Professor G NCAA Tournament Selection episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 6, 2026 · 1H 28M

Professor G NCAA Tournament Selection

from Sports Rap Network · host Chase Monterey

In this episode, Professor G. Mark Gray tackles one of the most controversial topics in college basketball: whether mid-major teams receive fair treatment when the NCAA Tournament field is selected.As the regular season winds down and the Field of 68 approaches, Gray questions why undefeated or near-perfect mid-major programs still have to fight for recognition while power-conference teams with weaker records often receive the benefit of the doubt.Gray breaks down the selection committee’s bias toward major conferences, arguing that the system favors brand names, television ratings, and corporate interests over what should matter most—wins and losses on the court.Key Topics CoveredMid-Major Teams Fighting for RespectGray highlights the uphill battle faced by programs from conferences like the Mid-American Conference (MAC). Even when these teams dominate their schedules, they often remain on the bubble heading into March.The NCAA Selection DebateThe episode examines the metrics used by the NCAA selection committee, suggesting that analytics and conference reputation sometimes outweigh actual performance when tournament invitations are decided.Historical ContextGray points out that historically teams with two or fewer losses have rarely been left out of the tournament, yet mid-major programs continue to face skepticism when competing for at-large bids.The Importance of Cinderella StoriesThe NCAA Tournament’s magic has long come from unexpected upsets and small-school runs. Gray recalls historic tournament moments, including Hampton’s upset of Iowa State, to illustrate how mid-majors bring excitement and unpredictability to March Madness.2026-03-06-markgray_descriptionMoney and Power in College BasketballGray also explores the financial realities of the NCAA Tournament, noting that advancing teams generate significant revenue. He argues that major conferences benefit disproportionately, creating an imbalance that limits opportunities for smaller programs.Key TakeawaysMid-major programs often face structural disadvantages in NCAA Tournament selection.Corporate interests and television ratings may influence selection decisions.Cinderella runs are essential to the identity of March Madness.Greater transparency and fairness are needed in the selection process.Keywordscollege basketball, NCAA tournament selection, March Madness, mid-major teams, NCAA selection committee, college basketball rankings, MAC conference basketball, Cinderella stories, Hampton upset Iowa State, NCAA tournament debate, NCAA fairness, college basketball politics, sports talk podcast, Mark Gray sports commentary.

In this episode, Professor G. Mark Gray tackles one of the most controversial topics in college basketball: whether mid-major teams receive fair treatment when the NCAA Tournament field is selected.As the regular season winds down and the Field of 68 approaches, Gray questions why undefeated or near-perfect mid-major programs still have to fight for recognition while power-conference teams with weaker records often receive the benefit of the doubt.Gray breaks down the selection committee’s bias toward major conferences, arguing that the system favors brand names, television ratings, and corporate interests over what should matter most—wins and losses on the court.Key Topics CoveredMid-Major Teams Fighting for RespectGray highlights the uphill battle faced by programs from conferences like the Mid-American Conference (MAC). Even when these teams dominate their schedules, they often remain on the bubble heading into March.The NCAA Selection DebateThe episode examines the metrics used by the NCAA selection committee, suggesting that analytics and conference reputation sometimes outweigh actual performance when tournament invitations are decided.Historical ContextGray points out that historically teams with two or fewer losses have rarely been left out of the tournament, yet mid-major programs continue to face skepticism when competing for at-large bids.The Importance of Cinderella StoriesThe NCAA Tournament’s magic has long come from unexpected upsets and small-school runs. Gray recalls historic tournament moments, including Hampton’s upset of Iowa State, to illustrate how mid-majors bring excitement and unpredictability to March Madness.2026-03-06-markgray_descriptionMoney and Power in College BasketballGray also explores the financial realities of the NCAA Tournament, noting that advancing teams generate significant revenue. He argues that major conferences benefit disproportionately, creating an imbalance that limits opportunities for smaller programs.Key TakeawaysMid-major programs often face structural disadvantages in NCAA Tournament selection.Corporate interests and television ratings may influence selection decisions.Cinderella runs are essential to the identity of March Madness.Greater transparency and fairness are needed in the selection process.Keywordscollege basketball, NCAA tournament selection, March Madness, mid-major teams, NCAA selection committee, college basketball rankings, MAC conference basketball, Cinderella stories, Hampton upset Iowa State, NCAA tournament debate, NCAA fairness, college basketball politics, sports talk podcast, Mark Gray sports commentary.

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Professor G NCAA Tournament Selection

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This episode is 1 hour and 28 minutes long.

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This episode was published on March 6, 2026.

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In this episode, Professor G. Mark Gray tackles one of the most controversial topics in college basketball: whether mid-major teams receive fair treatment when the NCAA Tournament field is selected.As the regular season winds down and the Field of...

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