In 2011, the NCAA permitted 68 teams to compete for the men’s basketball tournament, and the same was applied for the women’s championship in 2022. It aimed to keep March Madness exciting. This time of the year consistently delivers thrilling games and Cinderella stories until one team from each gender is crowned the national champion.
Efforts are increasing to expand the NCAA Tournament to 72 or 76 teams by 2027, with NCAA president Charlie Baker supporting the idea, citing past instances where one or two teams missed out on the Top 68. However, the plan has met opposition from the college basketball community, with legendary coach Mike Krzyzewski calling it a big mistake.
College Basketball Community Slams NCAA Tournament Expansion Plan
Baker has encouraged discussions about expansion, telling reporters he supports the initiative and believes the plan will lead to positive results.
The NCAA president has long supported expanding the event to give more programs the chance to experience the excitement of competition. However, he has not yet committed to whether it will happen in 2027 or in the coming years.
“We’re still talking to the various players in this one,” Baker said. “I said all along that I think there are some very good reasons to expand the tournament. So, I would like to see it expand.”
However, legendary Duke head coach Krzyzewski criticized the measure and pointed out the unequal distribution of power among teams, whether in terms of finances or their performance during the regular season.
“I don’t think you mess with something that is gold. It’s gold. The thing you should mess with is getting a leadership group and having them study and see what happens with that group,” the five-time national champion coach said to Jeff Goodman from “Field of 68.”
“It’s not just one person, but actually, they should run it like the NBA and have a staff and all that, and run it like a business. But I wouldn’t mess with gold right now, and the NCAA tournament is certainly that,” Krzyzewski added.
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Goodman also criticized Baker for making a rushed decision without properly reviewing the initiative, especially regarding the impact of the new format on other teams that may or may not deserve to compete in the tournament.
“Imagine thinking you want to expand the NCAA tournament after really studying the resumes of most of these bubble teams,” Goodman wrote on X.
CBS Sports college basketball insider Jon Rothstein was not in favor of the idea, explaining that it has been a tedious job to watch all NCAA games objectively and determine which teams deserve the 68 tournament bids, let alone expanding it to 72 or 76 teams.
Post-Standard’s Mike Waters believed that expanding the format would only benefit lower-ranked Power 5 teams that performed poorly during the conference regular season. The plan also undermines the idea of giving more spots to deserving mid-major teams rather than to fringe Power 5 teams that barely made it on Selection Sunday.
CNN Sports writer Dana O’Neil, meanwhile, discussed the logistical impact of the expansion. She considered the shortage of charter planes available for teams chosen to compete during March Madness.
“Member schools have been notified to expect some upheaval that could include refueling, late notice of departure times. Team manifests due this week,” O’Neil said.
She also described the bubble as a hot mess that would only fuel the flames of not moving forward with the expansion.
NBA veteran and Marquette shotblocking legend Jim McIlvaine also saw contradictions with the plan, replying to O’Neil’s tweet, saying: “Struggling to get planes, but it’s time to expand the tournament, right? #MarchMadness”
Made for March, then summarized the experts’ comments in one sentence: “We should not expand the tournament under any circumstances.”
Baker previously stated that he is not concerned about how the league would fund an expanded tournament, but last July, he said logistics are the main obstacle to implementing the expanded format.
The initiative is being revived because some teams deserve a spot in the tournament despite ranking lower in the NCAA’s various metrics. However, the committee officials should first conduct a thorough review to ensure that expansion is the right decision moving forward.

