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2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edition of USA college basketball tournament

2022 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season2021–22
Teams68
Finals siteCaesars Superdome,
New Orleans, Louisiana
ChampionsKansas Jayhawks (4th title, 10th title game,
16th Final Four)
Runner-upNorth Carolina Tar Heels (12th title game,
21st Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachBill Self (2nd title)
MOPOchai Agbaji (Kansas)
Attendance684,425[1]
Top scorerCaleb Love
Brady Manek (North Carolina)
(113 points)
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
«20212023»

The2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 68 teams playing in asingle-elimination tournament that determined theNational Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)Division I men'scollege basketball national champion for the2021–22 season. The 83rd annual edition ofthe tournament began on March 15, 2022, and concluded with thechampionship game on April 4 at theCaesars Superdome inNew Orleans, Louisiana, with theKansas Jayhawks defeating theNorth Carolina Tar Heels, 72–69, overcoming a 16-point first-half deficit (the largest deficit overcome in championship game history), to claim the school's fourth national title.

Big South Conference championLongwood andNortheast Conference (NEC) championBryant made their tournament debuts. Bryant was eliminated in the First Four byWright State, and Longwood was eliminated byTennessee in the first round.

A major upset occurred on the first full day of the tournament, when 15-seedSaint Peter's upset 2-seedKentucky, and subsequently became the third 15-seed to reach the Sweet 16 (the second consecutive year in which this occurred and third in the last nine years) and the first ever 15-seed to advance to the Elite Eight.[2] This was the tenth time a 15-seed defeated a 2-seed overall, but it was the sixth time since 2012 this occurred. The defending championsBaylor were defeated byNorth Carolina in the second round, ensuring the defending champion and at least one top seed was eliminated before the regional semifinals for the fifth consecutive tournament, and at least one double-digit seed (this year, four: 15-seed Saint Peter's, 11-seedsMichigan andIowa State, and 10-seedMiami) made the Sweet 16 for the 14th straight tournament.

Tournament procedure

[edit]
Further information:NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament § Current tournament format

A total of 68 teams were entered into the 2022 tournament. A total of 32 automatic bids were awarded to each program that won aconference tournament (with one exception, as thetournament winner in the ASUN Conference was ineligible, due to its transition from Division II). The remaining 36 bids were issued "at-large", with selections extended by theNCAA Selection Committee. The Selection Committee alsoseeded the entire field from 1 to 68.

Eight teams (the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams) played in theFirst Four. The winners of these games advanced to the mainbracket of the tournament.

The top four teams outside of the ranking (commonly known as the "first four out" in pre-tournament analyses) acted as standbys in the event a school was forced to withdraw before the start of the tournament due to COVID-19 protocols. Any recipient of an automatic bid would designate a replacement from within their own conference if they need to withdraw. Otherwise, the replacement teams were as follows, in order:

First Four Out[3]
NETSchoolConferenceRecord
58DaytonAtlantic 1023–10
40OklahomaBig 1218–15
44SMUAmerican23–8
42Texas A&MSEC23–12

Once the tournament started, any team that would have been forced to withdraw would not be replaced; the bracket would not be reseeded, and the affected team's opponent wouldautomatically advance to the next round.

2022 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues

[edit]
2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
Dayton
Dayton
Portland
Portland
Buffalo
Buffalo
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Fort Worth
Fort Worth
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Greenville
Greenville
Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh
San Diego
San Diego
2022 First Four (orange) and first and second rounds (green)
2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
San Francisco
San Francisco
San Antonio
San Antonio
Philadelphia
Philadelphia
Chicago
Chicago
New Orleans
New Orleans
2022 Regionals (blue) andFinal Four (red)

After the2020 tournament was cancelled and the2021 tournament was held in a single location due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, it was reverted to the standard format for the first time since2019.

