Santa Fe New Mexican

No. 3 Kentucky’s loss crushes millions of brackets

- By Mark Anderson

LAS VEGAS, Nev. — Kentucky’s 80-76 loss to Oakland didn’t just end a bunch of perfect brackets. It all but ruined many when it comes to the big picture.

The third-seeded Wildcats were picked in 95% of brackets in the ESPN Tournament Challenge to beat the 14th-seeded Golden Grizzlies. What’s more, 74.21% had Kentucky making the Sweet 16, 28.84% reaching the Final Four and 6.5% winning the national championsh­ip.

With the Wildcats out, only 12,833 brackets out of more than 22 million remain perfect.

March Madness Live, the NCAA’s official site, reported only 0.396% were flawless, and the number at CBS was 0.09%, with 95.7% of participan­ts on that site choosing Kentucky.

Those having No. 8 seed Mississipp­i State and No. 6 seed BYU advance out of the first round also took big hits. Each school was predicted to get through the first round in more than 9 million ESPN brackets.

Mississipp­i State lost 69-51 to Michigan State, and BYU was beaten 71-67 by Duquesne.

A record 22.6 million brackets were filled out on ESPN’s site, up 15% over last year.

UConn was named the champion on 32.3% of brackets submitted on CBS’ site, far away the most popular choice. Purdue was next at 12.3%, followed by Houston at 11.9% and North Carolina at 8.9%.

All four are No. 1 seeds, and at 3.8% are the most likely Final Four, according to the brackets.

The next closest at 2% includes No. 2 seed Arizona in place of North Carolina out of the West Region.

Mountain West tournament champion New Mexico, the 11 seed in the West, was the most popular double-digit pick to advance to the Sweet 16 at 14%.

UConn also was the favorite in the ESPN Tournament Challenge at 24.7%, followed by Houston at 13.6% and Purdue at 10.1%.

Sheldon Jacobson, who runs the BracketOdd­s website, said most people don’t take the proper approach to filling out their brackets, choosing games from the first round to the championsh­ip game.

“Pick the best team you like in each of the regions and then build your bracket from there,” Jacobson said. “When you do that, you’re actually eliminatin­g some of the risk of making mistakes in the other parts of the bracket. It’s very counterint­uitive, but that’s what our research paper showed.”

 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kentucky coach John Calipari looks deflated late against Oakland on Thursday in the NCAA Tournament in Pittsburgh. Oakland won 80-76.
GENE J. PUSKAR/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kentucky coach John Calipari looks deflated late against Oakland on Thursday in the NCAA Tournament in Pittsburgh. Oakland won 80-76.

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