What is March Madness?

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  • čas přidán 19. 03. 2022
  • I made my March Madness bracket on stream the other day, but as I did so I became aware of how few people outside the United States actually understand what the NCAA Basketball Championship, or March Madness, actually is. I mean obviously, it makes sense, if you’re not from the US why would you know what it is at all. There is no reason to. But, I love great sporting events, March Madness is a great sporting event, so I would love to introduce it to everyone through this video.
    If you like these kinds of videos do let me know, I have thought about doing guides to various sports and sporting events that could require further explanation to understand. March Madness popped up because of my bracket obsession, but a guide to understanding the NFL, NBA, and college sports, in general, is something I have kicked around for a while. So, if you want to see that sort of stuff, then let me know! I know I already said that, but still.
    Much Love,
    FM Senpai
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Komentáře • 213

  • @AdI3r
    @AdI3r Před 2 lety +65

    For all those interested, the Cinderella story this year is a small school called the Saint Peter's Peacocks, a 15 seed, that is currently in the last 16 teams left.

  • @saderzz1560
    @saderzz1560 Před 2 lety +121

    I'm so jealous of the college sporting set-up in the US, could only dream of something like that happening in the UK. I'm definitely going to try and give this a watch

    • @jackm0429
      @jackm0429 Před 2 lety +13

      College sports here reminds me a lot of lower level English football but with stadiums bigger than most Premier League grounds like my favorite team Michigan Wolverines has the 3rd biggest stadium in the world ‘Michigan Stadium’ for an amateur sport just wild

    • @Freemycousinn
      @Freemycousinn Před rokem

      You have NEVER watched march MADNESS?!?! OMG YOU ARE IN FOR A TREAT HOLY CRAP

    • @Mdksupreme1
      @Mdksupreme1 Před měsícem

      It's really that not that interesting@@Freemycousinn

    • @Freemycousinn
      @Freemycousinn Před měsícem

      @@Mdksupreme1 that’s a horrible take. Look up Virginia Vs UMBC, and Connecticut VS Cincinnati and get back to me

    • @karuscuvic
      @karuscuvic Před měsícem

      @@Mdksupreme1 weird thing to say. it's okay to not like basketball or college sports obviously, but the majority of those who appreciate both agree it's the most entertaining sporting event of the year. even if we generally prefer other sports or professional sports.

  • @Raptorsified
    @Raptorsified Před 2 lety +47

    The hype around March madness has the same energy as highschool baseball in Japan. There is also a national tournament called Koushien and it has many of the same dramas except even more high stakes as highschool in Japan is only 3 years.

    • @jackm0429
      @jackm0429 Před 2 lety

      I have seen videos about that and it’s insane

  • @alikasim9390
    @alikasim9390 Před 2 lety +146

    That was fascinating stuff Zealand, but I still don't know why people prefer a DLP at DM rather than a Regista.

    • @iondelic5967
      @iondelic5967 Před 2 lety +6

      Regista makes them leave their positipn too much, so a DM isnt really a DM/holding mid anymore, regista can work with sufficient support at the back

    • @2639theboss
      @2639theboss Před 2 lety +1

      @@iondelic5967 Wait so where does the Regista actually move? Im running essentially an assymetric diamond, and my middle two dont always get wide enough and my DLP seems too static in front of my back four. Ive been playing around with a Carrillo, but havent loved it.

    • @miraclemaker1418
      @miraclemaker1418 Před 2 lety

      @@2639theboss Regista starts from the DM position and usually ends up around the box. A DLP s very "rarely" moves that far up the pitch and DLP d never does that. It's basically about their positional discipline

    • @dAiMYoBeAr
      @dAiMYoBeAr Před 2 lety +1

      @@iondelic5967 Im 5 seasons into an FK Sarajevo match, and 2 seasons ago i sold my best newgen for 4 million into the PL and his was was Ion Delic.