The sites selected to host each round of the 2022 tournament were:[4]

First Four

First and second rounds (Subregionals)

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and Championship)

New Orleans hosted the Final Four for the sixth time, having previously hosted in2012.[6]

Qualification and selection of teams

[edit]
Further information:2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament qualifying teams

Automatic qualifiers

[edit]
ConferenceTeamAppearanceLast bid
America EastVermont8th2019
AmericanHouston23rd2021
Atlantic 10Richmond10th2011
ACCVirginia Tech13th2021
ASUNJacksonville State[A]2nd2017
Big 12Kansas50th2021
Big EastVillanova41st2021
Big SkyMontana State4th1996
Big SouthLongwood1stNever
Big TenIowa28th2021
Big WestCal State Fullerton4th2018
CAADelaware6th2014
C-USAUAB16th2015
HorizonWright State4th2018
Ivy LeagueYale6th2019
MAACSaint Peter's4th2011
MACAkron5th2013
MEACNorfolk State3rd2021
Missouri ValleyLoyola Chicago8th2021
Mountain WestBoise State8th2015
NECBryant1stNever
Ohio ValleyMurray State18th2019
Pac-12Arizona36th2018
PatriotColgate5th2021
SECTennessee23rd2021
SouthernChattanooga12th2016
SouthlandTexas A&M–Corpus Christi2nd2007
SWACTexas Southern10th2021
Summit LeagueSouth Dakota State6th2018
Sun BeltGeorgia State6th2019
WCCGonzaga24th2021
WACNew Mexico State26th2019

Tournament seeds

[edit]

The tournament seeds and regions were determined through theNCAA basketball tournament selection process and were published by the selection committee after the brackets were released.[8] This was the fifth consecutive tournament in which at least one of the four #1 seeds repeated their #1 seeding from the year before.

West Regional –Chase Center,San Francisco, California
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordOverall SeedBerth type
1GonzagaWest Coast26–31Automatic
2DukeACC28–68At-Large
3Texas TechBig 1225–912At-Large
4ArkansasSEC25–816At-Large
5UConnBig East23–917At-Large
6AlabamaSEC19–1321At-Large
7Michigan StateBig Ten22–1227At-Large
8Boise StateMountain West27–729Automatic
9MemphisAmerican21–1036At-Large
10DavidsonAtlantic 1027–640At-Large
11*RutgersBig Ten18–1344At-Large
Notre DameACC22–1045At-Large
12New Mexico StateWAC26–650Automatic
13VermontAmerica East28–553Automatic
14Montana StateBig Sky27–758Automatic
15Cal State FullertonBig West21–1062Automatic
16Georgia StateSun Belt18–1063Automatic
East Regional –Wells Fargo Center,Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordOverall SeedBerth type
1BaylorBig 1226–64At-Large
2KentuckySEC26–76At-Large
3PurdueBig Ten27–711At-Large
4UCLAPac–1225–713At-Large
5Saint Mary'sWest Coast25–719At-Large
6TexasBig 1221–1123At-Large
7Murray StateOhio Valley30–226Automatic
8North CarolinaACC24–930At-Large
9MarquetteBig East19–1235At-Large
10San FranciscoWest Coast24–937At-Large
11Virginia TechACC23–1243Automatic
12*WyomingMountain West25–846At-Large
IndianaBig Ten20–1347At-Large
13AkronMAC24–954Automatic
14YaleIvy19–1156Automatic
15Saint Peter'sMAAC19–1160Automatic
16Norfolk StateMEAC24–664Automatic
South Regional –AT&T Center,San Antonio, Texas
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordOverall SeedBerth type
1ArizonaPac–1231–32Automatic
2VillanovaBig East26–77Automatic
3TennesseeSEC26–710Automatic
4IllinoisBig Ten22–914At-Large
5HoustonAmerican29–518Automatic
6Colorado StateMountain West25–524At-Large
7Ohio StateBig Ten19–1128At-Large
8Seton HallBig East21–1032At-Large
9TCUBig 1220–1234At-Large
10Loyola ChicagoMissouri Valley25–739Automatic
11MichiganBig Ten17–1442At-Large
12UABC-USA27–748Automatic
13ChattanoogaSouthern27–751Automatic
14LongwoodBig South26–655Automatic
15DelawareColonial22–1259Automatic
16*Wright StateHorizon21–1365Automatic
BryantNortheast22–966Automatic
Midwest Regional –United Center,Chicago, Illinois
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordOverall SeedBerth type
1KansasBig 1228–63Automatic
2AuburnSEC27–55At-Large
3WisconsinBig Ten24–79At-Large
4ProvidenceBig East25–515At-Large
5IowaBig Ten26–920Automatic
6LSUSEC22–1122At-Large
7USCPac–1226–725At-Large
8San Diego StateMountain West23–831At-Large
9CreightonBig East22–1133At-Large
10Miami (FL)ACC23–1038At-Large
11Iowa StateBig 1220–1241At-Large
12RichmondAtlantic 1023–1249Automatic
13South Dakota StateSummit30–452Automatic
14ColgatePatriot23–1157Automatic
15Jacksonville StateASUN21–1061Automatic
16*Texas SouthernSWAC18–1267Automatic
Texas A&M–Corpus ChristiSouthland23–1168Automatic

