Sports Betting
Sports Betting OffersNFL BettingCollege Football BettingNBA BettingCollege Basketball BettingSoccer BettingLegal States for Betting SportsLegal Sportsbooks for Betting Sports
Online Casinos
Casino OffersCasino NewsBlackjack strategyPoker strategyVideo PokerRoulette strategySlots strategyClassic SlotsBacarrat strategy
Betting Odds & Lines
NFL OddsCollege Football OddsNBA OddsCollege Basketball OddsNHL OddsSoccer OddsGolf OddsBoxing OddsMMA OddsNASCAR Odds
Picks, Teasers, Parlays
NFL Free Expert PicksNCAAF Free Expert PicksNCAAB Free Expert PicksNBA Free Expert PicksMLB Free Expert Picks
Sportsbooks
BetMGM ReviewFanDuel ReviewBetRivers ReviewFanatics ReviewRecommended SportsbooksLegal Sportsbooks by State
Resources & Guides
How to bet on NFLHow to bet on NCAAFHow to bet on NBAHow to bet on NCAABHow to bet on SoccerHow to bet on Golf
Trending News
Sports Trade RumorsSports Injury ReportsCasino News

Sports Betting

Sports Betting OffersNFL BettingCollege Football BettingNBA BettingCollege Basketball BettingSoccer BettingLegal States for Betting SportsLegal Sportsbooks for Betting Sports

Online Casinos

Casino OffersCasino NewsBlackjack strategyPoker strategyVideo PokerRoulette strategySlots strategyClassic SlotsBacarrat strategy

Betting Odds & Lines

NFL OddsCollege Football OddsNBA OddsCollege Basketball OddsNHL OddsSoccer OddsGolf OddsBoxing OddsMMA OddsNASCAR Odds

Picks, Teasers, Parlays

NFL Free Expert PicksNCAAF Free Expert PicksNCAAB Free Expert PicksNBA Free Expert PicksMLB Free Expert Picks

Sportsbooks

BetMGM ReviewFanDuel ReviewBetRivers ReviewFanatics ReviewRecommended SportsbooksLegal Sportsbooks by State

Resources & Guides

How to bet on NFLHow to bet on NCAAFHow to bet on NBAHow to bet on NCAABHow to bet on SoccerHow to bet on Golf

Trending News

Sports Trade RumorsSports Injury ReportsCasino News
college basketball

30 fun facts about March Madness that might surprise you

(Photo by Shutterstock)

Ashley Anderson

March 12th, 2021

SHARE

A year ago today, the NCAA made the difficult, but necessary, decision to cancel March Madness for the first time in history, because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, after a grueling wait, the NCAA basketball tournament is back for its 82nd installment, and players, coaches, and fans alike are ready to revel in the chaos of this one-of-a-kind event.

Get ready for yet another edition of this hair-raising and wildly unpredictable tournament by checking out these 30 fun facts about March Madness that may surprise you!

Origin of the NCAA tournament

1. In 1939, the inaugural NCAA tournament was hosted in Evanston, Illinois, and featured eight teams. The Oregon Webfoots defeated the Ohio State Buckeyes, whose head coach, Harold Olsen, spearheaded the initiative to create this new tournament.

On this date in 1939, the Oregon Webfoots (now @OregonMBB) defeated @OhioStateHoops 46-33 in the first-ever NCAA Tournament title game.

That game was of course played at the TRUE HOME of college basketball: Patten Gymnasium in Evanston, Illinois. @NUMensBball #MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/xu6n9M9DqJ

— Jeff Eisenband (@JeffEisenband) March 27, 2020

2. The National Invitation Tournament predated the NCAA tournament by one year, and used to be more prestigious. That changed after 1970, when Marquette head coach Al McGuire shunned an invite to the NCAA tournament and instead went to the NIT (which Marquette won). In response, the NCAA created a rule that forbade a team from participating in any postseason tourney if it declined an initial offer to play in the NCAA tournament.

3. Until the mid-1950s, teams could participate in both the NIT and NCAA tournaments. City College of New York is the only school to win the NCAA and NIT titles in the same year (1950). The school was later implicated in a points-shaving scandal, and the NCAA dropped it from Division I to Division III.

4. The Illinois High School Association originally coined the term "March Madness" in 1939 and attempted to sue the NCAA over its usage in 1996. Today, "March Madness" is a "dual use trademark" owned by both parties.

March Madness Cinderellas

5. The lowest-seeded team to win the NCAA tournament is 1985 champion Villanova, a No. 8 seed.

6. The lowest-seeded team to play in the Final Four is a No. 11 seed. Four No. 11 seeds have reached the national semifinal round (LSU in 1986, George Mason in 2006, VCU in 2011, and Loyola-Chicago in 2018). 

Two No. 1 seeds, a No. 3 seed, and a No. 11 seed (the fourth No. 11 seed since 1985). A great Final Four. pic.twitter.com/UX2VoyH80F

— Jay Bilas (@JayBilas) March 26, 2018

7. The University of Maryland, Baltimore County Retrievers are the only No. 16 seed to knock off a No. 1 seed. UMBC upset Virginia 74-54 in the first round of the 2018 tournament.

