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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Tournament procedure  





2 Schedule and venues  



2.1  Original 2021 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues  







3 Qualification and selection  



3.1  Automatic qualifiers  





3.2  Tournament seeds  







4 Tournament bracket  



4.1  First Four  





4.2  West Regional  



4.2.1  West Regional Final  





4.2.2  West Regional all tournament team  







4.3  East Regional  



4.3.1  East Regional Final  





4.3.2  East Regional all tournament team  







4.4  South Regional  



4.4.1  South Regional Final  





4.4.2  South Regional all tournament team  







4.5  Midwest Regional  



4.5.1  Midwest Regional Final  





4.5.2  Midwest Regional all tournament team  







4.6  Final Four  Lucas Oil Stadium  



4.6.1  National semifinals  





4.6.2  National championship  





4.6.3  Final Four all-tournament team  









5 Game summaries and tournament notes  



5.1  Upsets  







6 Record by conference  





7 Media coverage  



7.1  Television  



7.1.1  Television channels  





7.1.2  Studio hosts  





7.1.3  Studio analysts  





7.1.4  Commentary teams  





7.1.5  Most-watched tournament games  







7.2  Radio  



7.2.1  First Four  





7.2.2  First and Second Rounds  





7.2.3  Regionals  





7.2.4  Final Four and National Championship  







7.3  Internet  







8 See also  





9 Notes  





10 References  














2021 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from 2021 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament)

2021 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season2020–21
Teams68 (including one that did not play)
Finals siteLucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis, Indiana
ChampionsBaylor Bears (1st title, 2nd title game,
3rd Final Four)
Runner-upGonzaga Bulldogs (2nd title game,
2nd Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • UCLA Bruins (19th Final Four)
  • Winning coachScott Drew (1st title)
    MOPJared Butler (Baylor)
    Attendance173,592[1]
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «2020 2022»

    The 2021 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 68 teams to determine the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's college basketball national champion for the 2020–21 season. The 82nd edition of the tournament began play on March 18, 2021, in sites around the state of Indiana,[2] and concluded with the championship gameatLucas Oil StadiuminIndianapolis on April 5, with the Baylor Bears defeating the previously undefeated Gonzaga Bulldogs 86–70 to earn the team's first ever title.

    For logistical considerations surrounding the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic (which resulted in the cancellation of the previous year's tournament), the NCAA announced in January 2021 that all tournament games would be held in Indiana rather than at sites across the country. This was the only time in the history of the tournament to date that a single state has hosted it in its entirety.[3]

    This marked the first time since 1976 that neither Duke nor Kentucky qualified for the tournament.[4] It was also the first time since 1995 that Duke failed to make the tournament, breaking a streak of 24 consecutive appearances. America East champion Hartford and WAC champion Grand Canyon made their NCAA Tournament debuts.

    The tournament was marked by many upsets, with Yahoo Sports journalist Pete Thamel calling it "one of the most dizzying NCAA men's tournaments in history". With only half of the 16 second-round games having been played, there had been 11 upsets to that point, using the NCAA's definition of "upset" as a win by a team seeded five or more lines below its defeated opponent. This had already broken the record for most upsets prior to the round of 16; by the end of the second round, this number went up to 12. In addition, at least one team seeded #9 through #15 won a first-round game for the fourth time ever, and the first time since 2016. Also, a record four teams seeded 13 or lower won first-round games.[5] Another notable mark set during the tournament was a record-breaking 14 upsets throughout the event, breaking the original record of 13 upsets from the 1985 and 2014 tournaments.

    The Final Four game between UCLA and Gonzaga (the first semifinal game to go into overtime since 1998) saw a game-winning buzzer-beater by Jalen Suggs to take Gonzaga into the championship game, the first buzzer-beater in a national semifinal since 1977. By defeating Gonzaga in the championship game, the Baylor Bears became the second consecutive first-time NCAA champions, following the Virginia Cavaliersin2019. The last time this happened was in 2002 and 2003, when the Maryland Terrapins and Syracuse Orange (then nicknamed Orangemen) won their first titles in their respective years. Baylor also joined Texas Western (now known as the University of Texas at El Paso) as the only two teams from the state of Texas to have won an NCAA Division I Basketball championship, the Miners having done so in 1966.

