Selection Sunday 2025: Men's and women's brackets reveal date, time, schedule, how NCAA March Madness works
After weeks of anticipation and speculation, the bracket-filling finally can begin Sunday as the 68-team fields for the NCAA men's and women's basketball tournaments are revealed.
"Selection Sunday" will unveil which teams made the March Madness tournaments (and which "bubble" teams were left disappointed) that will unfold over the course of four regionals to will determine the Final Four national semifinals.
The Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, is the host of this year's men's Final Four, which will be held April 5-7.
The 2025 women's Final Four will be held April 4-6 at Amalie Arena in Tampa, Florida.
Here are the details on how to watch "Selection Sunday" on March 16:
The men's bracket will be unveiled starting at 6 p.m. ET. The release of the women's bracket will begin at 8 p.m. ET.
CBS Sports will have the announcement of the first-round pairings on the "2025 NCAA Men's Basketball Championship Selection Show," which will be revealed region by region with reactions from the teams that qualified.
The show, which also is streamed on NCAA March Madness Live and Paramount Plus, will be hosted by Adam Zucker with analysts Clark Kellogg, Jay Wright and Seth Davis.
The women's bracket will be revealed live on ESPN with the "NCAA Women's Selection Special."
The teams are chosen through a mix of 31 automatic qualifiers (by winning their postseason conference tournaments) and 37 at-large bids (selected by the NCAA committee).
There are four regions of teams seeded from 1 through 16 (which also is determined by the committee).
Both the men's and women's tournament feature First Four play-in games among eight teams trying to advance to the main 64-team bracket.
The Men's First Four will be held March 18-19 in Dayton, Ohio. The first-round games in the 64-team bracket will begin March 20.
The Women's First Four will be held March 19-20 at neutral sites (on home courts for the top seeds that will play host to first-round games). The first-round games in the 64-team bracket will begin March 21.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
26 minutes ago
- New York Post
Simone Biles ‘incinerated her legacy' with trans athlete posts: Riley Gaines
Riley Gaines broke down the personal attack Simone Biles levied on her on social media and what it really meant for the Olympic gold medalist and one of the greatest gymnasts of all-time. Gaines dropped the latest episode of the 'Gaines for Girls' podcast on OutKick and recorded the show a few hours after Biles came after her on X. Gaines gave Biles her flowers as one of the best athletes to have ever performed in sports, but said the posts put a bad mark on her resume. Advertisement 'In just two tweets, Simone Biles basically tarnished her reputation to anyone with a shred of honesty, to anyone with a moral compass and to anyone with an inherent innate desire to protect women, to fight for equal opportunity for both men and women especially as it pertains to sports,' she said. 'The conclusion I'm drawing based on the response we have seen over the past 12-ish hours at this point on social media, she's basically incinerated her legacy in just two tweets.' Biles launched into an attack on Gaines on Friday as the former NCAA All-American swimmer reacted to a transgender athlete winning a state championship in Minnesota softball. 3 Simone Biles attends Netflix's 'Simone Biles Rising' FYC event at Hollywood Athletic Club on June 02, 2025 in Hollywood, California. Getty Images 3 Former competitive swimmer Riley Gaines speaks at a news conference following the House of Representatives vote on H.R. 28 – 'Protection of Women and Girls in Sports Act' at the U.S. Capitol on January 14, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images Advertisement The Olympic gymnast called Gaines a 'bully' and said that 'no one in sports is safe with you around.' Gaines said during her podcast that she believed that Biles' post showed she may be finished competing in gymnastics with her apparent support of transgender athletes, taking a page out of Megan Rapinoe's playbook. Rapinoe said in 2023 she would support a transgender player on the US women's national team. She retired from the sport later that year. 'What she's done here is pull up the ladder behind her,' Gaines said of Biles. 'We've seen people like Megan Rapinoe do this. Simone Biles is just the latest where apparently she's done competing. Just like Megan Rapinoe did – waited until they were done competing to take a stance on this issue, which for the life of me I cannot understand. 3 Simone Biles of Team United States competes on the balance beam during the Artistic Gymnastics Women's All-Around Final on day six of the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Bercy Arena on August 01, 2024 in Paris, France. Getty Images Advertisement 'Take me out of the equation. Again, I don't care about the personal attacks. I cannot for the life of me understand why Simone Biles, in the year 2025, would advocate for this.' Biles said she would welcome a debate or discussion to talk about the issue of transgender athletes in girls' and women's sports. Gaines has been at the forefront of championing fairness in women's sports since she tied with Lia Thomas in the 2022 NCAA Championships. 'I think she blindly advocated for this without actually thinking about the effects of what this would look like,' Gaines said. 'How no one would know Simone Biles if it weren't for women's gymnastics. … If her inclusive dream was a reality, she would have zero gold medals.'