*SeeFirst Four


Tournament bracket

[edit]

All times are listed inEastern Daylight Time (UTC−4)

The first game of the tournament – a First Four matchup featuringTexas Southern vs.Texas A&M-Corpus Christi

First Four –Dayton, OH

[edit]

TheFirst Four games involve eight teams: the four overall lowest-ranked teams and the four lowest-ranked at-large teams.

March 15 – Midwest Region
   
16Texas Southern76
16Texas A&M–Corpus Christi67
March 15 – East Region
   
12Wyoming58
12Indiana66
March 16 – South Region
   
16Wright State93
16Bryant82
March 16 – West Region
   
11Rutgers87
11Notre Dame892OT

West Regional –San Francisco, CA

[edit]
First round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 24
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 26
            
1Gonzaga93
16Georgia State72
1Gonzaga82
Portland – Thu/Sat
9Memphis78
8Boise State53
9Memphis64
1Gonzaga68
4Arkansas74
5UConn63
12New Mexico State70
12New Mexico State48
Buffalo – Thu/Sat
4Arkansas53
4Arkansas75
13Vermont71
4Arkansas69
2Duke78
6Alabama64
11Notre Dame78
11Notre Dame53
San Diego – Fri/Sun
3Texas Tech59
3Texas Tech97
14Montana State62
3Texas Tech73
2Duke78
7Michigan State74
10Davidson73
7Michigan State76
Greenville – Fri/Sun
2Duke85
2Duke78
15Cal State Fullerton61

West Regional Final

[edit]
TBS
March 26
5:49 pmPDT
#4 Arkansas Razorbacks 69,#2 Duke Blue Devils78
Scoring by half: 33–45,36–33
Pts:Jaylin Williams, 19
Rebs: Jaylin Williams, 10
Asts:JD Notae, 4
Pts:AJ Griffin, 18
Rebs:Mark Williams, 12
Asts:Paolo Banchero, 3
Chase Center – San Francisco, California
Attendance: 17,739
Referees: Ron Groover, Joe Lindsay, Larry Scirotto

West Regional all-tournament team

[edit]

East Regional –Philadelphia, PA

[edit]
First round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 25
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 27
            
1Baylor85
16Norfolk State49
1Baylor86
Fort Worth – Thu/Sat
8North Carolina93OT
8North Carolina95
9Marquette63
8North Carolina73
4UCLA66
5Saint Mary's82
12Indiana53
5Saint Mary's56
Portland – Thu/Sat
4UCLA72
4UCLA57
13Akron53
8North Carolina69
15Saint Peter's49
6Texas81
11Virginia Tech73
6Texas71
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
3Purdue81
3Purdue78
14Yale56
3Purdue64
15Saint Peter's67
7Murray State92OT
10San Francisco87
7Murray State60
Indianapolis – Thu/Sat
15Saint Peter's70
2Kentucky79
15Saint Peter's85OT

