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2025 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season2024–25
Teams68
Finals siteAlamodome
San Antonio, Texas
ChampionsSan Francisco Dons (3rd title, 3rd title game,
4th Final Four)
Runner-upTennessee Volunteers (1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachChris Gerlufson (1st title)
MOPRyan Beasley (San Francisco Dons)
Attendance713,877
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
«2024 2026»

The 2025 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 68 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's college basketball national champion for the 2024–25 season. The 86th annual edition of the tournament began on March 18, 2025, and concluded with the San Francisco Dons pulling off one of the greatest Cinderella runs in tournament history, going from the First Four all the way to defeating the Tennessee Volunteers 74-67 in the championship game on April 7, at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas.

During the first round, Toledo became the third 16-seeded team to defeat a 1-seed, upsetting Kansas 74-66. Big South champion High Point and MAAC champion Quinnipiac made their Division I NCAA tournament debuts. Additionally, Toledo made its first appearance since 1980, Hofstra made its first appearance since 2001, and Central Connecticut made its first appearance since 2007.

The Final Four consisted of Duke (first appearance since 2022 and first under Jon Scheyer's head coaching tenure), Tennessee (their first Final Four appearance in program history), San Francisco (first appearance since 1957), and Florida (first appearance since 2014).

With No. 11 seed San Francisco winning the national championship, they not only won their first national title since 1956, but also became the first 11-seed to advance past the Final Four and became the lowest-seeded team to ever win a national championship.

Tournament procedure[edit]

A total of 68 teams entered the 2025 tournament. A total of 32 automatic bids were awarded to each program that win a conference tournament. The remaining 36 bids were issued "at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 68.

Eight teams (the four-lowest seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at large-teams) played in the First Four. The winners of these games advanced to the main tournament bracket.

2025 NCAA Tournament schedule and venues[edit]

The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2025 tournament:.[1]

B-rexmedia/sandbox is located in the United States
Dayton
Dayton
Providence
Providence
Lexington
Lexington
Wichita
Wichita
Denver
Denver
Cleveland
Cleveland
Raleigh
Raleigh
Milwaukee
Milwaukee
Seattle
Seattle
2025 First Four (orange) and first and second rounds (green)
B-rexmedia/sandbox is located in the United States
Newark
Newark
San Francisco
San Francisco
Atlanta
Atlanta
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
San Antonio
San Antonio
2025 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

First Four

First and Second Rounds (Subregionals)

Regional Semi-Finals and Finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National Semifinals and Championship (Final Four)

San Antonio hosted the Final Four for the fifth time, having previously hosted in 2018.

Automatic qualifiers[edit]

Teams who won their conference championships automatically qualify.

Automatic qualifiers in the 2024 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament
Conference Team Appearance Last bid
America East Vermont 11th 2024
American Memphis 29th 2023
Atlantic 10 Dayton 20th 2024
ACC Duke 47th 2024
ASUN Lipscomb 2nd 2018
Big 12 Kansas 53rd 2024
Big East UConn 37th 2024
Big Sky Weber State 17th 2016
Big South High Point 1st Never
Big Ten Purdue 34th 2023
Big West UC Irvine 3rd 2019
CAA Hofstra 4th 2001
CUSA Western Kentucky 27th 2024
Horizon Oakland 5th 2024
Ivy League Princeton 26th 2023
MAAC Quinnipiac 1st Never
MAC Toledo 5th 1980
MEAC Norfolk State 4th 2022
Missouri Valley Bradley 10th 2019
Mountain West Boise State 11th 2024
NEC Central Connecticut 4th 2007
Ohio Valley Morehead State 10th 2024
Patriot Colgate 8th 2024
SEC Alabama 26th 2024
Southern Samford 4th 2024
Southland McNeese 4th 2024
SWAC Texas Southern 12th 2023
Summit League South Dakota State 8th 2024
Sun Belt Appalachian State 4th 2021
WCC Gonzaga 27th 2024
WAC Grand Canyon 4th 2024

Seeds[edit]

The tournament seeds and regions were determined through the NCAA basketball tournament selection process and were published by the selection committee after the brackets were released on March 17.

