ncteacher88
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- Dec 8, 2016
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The madness has started, anything is possible in the first two rounds of both men’s and women’s play.
Thanks to Furman and Princeton March Madness has indeed started. I would say big early round upsets are far more prevalent in men’s tournament due to parity, than in the women’s tournament. Teams seeded Nos. 14-16 are a combined 1-336 in tournament history. The single loss was, I believe, Harvard beating Stanford and that had some extenuating circumstances. The men on the other hand are 33-411, (Prior to this year) not great but still considerably better. Thirteen seeds are 31-113 men, 10-112 women. On the women’s side, 90-160, or 56% of all number one seeds make the final four, with men 60 out of 148, or 41%. The number of times that all four number one seeds have made the final four has happened four times with the women, and only one single time with the men. Obviously, most everybody understands the parity in men’s is much greater.
BTW: If you did not see the end of the Furman game, watch the last 11 seconds. Keep in mind, Virginia still had a time out left.