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The men s NCAA tournament routinely costs employers billions of dollars in productivity, and there s no question that filling out brackets is a major contributor to that deficit.
No matter your situation diehard fan, casual viewer, regular March Madness watcher or simply someone with a pulse we ll try nearly anything to pick an accurate bracket. Everything from team-by-team research and historical trends to coin flips, jersey colors and team nicknames may contribute to your choices.
What matters most, though?
To start, forget about perfection. A group of researchers at the University of Hawaii estimated that there are 7.5 quintillion grains of sand on Earth, Daniel Wilco of NCAA.com said. If we were to pick one of those at random and then give you one chance to guess which of the 7.5 quintillion grains of sand on the entire planet we had chosen, your odds of getting it correct would be 23 percent better than picking a perfect bracket by coi
Richard Pitino will be back on the sidelines next season, having been hired as the head coach of the New Mexico men's basketball team Tuesday. Minnesota fired Pitino on Monday night after he spent eight seasons with the Golden Gophers.
Both for competitive and historical reasons, the four No. 1 seeds in the NCAA men's basketball tournament are the hunted. To start, the rankings tell us they are the best teams in the country.