September 22, 2024

March Madness 2023 live updates: Selection Sunday brackets, conference tournaments results

Selection Sunday #SelectionSunday

March Madness 2023 takes center stage with Selection Sunday, when teams across college basketball learn if they’ll earn a berth into the NCAA Tournament.

USA TODAY Sports will provide the latest bracket reveal updates, news, analysis, conference tournament scores and more throughout the day. Follow along.

When is Selection Sunday 2023?

Sunday, March 12, 2023. The men’s bracket reveal show begins at 6 p.m. ET and airs on CBS. The women’s bracket reveal show begins at 8 p.m. and airs on ESPN.

PRINTABLE BRACKET: Fill out the NCAA Tournament field as bids are announced

What day does March Madness start?

Games for the men’s First Four are March 14-15. The women’s First Four will be played March 15-16. First-round games for the men are March 16-17 and March 17-18 for the women.

March Madness 2023 schedule

Here is the men’s schedule:

Here is the women’s schedule:

  • First Four: March 15-16

  • First round: March 17-18

  • Second round: March 19-20

  • Sweet 16: March 24-25

  • Elite Eight: March 26-27

  • Final Four: Friday, March 31

  • National championship game: Sunday, April 2

  • How to watch March Madness 2023

    For the men, CBS will air the Selection Sunday show, as well as the Final Four and the national championship game. TruTV will carry the First Four. CBS, TBS, TNT and TruTV will air first- and second-round games. CBS and TBS will air Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games. CBS will air the men’s Final Four and championship game.

    For the women, ESPN will air the Selection Sunday show. ESPN and ABC will carry the First Four. ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNews and ABC will air first- and second-round games. ESPN and ABC will air Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games. ABC will air the national championship game.

    Who are the March Madness 2023 broadcasters?

    For the eighth consecutive year, Jim Nantz, Bill Raftery, Grant Hill and Tracy Wolfson will call the men’s Final Four and championship game. This will mark Nantz’s 32nd – and final – Final Four as lead play-by-play announcer. Nantz announced in October that he would be leaving the longtime role with CBS and Turner Sports to be with his family.

    Story continues

    Jay Wright and Stan Van Gundy will join NCAA Tournament coverage as analysts. The network also tried in vain to get Dick Vitale to join its team. Vitale said he turned down the offer, in part, because of loyalty to ESPN, the network he has worked for since 1979.

    Greg Gumbel will host studio coverage from the CBS Broadcast Center in New York, joined by Charles Barkley, Clark Kellogg and Kenny Smith as well as Wally Szczerbiak. Ernie Johnson will host studio coverage from WBD Studios in Atlanta alongside Jay Wright, Candace Parker and Seth Davis. Additionally, Adam Zucker and Adam Lefkoe will also serve as hosts from New York and Atlanta, respectively.

    Printable March Madness 2023 bracket

    Here is a printable version of the men’s bracket. Here is a printable version of the women’s bracket.

    There are 32 conference tournaments that produce 32 automatic bids. The other 36 at-large teams selected to the field will be announced on Selection Sunday. Here is who has secured automatic bids.

  • Arizona: Pac-12 Conference tournament champion

  • Charleston: Colonial Athletic Association tournament champion

  • Colgate: Patriot League tournament champion

  • Drake: Missouri Valley tournament champion

  • Duke: ACC tournament champion

  • Fairleigh Dickinson: Earns Northeast Conference bid due to title game opponent Merrimack’s ineligibility

  • Florida Atlantic: Conference USA tournament champion

  • Furman: Southern tournament champion

  • Gonzaga: West Coast Conference tournament champion

  • Grand Canyon: WAC tournament champion

  • Howard: Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference tournament champion

  • Iona: MAAC tournament champion

  • Kennesaw State: Atlantic Sun tournament champion

  • Kent State: MAC tournament champion

  • Louisiana-Lafayette: Sun Belt tournament champion

  • Marquette: Big East Conference tournament champion

  • Montana State: Big Sky tournament champion

  • North Carolina-Asheville: Big South tournament champion

  • Northern Kentucky: Horizon League tournament champion

  • Oral Roberts: Summit League tournament champion

  • San Diego State: Mountain West Conference tournament champion

  • Southeast Missouri State: Ohio Valley Conference tournament champion

  • Texas: Big 12 Conference tournament champion

  • Texas A&M-Corpus Christi: Southland Conference tournament champion

  • Texas Southern: SWAC tournament champion

  • UC Santa Barbara: Big West Conference tournament champion

  • Vermont: American East tournament champion

  • Some of the most successful coaches in college basketball rank among the nation’s highest-paid, including Kansas coach Bill Self and Virginia’s Tony Bennett. But there are many more coaches struggling to match the expectations that come with a contract worth multiple millions in annual salary.

    That includes the highest-paid coach in the sport, Kentucky’s John Calipari, who is earning $8.5 million in total compensation with a contract that runs through the 2028-29 season. After being knocked out in the first round of last year’s NCAA Tournament, the Wildcats have spent most of this season unranked and on the tournament bubble.

    USA TODAY Sports compiled pay information from each school in the Power Five conferences and from each school outside those conferences whose team has appeared in at least three of the past five NCAA tournaments.

    These are the five most overpaid coaches in men’s college basketball.

    — Paul Myerberg

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness 2023 bracket reveal: Live updates on Selection Sunday

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