3 theories that may explain the lack of men's March Madness upsets
The end of March has been noticeably lacking some madness this year.
Not only has this men's NCAA tournament featured one of the chalkiest brackets in years, it's the first time since 2017 that no seed lower than No. 12 has advanced to the Round of 32. If there is a Cinderella out there, it's going to be a team fans are pretty familiar with already.
Which has left a lot of people watching the tournament wondering: What gives? Where did all the upsets go?
MARCH MADNESS ODDS:Final Four and national championship odds for all 68 men's NCAA tournament teams
There may not be a single definitive answer out there, but there are plenty of theories that help explain why the men's bracket doesn't feel as unpredictable this year. While not a definitive list, these are certainly worth taking consideration.
1. The transfer portal and NIL hurt smaller programs
This will undoubtedly be an argument that gets run into the ground after this week. The theory goes that because top programs have the money and means to pilfer talent from the transfer portal, mid-majors that would normally fit the Cinderella roll no longer stand a chance.
interesting 1-4 seeds in tournament went 16-0 with average margin of victory by 23 points. nil and the portal are hurting mid-majors in search of upsets over power conference teams. takes a lot of fun out of first week.
— Dick Weiss (@HoopsWeiss) March 22, 2025
There's probably some degree of truth here. No. 3 seed Kentucky, for instance, recruited starters Lamont Butler from San Diego State and Koby Brea from Dayton. No. 2 seed Alabama grabbed star guard Chris Youngblood from South Florida. No. 5 Michigan took Danny Wolf from Yale and Vladislav Goldin from Florida Atlantic.
Ole Miss, Tennessee and Texas Tech also relied heavily on transfers from mid-majors to boost their rosters.
Continuity is typically a huge part of mid-major success in March. When all the top players (and coaches) are leaving as soon as they can, it's much more difficult to put together a veteran lineup with chemistry that can overcome a more talented opponent.
On the other hand, there has never been an era in college athletics where the top programs didn't have a mighty upper-hand over mid-tier schools. The NCAA tournament has always been a great equalizer, but let's not pretend the majority of the best talent wasn't always going to brand name schools year after year.
2. Lower seeds really struggled to hit 3-pointers
When No. 13 seed Furman knocked off No. 4 Virginia in 2023, the Paladins hit 10 three-pointers two UVA's two. No. 14 seed Oakland hit 15 in last year's upset of No. 3 Kentucky. No. 15 Oral Roberts knocked down 11 to just five by No. 2 Ohio State when the Golden Eagles stunned the Buckeyes in 2021.
This year the shots just weren't falling for the potential Cinderellas.
It’s popular to claim the lack of upsets this year is because of NIL, but it seems to me the main reason there haven’t been many this year is none of the MM teams made threes.
— Kevin Sweeney (@CBB_Central) March 22, 2025
10 12-16 seeds played Friday. Only one shot over 30% from three: Colorado State, the lone winner.
NINE of the 20 12+ seeds were top-100 three point shooting teams this year by percentage, all shooting at least 35% from deep on the year. Only three of those nine shot 30+% from deep in their R64 game. These were good shooting teams that just… didn’t make shots.
— Kevin Sweeney (@CBB_Central) March 22, 2025
As much as there may be some big picture factors at play in the first round results this week, you won't win any games in college basketball these days if you can't hit from beyond the arc. Call it nerves or tight rims or something else, but mid-majors that had been reliable all year long suddenly couldn't buy a three-pointer when they needed it most.
3. The top teams really are that much better this year
Ok this might a bit out there, but here goes: what if the elite teams are actually...elite?
Everything mentioned above certainly plays a part here, but consider the top teams just flat out took care of business and it wasn't even close. Schools like Duke, Florida, Auburn and Michigan State were barely tested in their opening matchups.
Top-4 Seeds in the first round had a record-setting showing. A collective 16-0. Average MOV:
— Matt Norlander (@MattNorlander) March 22, 2025
1s: +32.0
2s: +19.8
3s: +18.8
4s: +20.3
--------------------------
Overall: +22.7
Largest average MOV by top-4 seeds ever in the first round. Blowout city. Historic dominance to start.
An average margin of victory of 22.7 from the top seeds is just something we don't ever see in this tournament. There were 32 games in the first round, and in all but two of them, the team leading at halftime won the game. Only seven of those games featured a second-half lead change.