    Tournament procedure

    [edit]

    A total of 68 teams entered the 2021 tournament, with 31 of them (down from 32, due to the Ivy League having canceled all winter semester sports due to COVID-19)[6] having received an automatic bid by winning their conference's tournament. The remaining 37 bids were "at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. Teams met sport sponsorship requirements and were considered for NCAA championship selection if they played 13 games, which represented a 50 percent reduction of the current minimum. For NCAA championship consideration, all 13 games had to be against other Division I opponents. Teams could also play 12 regular-season games against Division I opponents and one conference tournament game to be eligible for tournament consideration.[7]

    The Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 68. The four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams played in the First Four round: for the 2021 tournament, the games were played between the overall 65th and 66th seeds, the 67th and 68th seed, and the last four at-large seeds.[8]

    The top four teams outside of the ranking (commonly known as the "first four out" in pre-tourney analyses) acted as standbys in the event a school was forced to withdraw from the tournament due to COVID-19 protocols.[9][10] However, if a team withdrew within 48 hours of the tournament's commencement, they would not be replaced; the bracket was not reseeded, and the affected team's opponent would automatically advance to the next round.The replacement teams are as follows, in order:

    First Four Out[11]
    NET School Conference Record
    56 Louisville ACC 13–7
    51 Colorado State Mountain West 18–6
    43 Saint Louis Atlantic 10 14–6
    53 Ole Miss SEC 16–11

    [12]

    Schedule and venues

    [edit]
    Map
    2021 NCAA tournament venues
    Gonzaga vs. University of Southern California at Lucas Oil Stadium

    On January 4, 2021, the NCAA announced that due to logistical considerations associated with the COVID-19 pandemic (which prompted the cancellation of the 2020 tournament), the entirety of the tournament would be conducted at sites within the Indianapolis metro area and central Indiana, rather than across the country.[13] Players stayed at hotels near the Indiana Convention Center, which served as the main practice facility.[14] Lucas Oil Stadium had two courts named "Unity Court" and "Equality Court" during the First Round, Second Round, and Elite Eight.

    On February 19, it was announced that all venues would operate at a maximum of 25% capacity. As this capacity includes staff and players, the exact number of spectators varied by venue.[15][16] Artificial crowd noise was used at all venues to augment the limited in-person attendance.[17]

    This tournament marked the first time ever that Indiana Farmers Coliseum was a tournament venue, the first time since 2017 that Bankers Life Fieldhouse was a tournament venue, the first time since 1940 that Hinkle Fieldhouse was a tournament venue, the first time since 1980 that Mackey Arena was a tournament venue, and the first time since 1981 that Assembly Hall was a tournament venue.

    First Four:

    First and Second Rounds:

    Regional Semifinals and Finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight):

    National Semifinals and Championship (Final Four and Championship):

    Original 2021 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues

    [edit]
    Map
    2021 First Four (orange) and First and Second Rounds (green) as originally selected.
    Map
    2021 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red) as originally selected.

    The following sites were originally selected to host each round of the 2021 tournament;[18] with the exceptions of Boise and Minneapolis, all cities and venues listed are scheduled to host tournament games after 2021:

    First Four

    First and Second Rounds

    Regional Semifinals and Finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

    National Semifinals and Championship (Final Four and Championship)

    Qualification and selection

    [edit]

