March Madness: Biggest questions for the men’s committee as Selection Sunday nears

With march madness less than 24 hours away, the 12-member men’s selection committee chaired by Keith Gill faces a compressed window to resolve the toughest seeding and bubble decisions before Selection Sunday. Most of the field is in place, but several high-stakes questions will shape the final 68-team bracket and the top seed line.
What if the committee must pick the final No. 1 seeds?
Florida, Duke, Michigan and Arizona are positioned on the top line, but the committee will debate margins and recent form. Florida closed the regular season on an 11-game win streak before a heavy loss in the SEC semifinals to Vanderbilt. Duke secured the ACC title by holding off Virginia and remains a leading contender for the top overall seed despite injuries to Caleb Foster and Patrick Ngongba II. Duke is No. 1 in the NET, in the BPI, at KenPom and BartTorvik, while Michigan is No. 1 in the other three metrics referenced by the committee. The late losses by UConn and Houston in their conference tournaments removed immediate challengers for that final slot, leaving the top-line conversation centered on those four teams.
What Happens When March Madness brackets are set?
Sometime before 6 p. m. ET on Sunday evening, the selection committee will provide a completed bracket. That finalized march madness bracket will determine not only seeding and region lines but also the composition of on-site opening-round play and early matchups. For one team that finished the regular season unbeaten, the committee’s placement is a distinct decision point: Miami’s perfect regular season ended in a conference quarterfinal loss, and while the committee tends not to omit an unbeaten regular-season team, the RedHawks’ resume metrics present complications.
- Florida: 11-game win streak to end regular season; SEC semifinal loss to Vanderbilt; heavy Quad 1 résumé metrics and multiple marquee wins.
- Duke: ACC champion; significant Quad 1A and Quad 1 wins (10 Quad 1A, 17 Quad 1, 23 Quad 1 and 2); top-ranked in NET, BPI, KenPom and BartTorvik.
- Michigan: Ranked No. 1 in the other major metrics used by the committee; recently lost to Duke on a neutral court.
- Miami (RedHawks): Finished regular season 31-0 but lost in the Mid-American Conference quarterfinals; nonconference strength of schedule noted at the low end (No. 363) and overall strength of schedule also among the weakest referenced (No. 340); predictive metrics and KenPom position create the possibility of a compromise placement.
Who wins and who loses in the final room?
The committee’s choices will advantage programs with demonstrable high-quadrant wins and stable metrics while creating hard outcomes for teams with thin nonconference profiles. Duke’s heavy Quad 1 resume and multi-metric strength make it difficult for rivals to displace them. Programs that rely on streaks against weaker schedules face the risk of middle-round placement or play-in assignments; the RedHawks’ profile shows how unbeaten records can collide with weak scheduling and predictive measures in committee deliberations. The committee has historical guardrails as well: no at-large team with 16 losses has been selected, and selections for teams barely above. 500 have been rare, narrowing paths for long-shot at-large candidates.
Uncertainty is real. Late conference results — a single upset in a title game or a top team stumbling in a semifinal — have already reshaped the calculus for the top seed line. The panel must reconcile head-to-head results, volume of high-quadrant wins, recent form and injury reports within limited time, and that trade-off will define who benefits and who gets pushed to Dayton or into the opening rounds.
Readers should expect the committee, led by Keith Gill, to finalize the field and provide the completed bracket before 6 p. m. ET on Selection Sunday, and to watch how the balance between résumé volume and recent performance determines final march madness outcomes.