The upside of all this is that it should make for a much more entertaining tournament moving forward. As the best of the best continue to march toward the Final Four, some incredible matchups loom. If we can't have a chaotic bracket this year, fans might as well embrace the fact the teams who delivered all season long are on a collision course for the national championship.
This article originally appeared on For The Win: 3 theories that may explain the lack of men's March Madness upsets
Topics
-
3 March Madness upset predictions, bracket-busters for 2025 NCAA women's bracket
Which games in the 2025 NCAA women's tournament will bust your bracket? Our March Madness upset predictions are inYahoo Sports - 6d -
March Madness bracket hot takes, from upset picks to Final Four predictions
Bring on the madness. Here are eight takes on the March Madness men's bracket, including upset specials and Final Four picks.Yahoo Sports - 6d -
March Madness upset pick for Final Four bracket: Experts pick Cinderella for 2025 NCAAs
Four experts pick their Cinderella upset team to ruin March Madness and make the NCAA Final Four in San Antonio to help you fill out your bracket.Yahoo Sports - 6d -
March Madness 2025 bracket upsets: Tracking the toughest losses of the NCAA Tournament
Big upsets are arguably one of the most exciting parts of March Madness, despite the pain it might bring your already-busted bracket.Yahoo Sports - 3d -
March Madness perfect bracket tracker: McNeese knocks out 85% of brackets with upset of Clemson
The Cowboys provided the first big upset of the 2025 NCAA tournament.Yahoo Sports - 3d -
Most likely upsets in women's March Madness? Bracket predictions for surprise teams
The women's NCAA Tournament is here. Here's a prediction at which teams could surprise the field with first-round March Madness upsets:Yahoo Sports - 6d -
March Madness upset predictions 2025: Pick these early NCAA Tournament exits
Who will make early exits in 2025 NCAA Tournament bracket? Our best March Madness upset predictions are in.Yahoo Sports - 6d -
Men's March Madness upset predictions: What teams could surprise in today's second round
Here's a look at the most likely March Madness upsets from the second round of the men's NCAA Tournament on Sunday:Yahoo Sports - 13h -
Big upsets are rare in women’s March Madness. Is this the year that changes?
March Madness is known for bracket-busters, but Cinderella runs are rare in the women’s NCAA Tournament. That may change with increased parity.Yahoo Sports - 1d
More from Yahoo Sports
-
NCAA tournament: South Carolina showed again it knows how to win in March, but slow starts could prove damning
Dawn Staley's team didn't panic after yet another slow start on Sunday, and ultimately won by double digits. But better teams may be able to take advantage of their early malaise if it continues.Yahoo Sports - 8m -
Giants outfielder Jerar Encarnación to undergo surgery on his broken left hand
Yahoo Sports - 10m -
Nathaniel Wood thought he finally had an elusive finish vs. Morgan Charriere at UFC London
LONDON – Nathaniel Wood beat Morgan Charriere with a unanimous decision Saturday to open up the main card at UFC Fight Night 255 at The O2 in London. Take a look inside the fight with Wood, who won ...Yahoo Sports - 13m -
MSU hockey get No. 1 seed in NCAA Tournament, will face Cornell on Thursday
See who, when and where Michigan State hockey will open the NCAA Tournament this weekYahoo Sports - 16m -
Tyrese Proctor finally is having his moment and he might carry Duke to March Madness glory
Tyrese Proctor is a rarity. A standout recruit that has stayed three years at Duke. He playing his best ball of his career at the right time.Yahoo Sports - 17m
More in Sports
-
NCAA tournament: South Carolina showed again it knows how to win in March, but slow starts could prove damning
Dawn Staley's team didn't panic after yet another slow start on Sunday, and ultimately won by double digits. But better teams may be able to take advantage of their early malaise if it continues.Yahoo Sports - 8m -
Giants outfielder Jerar Encarnación to undergo surgery on his broken left hand
Yahoo Sports - 10m -
Poch: USMNT faces test of 'character' vs. Canada
USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino said that Sunday's third-place game in the Concacaf Nations League against Canada is a match where "we need to show character."ESPN - 12m -
Juventus sack Motta, hire Tudor after heavy losses
Juventus have sacked manager Thiago Motta and appointed Igor Tudor, the Serie A club said on Sunday, following two consecutive heavy defeats.ESPN - 12m -
Madrid beat Barça in women's Clásico for 1st time
Real Madrid beat Barcelona 3-1 at the Olympic Stadium on Sunday to secure their first-ever Clásico win and keep alive their faint title hopes.ESPN - 12m