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Daniel Wilco | NCAA.com | April 8, 2024

Teams with the worst records to make the men's NCAA tournament

The absurd odds of a perfect March Madness bracket

Since the NCAA tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, four teams have entered March Madness with a perfect record. We’re not here to talk about them. We’re here for their antitheses: the teams with the worst records to make an NCAA tournament.

Here’s every team that entered the tournament with a losing or .500 record

Year Team W L % Seed Conference Tournament result
1995 Florida International 11 18 37.93% 16 A-Sun First Round loss
1996 UCF 11 18 37.93% 16 A-Sun First Round loss
1997 Fairfield 11 18 37.93% 16 MAAC First Round loss
1985 Lehigh 12 18 40.00% 16 ECC First Round loss
1999 Florida A&M 12 18 40.00% 16 MEAC First Round loss
2023 Texas Southern 14 20 41.18% 16 SWAC First Four loss
2005 Oakland 13 18 41.94% 16 Mid-Cont First Round loss
2014 Cal Poly 14 19 42.42% 16 Big West First Round loss
2016 Holy Cross 15 19 44.12% 16 Patriot First Round loss
2018 Texas Southern 15 19 44.12% 16 SWAC First Round loss
1993 East Carolina 13 16 44.83% 16 CAA First Round loss
1996 San Jose State 13 16 44.83% 16 Big West First Round loss
1998 Prairie View 13 16 44.83% 16 SWAC First Round loss
1986 Montana State 14 16 46.67% 16 Big Sky First Round loss
2012 Western Kentucky 16 18 47.06% 16 Sun Belt First Round loss
1997 Jackson State 14 15 48.28% 16 SWAC First Round loss
2003 UNC Asheville 15 16 48.39% 16 Big South First Round loss
2004 Florida A&M 15 16 48.39% 16 MEAC First Round loss
2002 Siena 17 18 48.57% 16 MAAC First Round loss
1985 Penn 13 13 50.00% 15 Ivy First Round loss
1987 Penn 13 13 50.00% 16 Ivy First Round loss
1987 Idaho State 15 15 50.00% 16 Big Sky First Round loss
1987 Fairfield 15 15 50.00% 16 MAAC First Round loss
2000 Lamar 15 15 50.00% 16 Southland First Round loss
2015 Hampton 17 17 50.00% 16 MEAC First Round loss
2024 Montana State 17 17 50.00% 16 Big Sky First Four loss

Nineteen teams have finished the regular season with a losing record and still secured a bid to the tournament. Seven more have gone dancing at an even .500. All but one received a No. 16 seed. None made it past the first round, losing by an average margin of 25 points.

The absolute worst record is a three-way tie at 11-18 (37.93 percent). Those would be 1995 FIU, 1996 UCF, and 1997 Fairfield.

Two of those — FIU and UCF — came out of the Atlantic Sun Conference. In 1995, the Panthers went 6-12 in regular-season conference play before winning three in a row to take the conference crown. UCF was 6-10 before they won the conference title.

Fairfield was even more impressive in 1997 — posting a 2-12 record in the MAAC — good for last place by two games. But the Stags shocked No. 1 seed Iona (22-8, 11-3 MAAC) in the first round of the conference tournament, and beat No. 2 seed Canisius (17-12, 10-4 MAAC) to win the title and secure the auto-bid. They were rewarded with a first-round matchup against No. 1 seed UNC, which they lost, 82-74.

The worst record ever for a team that won an NCAA tournament game since 1985 expansion belongs to Villanova in 1991. The Wildcats entered the tournament at 16-14, having lost to Seton Hall in the Big East tournament semifinal. But they did own five wins against ranked teams on the year, including three top-10 opponents. That was enough to land them a No. 9 seed after earning an at-large bid. They took down Princeton, 50-48, but lost to No. 1 seed UNC 84-69 in the second round.

Not surprisingly, 1985 Villanova — the ultimate Cinderella — owns the distinction of the worst record among championship teams. After winning eight straight to start the season, the Wildcats lost six of their last 11. On Selection Sunday, they sat at 19-10 (65.5 percent) and found themselves as a No. 8 seed.

Then they won six games in a row — by a tight margin of five points per game — en route to knocking off the Goliath to their David in Patrick Ewing and No. 1 seed Georgetown. That Villanova team remains the highest-seeded team ever to win the title.

So, is a below-average winning percentage recommended in March? Not exactly. But it’s not a guaranteed early exit either. If anything, it’s the first ingredient in the recipe for a great Cinderella story.

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