8. The 2014 matchup between the No. 7 seed UConn Huskies and No. 8 seed Kentucky Wildcats represented the lowest-seeded combination in a national championship game.

9. A No. 5 seed has never won the NCAA tournament. Fifth-seeded Butler (2010), Indiana (2002), and Florida (2000) all competed in the title game but lost.

10. The biggest tournament upset, based on point spread, occurred in the 2012 round of 64, when No. 15 Norfolk State, a 21.5-point underdog, beat No. 2 Missouri.

No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament

11. The North Carolina Tar Heels have been awarded the most No. 1 seeds of any school, with 17. Kansas and Duke are tied at second, with 14.

Number of No. 1 seeds by school

No. 1 seedsSchool
17
North Carolina
14
Kansas, Duke
12
Kentucky
7
Virginia
6
Arizona
5
UConn, Georgetown, Michigan State, Oklahoma
4
DePaul, Ohio State, UCLA, Villanova
3
Illinois, Indiana, Purdue, St. John's, Stanford, Syracuse, UNLV, Gonzaga

12. All four No. 1 seeds met in the Final Four just once in NCAA history. That happened in 2008, with Kansas (champion), North Carolina, UCLA, and Memphis.

13. Three times in NCAA history, no No. 1 seed made it to the Final Four. That happened in 1980, 2006, and 2011.

14. Two No. 1 seeds have battled each other in the national championship game eight times in NCAA history (and seven times since the field expanded to 64). Most recently, No. 1 North Carolina beat No. 1 Gonzaga in 2017.

15. In 1997, No. 4 seed Arizona became the only team to beat three No. 1 seeds in a single tournament. The Wildcats defeated Kansas in the regional semifinal, then beat North Carolina in the national semifinal, and took down Kentucky in the championship game.

16. Nineteen teams have entered the NCAA tournament undefeated, but only seven went on to win the national championship. In 2021, Gonzaga will represent the 20th team to enter the tournament undefeated and will attempt to become the first unbeaten team since Indiana to win the NCAA championship.

On this day in 1976…Indiana beat Michigan to win the national title, finishing the season 32-0. There has not been an undefeated national champ since these Hoosiers. pic.twitter.com/n3FgLJMoqm

— ESPN Stats & Info (@ESPNStatsInfo) March 29, 2020

NCAA tournament team and player records

17. The most points scored by one team in a tournament game is 149 points. No. 11 seed Loyola Marymount racked up that many points against No. 3 Michigan in a 149-115 win in the second round of the 1990 tournament.

18. Christian Laettner's buzzer-beater against Kentucky in the 1992 East Regional Final is the most famous bucket of his record 407 career points in the NCAA tournament, which he piled up over 23 games.

19. In 1970, well before the three-point line was introduced to the NCAA tournament, Notre Dame shooting guard Austin Carr set the single-game record for most points scored (61). Carr went 25-of-44 from field-goal range and 11-of-14 from the charity stripe.

Number of No. 1 seeds by school

No. 1 seedsSchool
17
North Carolina
14
Kansas, Duke
12
Kentucky
7
Virginia
6
Arizona
5
UConn, Georgetown, Michigan State, Oklahoma
4
DePaul, Ohio State, UCLA, Villanova
3
Illinois, Indiana, Purdue, St. John's, Stanford, Syracuse, UNLV, Gonzaga

20. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (formerly known as Lew Alcindor at UCLA), is the only men's player to win Most Outstanding Player of the tournament three times. UConn's Breanna Stewart won the award a record four times in the women's NCAA tournament.

21. Former UCLA center Bill Walton holds the record for most points scored in a national championship game. In 1973, he racked up 44 points on 21-of-22 shooting against Memphis State to lift UCLA to a record-setting seventh consecutive NCAA title.

22. Not only does Shaquille O'Neal own the record for most blocked shots (11) in an NCAA tournament game, but he is one of eight players to record a triple-double in the tournament, since 1987. Former Michigan State star Draymond Green is the only player with two triple-doubles (2011 and 2012).

Ja Morant becomes the 8th player to record a triple-double in a NCAA tournament game.

He joins Shaq, Draymond and D-Wade ... some great company 👏 pic.twitter.com/178syN4Xe6

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) March 21, 2019

Top-performing tournament coaches

23. Joe B. Hall, Bob Knight and Dean Smith are the only three men to play and coach on an NCAA championship team. Hall did both with Kentucky. Knight played for Ohio State in 1960 and coached Indiana to titles in 1976, 1981, and 1987. Smith played for Kansas in 1952 and coached North Carolina to titles in 1982 and 1993.

24. Larry Brown is the only coach to win both an NCAA championship and an NBA title. Brown coached Kansas to a banner in 1988 and led the Detroit Pistons to a championship in 2004.

25. The coach with the most NCAA titles is UCLA's John Wooden, with 10. Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski is second all-time, with five, while Coach K and Wooden are tied for most Final Four appearances (12). Krzyzewski leads all coaches with 94 individual tournament victories.