East Regional - Prudential Center, Newark, NJ
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type Last bid
1 Duke ACC 31–3 1 Automatic 2024
2 Baylor Big 12 27–7 8 At Large 2024
3 UConn Big East 26–8 12 Automatic 2024
4 Texas SEC 27–7 15 At Large 2024
5 Michigan State Big Ten 24–10 18 At Large 2024
6 Ohio State Big Ten 23–10 21 At Large 2022
7 Nebraska Big Ten 24–9 26 At Large 2024
8 Mississippi State SEC 25–8 31 At Large 2024
9 Kansas State Big 12 21–11 36 At Large 2023
10 South Carolina SEC 28–6 40 At Large 2024
11 Memphis American 24–11 46 Automatic 2023
12 McNeese Southland 23–11 50 Automatic 2024
13 High Point Big South 22–9 52 Automatic Never
14 Western Kentucky C-USA 26–8 57 Automatic 2024
15 Weber State Big Sky 22–12 61 Automatic 2016
16* Central Connecticut Northeast 22–12 64 Automatic Never
Norfolk State MEAC 22-12 65 Automatic 2022
West Regional – Chase Center, San Francisco, CA
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type Last bid
1 Houston Big 12 27–7 4 At Large 2024
2 Gonzaga WCC 25–8 6 Automatic 2024
3 Arizona Big 12 23–10 9 At Large 2024
4 Creighton Big East 21–11 16 At Large 2024
5 Tennessee SEC 26–7 20 At Large 2024
6 Cincinnati Big 12 21–11 22 At Large 2019
7 Wisconsin Big Ten 26–7 28 At Large 2024
8 Maryland Big Ten 21–13 32 At Large 2024
9 NC State ACC 19–14 33 At Large 2024
10 New Mexico Mountain West 26–7 37 At Large 2024
11 Missouri SEC 26–9 44 At Large 2023
12 Bradley Missouri Valley 29–4 47 Automatic 2023
13 Hofstra CAA 27–7 54 Automatic 2001
14 Lipscomb ASUN 25–9 58 Automatic 2018
15 Oakland Horizon 21–14 59 Automatic 2024
16 South Dakota State Summit 18–16 67 Automatic 2024
Midwest Regional - Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, IN
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type Last bid
1 Kansas Big 12 30–4 2 Automatic 2024
2 North Carolina ACC 25–9 7 At Large 2024
3 Auburn SEC 23–9 11 At Large 2024
4 Saint Mary's WCC 24–8 13 At Large 2024
5 Rutgers Big Ten 22–13 19 At Large 2022
6 Illinois Big Ten 23–10 23 At Large 2024
7 Xavier Big East 24–11 25 At Large 2023
8 Wake Forest ACC 23–10 29 At Large 2017
9 Texas A&M SEC 20–14 34 At Large 2024
10 Seton Hall Big East 22–10 38 At Large 2022
11* Texas Tech Big 12 22–14 45 At Large 2024
San Francisco WCC 22-14 46 At Large 2022
12 Grand Canyon WAC 31–3 48 Automatic 2024
13 UC Irvine Big West 28–6 51 Automatic 2019
14 Appalachian State Sun Belt 23–11 55 Automatic 2021
15 Colgate Patriot 22–11 60 Automatic 2024
16 Toledo MAC 21–13 63 Automatic 1980
South Regional - State Farm Arena, Atlanta, GA
Seed School Conference Record Overall Seed Berth type Last bid
1 Alabama SEC 29–4 3 Automatic 2024
2 Iowa State Big 12 24–8 5 At Large 2024
3 Purdue Big Ten 23–9 10 Automatic 2024
4 Marquette Big East 22–10 14 At Large 2024
5 Miami (FL) ACC 25–7 17 At Large 2023
6 Florida SEC 26–7 24 At Large 2024
7 Dayton A10 20–12 27 Automatic 2024
8 Indiana Big Ten 27–6 30 At Large 2023
9 Boise State Mountain West 21–12 35 Automatic 2024
10 Pittsburgh ACC 23–10 41 At Large 2023
11* Clemson ACC 23–11 43 At Large 2024
Providence Big East 23-11 44 At Large 2023
12 Princeton Ivy 30–3 49 Automatic 2023
13 Vermont America East 29–5 53 Automatic 2024
14 Samford Southern 24–10 56 Automatic 2024
15 Quinnipiac MAAC 19–13 62 Automatic Never
16* Morehead State Ohio Valley 17–17 65 Automatic 2024
Texas Southern SWAC 20–14 66 At Large Never

*See First Four
Source:[2]


Tournament bracket[edit]

All times are listed in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−4)

First Four – Dayton, Ohio[edit]

The First Four games involved eight teams: the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams.