    Automatic qualifiers

    [edit]
    Conference Team Appearance Last bid
    America East Hartford 1st Never
    American Houston 22nd 2019
    Atlantic 10 St. Bonaventure 8th 2018
    ACC Georgia Tech 17th 2010
    ASUN Liberty 5th 2019
    Big 12 Texas 35th 2018
    Big East Georgetown 31st 2015
    Big Sky Eastern Washington 3rd 2015
    Big South Winthrop 11th 2017
    Big Ten Illinois 31st 2013
    Big West UC Santa Barbara 6th 2011
    CAA Drexel 5th 1996
    C-USA North Texas 4th 2010
    Horizon Cleveland State 3rd 2009
    Ivy League Season not played
    MAAC Iona 15th 2019
    MAC Ohio 14th 2012
    MEAC Norfolk State 2nd 2012
    Missouri Valley Loyola Chicago 7th 2018
    Mountain West San Diego State 13th 2018
    NEC Mount St. Mary's 6th 2017
    Ohio Valley Morehead State 8th 2011
    Pac-12 Oregon State 15th 2016
    Patriot Colgate 4th 2019
    SEC Alabama 22nd 2018
    Southern UNC Greensboro 4th 2018
    Southland Abilene Christian 2nd 2019
    SWAC Texas Southern 9th 2018
    Summit League Oral Roberts 6th 2008
    Sun Belt Appalachian State 3rd 2000
    WAC Grand Canyon 1st Never
    WCC Gonzaga 23rd 2019

    Tournament seeds

    [edit]

    The tournament seeds and regions were determined through the NCAA basketball tournament selection process.

    In contrast to previous years, the S-Curve used to establish overall seeds will also be used as primary determinant of the tournament bracket; this was made possible by the relatively condensed locations of this year's tournament making geographic concerns irrelevant. However, rules that can modify pairings to avoid early rematches and to distribute top conference representatives to different regions will remain in effect.[19][20]

    West Regional
    Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
    1 Gonzaga West Coast 26–0 1 Automatic
    2 Iowa Big Ten 21–8 7 At-Large
    3 Kansas Big 12 20–8 12 At-Large
    4 Virginia ACC 18–6 16 At-Large
    5 Creighton Big East 20–8 17 At-Large
    6 USC Pac-12 22–7 21 At-Large
    7 Oregon Pac-12 20–6 25 At-Large
    8 Oklahoma Big 12 15–10 32 At-Large
    9 Missouri SEC 16–9 33 At-Large
    10 VCU Atlantic 10 19–7 38 At-Large
    11* Wichita State American 16–5 45 At-Large
    Drake Missouri Valley 25–4 48 At-Large
    12 UC Santa Barbara Big West 22–4 50 Automatic
    13 Ohio MAC 16–7 51 Automatic
    14 Eastern Washington Big Sky 16–7 58 Automatic
    15 Grand Canyon WAC 17–6 59 Automatic
    16* Norfolk State MEAC 16–7 67 Automatic
    Appalachian State Sun Belt 17–11 68 Automatic
    East Regional
    Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
    1 Michigan Big Ten 20–4 4 At-Large
    2 Alabama SEC 24–6 5 Automatic
    3 Texas Big 12 19–7 11 Automatic
    4 Florida State ACC 16–6 13 At-Large
    5 Colorado Pac-12 22–8 20 At-Large
    6 BYU West Coast 20–6 23 At-Large
    7 UConn Big East 15–7 26 At-Large
    8 LSU SEC 18–9 29 At-Large
    9 St. Bonaventure Atlantic 10 16–4 39 Automatic
    10 Maryland Big Ten 16–13 36 At-Large
    11* Michigan State Big Ten 15–12 43 At-Large
    UCLA Pac-12 17–9 44 At-Large
    12 Georgetown Big East 13–12 47 Automatic
    13 UNC Greensboro Southern 21–8 54 Automatic
    14 Abilene Christian Southland 23–4 55 Automatic
    15 Iona MAAC 12–5 62 Automatic
    16* Mount St. Mary's Northeast 12–10 65 Automatic
    Texas Southern SWAC 16–8 66 Automatic
    South Regional
    Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
    1 Baylor Big 12 22–2 2 At-Large
    2 Ohio State Big Ten 21–9 6 At-Large
    3 Arkansas SEC 22–6 9 At-Large
    4 Purdue Big Ten 18–9 14 At-Large
    5 Villanova Big East 16–6 18 At-Large
    6 Texas Tech Big 12 17–10 22 At-Large
    7 Florida SEC 14–9 28 At-Large
    8 North Carolina ACC 18–10 31 At-Large
    9 Wisconsin Big Ten 17–12 35 At-Large
    10 Virginia Tech ACC 15–6 37 At-Large
    11 Utah State Mountain West 20–8 42 At-Large
    12 Winthrop Big South 23–1 49 Automatic
    13 North Texas C-USA 17–9 52 Automatic
    14 Colgate Patriot 14–1 57 Automatic
    15 Oral Roberts Summit 16–10 61 Automatic
    16 Hartford America East 15–8 64 Automatic
    Midwest Regional
    Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type
    1 Illinois Big Ten 23–6 3 Automatic
    2 Houston American 24–3 8 Automatic
    3 West Virginia Big 12 18–9 10 At-Large
    4 Oklahoma State Big 12 20–8 15 At-Large
    5 Tennessee SEC 18–8 19 At-Large
    6 San Diego State Mountain West 23–4 24 Automatic
    7 Clemson ACC 16–7 27 At-Large
    8 Loyola Chicago Missouri Valley 24–4 30 Automatic
    9 Georgia Tech ACC 17–8 34 Automatic
    10 Rutgers Big Ten 15–11 40 At-Large
    11 Syracuse ACC 16–9 41 At-Large
    12 Oregon State Pac-12 17–12 46 Automatic
    13 Liberty Atlantic Sun 23–5 53 Automatic
    14 Morehead State Ohio Valley 23–7 56 Automatic
    15 Cleveland State Horizon 19–7 60 Automatic
    16 Drexel Colonial 12–7 63 Automatic

