If you're looking for a sneak peek at the NCAA tournament bracket a month before Selection Sunday, prepare for disappointment this weekend.
That's not what Division I men's basketball committee chairman Mark Hollis will reveal Saturday for the first time. It's only the top 16 seeds. And everything is still fluid. Things will certainly change, but this should give us an idea of what folks picking the bracket are thinking at the moment.
It's never been done before. This doesn't really make the process better or any easier for the committee. But college basketball's version of the College Football Playoff ranking is being unveiled to create more buzz before March Madness.
"It's exciting on the one hand," Hollis told NCAA.com this week. "On the other hand, what it's doing to the process is, it's bunching together both the top of the bracket and the proverbial bubble. You have teams that are getting big wins and positioning themselves. The teams we thought were running away with it have been pulled back into the field, and the teams that maybe were out of it are being pulled back up into the field. It's a compression of the entire bracket."
This is a one-time thing. Meaning, the top 16 won't be updated each week leading into Selection Sunday. If that were the case, then the committee likely would be opposed to it, CBSSports.com's Jerry Palm said.
Palm, one of the main so-called bracketologists with ESPN's Joe Lunardi, doesn't see a problem with providing a taste of what the top seeds look like four weeks early.
"I don't know about it being a game-changer," Palm said. "It's a time of year when they're not going to be pigeonholed into anything because all of those teams will have eight, 10 games left to play. It's a time of the year when the NCAA tournament selection chairman can get everyone's attention."
Typically, the first time you would hear from the committee head is right before the bracket is released, once the last conference tournament is ending that Sunday in mid-March. The next time the chair shows his face is when he then goes into defensive mode trying to explain why "X" team and "Y" team got picked for at-large NCAA bids over those snubs with arguably better résumés. He becomes the bad guy.
"There's just a lot of noise on Selection Sunday," Palm said. "This is an opportunity for [Hollis] to get the general public's attention when their attention is available. It will create a little buzz for college basketball as they go into the home stretch of the season. If they were doing this every week, I would have a problem of it. Everybody on the committee would. But I think it's a good idea."