Current:Home > FinanceHas anyone ever had a perfect bracket for March Madness? The odds and precedents for NCAA predictions -Momentum Wealth Path
Has anyone ever had a perfect bracket for March Madness? The odds and precedents for NCAA predictions
View
Date:2025-04-16 20:09:07
With the 2024 NCAA men's tournament underway and the women's tournament set to begin Friday, the chase for the perfect March Madness bracket has also officially begun. While anyone has a chance to get it completely right, odds are 1 in 9.2. quintillion, according to the NCAA.
In other words, as Tim Chartier, a mathematics and computer science professor at Davidson College in North Carolina, told CBS News, it's like picking a single second in 297 billion years. "It's very difficult," he said.
As of Thursday evening, following No. 14 Oakland's upset of No. 3 Kentucky, the NCAA estimated that only 0.0396% of men's tournament brackets remained perfect.
Has anyone had a perfect bracket?
No, but a neurologist from Columbus, Ohio, named Gregg Nigl had the verified bracket closest to perfection. Back in 2019, he correctly guessed the first 49 games of the men's tournament until then-No. 3 ranked Purdue defeated No. 2 Tennessee in the Sweet 16 — ending his bid for perfection.
He told a local newspaper he almost didn't fill out his bracket because he was home sick hours before the deadline. His record as the longest perfect bracket continues to stand — at least for now.
Before him, someone picked 39 games to start the tournament correctly in 2017, according to the NCAA. That bid fell apart when Purdue defeated Iowa State. In the 2023 NCAA men's tournament, it took only 25 games after No. 16 seeded Fairleigh Dickinson University took down No.1 Purdue.
What are the odds of getting a perfect March Madness bracket?
The NCAA said the odds of a perfect 63-game bracket can be as high as 1 in 9.2 quintillion. Those odds are in play if every game was a coin flip – or a fair 50/50 shot. The amount of different possible outcomes comes out to exactly 9,223,372,036,854,775,808, according to the NCAA.
However, you have a better chance of, say, you and your partner each buying one ticket for a Powerball with a billion dollar jackpot and both winning it than a single person producing a perfect bracket, Chartier, the mathematics professor, told CBS News.
Knowledge of college basketball can tip the scales a bit, as the odds of picking a perfect bracket can be as low as 1 in 128 billion, late DePaul University professor Jeff Bergen said in 2019.
Factors such as travel and injury and other random acts make the tournament hard to predict, according to Chartier. Additionally, the stakes weighing on student athletes during the tournament can't be compared to the season.
"There's a tremendous amount of pressure on some players that were just in high school just a few years ago," he said. "I don't care what happens in the season. None of it really kind of matches the dynamics and the pressure in the history that they set with what happens in the tournament."
Will there ever be a perfect bracket?
Christopher O'Byrne, a lecturer in management information systems at San Diego State University and a college basketball fan, believes a perfect bracket could come if teams followed their "true trajectory" along their seeding positions. O'Byrne told CBS News that one could analyze seeding given out to teams and find some weaknesses there.
But he's not optimistic a perfect bracket will ever happen in his lifetime.
"I hope I live a very long life and have many opportunities or iterations to see a perfect bracket, but I don't have much faith," he said.
- In:
- March Madness
Christopher Brito is a social media manager and trending content writer for CBS News.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- 50 Cent throws microphone into crowd, reportedly hitting concertgoer: Video
- Utah, Nebraska headline college football winners and losers from Thursday of Week 1
- Taiwan suspends work, transport and classes as Typhoon Haikui slams into the island
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- Which stores are open — and closed — on Labor Day
- Sabotage damages monument to frontiersman ‘Kit’ Carson, who led campaigns against Native Americans
- Pentagon unveils new UFO website that will be a 'one-stop' shop for declassified info
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Man gets 2-year prison sentence in pandemic fraud case to buy alpaca farm
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Federal judge blocks Texas law requiring I.D. to enter pornography websites
- Sam Hunt Shares Rare Insight Into Family Life With Wife Hannah Lee Ahead of Baby No. 2
- New Mexico reports man in Valencia County is first West Nile virus fatality of the year
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Miranda Kerr Is Pregnant With Baby No. 4, Her 3rd With Evan Spiegel
- SpaceX launch livestream: Watch liftoff of satellites from Vandenberg base in California
- Burning Man is filled with wild art, sights and nudity. Some people bring their kids.
Recommendation
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Pentagon unveils new UFO website that will be a 'one-stop' shop for declassified info
Martha Stewart Stirs Controversy After Putting a Small Iceberg in Her Cocktail
Ukrainian students head back to school, but not to classrooms
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
Shooting at Louisiana high school football game kills 1 person and wounds another, police say
Miley Cyrus Details Undeniable Chemistry With Liam Hemsworth During The Last Song Auditions
Court revives doctors’ lawsuit saying FDA overstepped its authority with anti-ivermectin campaign