The 2026 men’s NCAA tournament is rapidly approaching, which means the question top of mind for many fans is: Will your team be in or out? Teams have roughly two weeks until Selection Sunday to strengthen their cases. Until then, we’re here to track how each team on the “bubble” of the bracket is trending.
We’ll use a variety of metrics as guides, classifying teams based on how likely they are to make the field of 68 as one of the 37 at-large selections — conditional on not winning their respective conference tournaments for one of the 31 automatic qualifying bids (AQs). To that end, we’ll use Joe Lunardi’s Bracketology projections and a combination of data sources — including my forecast-model consensus and NCAA résumé metrics such as NET rankings that the selection committee will evaluate — to judge a team’s underlying potential. (For a full glossary of terms and sources, click here or scroll to the bottom of this story.)
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We’ll sort teams in at-large contention into the following categories:
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Locks: Teams that have nearly a 100% chance to be called by the committee as an at-large selection (if necessary). They would need a significant change in momentum to miss the cut. 27 current teams
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Should be in: Teams tracking safely above the cutline (generally 75% consensus at-large odds or better), but not immune to trouble. Most likely, these teams should hear their names called on March 15, though their fates are not yet assured. 12 current teams
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Work to do: Teams whose upcoming results will meaningfully change their fate (for good or bad). These are the truest “on the bubble” teams, because their chances are closest to a coin flip, though their consensus at-large odds may be as low as 10%. 16 current teams
Teams beyond these categories would need to outperform expectations or benefit from chaos. There is little — though not zero — chance any team not listed here will make the Big Dance without winning its conference tournament.
Now let’s go conference by conference — in order of which project to have the most NCAA tournament bids — to rank the teams in each category based on their chances to secure an at-large bid.
Note: All times Eastern.
Jump to a conference:
SEC | Big Ten | ACC
Big 12 | Big East
Mid-majors


SEC
9.9 expected bids (8.9 at-large)

Locks (5)
Florida Gators
Alabama Crimson Tide
Vanderbilt Commodores
Arkansas Razorbacks
Tennessee Volunteers

Should be in (4)

Kentucky Wildcats
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:10 p.m.
Three straight losses to Florida, Georgia and Auburn meant we had to downgrade Kentucky from a “lock” recently, but the Wildcats got back to business this week with wins over South Carolina and Vanderbilt. Their résumé now features six Quadrant 1 victories, placing them inside the top 30 nationally in our résumé average, and sixth-best in an SEC that projects to send as many as 11 teams to the tournament. Of their 10 losses, seven came to Quadrant 1A foes.
Next game: at Texas A&M (Tuesday)

Georgia Bulldogs
Updated: Feb. 25, 9:10 p.m.
Coming off résumé-boosting wins over Kentucky and Texas, Georgia fell short in a comeback bid for another after falling behind big early at Vanderbilt on Wednesday. It has been a roller-coaster season for the Dawgs: After winning 16 of their first 19 games, they lost five of their next six and fell from a 97% to 66% consensus at-large chance in the span of three weeks — but those chances are back up around 90% despite the loss to the Commodores. Georgia sits mid-30s in the overall résumé rankings, with four wins against Quadrant 1 foes, and ranks seventh in résumé average within what should be at least a 10-bid SEC. Toward the end of a challenging stretch of games, the Dawgs have the conference’s easiest remaining schedule according to the BPI, so they should pick up a couple of additional wins.
Next game: vs. South Carolina (Saturday)

Missouri Tigers
Updated: Feb. 28, 3:10 p.m.
Coming off an important win over Tennessee, Missouri got another on Saturday at Mississippi State in its sixth victory in eight games. The Tigers have now cracked the top nine of SEC teams in the résumé average (borderline top 40 nationally), a favorable spot with the conference projected for 10 to 11 tournament entries. If it comes down to in-conference comparisons, they do have five Quadrant 1 wins and a much better record than a team like Auburn (19-9 vs. 15-13), albeit against a much easier schedule (65th hardest vs. fourth). The at-large forecast models continue to like the chances for Dennis Gates’ team, as they sit around 80% with two Quadrant 1 games to close the regular season.
Next game: at Oklahoma (Tuesday)

Texas A&M Aggies
Updated: Feb. 25, 11:17 p.m.
The Aggies recently found themselves downgraded from “should be in” to “work to do,” but a remarkable comeback against Ole Miss followed by a solid victory at Oklahoma helped their tournament hopes. With Wednesday’s one-sided loss at Arkansas, though, their consensus at-large chances stay in the mid-70% range. They rank ninth in the résumé average out of what’s looking like a 10- to 11-bid SEC, so they are on the right side of the bubble, but Bucky McMillan’s squad probably needs to bolster their case against Texas, Kentucky and/or LSU to close the regular season.
Next game: vs. Texas (Saturday)