    • @iondelic5967
      @iondelic5967 Před 2 lety

      @@dAiMYoBeAr Hhahaa siiick, can you send me a screenshot? 😆 In FB or i cam give u my e-mail on dm

  • @ItsSFChris
    @ItsSFChris Před 2 lety +6

    As an American who's never been too into basketball, especially college, this is the best explanation of March Madness I've heard that actually makes me want to catch some game and follow the storylines

  • @patrickfleming7731
    @patrickfleming7731 Před 2 lety +60

    Just so people know a big upset a couple years ago was UMBC, a 16th seed, beat Virginia, a #1 seed and Zealand’s school. To put how crazy this was: this was the first ever time a #16th seed beat a #1 seed ever in this tournament!

    • @jtp2007
      @jtp2007 Před 2 lety +16

      and then that same Virginia team with most of the same players, won the national championship the next year.

    • @dantenicastro9617
      @dantenicastro9617 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jtp2007 that type of rebound seems to happen with upsets, like when Columbus swept Tampa in hockey and then Tampa won the next year

    • @evanvantro
      @evanvantro Před 2 lety

      And it was incredible! I went to Catonsville High School and UMBC is right across the street! Go Retrievers!!!

    • @ianturner3613
      @ianturner3613 Před 2 lety

      @@dantenicastro9617 tampa’s coach actually reached out to uva’s coach and they kept a uva hat in the locker room to inspire them

    • @dantenicastro9617
      @dantenicastro9617 Před 2 lety

      @@ianturner3613 shoutout John Cooper

  • @inomaderazo3926
    @inomaderazo3926 Před 2 lety +35

    One of my favorite Football Manager personalities talking about one of my favorite sporting events ever. Thank you for this Zealand!

  • @robertvukovic5552
    @robertvukovic5552 Před 2 lety +71

    Great video. I would like to see more guides to American sports and their formats

    • @romanyoder9266
      @romanyoder9266 Před 2 lety

      This one is pretty good about the NFL:
      czcams.com/video/E5ob6EiKcSc/video.html

    • @TehStormOG
      @TehStormOG Před 2 lety +5

      can't wait for Zealand to come out with the 10 hour long documentary on the convoluted mess that is college football

  • @Beyondultragaming
    @Beyondultragaming Před 2 lety +24

    As an english sport fan it was interesting to watch

  • @coffeyallday
    @coffeyallday Před 2 lety +16

    Part of the reason why college sports are so popular here is that in some states, there are no top level pro sports teams, but there are big college teams. Therefore the energy that would go into supporting a pro team in that area, goes into supporting a college team. That's part of the reason why my home state of Kentucky is just in shock right now

    • @SimonWakefieldUK
      @SimonWakefieldUK Před 2 lety

      I would imagine as well even if they have a pro team in the state that pro team could up and move to the other side of the country at any time where as a college can't really do that. Plus lets be honest you Americans seem to have this almost obsessive with the whole Alumni thing, it's almost like going to high-school and college is like joining the Mafia. It's like a lifetime commitment that becomes almost more important as part of your identity than anything, in my experience put more than 2 Americans into a room together and their school will be one of the first things they use to identify themselves, to a point that I'm surprised they tell people their name first and don't just go by the name of their school :) Certainly here in the UK you wouldn't ever get something like homecoming taking off, school and uni is largely just something you fo and then move on from without a second thought

    • @elvangulley3210
      @elvangulley3210 Před rokem

      @@SimonWakefieldUK lol me and a former coworker would literally spend our entire lunch breaks talking about how much we hated each other's high team and argue over who had the most tradition and prestige we played 20 years ago our pro sports don't have real rivalries don't have real history don't have real passion and definitely aren't loyal to the people or the city/state it also doesn't help that college sports are way older than pro sports and high school and college sports are cheaper to attend so we combine years of passed on loyalty and passion for our high school with support for the kids from the community that are playing for our team we want to see those kids get recruited to the college teams especially our local team and if they do that just makes us more loyal to our college teams because they have this kid that we literally saw grow up our pro teams just don't have that since of community we don't feel like we own them we don't feel like they one of us because they aren't

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      ​@@SimonWakefieldUKyeah, you got that lifetime commitment thing spot on lol. I love my college class ring. It gives me a sense of pride and accomplishment, and a sense of belonging. It helps that my best friend and my mom (who graduated 25 years prior to me) got their's with me.
      As such, I can't really turn away from my school's sports. Even though I have graduated, it feels like there is a distant connection with the players, simply because they walked the same places I walked, and experienced similar things that I got to experience. You can't really make that comparison with pro-sports. Sure, they may be a part of your city, but there are status levels to a city. The wealthy will always be perceived as higher than that of everyone else.
      Conversely, the status level is not ranked by wealth, but by class year, employment at the university, or your former student status.
      Factor in several other reasons, like community culture and economics, regionality, and location of professional teams, and it is easy to see why college sports reign supreme in America.

