Don’t look now, folks, but Selection Sunday is a scant six weeks away for the Division I volleyball tournament. Division II Selection Sunday is a week prior, and if this were a paying job, I’d be thrilled to do a D-II bracketology as well. But it’s not, so I’ll focus on the big girls.
Not that many of the same bracketing principles apply in the volleyball tournament as do in the better-known NCAA basketball tournaments. Regionals are held at pre-determined sites, hosted this year by California, Nebraska, Texas, and Purdue. There is no restriction against placing a team into the regional which they will host. In fact, it seems just the opposite is the case — last year Florida hosted a regional in Gainesville, and despite not carrying a tournament seed (only the top 16 teams overall are seeded), they were placed there. So since Nebraska, Texas, and Purdue are all mortal locks to be NCAA tournament teams, you can bet they’ll be bracketed into their home regionals. There are rules restricting conference matchups and regular-season rematches in the first and second rounds, unless a conference has so many teams in the tournament restricting them would be unavoidable. In practice, that can really only happen with the 15-team Big East Conference, so it’s something the basketball tournament committee has to be aware of, but not so much the volleyball selectors.
Each of the 31 conferences gets their regular-season champion in, but that does not mean that 33 bids are up for grabs. For the easiest illustrative example, consider the Pac-12 — Stanford, Oregon, Washington, USC, and UCLA. Regardless of who ends up as Pac-12 champion, none of these teams are going to be biting their nails on Selection Sunday. They’re all in, no question about it. By my reckoning, I count 13 at-large bids that are by all rights spoken for at this time. That number could increase if someone falters in a conference tournament.
I will update this every week, now that the hard part is done. I may update it multiple times in the week leading up to Selection Sunday.
SEEDS
1. Penn State
2. Washington
3. Nebraska
4. Stanford
5. Texas
6. Oregon
7. UCLA
8. Louisville
9. USC
10. Kansas State
11. Minnesota
12. Hawaii
13. Florida
14. Florida State
15. San Diego
16. BYU
LAST FOUR TEAMS IN:
1. Notre Dame
2. Clemson
3. Georgia Tech
4. Illinois
FIRST FOUR TEAMS OUT:
1. California
2. Santa Clara
3. Colorado
4. Seton Hall
NEXT FOUR TEAMS OUT:
1. Wichita State
2. Duke
3. Southern Illinois
4. St. John’s
The first two rounds are held at the home court of the seeded team. I have employed a little creative bolding to make it clear how the first and second rounds would “pod” together, since the double-spacing tendencies of WordPress make it a little less than obvious.
PURDUE REGIONAL:
(1) Penn State vs. Canisius
Missouri vs. Creighton
Purdue vs. Idaho State
(16) BYU vs. Central Arkansas
(9) USC vs. Albany
Texas A&M vs. Notre Dame
Dayton vs. Colorado State
(8) Louisville vs. LIU-Brooklyn
TEXAS REGIONAL:
(5) Texas vs. Jackson State
North Carolina vs. Marquette
Ohio State vs. Bowling Green
(12) Hawaii vs. Utah State
(13) Florida vs. Towson
Pepperdine vs. Tulsa
Oklahoma vs. Michigan State
(4) Stanford vs. Maryland-Eastern Shore
NEBRASKA REGIONAL:
(3) Nebraska vs. Yale
Tennessee vs. Oregon State
Miami vs. Illinois
(14) Florida State vs. Morehead State
(11) Minnesota vs. College of Charleston
Western Kentucky vs. Georgia Tech
Kentucky vs. St. Mary’s
(6) Oregon vs. Florida-Gulf Coast
CALIFORNIA REGIONAL:
(7) UCLA vs. Liberty
Arkansas vs. Northern Iowa
Iowa State vs. Clemson
(10) Kansas State vs. Cleveland State
(15) San Diego vs. UNLV
Kansas vs. IPFW
North Carolina State vs. Michigan
(2) Washington vs. Colgate
Conferences by number of bids:
8 – Big Ten
6 – Pac 12, Southeastern, Atlantic Coast
5 – Big 12
4 – West Coast
3 – Big East
2 – Missouri Valley, Mountain West
1 – Other 22 conferences
Keep in mind it’s early yet. I don’t fancy this to be anything close to perfect, and I can all but guarantee you the SEC is not going to get 6 bids. They might get 5. Last year, at-large bids went to the Missouri Valley (2), the Mid-American (3), and the Sun Belt Conferences in addition to the power six and perennial volleyball powerhouse West Coast Conference.
So there will be some movement, and some of the teams I have as “gimmes” will end up needing at-large bids. But this it the first look at it.
**OF NOTE** The conference count was originally wrong — I somehow had Clemson down as an SEC team.
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