Work to do (2)

Texas Longhorns
Updated: Feb. 25, 9:12 p.m.
Leading Florida by three points with 7:27 to play Wednesday, Texas was outscored 23-7 down the stretch for its second consecutive loss. The Longhorns’ five-game winning streak is disappearing in the rearview mirror, with the consensus forecast now setting their at-large chances in the at 63% — up from 45% earlier in the month but down from 81% a week ago. They still have more Quadrant 1 wins than Texas A&M, but they’re also neck and neck with Missouri for 10th among SEC teams in the résumé rankings (mid-40s nationally). Even after losing to Georgia and Florida, two of their final three regular-season contests are against Quad 1 opponents, so their tournament fate still hangs in the balance.
Next game: at Texas A&M (Saturday)

Auburn Tigers
Updated: Feb. 25, 7:41 a.m.
The Tigers stopped their five-game losing streak with Saturday’s dramatic victory over Kentucky, but the relief turned out to be only temporary — they lost again at Oklahoma on Tuesday to cast more doubt on their tournament outlook. They still have a fascinating case: Although all but one of their recent losses came against Quadrant 1 opponents, they have five Quadrant 1 wins against the nation’s fourth-most difficult schedule per the BPI and remain top 40 in the national résumé ranking average. But those mounting losses do matter, and teams most similar to Auburn have tended to miss out on an at-large bid more often than not. Whatever happens, they will be an interesting litmus test for what the committee values.
Next game: vs. Mississippi (Saturday)


BIG TEN
9.2 expected bids; 8.2 at-large

Locks (6)
Michigan Wolverines
Purdue Boilermakers
Illinois Fighting Illini
Nebraska Cornhuskers
Michigan State Spartans
Wisconsin Badgers

Should be in (2)

Iowa Hawkeyes
Updated: Feb. 28, 2:52 p.m.
With Wednesday’s victory over fellow Big Ten bubble team Ohio State barely in the rearview, Iowa let Saturday’s game against Penn State slip away late as a big favorite. The Hawkeyes’ résumé still sits in the low-30s nationally — in addition to being top 25 in our average of predictive ratings — so their tournament hopes remain in relatively good shape. But the trip to State College was supposed to be the easy leg of their remaining schedule, as they close out the regular season against Michigan and Nebraska.
Next game: vs. Michigan (Thursday)

UCLA Bruins
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:01 p.m.
The Bruins’ brief winning streak against Illinois and crosstown bubble rival USC came to an end on Saturday at Minnesota. Despite the loss, they have three Quadrant 1 victories on the season, placing their résumé eighth in what Bracketology projects to be a nine-bid Big Ten. Their consensus at-large odds remain around 90% in the forecast models.
Next game: vs. Nebraska (Tuesday)

Work to do (3)

Indiana Hoosiers
Updated: Feb. 24, 9:10 p.m.
After a run of five wins in six games, Indiana has now lost three straight to Illinois, Purdue and Northwestern, shaving the Hoosiers’ conditional at-large probability down to the 60% range. Their portfolio can stand up next to other bubble teams — they rank mid-40s in the national résumé average, no worse than 10th among the Big Ten in what’s looking like a nine-bid conference — and they remain among the top 40 in the predictive metrics. But they just lost their most winnable remaining game to Northwestern and are likely to enter the Big Ten tournament in limbo.
Next game: vs. Michigan State (Sunday)

Ohio State Buckeyes
Updated: Feb. 25, 11:15 p.m.
When we noted that the Buckeyes needed more consistency after alternating wins and losses for so long, they were looking for a winning streak — not the back-to-back losses they got against Michigan State and Iowa this week. Their at-large chances now sit in the high-50% range, casting doubt on a tournament profile that seemed much stronger not long ago. Ohio State is a better team than its current résumé indicates, ranking inside the top 40 of the predictive ratings. But the Buckeyes have been unable to escape the bubble for very long, ranking in the mid-40s in the résumé rankings — right on the cutline both nationally and for a projected nine- or 10-bid Big Ten. After the Iowa loss, they are now 1-10 against Quadrant 1 opponents and 0-9 vs. Q1-A specifically. Remaining games against Purdue and Indiana loom large.
Next game: vs. Purdue (Sunday)