East Regional Final

[edit]
CBS
March 27
5:05 pmEDT
#15 Saint Peter's Peacocks 49, #8North Carolina Tar Heels69
Scoring by half: 19–38, 30–31
Pts: Fousseyni Drame, 12
Rebs:2 tied, 7
Asts:KC Ndefo, 3
Pts:Armando Bacot, 20
Rebs: Armando Bacot, 22
Asts:2 tied, 4
Wells Fargo Center – Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Referees: Verne Harris, John Higgins, Bo Boroski

East Regional all-tournament team

[edit]

South Regional –San Antonio, TX

[edit]
First round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 24
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 26
            
1Arizona87
16Wright State70
1Arizona85OT
San Diego – Fri/Sun
9TCU80
8Seton Hall42
9TCU69
1Arizona60
5Houston72
5Houston82
12UAB68
5Houston68
Pittsburgh – Fri/Sun
4Illinois53
4Illinois54
13Chattanooga53
5Houston44
2Villanova50
6Colorado State63
11Michigan75
11Michigan76
Indianapolis – Thu/Sat
3Tennessee68
3Tennessee88
14Longwood56
11Michigan55
2Villanova63
7Ohio State54
10Loyola Chicago41
7Ohio State61
Pittsburgh – Fri/Sun
2Villanova71
2Villanova80
15Delaware60

South Regional Final

[edit]
TBS
March 26
5:09 pmCDT
#5 Houston Cougars 44, #2Villanova Wildcats50
Scoring by half: 20–27,24–23
Pts:Taze Moore, 15
Rebs:Taze Moore, 10
Asts:Kyler Edwards, 4
Pts:Jermaine Samuels, 16
Rebs:Jermaine Samuels, 10
Asts:2 tied, 2
AT&T Center – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 17,186
Referees: Jeff Anderson, Kipp Kissinger, Mike Reed

South Regional all tournament team

[edit]

Midwest Regional –Chicago, IL

[edit]
First round
Round of 64
March 17–18
Second Round
Round of 32
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 25
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 27
            
1Kansas83
16Texas Southern56
1Kansas79
Fort Worth – Thu/Sat
9Creighton72
8San Diego State69
9Creighton72OT
1Kansas66
4Providence61
5Iowa63
12Richmond67
12Richmond51
Buffalo – Thu/Sat
4Providence79
4Providence66
13South Dakota State57
1Kansas76
10Miami (FL)50
6LSU54
11Iowa State59
11Iowa State54
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
3Wisconsin49
3Wisconsin67
14Colgate60
11Iowa State56
10Miami (FL)70
7USC66
10Miami (FL)68
10Miami (FL)79
Greenville – Fri/Sun
2Auburn61
2Auburn80
15Jacksonville State61

Midwest Regional Final

[edit]
CBS
March 27
1:20 pmCDT
#10 Miami Hurricanes 50,#1 Kansas Jayhawks76
Scoring by half:35–29, 15–47
Pts:Kameron McGusty, 18
Rebs: Anthony Walker, 5
Asts:Isaiah Wong, 3
Pts:Ochai Agbaji, 18
Rebs:Jalen Wilson, 11
Asts: 3 tied, 4
United Center – Chicago, Illinois
Referees: Roger Ayers, Terry Wymer, Earl Walton

Midwest Regional all-tournament team

[edit]

Final Four –New Orleans, Louisiana

[edit]
National semifinals
Saturday, April 2
National championship game
Monday, April 4
      
W2Duke77
E8North Carolina81
E8North Carolina69
MW1Kansas72
S2Villanova65
MW1Kansas81