March 19 – East Regional
   
16 Central Connecticut 71
16 Norfolk State 68
March 19 – Midwest Regional
   
11 Texas Tech 62
11 San Francisco 67
March 20 – South Regional
   
16 Morehead State 91OT
16 Texas Southern 88
March 20 – South Regional
   
11 Clemson 63
11 Providence 50

East regional – Newark, New Jersey[edit]

First round
Round of 64
March 20-21
Second round
Round of 32
March 22-23
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 27
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 29
            
1 Duke 71
16 Central Connecticut 62
1 Duke 74
Raleigh – Fri/Sun
9 Kansas State 70
8 Mississippi State 65
9 Kansas State 69
1 Duke 71
5 Michigan State 61
5 Michigan State 94
12 McNeese 84
5 Michigan State 76
Cleveland – Fri/Sun
4 Texas 68
4 Texas 81
13 High Point 78
1 Duke 70
3 UConn 68
6 Ohio State 68
11 Memphis 77
11 Memphis 57
Providence – Thu/Sat
3 UConn 84
3 UConn 71
14 Western Kentucky 51
3 UConn 104
7 Nebraska 78
7 Nebraska 92
10 South Carolina 54
7 Nebraska 87
Denver – Thu/Sat
2 Baylor 77
2 Baylor 93
15 Weber State 73

East regional final[edit]

March 29
6:09 p.m. EDT
No. 3 UConn Huskies 68, No. 1 Duke Blue Devils 70
Scoring by half: 23−45, 45-25
Pts: Johnson (17)
Rebs: Johnson (6)
Asts: Diarra (3)
Pts: Flagg (22)
Rebs: Maluach (10)
Asts: Tied (5)
Prudential CenterNewark, New Jersey
Attendance: 19,181
Referees: Doug Shows, Terry Oglesby, Byron Jarrett

East regional all-tournament team[edit]

  • Cooper Flagg (MOP) - Duke
  • Hassan Diarra - UConn
  • Samson Johnson - UConn
  • Maliq Brown - Duke
  • Khaman Maluach - Duke

West regional – San Francisco, California[edit]

First round
Round of 64
March 20-21
Second round
Round of 32
March 22-23
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 27
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 29
            
1 Houston 97
16 South Dakota State 59
1 Houston 71
Wichita – Thu/Sat
9 NC State 63
8 Maryland 64
9 NC State 65
1 Houston 57
5 Tennessee 62
5 Tennessee 82
12 Bradley 69
5 Tennessee 93
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
4 Creighton 76
4 Creighton 80
13 Hofstra 75
5 Tennessee 86
2 Gonzaga 66
6 Cincinnati 85
11 Missouri 88
11 Missouri 79
Denver – Fri/Sun
3 Arizona 63
3 Arizona 86
14 Lipscomb 75
11 Missouri 65
2 Gonzaga 86
7 Wisconsin 63
10 New Mexico 78
10 New Mexico 80
Seattle – Thu/Sat
2 Gonzaga 91
2 Gonzaga 94
15 Oakland 49

West regional final[edit]

March 29
8:49 p.m. EDT
No. 5 Tennessee Volunteers 86, No. 2 Gonzaga Bulldogs 66
Scoring by half: 32–50, 54–16
Pts: Ziegler (23)
Rebs: Estrella(11)
Asts: Gainey (7)
Pts: Ike (19)
Rebs: Ike (11)
Asts: Nembhard (6)
Chase CenterSan Francisco, California
Attendance: 19,227
Referees: James Breeding, Keith Kimble, Brian Dorsey