    *See First Four


    Tournament bracket

    [edit]

    Note: Unlike past tournaments, teams are not grouped as pods. Second round games will match teams that played at different venues in the first round.

    First Four

    [edit]

    The First Four games involved eight teams: the four overall lowest-ranked teams, and the four lowest-ranked at-large teams.

    March 18 – West Regional
    Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall
    Bloomington
       
    16Norfolk State 54
    16Appalachian State 53
    March 18 – West Regional
    Mackey Arena
    West Lafayette
       
    11Wichita State 52
    11Drake 53
    March 18 – East Regional
    Mackey Arena
    West Lafayette
       
    11Michigan State 80
    11UCLA 86OT
    March 18 – East Regional
    Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall
    Bloomington
       
    16Mount St. Mary's 52
    16Texas Southern 60

    West Regional

    [edit]
    First Round
    Round of 64
    Saturday, March 20
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    Monday, March 22
    Regional Semifinals
    Sweet 16
    Sunday, March 28
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    Tuesday, March 30

    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    1Gonzaga98
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    16Norfolk State55
    1Gonzaga87

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Equality
    8Oklahoma71
    8Oklahoma72
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    9Missouri68
    1Gonzaga83

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    5Creighton65
    5Creighton63
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    12UC Santa Barbara62
    5Creighton72

    Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall
    13Ohio58
    4Virginia58
    Lucas Oil Stadium – Equality
    13Ohio62
    1Gonzaga85

    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    6USC66
    6USC72
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    11Drake56
    6USC85

    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    3Kansas51
    3Kansas93
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    14Eastern Washington84
    6USC82

    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    7Oregon68
    7OregonWO
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    10VCU[A]
    7Oregon95

    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    2Iowa80
    2Iowa86
    15Grand Canyon74

    West Regional Final

    [edit]

    TBS

    March 30
    7:15 pm EDT

    Box score

    #6 USC Trojans 66, #1 Gonzaga Bulldogs 85
    Scoring by half: 30–49, 36–36
    Pts: I. Mobley, 19
    Rebs: I. Mobley, 7
    Asts: I. Mobley, E. Mobley, 3
    Pts: D. Timme, 23
    Rebs: J. Suggs, 10
    Asts: J. Suggs, 8

    Equality Court – Lucas Oil Stadium
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Attendance: 6,166
    Referees: Randy McCall, Doug Shows, Bert Smith, Tony Henderson [22]

    West Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    East Regional

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    Saturday, March 20
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    Monday, March 22
    Regional Semifinals
    Sweet 16
    Sunday, March 28
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    Tuesday, March 30

    Mackey Arena
    1Michigan82
    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    16Texas Southern66
    1Michigan86

    Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall
    8LSU78
    8LSU76
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    9St. Bonaventure61
    1Michigan76

    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    4Florida State58
    5Colorado96
    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    12Georgetown73
    5Colorado53