USC Trojans
Updated: Feb. 25, 7:53 a.m.
A recent three-game win streak had helped pad USC’s bubble case, but losses to Ohio State, Illinois, Oregon and now bubble rival UCLA — the latter of which saw the Bruins open up a lead near the half and pull away down the stretch — have sliced the Trojans’ at-large chances to just 20%. With the 11th-best résumé ranking in what’s trending to be just a nine-bid conference, and a ranking outside the top 50 of the predictive ratings, USC needs strong showings against Nebraska, Washington and UCLA again to make a case as one of the Big Ten’s last entries.
Next game: vs. Nebraska (Saturday)


ACC
8.1 expected bids; 7.1 at-large

Locks (5)
Duke Blue Devils
Virginia Cavaliers
North Carolina Tar Heels
Louisville Cardinals
NC State Wolfpack

Should be in (3)

SMU Mustangs
Updated: Feb. 26, 8:06 a.m.
The Mustangs improved their projections last week with back-to-back wins over Louisville and Boston College, but Wednesday’s loss at California slowed that momentum a bit. They have been neck and neck with Miami (and now Clemson) recently, fighting to be sixth (as opposed to eighth) in what could be an eight-bid ACC. Now SMU’s consensus at-large chances are 89% — narrowly ahead of the Hurricanes and Tigers at 87% each — though all three teams are well clear of Cal (35%) and Virginia Tech (26%), who stand as its closest bubble rivals within the conference. The Mustangs do have the most challenging schedule of the three, with trips to Stanford and FSU sandwiched around a head-to-head against Miami.
Next game: at Stanford (Saturday)

Miami Hurricanes
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:15 p.m.
The Hurricanes have been on a roll in ACC play, adding to their recent résumé-boosting victories over North Carolina, NC State, Virginia Tech and Florida State with a one-sided win over Boston College on Saturday. Their at-large chances (near 90%) and national résumé quality ranking (around top 30) are bunched up next to SMU and Clemson — the trio all fit within the top eight of the ACC with a big gap over the rest of what projects to be an eight-bid conference. A couple of tough opponents are next in SMU and Louisville, but the Canes are in good shape.
Next game: at SMU (Wednesday)

Clemson Tigers
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:21 p.m.
Clemson built a double-digit second-half lead against a ranked Louisville team for its fourth Quadrant 1 win of the season. The Tigers rank in the low-to-mid 30s nationally on résumé (no worse than eighth in the ACC), and their consensus chances are around 90% — down from 98% after their recent slump, but still high enough in the conference’s pecking order to feel optimistic about their chances ahead of dates with North Carolina and Georgia Tech to close out the regular season.
Next game: at North Carolina (Tuesday)

Work to do (2)

California Golden Bears
Updated: Feb. 26, 8:26 a.m.
Cal’s tourney chances remain somewhat distant, but victories over Boston College, Stanford and, most importantly, SMU on Wednesday have the Golden Bears moving in the right direction. They still sit outside the nation’s top-50 on the résumé ranking, but they also have five Quadrant 1 wins and face the ACC’s easiest remaining schedule. That doesn’t leave many more signature-win chances, aside from a Quadrant 1 visit to Wake Forest in the finale. With a consensus at-large probability of 35%, the Bears have to bolster their case further.
Next game: vs. Pittsburgh (Saturday)

Virginia Tech Hokies
Updated: Feb. 21, 2:26 p.m.
Regrouping from the disappointment of Tuesday’s loss to Miami, the Hokies bested Wake Forest by 19 on Saturday to keep their bubble case in play. They do have ammunition in their battle to be possibly the last ACC team called to the brackets, including three Quadrant 1 wins and a résumé rating that is borderline top 50. But their conditional at-large chances are still south of 30%, suggesting they are in serious limbo if they don’t knock off North Carolina and/or Virginia as well in the next couple of weeks.
Next game: at North Carolina (Saturday)


BIG 12
7.6 expected bids (6.6 at-large)

Locks (6)
Arizona Wildcats
Iowa State Cyclones
Houston Cougars
Kansas Jayhawks
Texas Tech Red Raiders
BYU Cougars

Should be in (1)