West regional all-tournament team[edit]

  • Zakai Ziegler (MOP) - Tennessee
  • Jordan Gainey - Tennessee
  • Ryan Nembhard - Gonzaga
  • Graham Ike - Gonzaga
  • Nolan Hickman - Gonzaga

Midwest regional – Indianapolis, Indiana[edit]

First round
Round of 64
March 20-21
Second round
Round of 32
March 22-23
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 27
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 29
            
1 Kansas 66
16 Toledo 74
16 Toledo 58
Wichita – Fri/Sun
8 Wake Forest 91
8 Wake Forest 66
9 Texas A&M 64
8 Wake Forest 67
12 Grand Canyon 71
5 Rutgers 66
12 Grand Canyon 82
12 Grand Canyon 68
Seattle – Fri/Sun
4 Saint Mary's 58
4 Saint Mary's 82
13 UC Irvine 63
12 Grand Canyon 53
11 San Francisco 77
6 Illinois 71
11 San Francisco 73
11 San Francisco 74
Lexington – Thu/Sat
3 Auburn 71
3 Auburn 94
14 Appalachian State 70
11 San Francisco 65
7 Xavier 54
7 Xavier 86
10 Seton Hall 74
7 Xavier 76
Raleigh – Fri/Sun
2 North Carolina 74
2 North Carolina 86
15 Colgate 61

Midwest regional final[edit]

March 30
5:05 p.m. EDT
No. 12 Grand Canyon Antelopes 53, No. 11 San Francisco Dons 77
Scoring by half: 21−27, 32−50
Pts: Harrison (29)
Rebs: Harrison (11)
Asts: Harrison (6)
Pts: Thomas (32)
Rebs: Todorovic (9)
Asts: Beasley (4)
Lucas Oil StadiumIndianapolis, Indiana
Attendance: 16,969
Referees: Michael Irving, Brian O'Connell, Doug Sirmons

Midwest regional all-tournament team[edit]

  • Malik Thomas (MOP) - San Francisco
  • Ryan Beasley - San Francisco
  • Ray Harrison - Grand Canyon
  • Stefan Todorovic - San Francisco
  • RJ Davis - North Carolina

South regional – Atlanta, Georgia[edit]

First round
Round of 64
March 20-21
Second round
Round of 32
March 22-23
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 28
Regional Final
Elite 8
March 30
            
1 Alabama 103
16 Morehead State 79
1 Alabama 64
Lexington – Fri/Sun
9 Boise State 80
8 Indiana 64
9 Boise State 93
9 Boise State 80
4 Marquette 59
5 Miami 64
12 Princeton 74
12 Princeton 68
Providence – Thu/Sat
4 Marquette 80
4 Marquette 92
13 Vermont 63
9 Boise State 67
6 Florida 82
6 Florida 84
11 Clemson 68
6 Florida 79
Cleveland – Thu/Sat
3 Purdue 76
3 Purdue 81
14 Samford 79
6 Florida 86
15 Quinnipiac 65
7 Dayton 74
10 Pittsburgh 62
7 Dayton 70
Milwaukee – Thu/Sat
15 Quinnipiac 79
2 Iowa State 74
15 Quinnipiac 78

South regional final[edit]

March 30
2:20 p.m. EDT
No. 9 Boise State Broncos 67, No. 6 Florida Gators 82
Scoring by half: 34−36, 33−46
Pts: Anderson III (37)
Rebs: Tied (4)
Asts: Stanley(8)
Pts: Clayton Jr. (40)
Rebs: Clayton Jr.(16)
Asts: Condon (7)
State Farm ArenaAtlanta, Georgia
Attendance: 18,577
Referees: Ron Groover, Marques Pettigrew, Ray Natali

South regional all-tournament team[edit]

  • Walter Clayton Jr. (MOP) - Florida
  • Alex Condon - Florida
  • Roddie Anderson III - Boise State
  • O'Mar Stanley - Boise State
  • Kam Jones - Marquette

Final Four – San Antonio, Texas[edit]

National Semifinals
Final Four
Saturday, April 5
National Championship Game
Monday, April 7
      