    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    4Florida State71
    4Florida State64
    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    13UNC Greensboro54
    1Michigan49

    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    11UCLA51
    6BYU62
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    11UCLA73
    11UCLA67

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    14Abilene Christian47
    3Texas52
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    14Abilene Christian53
    11UCLA88OT

    Mackey Arena
    2Alabama78
    7UConn54
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    10Maryland63
    10Maryland77

    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    2Alabama96
    2Alabama68
    15Iona55

    East Regional Final

    [edit]

    TBS

    March 30
    9:57 pm EDT

    Box score

    #11 UCLA Bruins 51, #1 Michigan Wolverines 49
    Scoring by half: 27–23, 24–26
    Pts: J. Juzang, 28
    Rebs: J. Bernard, 9
    Asts: J. Jaquez Jr., 4
    Pts: H. Dickinson, 11
    Rebs: C. Brown Jr., 9
    Asts: E. Brooks, M. Smith, 4

    Unity Court – Lucas Oil Stadium
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Attendance: 7,515
    Referees: Bo Boroski, Verne Harris, Lee Cassell

    East Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    South Regional

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    Friday, March 19
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    Sunday, March 21
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    Saturday, March 27
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    Monday, March 29

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    1Baylor79
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    16Hartford55
    1Baylor76

    Mackey Arena
    9Wisconsin63
    8North Carolina62
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    9Wisconsin85
    1Baylor62

    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    5Villanova51
    5Villanova73
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    12Winthrop63
    5Villanova84

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Equality
    13North Texas61
    4Purdue69
    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    13North Texas78OT
    1Baylor81

    Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall
    3Arkansas72
    6Texas Tech65
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    11Utah State53
    6Texas Tech66

    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    3Arkansas68
    3Arkansas85
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    14Colgate68
    3Arkansas72

    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    15Oral Roberts70
    7Florida75OT
    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    10Virginia Tech70
    7Florida78

    Mackey Arena
    15Oral Roberts81
    2Ohio State72
    15Oral Roberts75OT

    South Regional Final

    [edit]

    CBS

    March 29
    9:57 pm EDT

    Box score

    #3 Arkansas Razorbacks 72, #1 Baylor Bears 81
    Scoring by half: 38–46, 34–35
    Pts: D. Davis, J. Notae, 14
    Rebs: J. Smith, D. Davis, D. Sills, 6
    Asts: D. Sills, 4
    Pts: M. Teague, 22
    Rebs: J. Tchamwa Tchatchoua, 6
    Asts: D. Mitchell, 6

    Unity Court – Lucas Oil Stadium
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Attendance: 7,519
    Referees: Terry Oglesby, Jeff Clark, Paul Szelc

    South Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    Midwest Regional

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    Friday, March 19
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    Sunday, March 21
    Regional Semifinals
    Sweet 16
    Saturday, March 27
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    Monday, March 29

    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    1Illinois78
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    16Drexel49
    1Illinois58

    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    8Loyola Chicago71
    8Loyola Chicago71
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    9Georgia Tech60
    8Loyola Chicago58

    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    12Oregon State65
    5Tennessee56
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    12Oregon State70
    12Oregon State80

    Indiana Farmers Coliseum
    4Oklahoma State70
    4Oklahoma State69
    Lucas Oil Stadium – Equality
    13Liberty60
    12Oregon State61

    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    2Houston67
    6San Diego State62
    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    11Syracuse78
    11Syracuse75

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    3West Virginia72
    3West Virginia84
    Hinkle Fieldhouse
    14Morehead State67
    11Syracuse46

    Bankers Life Fieldhouse
    2Houston62
    7Clemson56
    Lucas Oil Stadium – Unity
    10Rutgers60
    10Rutgers60

    Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall
    2Houston63
    2Houston87
    15Cleveland State56

    Midwest Regional Final

    [edit]

    CBS

    March 29
    7:15 pm EDT

    Box score

    #12 Oregon State Beavers 61, #2 Houston Cougars 67
    Scoring by half: 17–34, 44–33
    Pts: M. Calloo, 13
    Rebs: E. Thompson, 7
    Asts: E. Thompson, 6
    Pts: M. Sasser, 20
    Rebs: J. Gorham, 10
    Asts: D. Jarreau, 8