National semifinals

[edit]
TBS
April 2
5:09 pmCDT
S2 Villanova Wildcats 65,M1 Kansas Jayhawks81
Scoring by half: 29–40, 36–41
Pts:Collin Gillespie, 19
Rebs:3 tied, 7
Asts:3 tied, 3
Pts:David McCormack, 25
Rebs:Jalen Wilson, 11
Asts:2 tied, 5
Caesars Superdome – New Orleans, Louisiana
Attendance: 70,602
Referees: Doug Sirmons, Keith Kimble, James Breeding
Related article:Carolina–Duke rivalry
TBS
April 2
7:49 pmCDT
E8 North Carolina Tar Heels81, W2 Duke Blue Devils 77
Scoring by half: 34–37,47–40
Pts: Caleb Love, 28
Rebs: Armando Bacot, 21
Asts: RJ Davis, 4
Pts: Paolo Banchero, 20
Rebs: Paolo Banchero, 10
Asts: Jeremy Roach, 5
Caesars Superdome – New Orleans, Louisiana
Attendance: 70,602
Referees: Roger Ayers, Tony Padilla, Bo Boroski

National championship

[edit]
Main article:2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game
TBS
April 4
8:20 pmCDT
E8 North Carolina Tar Heels 69,M1 Kansas Jayhawks72
Scoring by half:40–25, 29–47
Pts:A. Bacot,R. J. Davis – 15
Rebs: A. Bacot – 15
Asts:Four tied – 2
Pts:J. Wilson,D. McCormack – 15
Rebs:C. Braun – 12
Asts:D. Harris, C. Braun – 3
Caesars Superdome – New Orleans, Louisiana
Attendance: 69,423
Referees: Ron Groover, Jeff Anderson, Terry Oglesby

Final Four all-tournament team

[edit]

Game summaries and tournament notes

[edit]

Upsets

[edit]

Per the NCAA, "Upsets are defined as when the winner of the game was seeded five or more places lower than the team it defeated." The 2022 tournament saw a total of 13 upsets; 6 of them were in the first round, 5 of them were in the second round, one in the Sweet Sixteen, none in the Elite Eight, and one in the Final Four.[9]

RoundWestMidwestSouthEast
First round
No. 11Michigan defeated No. 6Colorado State, 75–63No. 15Saint Peter's defeated No. 2Kentucky, 85–79 (OT)
Second RoundNone
No. 11 Michigan defeated No. 3Tennessee, 76–68
Sweet 16NoneNoneNoneNo. 15 Saint Peter's defeated No. 3Purdue, 67–64
Elite 8NoneNoneNoneNone
Final 4No. 8 North Carolina defeated No. 2Duke, 81–77

Miscellaneous

[edit]
  • Indiana cheerleader Cassidy Cerny signed aname, image and likeness (NIL) deal after teaming with fellow cheerleader Nathan Paris to rescue a ball stuck on the backboard during theHoosiers' first-round game againstSaint Mary's.[10] The moment wentviral, and Arkansas cheerleaders used the same approach when another ball was stuck on the backboard during theRazorbacks' West Regional Final againstDuke.[11]

Record by conference

[edit]
ConferenceBidsRecordWin %FFR64R32S16E8F4CGNC
Big 12613–5.7226631111
ACC514–5.7371543321
Big East67–6.53863211
MAAC13–1.7501111
American24–2.6672211
SEC65–6.4556311
Pac-1234–3.571322
Big Ten99–9.5002862
WCC33–3.500321
Ohio Valley11–1.50011
WAC11–1.50011
Atlantic 1021–2.33321
Horizon11–1.50011
SWAC11–1.50011
Mountain West40–4.00013
Atlantic Sun10–1.0001
America East10–1.0001
Big Sky10–1.0001
Big South10–1.0001
Big West10–1.0001
C-USA10–1.0001
Colonial10–1.0001
Ivy League10–1.0001
MAC10–1.0001
MEAC10–1.0001
Missouri Valley10–1.0001
Patriot10–1.0001
Southern10–1.0001
Summit10–1.0001
Sun Belt10–1.0001
Northeast10–1.0001
Southland10–1.0001
  • The FF, R64, R32, S16, E8, F4, CG, and NC columns indicate how many teams from each conference were in the first four, round of 64 (first round), round of 32 (second round), Sweet 16, Elite Eight, Final Four, championship game, and national champion, respectively.