Miscellaneous March Madness trivia

26. Since the inception of the 64-team format in 1985, teams with a "Wildcat” mascot have won the national championship seven times, more than any other mascot.

27. UConn is the only school to field men's and women's national championship teams in the same year. The Huskies did this twice, in 2004 and 2014.

28. Kansas City, Missouri has played host to the Final Four a record 10 times. Indianapolis will host the Final Four for the eighth time in 2021.

Indianapolis' March Madness History:

1991: Duke snaps UNLV's 45-game winning streak
1997: Arizona wins its first national title
2000: Michigan State
2010: Duke tops Butler in a classic
2015: Wisconsin ends Kentucky's 38-game winning streak
2021: CITY HOSTS ENTIRE NCAA TOURNAMENT https://t.co/Mm0nLTLwnc

— Jon Rothstein (@JonRothstein) November 16, 2020

29. The 1979 national championship clash, which featured Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, pulled in the highest television rating of all time for an NCAA tournament game. More than 35 million people tuned in for the Michigan State vs. Indiana State matchup, which garnered a 24.1 rating for the NBC broadcast. 

Michigan State and Notre Dame have only met twice since 1979...#TBT to that 1979 Magic Johnson double-double performance! pic.twitter.com/JM0GC4Oed6

— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) November 30, 2017

30. The odds of filling out a perfect NCAA tournament bracket are 1 in 9.2 quintillion, if you guess or flip a coin. If you know something about basketball, your odds improve to 1 in 120.2 billion.

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

College Basketball

Suggested Articles

March Madness basketball.

March Madness Final Four Live Updates, Scores, Odds & More

NCAA Final Four Edition basketball.

Best March Madness Betting Promos (2025): Claim Over $3K in Bonuses

Basketball sport

FanDuel March Madness Promo (2025): Bet $5, Win $150 in Bonus Bets

ADVERTISEMENT

Colorado

Bet $5 Get $250 in Bonus Bets if You Win!

21+ (18+ D.C.) and present in select states (for KS, in affiliation with Kansas Star Casino). First online real money wager only. $5 first deposit required. Bonus issued as nonwithdrawable bonus bets which expire 7 days after receipt. Restrictions apply. See terms at sportsbook.fanduel.com. Gambling Problem? Call  1-800-GAMBLER or visit RG-help.com. Call 1-888-789-7777 or visit ccpg.org/chat (CT). Hope is here. GamblingHelpLineMA.org or call (800)-327-5050 for 24/7 support (MA). Visit www.mdgamblinghelp.org (MD). Call 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY).

Fanatics Sportsbook logo

Bet and Get up to $1,000 in Bonus Bets

Must be 21+. GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER, Call (877-8-HOPENY) or text HOPENY (467369) (NY), 1-800-BETS-OFF (IA), or 1-800-9-WITH-IT (IN).

Fanatics Sportsbook logo

Get a Guaranteed Win Every Day For Your First Week

Spin to win for free every day, with Casino Credit, Free Spins, FastCash, merch, and more to be won! Must be 21+. GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER.

First Bet Offer up to $1,500 Back in Bonus Bets

21+ only. Please Gamble Responsibly. See BetMGM.com for Terms. First Bet Offer for new customers only (if applicable). Subject to eligibility requirements. Bonus bets are non-withdrawable. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER. Call 1-877-8-HOPENY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY).

100% Deposit Match up to $1,000 Plus $25 on the House

21+ only. Please Gamble Responsibly. See BetMGM.com for Terms. First Bet Offer for new customers only (if applicable). Subject to eligibility requirements. Bonus bets are non-withdrawable. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER.

Welcome to YouBet™, your daily destination to read the latest news and stories on sports, sports betting, gambling, wagering, and games of chance.

Bet on Sports

NFL BettingCollege Football BettingNBA BettingCollege Basketball BettingSoccer BettingGolf BettingBoxing BettingMMA BettingNASCAR Betting

How to Bet on Sports

How to bet on NFLHow to bet on NCAAFHow to bet on NBAHow to bet on NCAABHow to bet on SoccerHow to bet on Golf

Online Sports Betting

Sportsbook OffersSports Betting OddsSportsbooks by StateExpert Picks for SportsSportsbook OperatorsOnline Horse Betting Offers

About

Terms & ConditionsPrivacy & SecurityCookie PreferencesWager ResponsiblyDo Not Sell or Share My InfoAbout Us

Copyright © Churchill Downs Technology Initiatives Company, All Rights Reserved. This site is solely for entertainment purposes and does not contain any real money wagering. YouBet.com does not promote betting or wagering to users under the relevant legal age in their jurisdiction. Online gambling is not legal in some jurisdictions. Prior to wagering online, it is your responsibility to review local regulations. We encourage responsible gaming and provide resources for individuals who may (or know someone who may) have a gaming addition. Churchill Downs Technology Initiatives Company and its affiliates, officers, directors, and employees do not take responsibility for your actions.

Content intended for a 21+ audience. Gambling Problem? Call 1-800-Gambler or find assistance with the National Council on Problem Gambling.