    Equality Court – Lucas Oil Stadium
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Attendance: 7,519
    Referees: Ron Groover, Jeff Anderson, Mike Reed

    Midwest Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    Final Four – Lucas Oil Stadium

    [edit]
    National Semifinals
    Saturday, April 3
    National Championship Game
    Monday, April 5
          
    W1 Gonzaga 93OT
    E11 UCLA 90
    W1 Gonzaga 70
    S1 Baylor 86
    S1 Baylor 78
    MW2 Houston 59

    National semifinals

    [edit]

    CBS

    April 3
    5:14 pm EDT

    Box score

    S1 Baylor Bears 78, MW2 Houston Cougars 59
    Scoring by half: 45–20, 33–39
    Pts: J. Butler, 17
    Rebs: J. Tchamwa Tchatchoua, 6
    Asts: D. Mitchell, 11
    Pts: M. Sasser, 20
    Rebs: J. Gorham, 6
    Asts: J. Gorham, 3

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Indianapolis, Indiana
    Attendance: 8,131
    Referees: Doug Sirmons, Pat Adams, Chris Rastatter

    CBS

    April 3
    8:34 pm EDT

    Box score

    W1 Gonzaga Bulldogs 93, E11 UCLA Bruins 90 (OT)
    Scoring by half: 45–44, 36–37 Overtime: 12–9
    Pts: D. Timme, 25
    Rebs: J. Ayayi, 6
    Asts: A. Nembhard, 8
    Pts: J. Juzang, 29
    Rebs: C. Riley, 10
    Asts: T. Campbell, 7

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Indianapolis, Indiana
    Attendance: 8,131
    Referees: Ron Groover, Jeff Anderson, James Breeding

    National championship

    [edit]

    CBS

    April 5
    9:20 pm EDT

    Box score

    S1 Baylor Bears 86, W1 Gonzaga Bulldogs 70
    Scoring by half: 47–37, 39–33
    Pts: J. Butler, 22
    Rebs: M. Vital, 11
    Asts: J. Butler, 7
    Pts: J. Suggs, 22
    Rebs: D. Timme, 5
    Asts: A. Nembhard, 4

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Indianapolis, Indiana
    Referees: Randy McCall, Bo Boroski, Keith Kimble

    Final Four all-tournament team

    [edit]

    Source:[23]

    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 2021 tournament saw a record total of 14 upsets; 7 of them were in the first round, 5 of them were in the second round, and one of them in the Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight, respectively.[24]

    Round West East South Midwest
    First round No. 13 Ohio defeated No. 4 Virginia, 62–58
  • No. 11 UCLA defeated No. 6 BYU, 73–62
  • No. 13 North Texas defeated No. 4 Purdue, 78–69 (OT)
  • No. 11 Syracuse defeated No. 6 San Diego State, 78–62
  • Second Round No. 7 Oregon defeated No. 2 Iowa, 95–80 None No. 15 Oral Roberts defeated No. 7 Florida, 81–78
  • No. 11 Syracuse defeated No. 3 West Virginia, 75–72
  • No. 8 Loyola Chicago defeated No. 1 Illinois, 71–58
  • Sweet 16 None No. 11 UCLA defeated No. 2 Alabama, 88–78 (OT) None None
    Elite 8 None No. 11 UCLA defeated No. 1 Michigan, 51–49 None None

    Record by conference

    [edit]
    Conference Bids Record Win % FF R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC
    Big 12 7 11–6 .647 7 6 1 1 1 1 1
    WCC 2 5–2 .714 2 1 1 1 1 1
    American 2 4–2 .667 1 1 1 1 1 1
    Pac-12 5 13–5 .722 1 5 5 4 3 1
    Big Ten 9 8–9 .471 1 8 6 1 1
    SEC 6 7–6 .538 6 4 2 1
    ACC 7 4–7 .364 7 2 2
    Big East 4 4–4 .500 4 2 2
    Missouri Valley 2 3–2 .600 1 2 1 1
    Summit 1 2–1 .667 1 1 1
    C-USA 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    MAC 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Southland 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    MEAC 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    SWAC 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Atlantic 10 2 0–1 .000 2
    Mountain West 2 0–2 .000 2
    America East 1 0–1 .000 1
    Atlantic Sun 1 0–1 .000 1
    Big Sky 1 0–1 .000 1
    Big South 1 0–1 .000 1
    Big West 1 0–1 .000 1
    Colonial 1 0–1 .000 1
    Horizon 1 0–1 .000 1
    MAAC 1 0–1 .000 1
    Ohio Valley 1 0–1 .000 1
    Patriot 1 0–1 .000 1
    Southern 1 0–1 .000 1
    WAC 1 0–1 .000 1
    Northeast 1 0–1 .000 1
    Sun Belt 1 0–1 .000 1

