USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Midmajors dish out karma on SEC, commish

- Dan Wolken

The basketball gods have spoken, and their message to Southeaste­rn Conference Commission­er Greg Sankey is crystal clear: Get your greedy, dirty hands off our NCAA Tournament.

Do you believe in karma? If not, maybe it’s time to start.

How else to explain Sankey going on a public relations crusade against the midmajors and small conference champions who make March Madness what it is, then watching as his mighty league fell flat on its face.

SEC tournament champion Auburn? Gone.

Kentucky? Buh-bye.

Florida? See ya. Mississipp­i State? Blown out. South Carolina? Completely outclassed.

On the bright side, Tennessee, Texas A&M and Alabama managed to get through their first-round games, giving the SEC a slightly less embarrassi­ng 3-5 record. Hey, it just means more … coping.

But if what happened last week isn’t a signal for the Dear Leader of the nation’s premiere athletic conference to humble himself and acknowledg­e there are bigger forces at play in this tournament, he has lost all sense of reality and proportion.

In this event, it doesn’t matter whether you won the SEC or represent the onebid Ivy League. A league champion is a league champion, treated equally and seeded by a committee on the totality of their seasons. And when you toss it up and go play, when the politics and propaganda melt away, what you get is the purest form of sport.

Best team on the day wins.

You don’t mess with that, commission­er. You don’t even pretend to threaten something so sacred, so perfect and – as we see in this tournament every single year – so revealing of the sporting character of its participan­ts.

But Sankey’s public comments over the week preceding the first tip-off suggested a colder, more transactio­nal view of how he wants the tournament to work in the future.

In an interview with ESPN, Sankey – who has been pushing for NCAA Tournament expansion the past few years – showed absolutely zero respect or regard

for the role of the midmajor conference champions in making this event a cultural phenomenon that transcends college basketball’s place in the sporting ecosystem.

“We are giving away highly competitiv­e opportunit­ies for automatic qualifiers, and I think that pressure is going to rise as we have more competitiv­e basketball leagues at the top end because of expansion,” he said.

Then, given the chance to clarify a couple of days later in an interview with The Athletic, he continued to call for “a review” of how the tournament field is selected while never expressly saying

that access should be guaranteed for small conference­s. In fact, he even floated the notion that sending the last four at-large selections to Dayton for the First Four should be reconsider­ed.

“Some of those 11 seeds have proven that they go a long way in the tournament,” he said. “So we do have, I think, a healthy need for review. I understand access, I understand the special nature (of Cinderella­s) and certainly respect that, but right now in college athletics, nothing is static.”

That’s a dangerous comment, and here’s why: If the tournament expands from 68 to 76 teams, as some administra­tors believe it will in the next several years, it changes the entire bracket.

Instead of four play-in games as we have now – two of which feed into the 16 seeds in the main bracket – there will be 12 games and 24 teams outside the main bracket.

Who gets relegated to those 24 spots? Is it the weakest at-large teams, a large number of which will presumably come from mid-pack teams in the super-sized SEC or Big Ten? Or will it be the small conference champions fighting each other for the chance to take on the big boys, with half of them being eliminated before the real tournament starts?

So instead of the nation being transfixed by Oakland and sharpshoot­er Jack Gohlke taking it to Kentucky or getting to see the magic of Yale stunning Auburn, you’d be more likely to get Oakland and Yale playing each other in the format Sankey wants. Meanwhile, his schools get a free pass into the round of 64 and minimize their chances of getting embarrasse­d by a midmajor.

Let’s be very clear here: Anyone who wants that version of the tournament hates the sport. This isn’t football. This is an equal-opportunit­y sport where future YMCA All-Stars can get the better of NBA draft picks for the only 40 minutes in their careers that matter.

Even Auburn coach Bruce Pearl managed last Friday to acknowledg­e that his team’s 78-76 loss to Yale, just days after cutting down the nets at the SEC tournament, is what the popularity of this tournament is really all about.

“This just shows you what a great tournament this is,” he said during an interview on CBS. "It shows you how special March is. I was on the other side (at Wisconsin-Milwaukee), I was a 12 (seed), I was a 13. I know how much this means to those midmajor programs that are fighting all year long to play in games like this.”

The SEC, through expansion and its fan base and its financial commitment to win, has stacked the deck in pretty much every sport for 330-plus days a year. But for the three weeks in March and April, they have to prove it on the basketball court like everyone else.

Asking for more than that is akin to throwing up a pair of middle fingers at those who have built and sustained this national treasure that always – always – delivers the goods. Hopefully the SEC’s disastrous weekend teaches Sankey a lesson: Stop trying to make this tournament your personal plaything.

How dare you, commission­er.

 ?? KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Auburn guard Denver Jones reacts after a basket against Yale during the Tigers’ loss in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS Auburn guard Denver Jones reacts after a basket against Yale during the Tigers’ loss in the first round of the NCAA Tournament.
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