5 bracket alternatives to try during March Madness

From Calcuttas to box pools.

NOTE: We published this back in 2019!

Filling out a bracket for typical March Madness pools is an all-time classic activity and makes the NCAA men’s tournament infinitely more fun and interesting.

But it’s not the only game you can play involving the tournament.

As you’ll see from this list compiled below, there are a whole bunch of other ways to make your tourney experience more fun (and, if you play for money, potentially more lucrative) that involve picking games or the players involved in it. Some of them are bracket-based, but these will get you to think differently about how to strategize.

Here are a few I highly recommend:

1. Calcutta

This one isn’t for the faint of heart: You and a group of friends get together and bid on the teams involved in the tournament in an auction with real dollars. Every time one of your teams win, you get back a percentage of the pot that increases in each round. The hope is you make back more than you invested.

Let’s say you won the bid on an underdog who becomes a Cinderella year for only $50. You would have made some serious return on investment with that pick because they made it to the Final Four. On the flip side, if you bid a lot more to, say, get a No. 1 seed like Virginia and watch them lose to 16 seed UMBC, you lose a lot.

2. A 1 to 64 confidence pool

This was run by a friend of mine for years and it was mind-bending: Instead of picking the winners, you rank the teams involved 1 to 64. Every time a team wins, you get the amount of points in the ranking added to your total. So if Duke is your no. 10 ranked squad, you get 10 points every time they win. The wrinkle? You want the LOWEST score possible. So if there’s a sleeper 12 seed you think can win a couple of times, you’ll want to rank them in the middle of the pack. Think there’s a vulnerable No. 1? Send them down.

3. Survivor pool

Similar to its NFL equivalent, you pick on team to win per day of the tournament, but you can’t use them again once you’ve picked a winning team. Win, and you move on, which can get tricky as the tourney gets tighter.

4. Fantasy leagues

You draft a team based on the players involved, which obviously can be tricky: Do you take a player who is talented but who might lose early?

5. Squares or Box pool

Just like the Super Bowl, you set up a 10 x 10 grid and numbers are randomly assigned to each column. You win money based on the final score of each game in the tournament if your box matches the final digits in each of the scores of a game. That means you could win multiple times throughout the entire tourney and payments can increase with each round.

[mm-video type=video id=01gvcf927a2bznn4m027 playlist_id=none player_id=01gp1x90emjt3n6txc image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027-9bde47dbdccacfadbdb3af94826005a4.jpg]

March Madness: 5 bracket alternatives you need to try, from Calcuttas to confidence pools

From Calcuttas to box pools.

NOTE: We published this back in 2019!

Filling out a bracket for typical March Madness pools is an all-time classic activity and makes the NCAA men’s tournament infinitely more fun and interesting.

But it’s not the only game you can play involving the tournament.

As you’ll see from this list compiled below, there are a whole bunch of other ways to make your tourney experience more fun (and, if you play for money, potentially more lucrative) that involve picking games or the players involved in it. Some of them are bracket-based, but these will get you to think differently about how to strategize.

Here are a few I highly recommend:

1. Calcutta

This one isn’t for the faint of heart: You and a group of friends get together and bid on the teams involved in the tournament in an auction with real dollars. Every time one of your teams win, you get back a percentage of the pot that increases in each round. The hope is you make back more than you invested.

Let’s say you won the bid on an underdog who becomes a Cinderella year for only $50. You would have made some serious return on investment with that pick because they made it to the Final Four. On the flip side, if you bid a lot more to, say, get a No. 1 seed like Virginia and watch them lose to 16 seed UMBC, you lose a lot.

2. A 1 to 64 confidence pool

This was run by a friend of mine for years and it was mind-bending: Instead of picking the winners, you rank the teams involved 1 to 64. Every time a team wins, you get the amount of points in the ranking added to your total. So if Duke is your no. 10 ranked squad, you get 10 points every time they win. The wrinkle? You want the LOWEST score possible. So if there’s a sleeper 12 seed you think can win a couple of times, you’ll want to rank them in the middle of the pack. Think there’s a vulnerable No. 1? Send them down.

3. Survivor pool

Similar to its NFL equivalent, you pick on team to win per day of the tournament, but you can’t use them again once you’ve picked a winning team. Win, and you move on, which can get tricky as the tourney gets tighter.

4. Fantasy leagues

You draft a team based on the players involved, which obviously can be tricky: Do you take a player who is talented but who might lose early?

5. Squares or Box pool

Just like the Super Bowl, you set up a 10 x 10 grid and numbers are randomly assigned to each column. You win money based on the final score of each game in the tournament if your box matches the final digits in each of the scores of a game. That means you could win multiple times throughout the entire tourney and payments can increase with each round.