  • @arvydasm4351
    @arvydasm4351 Před rokem

    Best explanation I found. Thanks for the video!

  • @tobesleroney8696
    @tobesleroney8696 Před 2 lety +6

    The best part of March madness is that for that first 4 days, there is a 12 hour stretch where you get to watch the dramatic final moments to a game every thirty minutes. It just doesn’t end

  • @The_Greech
    @The_Greech Před měsícem

    Really good summary of the tournament. Getting pumped for March Madness!!

  • @marcosandoval6973
    @marcosandoval6973 Před rokem

    Clear and Concise... Thanks for this video 👍

  • @PirateDrive
    @PirateDrive Před 2 lety +48

    And I thought the way that the Nations League fed into the Euro Champions playoffs was complicated...

    • @SalmanAli-hn2kt
      @SalmanAli-hn2kt Před rokem +3

      this is nothing compared to the mess that is college football 🏈

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      ​@@SalmanAli-hn2kt thank God that is changing.

  • @patrickstump6809
    @patrickstump6809 Před 2 lety +13

    Just a note but we have a Europa League style junior tournament for teams that miss the Big Dance called the NIT. All regular season conference champs that miss the main tournament go to that

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      Even though it is embarrassing to go to the NIT (used to actually be a more prestigious tournament back in the day), it does have the charm of being played at the best team's home court. Even though A&M got robbed of a tournament bid the year this video was made, it was still fun watching them play at Reed Arena in the 1st Round.

  • @niklasg2964
    @niklasg2964 Před 2 lety +5

    I knew basketball was big in the US but not this big! Really fascinating and interesting walkthough.

  • @fartfruit1157
    @fartfruit1157 Před rokem +3

    IF YOU LISTEN CLOSELY YOU CAN HEAR IT, THE MUSIC OF THE BIG DANCE IN THE DISTANCE

  • @fbiopenup6534
    @fbiopenup6534 Před 5 měsíci +1

    As a non american basketball fan, college basketball has always been one of those things i've never fully understood. Thanks for explaining.

  • @benjaminfuller3390
    @benjaminfuller3390 Před 2 měsíci

    Great video fr I’m so ready for MM

  • @Tuck3tt
    @Tuck3tt Před 2 lety

    Frickin' love March Madness!

  • @bugragundogan7918
    @bugragundogan7918 Před 2 lety +2

    Hey Z, just saying it would be interesting to watch something at the end of each NBA season from you. Like a recap or something. We don't get to watch each game (cause time difference and sleep matters) and miss the drama most of the time.

  • @lmet6174
    @lmet6174 Před rokem

    Very informative thx

  • @vinofakind
    @vinofakind Před rokem

    Thank you! 🙏

  • @aimannazmi7198
    @aimannazmi7198 Před 2 lety +2

    The best analogy in european football would be like the old European Cup (before been rebrand as UEFA Champions League) where league champions of each country (plus defending champions) play on a knockout tournament to determine the european champion, the only different is after the regular domestic season each league have a knockout tournament to determine their representative for the cup instead of selecting the league winner by default, and the European Cup are all playing on the same season after the domestic league season instead of qualifies for the next season.
    European Cup, where clubs like Malmo, Steaua Bucuresti, Red Star Belgrades, Celtics, Partizan Belgrade, Club Brugge, PSV, Ajax had chances to go to final or win the cup. Sadly enough established big european countries & teams want all by themselves and we now are getting 4th team qualifies for the Champions League...