    Includes a game declared no-contest due to COVID-19 protocols with VCU. Oregon of the Pac-12 conference advanced to the second round and VCU of the Atlantic 10 conference was eliminated from the tournament.

    Media coverage

    [edit]

    Television

    [edit]

    CBS Sports and Turner Sports had US television rights to the tournament.[25][26] As part of a cycle that began in 2016, CBS televised the 2021 Final Four and the national championship game. Because the 2020 tournament had been cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns, the last two rounds in back-to-back editions were broadcast on CBS for the first time since 2015 (TBS would have broadcast the 2020 Final Four and National Championship according to the arrangement).

    Television channels

    [edit]

    Studio hosts

    [edit]

    Studio analysts

    [edit]

    Commentary teams

    [edit]

    ESPN International had international rights to the tournament. Coverage used CBS/Turner play-by-play teams until the Final Four.[27]

    Most-watched tournament games

    [edit]

    All times Eastern. Tournament seedings and region are in parentheses.

    Rank Round Date Matchup Network Viewers (millions) TV Rating[28][29][30][31][32]
    1 National Championship April 5, 2021, 9:20 ET (1 S) Baylor 86 (1 W) Gonzaga 70 CBS 16.92 9.4
    2 Final Four April 3, 2021, 8:34 ET (11 E) UCLA 90 (1 W) Gonzaga 93 14.94 7.6
    3 Sweet 16 March 28, 2021 5:00 ET (4 E) Florida State 58 (1 E) Michigan 76 9.03 5.1
    4 Final Four April 3, 2021, 5:14 ET (2 MW) Houston 59 (1 S) Baylor 78 8.18 4.4
    5 Round of 32 March 21, 2021, 5:15 ET (11 MW) Syracuse 75 (3 MW) West Virginia 72 7.86 4.5
    6 Sweet 16 March 27, 2021 5:15 ET (5 S) Villanova 51 (1 S) Baylor 62 7.54 4.2
    7 Round of 32 March 21, 2021, 2:40 ET (9 S) Wisconsin 63 (1 S) Baylor 76 7.42 4.5
    8 Elite Eight March 30, 2021, 9:57 ET (11 E) UCLA 51 (1 E) Michigan 49 TBS 6.89 3.9
    9 Sweet 16 March 28, 2021, 2:10 ET (5 W) Creighton 65 (1 W) Gonzaga 83 CBS 6.66 3.9
    10 Sweet 16 March 28, 2021, 7:15 ET (11 E) UCLA 88 (2 E) Alabama 78 TBS 6.51 3.7

    Radio

    [edit]

    Internet

    [edit]

    FastBreak is an online-only program providing whiparound coverage of all tournament games similar to NFL RedZone during the first weekend.

    See also

    [edit]