[mm-video type=video id=01gvcf927a2bznn4m027 playlist_id=none player_id=01gp1x90emjt3n6txc image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027-9bde47dbdccacfadbdb3af94826005a4.jpg]

March Madness: 5 bracket alternatives you need to try, from Calcuttas to confidence pools

From Calcuttas to box pools.

NOTE: We published this back in 2019!

Filling out a bracket for typical March Madness pools is an all-time classic activity and makes the NCAA men’s tournament infinitely more fun and interesting.

But it’s not the only game you can play involving the tournament.

As you’ll see from this list compiled below, there are a whole bunch of other ways to make your tourney experience more fun (and, if you play for money, potentially more lucrative) that involve picking games or the players involved in it. Some of them are bracket-based, but these will get you to think differently about how to strategize.

Here are a few I highly recommend:

1. Calcutta

This one isn’t for the faint of heart: You and a group of friends get together and bid on the teams involved in the tournament in an auction with real dollars. Every time one of your teams win, you get back a percentage of the pot that increases in each round. The hope is you make back more than you invested.

Let’s say you won the bid on an underdog who becomes a Cinderella year for only $50. You would have made some serious return on investment with that pick because they made it to the Final Four. On the flip side, if you bid a lot more to, say, get a No. 1 seed like Virginia and watch them lose to 16 seed UMBC, you lose a lot.

2. A 1 to 64 confidence pool

This was run by a friend of mine for years and it was mind-bending: Instead of picking the winners, you rank the teams involved 1 to 64. Every time a team wins, you get the amount of points in the ranking added to your total. So if Duke is your no. 10 ranked squad, you get 10 points every time they win. The wrinkle? You want the LOWEST score possible. So if there’s a sleeper 12 seed you think can win a couple of times, you’ll want to rank them in the middle of the pack. Think there’s a vulnerable No. 1? Send them down.

3. Survivor pool

Similar to its NFL equivalent, you pick on team to win per day of the tournament, but you can’t use them again once you’ve picked a winning team. Win, and you move on, which can get tricky as the tourney gets tighter.

4. Fantasy leagues

You draft a team based on the players involved, which obviously can be tricky: Do you take a player who is talented but who might lose early?

5. Squares or Box pool

Just like the Super Bowl, you set up a 10 x 10 grid and numbers are randomly assigned to each column. You win money based on the final score of each game in the tournament if your box matches the final digits in each of the scores of a game. That means you could win multiple times throughout the entire tourney and payments can increase with each round.

[mm-video type=video id=01gvcf927a2bznn4m027 playlist_id=none player_id=01gp1x90emjt3n6txc image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027-9bde47dbdccacfadbdb3af94826005a4.jpg]

March Madness: 5 bracket alternatives you need to try, from Calcuttas to confidence pools

From Calcuttas to box pools.

NOTE: We published this back in 2019!

Filling out a bracket for typical March Madness pools is an all-time classic activity and makes the NCAA men’s tournament infinitely more fun and interesting.

But it’s not the only game you can play involving the tournament.

As you’ll see from this list compiled below, there are a whole bunch of other ways to make your tourney experience more fun (and, if you play for money, potentially more lucrative) that involve picking games or the players involved in it. Some of them are bracket-based, but these will get you to think differently about how to strategize.

Here are a few I highly recommend:

1. Calcutta

This one isn’t for the faint of heart: You and a group of friends get together and bid on the teams involved in the tournament in an auction with real dollars. Every time one of your teams win, you get back a percentage of the pot that increases in each round. The hope is you make back more than you invested.

Let’s say you won the bid on an underdog who becomes a Cinderella year for only $50. You would have made some serious return on investment with that pick because they made it to the Final Four. On the flip side, if you bid a lot more to, say, get a No. 1 seed like Virginia and watch them lose to 16 seed UMBC, you lose a lot.

2. A 1 to 64 confidence pool

This was run by a friend of mine for years and it was mind-bending: Instead of picking the winners, you rank the teams involved 1 to 64. Every time a team wins, you get the amount of points in the ranking added to your total. So if Duke is your no. 10 ranked squad, you get 10 points every time they win. The wrinkle? You want the LOWEST score possible. So if there’s a sleeper 12 seed you think can win a couple of times, you’ll want to rank them in the middle of the pack. Think there’s a vulnerable No. 1? Send them down.

THE BRACKETS ARE BACK: The USA TODAY Sports Bracket Challenge is back. $1 MILLION grand prize for a perfect bracket.

3. Survivor pool

Similar to its NFL equivalent, you pick on team to win per day of the tournament, but you can’t use them again once you’ve picked a winning team. Win, and you move on, which can get tricky as the tourney gets tighter.

4. Fantasy leagues

You draft a team based on the players involved, which obviously can be tricky: Do you take a player who is talented but who might lose early?

