NCAA Shifts Women’s Tournament Seeding Rules
New Seeding Formula Explained
The NCAA unveiled a major revision to the women’s basketball tournament bracket that will take effect next season. The top 16 seeds will now be placed purely on committee ranking, discarding conference affiliation as a factor for regional placement. Previously, rivals from the same conference were forced into separate regions to avoid early meetings, which sometimes distorted the official rankings.
Top Programs Affected
Last seasonâs SEC quartet â Texas (No. 3), South Carolina (No. 4), LSU (No. 5) and Vanderbilt (No. 7) â illustrates the old systemâs quirks. To keep the four schools apart before the Final Four, LSU moved up to No. 7 and Vanderbilt fell to No. 8, even though they were already among the nationâs best. Under the new rule, these teams could theoretically end up in the same region if their rankings dictate.
Fairness Debate and Committee Insight
Committee chair Amanda Braun defended the change, noting the extensive work that goes into ranking the top 16 teams. âWe put a lot of time into establishing those top 16 teams in the order they go in⌠The work we did justifies keeping them where they are in that group of 16,â she said. The shift is presented as a more straightforward approach that rewards onâcourt performance alone.
Coincides with Tournament Expansion
The seeding overhaul arrives alongside the NCAAâs move to expand the field from 68 to 76 teams next year. The broader field adds more participants but does not alter the menâs bracket, which will retain the old conferenceâseparation rule for its top 16 seeds. The expansion and the new seeding are expected to create a deeper, more competitive field.
What It Means Moving Forward
Going forward, fans could see historic intraâconference clashes in the early rounds, adding new narrative threads to the tournament. The risk of a topâseed conference sweep increases, which may shift recruiting and seasonâplanning strategies. In the end, the change aims to let the committeeâs rankings speak for themselves, potentially reshaping how March madness unfolds for the womenâs game.
sports.yahoo.com.
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