UCF Knights
Updated: Feb. 25, 8:05 a.m.
With so many of the Big 12’s expected bids being effective locks — the six teams listed above each have 99% conditional at-large chances in the model consensus — the conference’s bubble picture really starts with who could be the seventh bid. The Knights had been losing their grip on that spot with three straight losses to Houston, Cincinnati and West Virginia earlier this month, but it’s fair to say they’ve regained their position and then some (now up to 97% at-large odds) with wins over bubble rival TCU, Utah and then a big road upset over BYU on Tuesday night. The victories push their full-season projection back up to near 22 wins and help them close in on the top 30 in the résumé average — a good place to be, since no other non-lock from the Big 12 is even better than No. 50. With a couple of manageable home games coming up against Baylor and Oklahoma State before a visit to WVU for the season finale, the Knights are back in the driver’s seat.
Next game: vs. Baylor (Saturday)

Work to do (2)

TCU Horned Frogs
Updated: Feb. 24, 11:36 p.m.
The Horned Frogs continue to make a run at the Big 12’s final at-large nod with their fifth win in six games, beating Arizona State at home Tuesday. Although they sit with a consensus at-large chance in the 40% range, they have four Quadrant 1 wins and have one more chance to add another coming up against Texas Tech on March 3. They have a clear case to be the conference’s eighth tournament team, though if seven ends up being the Big 12’s magic number, they’re in trouble.
Next game: at Kansas State (Saturday)

Cincinnati Bearcats
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:06 p.m.
The Bearcats’ late-season charge continued Saturday with a blowout win hosting Oklahoma State for their fifth win in six games. They are still just borderline top 60 in the national résumé average — the rest of the bubble is generally around No. 45 — so the consensus model sets their at-large chances in the teens. At this point, their case really relies on two signature wins: vs. Iowa State and at Kansas. But they’ll have chances to add more, against BYU and TCU, before the regular season ends.
Next game: vs. BYU (Tuesday)


BIG EAST
3.2 expected bids (2.2 at-large)
Locks (3)
UConn Huskies
St. John’s Red Storm
Villanova Wildcats

Should be in (0)
None

Work to do (1)

Seton Hall Pirates
Updated: Feb. 28, 2:15 p.m.
Barely clinging to the bubble, the Pirates gave UConn a serious fight on Saturday but ultimately fell short of the upset. Their at-large chances sat at 12% in the forecast composite entering the day, and while the loss doesn’t really hurt those much — as heavy underdogs, it was basically already priced in — they missed a prime opportunity to add a much-needed résumé boost. They rank outside the top 50 nationally in résumé average with only a single Quadrant 1 win. A case will be hard to make if the Big East receives only three bids, which is the current Bracketology expectation, and their last chance to impress the committee now would be to upset St. John’s on March 6.
Next game: at Xavier (Tuesday)

OTHERS
Locks (2)
Gonzaga Bulldogs (West Coast Conference)
Utah State Aggies (Mountain West)

Should be in (2)

Saint Mary’s Gaels (WCC)
Updated: Feb. 26, 8:30 a.m.
Facing rival Santa Clara in a big Bubble Watch contest Wednesday night, the Gaels outscored the Broncos 44-31 in the second half to pull away for the statement win. They haven’t missed the NCAA tournament since 2022, and it’s tough to imagine that streak coming to an end now. Saint Mary’s sits 27th in the résumé rankings with a consensus 95% at-large probability — very nearly a “lock” — and after Wednesday, it likely no longer has to worry about how many WCC teams the NCAA can accommodate for the Dance after Gonzaga. It still has just one Quadrant 1 win — it could add a second vs. Gonzaga when the two meet again on Saturday at Saint Mary’s. But the Gaels have to feel like they are in solid shape either way.
Next game: vs. Gonzaga (Saturday)

Saint Louis Billikens (Atlantic 10)
Updated: Feb. 24, 9:12 p.m.
The Billikens are a great story in their second season with Josh Schertz at the helm and a cast of five double-figure scorers led by bespectacled big man Robbie Avila, tracking for the best SRS in program history. After they came back to beat bubble rival VCU by 13 points Friday, they turned around and suffered their ugliest loss of the year: by 15 points at Dayton. The positives are that Saint Louis still ranks top 30 nationally in the résumé rankings and even better in the predictive ratings, so it’s hard to see this group not making the field as an at-large team if necessary. But there will be lessons to learn from Tuesday’s loss.
Next game: vs. Duquesne (Saturday)

Work to do (6)