5. Squares or Box pool

Just like the Super Bowl, you set up a 10 x 10 grid and numbers are randomly assigned to each column. You win money based on the final score of each game in the tournament if your box matches the final digits in each of the scores of a game. That means you could win multiple times throughout the entire tourney and payments can increase with each round.

[mm-video type=video id=01gvcf927a2bznn4m027 playlist_id=none player_id=01gp1x90emjt3n6txc image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027/01gvcf927a2bznn4m027-9bde47dbdccacfadbdb3af94826005a4.jpg]

WATCH: Texas basketball celebrates NCAA Tournament draw

Texas earns its highest NCAA Tournament seeding since 2008.

The Longhorns were all smiles on selection Sunday after earning a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. Texas gathered together for a bracket reveal watch party at the Moody Center on Sunday.

This marks the highest seeding for Texas basketball since the 2007-2008 season when the Horns made it all the way to the Elite Eight.

Texas is set to take on the Patriot League champion and No. 15-seeded Colgate in the first round of March Madness. A win over the Raiders could set up a potential second-round matchup between instate rivals Texas and Texas A&M.

Getting hot at the right time is a key factor for the NCAA Tournament. Texas has won four consecutive games after cruising to a Big 12 Tournament title in Kansas City this weekend. The Longhorns are a trendy pick to make it out of the midwest region and make it to the Final Four.

Rodney Terry’s group is no doubt excited to gear up for the NCAA Tournament on Thursday.

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Contact/Follow us @LonghornsWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas news, notes and opinions.

Notre Dame announces nonconference schedule for 2022-23 season

Notre Dame is eager to build on the success it had during the 2021-22 season.

Notre Dame is eager to build on the success it had during the 2021-22 season. It won two NCAA Tournament games, and [autotag]Blake Wesley[/autotag] became the program’s first one-and-done player after being drafted by the San Antonio Spurs. For the 2022-23 season, the Irish are returning most of their players and have another freshman with high expectations in [autotag]JJ Starling[/autotag]. We now know how their season will start in that they have released their nonconference schedule.

After everything the Irish accomplished last year, opponents will know not to take them lightly. [autotag]Mike Brey[/autotag] has recaptured his old magic, and that means a team that should continue to get better. All of this means some quality basketball will be played, and that means a product worth the money paid by the fans who come out to see them. After a Nov. 2 exhibition against New Orleans-based NAIA opponent Xavier, here’s who the Irish will face before playing an ACC schedule that promises even more excitement:

Notre Dame wins Capital One Trophy for male athletics

This is rather nice.

From a nice football season to a March Madness run to a College World Series berth, Notre Dame’s male programs had a fine 2021-22 campaign. Now, they’re being rewarded for it. For the second time, Notre Dame has won the Capital One Trophy for the men’s side. It’s also the fourth time a school has been awarded the trophy multiple times. The others are Virginia, Stanford and Florida.

Irish athletic director [autotag]Jack Swarbrick[/autotag] took to Twitter to express pride for what the male programs did during the past school year:

The Irish previously won the trophy in 2013-14. In addition to the new hardware, the athletic department will be awarded $250,000 to be used for its student-athlete scholarship fund. One only can imagine the impact that will have over the next few years.

It’s nice to see Notre Dame receive a token of all the success we’ve seen recently. Here’s to an equally successful 2022-23 school year.

Contact/Follow us @IrishWireND on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Notre Dame news, notes, and opinions.

Follow Geoffrey on Twitter: @gfclark89

Bill Self told Kansas to ‘Take it right at their [expletive]’ in title game speech

“Take care of business tonight and you’ll never be forgotten.”

At the end of every Kansas basketball season, the team holds a banquet that’s part celebration, part roast and part remembrance of what’s typically a pretty successful season.

Having won the NCAA national championship less than two weeks ago, this year’s festivities certainly leaned into those themes. To kick things off on Thursday, the program showed an incredible video highlighting the biggest games and moments of the season leading up to the Final Four in New Orleans.

Once it got there, the school showed newly released footage of head coach Bill Self giving his team one final (and mildly expletive-laden) pep talk before taking the court against North Carolina for the title.

(h/t Kansas Athletics)

“You guys will be loved forever, but Danny [Manning is] right. Take care of business tonight and you’ll never be forgotten. Ok? Never be forgotten. You deserve to be here. You deserve to play in this game and I damn guarantee you we deserve to win. Ok? You’re not going to win by hoping it happens. You’re going to win it by going out playing one possession at a time and, as Nick Collison said, ‘hold the moment, play where your feet are’. Ok? Your mind is where your feet are. Always thinking next play, ok?