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
Texas, Duke to meet in inaugural Dick Vitale Invitational
Texas, Duke to meet in inaugural Dick Vitale Invitational The game will serve as an early test for Sean Miller's Longhorns, who are expected to enter the season ranked in the top 25. The Texas Longhorns and Duke Blue Devils will open the 2025-26 college basketball season with a marquee matchup that now carries special significance. The teams are set to face off in the inaugural Dick Vitale Invitational on Nov. 4 at Spectrum Center, ESPN and the Charlotte Sports Foundation announced Monday. The annual event will honor legendary sportscaster Dick Vitale, who has been a fixture in college basketball broadcasting since joining ESPN in 1979. Monday's announcement coincided with Vitale's 86th birthday. 'Dick is the heart of college basketball, and his kindness, generosity and courage are a constant inspiration to us all,' ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro said in a statement. 'Through the creation of the Dick Vitale Invitational, we will celebrate him and his profound impact on the sport.' Vitale has called more than 1,000 games during his career and recently returned to the broadcast booth after a three-year battle with four types of cancer. He was declared cancer-free in December 2024 and made his on-air return Feb. 8 for Duke's game against Clemson. 'ESPN has been such a vital part of my life since December 5, 1979, and I was so thrilled to learn that ESPN Events will have an annual Dick Vitale Invitational,' Vitale said. 'Jimmy Pitaro and all my colleagues and friends at ESPN have been so good to me and I am so thankful for all of the prayers and love I have received from them during my cancer battles. ESPN has been family to me and has given me a life that has been even better than my dreams. To the Vitale family, ESPN is 'Awesome, baby' with a capital A!' Will Pitts, CEO of the Charlotte Sports Foundation, called the matchup a fitting tribute. 'Bringing together two powerhouse programs like Texas and Duke is an incredible way to kick off this new tradition,' Pitts said. 'More importantly, this event celebrates the enduring legacy of Dick Vitale—his passion for college basketball, his advocacy for cancer research, and the joy he brings to fans everywhere. It's an honor to carry his name on this event, and we look forward to making this a special experience for everyone involved.' The game will serve as an early test for Sean Miller's Longhorns, who are expected to enter the season ranked in the top 25. Duke, coming off a Final Four appearance and boasting the nation's top recruiting class, will provide stiff competition in what is expected to be a road environment for Texas in Charlotte.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
College sports commissioners laud $2.8B antitrust settlement, call for Congress to act
FILE - The NCAA headquarters in Indianapolis is seen on March 12, 2020. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File) Conference commissioners lauded a judge's approval of a $2.8 billion antitrust lawsuit settlement as a means for bringing stability and fairness to an out-of-control college athletics industry but acknowledged there would be growing pains in implementing its terms. In a 30-minute virtual news conference Monday, commissioners of the ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12 and SEC renewed their call for congressional action to supplement and even codify the settlement and emphasized that cooperation at every level of college sports would be necessary to make it work. Advertisement They said it was too early to address how violators of rules surrounding revenue sharing and name, image and likeness agreements would be punished and noted newly hired College Sports Commission CEO Bryan Seeley would play a major role in determining penalties. The new era of college athletics has arrived after U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken gave final approval Friday night to what's known as House vs. NCAA. Beginning July 1, each school can share up to about $20.5 million with their athletes and third-party NIL deals worth $600 or more will be analyzed to make sure they pay appropriate 'market value' for the services being provided by athletes. Some of the topics addressed Monday: Binding conferences to terms Advertisement The conferences drafted a document that would bind institutions to enforcement policies even if their state laws are contradictory. It would require schools to waive their right to pursue legal challenges against the CSC. It also would exempt the commission from lawsuits from member schools over enforcement decisions, instead offering arbitration as the main settlement option. Consequences for not signing the agreement would include risking the loss of league membership and participation against other teams from the Power Four conferences. Big 12 Commissioner Brett Yormark said the document remains a work in progress but that he's gotten no pushback from his schools. 'I look to get that executed here in short order,' he said, "and know it will be very necessary for all the conferences to execute as well.' Advertisement Directives on revenue sharing There has been no directive given to individual schools on how to determine the allocation of revenue-sharing payments, commissioners said. It's widely acknowledged that athletes in football and basketball are expected to receive the majority of the money. 'I know for all five of us no one is forgetting about their Olympic sports and continuing to make sure we've invested a high level for all of our sports,' ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips said. College Sports Commission CEO The commissioners said Seeley, as Major League Baseball executive vice president of legal and operations, was uniquely qualified to lead the CSC, which is charged with making sure schools adhere to the rules. Advertisement 'Culture doesn't change overnight," Seeley told The Athletic over the weekend. "I don't expect that to happen overnight, but I do think that the schools that have signed on to the settlement want rules and want rules to be enforced. Otherwise they wouldn't have signed on to the settlement. I think student-athletes want a different system. So I think there is a desire for rules enforcement. There's a desire for transparency.' Sankey said Seeley is well-versed in areas of implementation, development and adjustment of rules and in NIL disputes requiring arbitration. Yormark said: 'You want people not to run away from a situation but to run to a situation. He ran here, and he's very passionate to make a difference and to course correct what's been going on in the industry.' Skepticism about enforcement Advertisement Deloitte's 'NIL Go' program and LBI Software will track NIL deals and revenue-sharing contracts, and the commissioners shot down skepticism about the ability of those tools to enforce terms of the settlement. SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey said football and basketball coaches he spoke with in February were unanimous in wanting regulation. 'They have the responsibility to make what they asked for work,' he said. Congressional action NCAA President Charlie Baker has been pushing Congress for a limited antitrust exemption that would protect college sports from another series of lawsuits, and the commissioners want a uniform federal NIL law that would supersede wide-ranging state laws. Advertisement 'We're not going to have Final Fours and College Football Playoffs and College World Series with 50 different standards,' Sankey said, 'so that's a starting point.' Big Ten Commissioner Tony Petitti said the willingness of administrators to modernize the college athletics model should prompt federal lawmakers to move on codifying the settlement. Sankey's meeting with Trump Sankey confirmed a Yahoo Sports report that he and Notre Dame athletic director Pete Bevacqua played golf with President Donald Trump on Sunday. Sankey said he appreciates Trump's interest in college sports and that it was helpful to share perspectives on the path forward. Trump reportedly considered a presidential commission on college sports earlier this year. Sankey declined to disclose details of their talks. 'I think those are best left for the moment on the golf course,' he said. ___ AP college sports: