tournament Bracket Watch: Tennessee claims a No. 1 seed, Baylor rises


(Editor’s note: This is part of the Bracket Central Series, an inside look at the run-up to the men’s and women’s NCAA Tournaments, along with analysis and picks during the tournaments.)

Bracket Watch HQ is also home to a 5-year-old, who has recently discovered a new favorite song. Which means we’ve been forced to listen to it on an endless Spotify loop:

Yes, for those of you without children or an aversion to cartoons, that’s Reel 2 Real’s relentlessly dumb but inescapably catchy 1993 hit “I Like to Move It,” remade for the “Madagascar” movie franchise. You’re welcome for the earworm.

It also reminds us that things are always changing and growing in unexpected ways. Take the NCAA Tournament, for example (segue alert!). Dana O’Neil reported this week that tournament expansion remains a very likely outcome, but the field would only grow by a modest four to eight teams. Perhaps we’ve reached the acceptance stage of our grief, but we can move forward with a few more play-in games if that’s what it takes to keep the barbarians at the gate.

It’s also time for teams to make their moves in our latest mock bracket, now just nine days from Selection Sunday. Conference tournaments have begun, and the power conferences get going with their postseasons next week. Bubble teams making their final arguments, bid thieves emerging, top seeds coming into focus — move it!

go-deeper

GO DEEPER

Let the madness begin! Your guide to the early conference tournaments

Just remember there’s never as much movement as you think or some will try to convince you is happening. The selection committee considers the entire season equally, and conference tournaments represent less than 10 percent of a team’s overall body of work. The hay isn’t just in the barn at this point; it’s mostly been baled (Does that metaphor work? We’ve never farmed). Perfect examples came in the past two SEC tournaments, where runs by Texas A&M (in 2022) and Vanderbilt (2023) had media members breathlessly tweeting and broadcasting that both teams had played their way into the field despite shaky resumes. Spoiler alert: They did not. Vandy wasn’t even particularly close.

But teams are still making moves in these final days. Let’s take a look at some of the big changes in this week’s field:

• Tennessee moves ahead of Arizona for the fourth No. 1 seed. This seems to be the consensus among most bracketologists, but it’s still not a slam dunk that the selection committee would go away from the Wildcats, whom they said were firmly on the top line during the Feb. 17 reveal. Consider these numbers, after Arizona beat UCLA by 23 points on the road Thursday night (RIP, Pac-12 Thursdays):

Final No. 1 seed?

Arizona Tennessee

NET

4

5

KenPom

4

5

BPI

4

5

KPI

4

3

SOR

10

4

Q1

7-3

8-5

Q2

7-2

5-1

Noncon SOS

11

16

It’s very close! The Volunteers get the slight edge because of a marginally better road record (8-3 vs. 7-3), better results metrics (KPI and SOR), more Quad 1A wins (five to four) and no losses outside of the first two quads, while Arizona has a Q3 loss (at Oregon State). Plus, while not an official part of the selection process, winning a deep SEC should be viewed as more valuable than a shallow Pac-12. It’s all but a coin flip, though Tennessee will have more opportunities to bolster its resume, starting with a home game against Kentucky on Saturday. This swap doesn’t have a big practical impact on the Wildcats, who are still in the West Region as a No. 2 seed with a chance to play the second weekend in Los Angeles.

And don’t count out North Carolina, which beat Tennessee head-to-head — especially if the Tar Heels beat Duke in Cameron Indoor Stadium on Saturday with the ACC title on the line. Kind of a big game, it sounds like.

• Baylor moves to the No. 2 seed line, one spot ahead of Big 12 mate Iowa State. The Bears have come on strong, winning three straight Q1 games, including against Kansas at home, and own a head-to-head victory over Iowa State (in Waco). Marquette drops to the No. 3 line after back-to-back losses and, more critically, the oblique injury to All-America point guard Tyler Kolek, whose status for the postseason remains unknown.

Kansas, with Kevin McCullar Jr. returned to the lineup, has a chance to move back to the No. 2 line with a good finish. And, hey, the Jayhawks are at Houston on Saturday. BYU also moves up to the No. 4 line. The Cougars have been metrics darlings all along and are now 9-9 in the first two quads, with a win in Allen Fieldhouse and no losses outside of the first two quads. The Big 12 tournament will feature more beasts than all the “Madagascar” movies.

• The most fascinating moving days of any conference tournament will take place in the early rounds at Madison Square Garden. The Big East bubble continues to entertain and confound; this week, we have two teams from the league — Villanova and St. John’s, surging despite its lack of lateral quickness — in the First Four, with Seton Hall getting the final at-large bye. Providence is one of the first two teams out. Perhaps Dayton could step aside this year and just let MSG host an All-Big East First Four.

• Now that many conference tournament brackets are set, we have moved to assigning AQ designations to the top remaining seed in each event. So, yes, Richmond gets the Atlantic 10 auto-bid in this latest edition, and South Florida remains in.

• Bracket Watch will be back on Monday and moves to daily installments until Selection Sunday, including a final update right before the brackets are revealed if warranted. We’ll have much shorter intros (hey, you didn’t have to cheer that loudly!) and far less interaction in the comments with the madness in full swing. But for today, we’ll answer as many questions and gripes as we can. After all, we like to prove it, prove it.

First Four Out Next Four Out Last Four In Last Four Byes

New Mexico

Wake Forest

Villanova

TCU

Providence

Colorado

Virginia

Michigan State

Texas A&M

James Madison

St. John’s

Florida Atlantic

Iowa

Pitt

Drake

Seton Hall

Multi-bid conferences

League Bids

Big 12

9

SEC

7

Big East

6

Big Ten

6

Mountain West

5

ACC

4

Pac-12

2

A10

2

AAC

2

Missouri Valley

2

WCC

2

Seed list

1

Purdue

AQ

2

UConn

AQ

3

Houston

AQ

4

Tennessee

AQ

5

Arizona

AQ

6

North Carolina

AQ

7

Baylor

8

Iowa State

9

Kansas

10

Marquette

11

Duke

12

Creighton

13

Kentucky

14

Illinois

15

Alabama

16

BYU

17

Auburn

18

San Diego State

19

South Carolina

20

Clemson

21

Florida

22

Utah State

AQ

23

Washington State

24

Saint Mary’s

AQ

25

Wisconsin

26

Gonzaga

27

Dayton

28

Nevada

29

Boise State

30

Northwestern

31

Texas

32

Colorado State

33

Texas Tech

34

Nebraska

35

Mississippi State

36

Oklahoma

37

TCU

38

Michigan State

39

Florida Atlantic

40

Seton Hall

41

Indiana State

AQ

42

Villanova

43

Virginia

44

St. John’s

45

Drake

46

Richmond

AQ

47

South Florida

AQ

48

Appalachian State

AQ

49

Grand Canyon

AQ

50

McNeese Sate

AQ

51

Samford

AQ

52

UC Irvine

AQ

53

Princeton

AQ

54

Akron

AQ

55

Vermont

AQ

56

High Point

AQ

57

Charleston

AQ

58

Eastern Washington

AQ

59

Oakland

AQ

60

Morehead State

AQ

61

Colgate

AQ

62

Sam Houston State

AQ

63

Quinnipiac

AQ

64

South Dakota State

AQ

65

Stetson

AQ

66

Merrimack

AQ

67

Norfolk State

AQ

68

Grambling

AQ

The Bracket Central series is part of a partnership with E*TRADE.

The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication.

(Top photo of Tennessee’s Zakai Zeigler and Auburn’s Johni Broome: Wade Payne / AP) 





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