E1 Duke 71
W5 Tennessee 74
W5 Tennessee 67
MW11 San Francisco 74
MW11 San Francisco 70
S6 Florida 64


National semifinals[edit]

April 5
6:09 p.m. EDT
MW11 San Francisco Dons 70, S6 Florida Gators 64
Scoring by half: 29−35, 41−29
Pts: Ryan Beasley, 20
Rebs: Ryan Beasley, 6
Asts: Malik Thomas, 3
Pts: Walter Clayton Jr., 20
Rebs: Walter Clayton Jr., 12
Asts: Alex Condon, 6
AlamodomeSan Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 74,720
Referees: Keith Kimble, Kipp Kissinger, Michael Reed
CBS
April 5
8:49 p.m. EDT
W5 Tennessee Volunteers 74, E1 Duke Blue Devils 71
Scoring by half: 40−44, 34-27
Pts: Zakai Ziegler, 24
Rebs: Jordan Gainey, 15
Asts: Tied, 3
Pts: Cooper Flagg, 21
Rebs: Tied, 8
Asts: Tyrese Proctor, 9
Alamodome – San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 74,720
Referees: Ron Groover, Patrick Adams, Paul Szelc

National championship[edit]

CBS
April 7, 2025
9:20 p.m. EDT
MW11 San Francisco Dons 74, W5 Tennessee Volunteers 67
Scoring by half: 30−36, 44-31
Pts: Malik Thomas, 37
Rebs: Malik Thomas, 10
Asts: Ryan Beasley, 8
Pts: Zakai Ziegler, 20
Rebs: Jordan Gainey, 8
Asts: Zakai Ziegler, 7
Alamodome - San Antonio, Texas
Attendance: 74,423
Referees: Jeffrey Anderson, Terry Oglesby, Roger Ayers

Game summaries and tournament notes[edit]

Tournament upsets[edit]

Per the NCAA, an upset occurs "when the losing team in an NCAA tournament game was seeded at least five seed lines better than the winning team."[3]

The 2025 tournament saw a total of 17 upsets, with seven in the first round, seven in the second round, one in the Sweet Sixteen, one in the Final Four and one in the National Championship.

This tournament was notable for seeing the third upset by a 16-seeded team over a 1-seeded team, following Toledo's 74-66 upset over Kansas in the first round.

Upsets in the 2024 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament
Round West Midwest South East
Round of 64 No. 11 Missouri defeated No. 6 Cincinnati, 88-85 No. 16 Toledo defeated No. 1 Kansas, 74-66

No. 12 Grand Canyon defeated No. 5 Rutgers, 82-66

No. 11 San Francisco defeated No. 6 Illinois, 73-71

No. 12 Princeton defeated No. 5 Miami (FL), 74-64

No. 15 Quinnipiac defeated No. 2 Iowa State, 78-74

No. 11 Memphis defeated No. 6 Ohio State, 77-68
Round of 32 No. 11 Missouri defeated No. 3 Arizona, 79-73 No. 12 Grand Canyon defeated No. 4 Saint Mary's, 68-58

No. 7 Xavier defeated No. 2 North Carolina, 76-74

No. 11 San Francisco defeated No. 3 Auburn, 74-71

No. 9 Boise State defeated No. 1 Alabama, 80-64

No. 15 Quinnipiac defeated No. 7 Dayton, 79-70

No. 7 Nebraska defeated No. 2 Baylor, 87-77
Sweet 16 None None No. 9 Boise State defeated No. 4 Marquette, 80-59 None
Elite 8 None None None None
Final 4 No. 11 San Francisco defeated No. 6 Florida, 70-64
National Championship No. 11 San Francisco defeated No. 5 Tennessee, 74-67
  1. ^ "Future Dates & Sites". NCAA. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  2. ^ Salerno, Cameron (March 17, 2024). "March Madness 2024: Committee reveals official NCAA Tournament bracket seed list from 1-68". CBS Sports. Retrieved March 17, 2024.
  3. ^ Wittry, Andy (March 15, 2023). "Here's how to pick March Madness men's upsets, according to the data". NCAA. Archived from the original on March 12, 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-12.