  • @rythaguy1452
    @rythaguy1452 Před rokem

    good video very informative

  • @andrewberna4045
    @andrewberna4045 Před rokem +1

    Being at a sportsbook in a casino during March Madness round 1 is second to none at the top of sports entertainment. Nothing will ever come close.

  • @frankinho233
    @frankinho233 Před 2 lety +1

    You should do a YT Series with College basketball - Draft Day Sports College Basketball 22. Its a really good game similar to FM that you would enjoy

  • @Roxas1711
    @Roxas1711 Před 2 lety +2

    One of Future's best songs

  • @tthaas
    @tthaas Před 2 lety +7

    People really need to understand the drama of the postseason -- it really is a "nobody is safe" tourney. In 2013, Florida Gulf Coast University -- a #15 seed in their 1st NCAA tourney -- beat #2 seed Georgetown and #7 seed San Diego State to advance to the round of 16 (they were the first 15 seed to beat a 2 seed, and the first 15 seed to go to the "Sweet Sixteen."). In 2018, UMBC -- a #16 seed -- beat their first-round opponents, #1 seed Virginia, the first time a #1 didn't make it out of the first round. This year, #15 seed Saint Peter's upset #2 Kentucky and #7 Murray State to make it to the round of 16. And, of course, #11 Loyola Chicago made the Final Four. American sports fans love watching Cinderella dance.
    In English football terms, imagine a Skybet Two team making a very deep FA Cup run and defeating, say, QPR and Arsenal on the way.

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      And last year (2023) #1 Purdue lost to #16 Fairleigh Dickinson, #2 Arizona lost to #15 Princeton, and #4 Virginia lost to #13 Furman.

  • @jamesdrylie5584
    @jamesdrylie5584 Před 2 lety +5

    The First Four is the absolute worst. If you win your conference title, you should get an automatic bid into the tournament, not just a playin game. If they really want a First Four, it should be the last eight at large teams.
    My college has made the tournament once, losing in the first four. So I am a bit biased but I have felt this way before they made it and for years after.

  • @DevoGaming93
    @DevoGaming93 Před 2 lety

    Saw my Bulldogs win a National Championship in football this year, would love to see the same from them in basketball. The hiring of Mike White from Florida is a great step.

    • @jackm0429
      @jackm0429 Před 2 lety

      As a Michigan fan I knew we didn’t stand a chance in the semis against you guys lol but glad you beat Bama

  • @jamieoneill4960
    @jamieoneill4960 Před 2 lety

    As an English fan of the NFL I would love some videos with your insights on the draft etc

    • @tubbs51
      @tubbs51 Před 2 lety

      The NFL Draft is absolutely exciting for me as a longtime NFL fan. I've watched the last 12 NFL drafts in their entirety live. Z's insights in the NFL draft process would be interesting, especially considering the long lead up to the NFL draft.

    • @suavezchavez7156
      @suavezchavez7156 Před 2 lety

      @@tubbs51 i honestly feel so blessed i grew up here in the states and i know the NFL, NBA MLB college and european football so well. we need an NFL equivalent of football manager

  • @EurovisionFlare
    @EurovisionFlare Před 2 lety +6

    I’d love to see more videos like this but for American football

    • @DevoGaming93
      @DevoGaming93 Před 2 lety +1

      would love an American Football "head coach" game as intricate as FM. I know some games similar exist, but just don't hit it.

  • @mgradiant
    @mgradiant Před 2 lety

    Go Go Duke!

  • @oliverr8826
    @oliverr8826 Před 2 lety +6

    Good Video, Could you explain other American sports like baseball ?