    Notes

    [edit]
    1. ^ Game declared no contest due to COVID-19 protocols with VCU. Oregon advances in the tournament.[21]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "2021 ATTENDANCE SUMMARY~" (PDF).
  • ^ "NCAA announces dates for preliminary March Madness rounds". ESPN.com. January 19, 2021. Retrieved January 19, 2021.
  • ^ "NCAA announces further details for 2021 Division I men's basketball championship". Retrieved January 4, 2021.
  • ^ "Gonzaga, Baylor, Illinois, Michigan get top seeds in NCAA men's basketball tournament". ESPN.com. March 14, 2021. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  • ^ Thamel, Pete (March 22, 2021). "Why this may already be the craziest NCAA men's tournament ever". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved March 22, 2021.
  • ^ "Ivy League cancels basketball season for 2020-21 as part of ban on winter sports due to COVID-19". CBSSports.com. November 12, 2020. Retrieved November 15, 2020.
  • ^ "DI Council approves Nov. 25 start date for men's and women's basketball". NCAA. September 16, 2020.
  • ^ "New bracketing principles adopted for 2021 NCAA tournament". NCAA.com. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  • ^ Gleeson, Scott (March 14, 2021). "March Madness: Here's how Duke could play in the 2021 NCAA Tournament after all". USA Today. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  • ^ Gleeson, Scott; Mast, Shelby (March 14, 2021). "NCAA Tournament bracketology: Final March Madness projection on Selection Sunday". USA Today. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  • ^ "Memphis, Colorado State, Saint Louis, Ole Miss are top seeds in NIT bracket. Louisville did not play in the NIT". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 14, 2021.
  • ^ Wells, Adam (February 21, 2021). "NCAA Tournament teams won't be replaced if forced to withdraw due to COVID-19". Bleacher Report. Retrieved March 8, 2021.
  • ^ "NCAA men's basketball tournament to be played entirely in Indiana". ESPN.com. January 4, 2021. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  • ^ Benbow, Dana Hunsinger; Doyel, Gregg; Osterman, Zach. "It's official: 2021 NCAA tournament to be played entirely in Central Indiana, Indianapolis". The Indianapolis Star. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  • ^ "A limited number of fans will be allowed to attend 2021 NCAA Tournament games". CBSSports.com. February 19, 2021. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  • ^ "NCAA to allow limited number of fans for Division I men's basketball tournament". ESPN.com. February 19, 2021. Retrieved February 22, 2021.
  • ^ Daley, Dan (March 26, 2021). "March Madness 2021: Broadcast Audio Mixes in Crowd Sound — Real and Augmented". Sports Video Group. Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  • ^ "Future Division I Men's Basketball Championship sites". NCAA. March 22, 2019.
  • ^ "New bracketing principles adopted for 2021 NCAA tournament". www.ncaa.com. NCAA. January 15, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  • ^ "The NCAA bracket S-curve, explained". www.ncaa.com. NCAA. January 15, 2021. Retrieved March 6, 2021.
  • ^ NCAA staff (March 20, 2021). "VCU-Oregon game ruled a no-contest due to COVID-19 protocols". NCAA.com. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
  • ^ "Official collapses, wheeled off court on stretcher from NCAA tournament game". March 30, 2021.
  • ^ "NCAA All-Tournament Teams". Associated Press. April 6, 2021. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  • ^ "We're tracking upsets in the 2021 NCAA tournament". NCAA.com. March 19, 2021. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
  • ^ Bonesteel, Matt (April 12, 2016). "CBS and Turner Sports lock down NCAA tournament through 2032". The Washington Post. Retrieved April 12, 2016.
  • ^ "Turner Sports and CBS Sports Announce 2021 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Commentator Teams". Warner Media. March 11, 2021. Retrieved March 11, 2021.
  • ^ "ESPN's College GameDay Covered by State Farm Headlines Men's College Basketball Studio Programming this Weekend". ESPN Press Room U.S. April 2, 2021. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
  • ^ Paulsen (March 24, 2021). "NCAA Tournament off to solid start despite dip". sportsmediawatch.com. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
  • ^ Paulsen (March 30, 2021). "Super Sweet 16: schedule change boosts regional semis". sportsmediawatch.com. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  • ^ Paulsen (March 31, 2021). "Steep declines for men's Elite Eight". sportsmediawatch.com. Retrieved April 2, 2021.
  • ^ Paulsen (April 6, 2021). "Final Four ratings: Gonzaga-UCLA thriller hits post-hiatus high despite drop". sportsmediawatch.com. Retrieved April 6, 2021.
  • ^ Paulsen (April 7, 2021). "Nearly 17 million watch Baylor bully Bulldogs". sportsmediawatch.com. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  • ^ "Community news: Summer concert series announced and more". Ct Insider. March 18, 2021. Retrieved March 19, 2021.

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