“I know you’re excited. You should be excited. Maybe a few nerves. Let’s take it out on defense and rebounding. You guys all understand that. Share the ball and the most aggressive team wins. Take it right at their a****. You guys got it? You ready to go? Let’s go have some fun.”

Whew. Yeah, that’ll get you going. For a program that prides itself on the history of the game, referencing Danny Manning and Nick Collison are sure to get the blood pumping a bit faster.

The speech has some shades of what Self told his team before winning the 2008 title with Manning serving as KU’s assistant coach. Self said the players can “ask Danny” about what playing on this stage means.

Whether or not the speech worked in 2022 is up for debate. Kansas came out and knocked down an Ochai Agbaji three to open the scoring, but quickly fell behind, facing a 15-point deficit at halftime.

Not long after, the Jayhawks completed the largest comeback in title game history to knock off the Tar Heels and hang a sixth championship banner at Allen Fieldhouse. No one may ever know for sure what Self told the team at the break—we’ll at least have to wait a few years before the full story comes out—but former KU great Paul Pierce had a pretty good idea what was happening in that locker room at the time.

Hard to argue against The Truth there. Whatever was said, it clearly worked.

[mm-video type=video id=01g0mfxnrkwfbjydq7ca playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01g0mfxnrkwfbjydq7ca/01g0mfxnrkwfbjydq7ca-837e1b5942895af848a48f17a11ea36a.jpg]

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Kansas players are already cashing in on their championship win, with an assist from the school

NIL continues to change the landscape of college sports for the better

University of Kansas head coach Bill Self had quite a profitable postseason. En route to winning the 2022 national championship, the Jayhawks’ leader picked up bonuses totaling $575,000—including $200,000 for winning the title game alone.

Now, thanks to NIL, the school is helping making sure the players on the team have a chance to cash in, as well, and it’s hard not to feel great about this.

The entire KU roster—all 18 players—will embark on a state-wide barnstorming tour to celebrate their championship with fans after the school partnered with 6th Man Strategies to conduct the events.

CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander (yes, the guy with the Guster sticker), explained how the tour will work and how it’ll benefit the players involved:

“Memorabilia will be signed. Photos with Kansas players and giddy KU fans — young and old — will be taken. There will be a special VIP dinner, and the players will also participate in a skills camp for the kids who attend. Fans will also get to see a little live-action basketball, as KU’s players will play a scrimmage for fun….Tickets will go for as little as $30 to as much as $125.

“Arguably the best part: Kansas’ players are set to collectively receive 70% of the ticket revenue from however many of these events wind up happening in the coming weeks. What’s more, any championship Kansas gear that is sold, 100% of those profits will go right back to the players.”

It’s hard to imagine a better example of the benefits provided by NIL.

Fans get a final opportunity to see this KU roster all together, the players get a final opportunity to share in the glory of winning a title and the school can brag to recruits about all the spoils that come with joining the Jayhawks.

It’s a model that’s easy to duplicate and one that’s guaranteed to see copycats across college athletics. Don’t believe me? Go reread that bit about using this to sell recruits. Kansas just happened to reach the mountaintop at the right time—and with the right partners.

But the big winners here won’t just be stars like Ochai Agbaji, David McCormack, Christian Braun and Remy Martin—each of whom have pro careers waiting next season. It’ll be the reserves who worked just as hard as those aforementioned names without getting similar minutes. Guys like Cam Martin, Bobby Pettiford, KJ Adams, Zach Clemence, Joseph Yesufu and Kyle Cuffe Jr.

They deserve every bit as much of the recognition and profits as anyone. It’s nice to see the program is willing to help make that happen. It’ll be even sweeter when this becomes the norm across college athletics.

[mm-video type=video id=01g0mgg0h2zsfpac9rkr playlist_id=none player_id=none image=https://images2.minutemediacdn.com/image/upload/video/thumbnail/mmplus/01g0mgg0h2zsfpac9rkr/01g0mgg0h2zsfpac9rkr-bb4f839eecea9d9b1e4fa59da28e5ff5.jpg]

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14 amazing photos from the Kansas Jayhawks championship parade

The party continues in Kansas

The party continues to rage in Lawrence, Kansas where we imagine the NCAA tournament champion Jayhawks have yet to sleep since Monday night.

After returning from the Final Four in New Orleans earlier this week, the KU team has seemingly been everywhere at once. From celebrating with the Kansas City Royals on Opening Day, to appearing at the Kansas football spring game—where basketball walk-on Chris Teahan suited up and threw a touchdown pass during a “scrimmage”—the Jayhawks are making the most of their time on the mountain top.

Sunday provided another spoil for the victors as thousands of fans packed Massachusetts Street in Lawrence for an epic title parade featuring players and coaches rolling in everything from classic Corvettes to brand new BMWs.

Here are some of the best moments from the festivities.

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