Media coverage

[edit]

Television

[edit]
Main article:NCAA March Madness (TV program)

CBS Sports andTurner Sports had US television rights to the tournament.[12][13] As part of a cycle that began in 2016,TBS televised the 2022 Final Four and the national championship game. The Final Four and title game broadcasts were the last CBS Sports assignments for longtime director Bob Fishman, who retired from CBS Sports after 47 years (and 50 withCBS) and has been a director on 39 of the 40 Final Fours CBS/Turner have carried.[14][15] The 2022 Tournament wasMark Emmert's final one as the NCAA President withCharlie Baker succeeding him starting in 2023.

Television channels

[edit]
  • Selection Show –CBS
  • First Four –truTV
  • First and second rounds – CBS, TBS,TNT, and truTV
  • Regional semifinals and final (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight) – CBS and TBS
  • National semifinals (final Four) and championship – TBS, TNT, and truTV

Number of games per network

[edit]
  • CBS: 21
  • TBS: 21
  • TruTV: 16
  • TNT: 15

Studio hosts

[edit]
  • Greg Gumbel (New York City and New Orleans) – first round, second round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Ernie Johnson (New York City, Atlanta, and New Orleans) – first round, second round, regional semi-finals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Nabil Karim (Atlanta) – First Four, first round and Second round
  • Adam Lefkoe (New York City) – first round and Second round (game breaks)

Studio analysts

[edit]
  • Charles Barkley (New York City and New Orleans) – first round, second round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Rex Chapman (Atlanta) – First Four, first round, second round and regional semi-finals
  • Seth Davis (Atlanta and New Orleans) – First Four, first round, second round, regional semi-finals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Scott Drew (Atlanta) – regional semi-finals
  • Bob Huggins (Atlanta) – second round
  • Bobby Hurley (New Orleans) – Final Four
  • Clark Kellogg (New York City and New Orleans) – first round, second round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Frank Martin (Atlanta) – first round
  • Candace Parker (Atlanta and New Orleans) – First Four, first round, second round, regional semi-finals and Final Four
  • Kenny Smith (New York City and New Orleans) – first round, second round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Gene Steratore (New York City and New Orleans) (Rules Analyst) – First Four, first round, second round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Wally Szczerbiak (New York City) – second round

Commentary teams

[edit]

Radio

[edit]

Westwood One had exclusive radio rights to the entire tournament.

First Four

[edit]

First and second rounds

[edit]

Regionals

[edit]
  • Tom McCarthy and Will Perdue – East Regional at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Kevin Kugler and Robbie Hummel – Midwest Regional at Chicago, Illinois
  • Scott Graham and P. J. Carlesimo – South Regional at San Antonio, Texas
  • Ryan Radtke andSteve Lavin – West Regional at San Francisco, California

Final Four and National Championship

[edit]

Internet

[edit]
Video

Live video of games is available for streaming through the following means:[16]

  • NCAA March Madness Live (website and app, no CBS games ondigital media players; access to games on WarnerMedia channels (TBS, TNT, truTV) requiredTV Everywhere authentication through provider)
  • Paramount+ (only CBS games, service subscription required)
  • CBS Sports website and app (only CBS games)
  • Watch TBS website and app (only TBS games, required TV Everywhere authentication)
  • Watch TNT website and app (only TNT games, required TV Everywhere authentication)
  • Watch truTV website and app (only truTV games, required TV Everywhere authentication)
  • Websites and apps of cable, satellite, and OTT providers of CBS, TBS, TNT, and truTV (access required subscription)

In addition, the March Madness app offeredFast Break, whiparound coverage of games similar toNFL RedZone.

