2020 FIW Tournament: Bracket Release – Notre Dame’s Best Game Since 1986

We’re excited about the tournament we’re holding at FIW as we spend March determining the best game Notre Dame football has won since 1986.

Happy “Selection Sunday” and welcome to March Madness, Fighting Irish Wire style.  We may not have live sports to watch but we do have each other and that’s really all that matters at the end of the day.

We also have a bracket for our tournament here at Fighting Irish Wire where we will determine the best Notre Dame football game (wins only) since Lou Holtz took over in 1986.

How Will Winners be Determined?
By YOU!  Voting is now open as of this post going live.  Follow along to pick your favorite games and go ahead and share them with your Notre Dame fan friends and let’s make this a fun few weeks.

How Games Were Chosen:
Nick Shepkowski and Jeff Feyerer, both of FIW looked over every Notre Dame win since 1986 and nominated games for selection.  From there they drafted out the nominations until a field of 64 was determined and the bracket was built from there.

The Regions:
What are the four most recognizable locations on Notre Dame’s campus?  As appropriate as the Backer or Corby’s may have been, we decided to the controversial route and select the Basilica, Golden Dome, Grotto and Hesburgh Library instead.  Crazy, we know.

The Bracket:
Like you’re watching the CBS crew do their thing on Selection Sunday, let’s start with the number one seeds.

2020 FIW Tournament: Notre Dame’s Best Games Since 1986 (Introduction)

Who is ready for a tournament that will consume your life for the next three weeks?  Come hang out with us and check back often as we determine the best Notre Dame football game since in the last 34 years.

Who out there is ready for a tournament that will consume your life for the next three weeks?  Aren’t we usually used to that this time of year?  Since we’re all on lock down anyway, let’s have a tournament of our own —

For Notre Dame fans it was already looking like a March to forget.  The women’s basketball team had an incredibly rare off year and the hockey team saw their season end last weekend after dropping two straight in Minnesota to get eliminated from the Big Ten Tournament.  Neither was tournament bound.  Unless Notre Dame went on a miracle run and won the ACC Tournament, the men’s basketball team wasn’t going to be participating in March Madness, either.

What we have for you here at Fighting Irish Wire though is a tournament to remember some of the good and hopefully start some (mostly) friendly debates.

What is the best Notre Dame football game since 1986?

A couple of facts for this bracket and what the selection committee is thinking as we finalize the bracket before it’s Sunday evening release:

  1.  It was put together by Nick Shepkowski and Jeff Feyerer.  The two used a draft type format to come up with seeds for the majority of it, aside from the very top seeds.
  2. It doesn’t matter if the game had national championship implications or not, was it a great game?  It’s worth at least remembering and discussing.  There will be some of the classics you will easily recall and hopefully more than a couple that make you think “oh man, I entirely forgot about that…how in the bloody hell did the Irish win that?!?!”
  3. The only real rule for this is that it had to have occurred since Lou Holtz took over (starting in 1986) and Notre Dame had to have won.  Sure, 2000 Nebraska was a thriller as was 2014 Florida State and 2005 USC.  They were losses though and I’m fine with not having to relive those for now.  Let’s just hope this Coronavirus goes away so we don’t have to start bringing up some of the painful heartbreak and analyzing it too thoroughly (let’s obviously hope Coronavirus goes away for the obvious reasons, too).

We will unveil the bracket on what is normally “Selection Sunday”.  You the Fighting Irish Wire community will then be in charge of voting for the games you think most-deserve to move on and you’ll come right to FIW to do just that.

If you’re not following us on Twitter, be sure to do so and if you’re not following our Facebook page be sure to give it a like.  We’ll post the rounds on both of those and share reminders to vote on each round of action.

Here’s the plan for voting for the games:

First round voting will start on Monday, March 16 at 9 a.m. ET and go through Wednesday, March 18 at 6 p.m ET.

Second round voting then starts Thursday, March 19 at 9 a.m. ET and goes through Sunday evening, March 22 at 6 p.m. ET.

Sweet 16 voting will then be conducted March 23 at 9 a.m. ET and go until Wednesday, March 25 at 6 p.m. ET.

Elite Eight voting will be held then from Thursday, March 26 at 9 a.m. ET and go until Sunday evening of March 29 at 6 p.m. ET.

We’ll then conduct Final Four voting starting Monday, March 30 at 9 a.m. ET and have it go through the evening of Wednesday, April 1 at 7 p.m. ET.

Championship voting will finally take place starting Thursday, April 2 at 9 a.m. ET and go through Monday night, what would have been the night of the NCAA Men’s Basketball national championship.  We’ll close voting at 11:30 p.m. ET to go right along with when “One Shining Moment” usually is hitting the air.

Check back here Sunday night to see the bracket and be sure to share it with your Notre Dame fan friends all March long.  We may not have live sports but we’ll still have plenty of fun in the coming days and weeks.

In the meantime, what games that you fear we may be forgetting need to be included on this bracket?  Get your last minute submissions in before the committee unveils the bracket Sunday night!

ESPN’s latest bracketology has Alabama dropping

The Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team has consistently had ups and downs in recent years, and the trend continues in the 2019-2020 season with Nate Oats. Earlier this week we, at Roll Tide Wire, updated you on Alabama’s positioning in …

The Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team has consistently had ups and downs in recent years, and the trend continues in the 2019-2020 season with Nate Oats.

Earlier this week we, at Roll Tide Wire, updated you on Alabama’s positioning in ESPN’s latest ‘mock bracket, done by their bracketologist, Joe Lunardi.

They sat on the bubble as Lundardi had Alabama as a member of the ‘first four out’ of the tournament.

Now, after Alabama’s loss against Texas A&M at home, which went down to the wire, Lunardi has Alabama listed as a team in the ‘next four out.’

Alabama is listed as the bottom team and Lunardi includes that should VCU win their game on Friday, they will be moved up into the next four out, dropping Alabama.

Should the Crimson Tide stay where they are, they join Georgetown, South Carolina and fellow member of the SEC Arkansas.

Alabama has five games remaining in the regular season before the SEC tournament to help them gain some wins and build a resume to make them an appealing candidate to be apart of the 2020 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.

They will stay in Mississippi for the next two games as they take on Ole Miss tomorrow, Feb. 22, and then Mississippi State on Feb. 25.

Roll Tide Wire will keep you updated on Alabama’s positioning for the 2020 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament.

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Alabama basketball among ‘first four out’ in latest ESPN bracket

The Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team has adopted a ‘blue-collar’ culture under their new head coach, Nate Oats. This culture may just be what will propel them into the NCAA tournament come March. With a current record of 14-11, and 6-6 in …

The Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team has adopted a ‘blue-collar’ culture under their new head coach, Nate Oats.

This culture may just be what will propel them into the NCAA tournament come March.

With a current record of 14-11, and 6-6 in conference play, Alabama is still a team that has some work to put in in order to improve their resume.

ESPN bracketologist, Joe Lunardi released his most recent takes for teams that lie on the bubble.

As seen in Lunardi’s tweet, Alabama sits in the ‘first four out’ category along with Georgetown, Richmond and Mississippi State.

While Alabama basketball fans would rather see the Crimson Tide listed as a team that’s a lock to “dance in March,” it should be encouraging to see that they are right on the cusp of making it into the tournament.

This is a big turnaround from their 2018-2019 season which ended in a disheartening loss to Norfolk St. in the first round of the NIT.

With six games remaining in the regular season, Alabama should look to win the rest of them in order to achieve a record of 20-11 before heading into the SEC Tournament in Nashville.

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