Even before the brackets came out Sunday, March Madness was a muddled mess.
About the closest thing to a sure thing: UConn.
The defending champion Huskies earned the top seed in the NCAA Tournament, joined by Houston,Purdue and North Carolina as No. 1 seeds in a bracket that started going haywire even before the pairings were announced Sunday evening.
Of those top teams, only UConn heads into the tournament coming off a win. The others lost in their conference tournaments, yet those were hardly the only surprises over the final weekend of hoops before the sport's main event hits center stage.
Unexpected titles placed teams like Oregon, North Carolina State and even Duquesne, none of whom were projected to make the tournament, into the field of 68 via the automatic bid that goes to conference champions. The teams they beat gobbled up a handful of the 34 at-large bids, thus shrinking the number of spots available to teams on the so-called bubble.
''It was one of the most difficult that I've been involved in,'' Charles McClelland, the chairman of the selection committee, said of the process that had everyone up until 2:30 a.m. the night before. ''And I talked to some of the staff that's been in that room for the last 20 years, and they said this is probably the most difficult selection process that they've been a part of.''
It showed in a bracket that had its share of head-scratchers:
— Two of the last four teams in — Boise State and Colorado State — weren't even considered on the bubble by most bracketologists.