Audio

Live audio of games is available for streaming through the following means:

  • NCAA March Madness Live (website and app)
  • Westwood One Sports website
  • TuneIn (website and app, required TuneIn Premium subscription)
  • Websites and apps of Westwood One Sports affiliates

International

[edit]

ESPN International had international rights to the tournament. Coverage uses CBS/Turner play-by-play teams until the Final Four.[18]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Jacksonville State, the ASUN regular-season champion, was awarded the ASUN's NCAA tournament bid becauseBellarmine, which won theconference tournament, is ineligible due to a transition from Division II.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"2022 ATTENDANCE SUMMARY"(PDF).
  2. ^Bushnell, Henry (March 17, 2022)."Kentucky stunned by No. 15 seed Saint Peter's, a new March Madness low for John Calipari".Yahoo! Sports. RetrievedMarch 17, 2022.
  3. ^Jeff Borzello (March 13, 2022)."Dayton, Oklahoma, SMU, Texas A&M are top seeds in NIT bracket".ESPN.com. RetrievedMarch 13, 2022.
  4. ^"Future Division I Men's Basketball Championship sites".NCAA. April 21, 2017.
  5. ^Page, Fletcher (December 11, 2019)."2022 NCAA Tournament moving away from Cincinnati, Heritage Bank Center, to Indianapolis".cincinnati.com. Cincinnati Enquirer. RetrievedFebruary 9, 2021.
  6. ^"Five future Final Four sites announced".NCAA. November 14, 2014. Archived fromthe original on March 30, 2016. RetrievedApril 4, 2018.
  7. ^"Division I newcomer Bellarmine wins Atlantic Sun championship but ineligible for NCAA tournament".ESPN. March 8, 2022.Bellarmine defeated Jacksonville 77–72 in the Atlantic Sun Conference tournament final on Tuesday, handing the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament to regular-season champion Jacksonville State.
  8. ^NCAA March Madness [@MarchMadnessMBB] (March 14, 2022)."1 to 68... 🔥 The COMPLETE 2022 seed list from Selection Sunday! #MarchMadness" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  9. ^"We're tracking every upset in the NCAA men's tournament".NCAA.com. March 15, 2022. RetrievedMarch 25, 2022.
  10. ^Coons, Zach (March 22, 2022)."Indiana Cheerleader Who Rescued Stuck Ball During First Round Secures NIL Deal".Sports Illustrated. RetrievedMarch 22, 2023.
  11. ^Bromberg, Nick (March 26, 2022)."NCAA tournament: Inspired by Indiana, Arkansas cheerleaders get basketball from top of backboard".Yahoo! Sports. Yahoo!. RetrievedMarch 22, 2023.
  12. ^Bonesteel, Matt (April 12, 2016)."CBS and Turner Sports lock down NCAA tournament through 2032".The Washington Post. RetrievedApril 12, 2016.
  13. ^"CBS Sports and Turner Sports announce 2022 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship commentator teams". NCAA.com. March 8, 2022. RetrievedMarch 8, 2022.
  14. ^Lafayette, Jon (August 31, 2021)."CBS Sports Director Bob Fishman Retiring After NCAA Hoop Tournament".Broadcasting & Cable.
  15. ^Reedy, Joe (April 1, 2022)."Last dance: Director Fishman ready for his 39th Final Four".Associated Press.
  16. ^Maiman, Beth (March 8, 2017)."March Madness TV schedule: How to watch and live stream every game in the NCAA men's basketball tournament". NCAA. RetrievedMarch 9, 2017.
  17. ^"Roundup: Ukraine, March Madness, History Bowl …". March 16, 2022.
  18. ^Ufnowski, Amy (March 31, 2022)."Blue Bloods in the Bayou: ESPN to have Extensive Coverage of the Men's Final Four in New Orleans".ESPN Press Room U.S. RetrievedApril 1, 2022.
Tournaments
Structure
Champions & awards
Media and culture
Records and statistics
Related
2021–22 NCAA Division I championships
  • Not an officially sanctioned NCAA championship
Conference
Postseason
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