Miami (Ohio) RedHawks (MAC)
Updated: Feb. 28, 8:06 a.m.
The MAC hasn’t received multiple bids since 1998-99 — fittingly, the same year Wally Szczerbiak led Miami (Ohio) to the Sweet 16 after knocking off Washington and Utah in the first two rounds. Could history repeat? Miami survived a real scare against Western Michigan on Friday night, rallying from down eight in the second half to prevail on Trey Perry’s game winner and remain the sole remaining unbeaten team in Division I. The forecast models don’t quite know how to handle the RedHawks, though they rank inside the top 40 on résumé, the committee has never excluded an eligible team with fewer than four losses in a non-pandemic season, and Miami (Ohio) made the field as an at-large team during a recent NCAA-run mock selection exercise. It is true that the RedHawks are a mid-80s team in the predictive ratings (Akron actually still ranks higher in the MAC) and had just the 321st-hardest schedule in the nation. But wins are wins! They are now only two away from an undefeated regular season, which the major forecast models give around a 60% chance to happen.
Next game: vs. Toledo (Tuesday)

Santa Clara Broncos (WCC)
Updated: Feb. 26, 8:30 a.m.
The Santa Clara and Saint Mary’s comparisons will be constant down the stretch as we debate whether the WCC could get three bids — which has happened only once in the past 13 seasons. The Broncos had beaten SMC in mid-January, but Wednesday’s loss in the rematch dropped their consensus at-large chances from 76% to 68% and cast new doubt on whether Santa Clara is tourney-bound. They do own the nation’s No. 40 résumé ranking and that previous head-to-head win over Saint Mary’s, but their fate appears to hang almost entirely upon whether the selection committee will send that extra WCC at-large team to the Dance.
Next game: vs. Oregon State (Saturday)

New Mexico Lobos (MW)
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:26 p.m.
Seeking a third straight tournament bid for the first time in more than a decade, New Mexico got closer to that reality on Saturday after avenging its Jan. 17 loss to San Diego. The Lobos’ chances are still around a coin-flip based on their borderline top-50 national résumé ranking, but they have more Quadrant 1 and 2 wins than the Aztecs, and have now evened the head-to-head scales.
Next game: vs. Colorado State (Wednesday)

San Diego State Aztecs (MW)
Updated: Feb. 28, 4:26 p.m.
Just when the Aztecs seemed to be sliding out of the bubble picture with consecutive losses to Grand Canyon and Colorado State, they responded by taking down conference leader Utah State by 17 on Wednesday night. They weren’t as fortunate on Saturday, losing a nailbiter at New Mexico. The loss once again cast their consensus at-large chances in doubt, dropping them from around a coin flip to the 30% range. Already borderline top 50 nationally in the résumé ranking, they remain squarely on the bubble but are trending in the wrong direction. The Mountain West could potentially send three teams to the tournament — it hasn’t fallen below that threshold in five seasons — and with a fairly sizable gap in at-large chances between SDSU and New Mexico vs. the next-best teams, both teams could get in regardless. But if the MWC gets only two bids, Saturday’s loss to the Lobos could haunt the Aztecs.
Next game: at Boise State (Tuesday)

VCU Rams (A-10)
Updated: Feb. 28, 2:48 p.m.
VCU hasn’t made back-to-back NCAA tournaments since the Will Wade era nearly a decade ago, and the forecast models (which sit in the mid-20% consensus at-large range) remain less than bullish on that streak ending this season. That’s in part because the Rams are 0-5 against Quadrant 1 opponents, including a recent collapse at Saint Louis that hurt their at-large case. They are still right in the middle of bubble territory in overall résumé (mid-40s nationally), have won 11 of 12 after crushing Fordham on Saturday, and could add a Quadrant 1 win over Dayton on Friday. But it remains to be seen if the A-10 will get a second bid (which has happened in three of five years), and Saint Louis would be first in line.
Next game: vs. George Mason (Tuesday)

Belmont Bruins (MVC)
Updated: Feb. 25, 9:24 p.m.
Belmont’s case for at-large consideration continues to grow after the Bruins cruised past Evansville for their 13th win in 14 games. They lead the nation in effective FG% and are a top-50 team in our résumé composite. Though they don’t have any Quadrant 1 wins, they’ll get one more chance to improve on their 5-1 record against Quadrant 2 teams: against Illinois State on March 1.
Next game: at Illinois State (Sunday)

Glossary of terms
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Model consensus: A blend of the conditional at-large bid odds found via BartTorvik, TeamRankings, JThom Analytics and ESPN Analytics.
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Résumé ranking: An average of rankings in strength of record (SOR), NET, KPI and wins above bubble (WAB).
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Predictive ranking: An average of rankings in the Basketball Power Index (BPI), KenPom ratings (KP), Bart Torvik’s “Barthagorean” ratings, TeamRankings’ power ratings and Sports-Reference’s SRS ratings.
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Strength of schedule and projected records are according to the BPI.