  • @benjaminguzman3428
    @benjaminguzman3428 Před 2 lety

    Zealand what stream did you make your bracket? I want to see it

  • @milosruss
    @milosruss Před 2 lety +1

    Jokic in the video

  • @ENBSports
    @ENBSports Před 2 lety +1

    They have the exact same for soccer/football in December

  • @alastairtodd248
    @alastairtodd248 Před 2 lety +4

    would love a similar explanor for College (American) Football - try as i might I just cant work out how the confernces, schedules and playoffs all come together ! Great video

    • @tthaas
      @tthaas Před 2 lety +3

      College football is a little simpler in some respects, and more complex in others.
      Essentially, the conferences are the same, although the top tier of college football is smaller -- I believe it's now 130 teams in 10 conferences -- and the postseason is both shorter and weirder.
      Each team plays at least 12 games, usually 8 in conference and 4 non-conference games. There's historical rivalries that can cross conference lines, so most teams play one "rivalry game" a year (regional ones like, Ohio State-Michigan, in-state ones like University of Central Florida-University of South Florida, and even in-city ones like Houston-Rice), many of which are massive events with nicknames, trophies, and decades of history (the aforementioned Ohio State-Michigan game is literally called The Big Game. Georgia-Florida is The World's Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party, Alabama-Auburn is the Iron Bowl, UCF-USF is The War on I-4 -- because Interstate 4 is the main road you'd drive on between those two campuses, etc). There's teams that would gladly go 1-11, so long as that 1 win is their rivalry game.
      Conference games work much like in basketball, to either spit out a winner of the conference (in the case of conferences with less than 12 teams) based on winning record, with various tiebreakers (direct wins, points scored/allowed, etc), or two teams that will then play a 13th "conference championship" game. Simple enough.
      The postseason is where it gets weird. There's what's called the "College Football Playoffs," a 4-team tourney to determine the national champion. There's a selection committee, with no automatic bids (in theory, although in practice most of the teams are almost always selected from the conference champions of the SEC, Big 10, Big 12, Pac 12, and ACC), and the fact that there's only 4 teams playing means that who is selected - or not - is a huge point of contention (ie, UCF went 12-0 in the regular season of 2017 and didn't get invited because they played in the "weaker" American Athletic Conference. In their postseason bowl game -- we'll get to those in a bit -- they beat Auburn, the team that beat both Georgia and Alabama, the teams that eventually played for the national championship. Because of this -- and a #1 ranking from one of the computer ranking services for college football for that season, UCF claims the 2017 national championship on paper, even though they weren't invited to play for it.). For teams that don't make the playoffs, but have at least 6 wins on their record this season, there's still a single posteason "bowl game" that they'll attend, where there's usually some form of conference tie-in (ie, the Fenway Bowl -- played in Fenway Park, the baseball stadium where the Boston Red Sox play -- usually is a top American Athletic Conference team playing a top Atlantic Coast Conference team), although each bowl has a selection committee that has the right to determine who will play. The bowl games have corporate tie-ins, and offer prize money to the schools involved (NOT the players! Players in college football are, ostensibly, not paid, although they can get the cost of schooling and housing during their tenure in school paid for, and there have been scandals where rich fans of various teams offer inducements to players like do-nothing jobs during the offseason, cars or houses for family members, or even straight-up envelopes filled with cash), which result in some stupid names (my favorite: The Bad Boy Mowers Gasparilla Bowl, generally just called the Gasparilla Bowl), and many are played in nontraditional venues (the Fenway and Pinstripe bowls being played in Yankee Stadium and Fenway Park, which are baseball stadiums, the Bahamas Bowl played in Thomas Robinson Stadium in Nassau, etc).
      Big breath.
      So, college football -- 4 non-conference games, 8 or 9 conference games, and hopefully 1 or (for 2 teams) 2 postseason games. But so much more.

    • @thomasmeier4399
      @thomasmeier4399 Před 2 lety +1

      College football confuses Americans don’t worry😂

    • @jackm0429
      @jackm0429 Před 2 lety +1

      It’s mainly the same for conferences but no massive tournament only a 4 team playoff, hope he makes a video on this someday

    • @elvangulley3210
      @elvangulley3210 Před rokem

      @@tthaas you were doing so good until you tried to claim that plastic Disney trophy as real nobody thinks you won that title

  • @iliasVoolgaris
    @iliasVoolgaris Před 2 lety +1

    As with the rest of all the American sports, this is incredibly convoluted

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      It's convoluted and not convoluted at the same time. Regulated chaos in a way

  • @azura1774
    @azura1774 Před měsícem

    I find it so interesting why most don’t make the NBA. As a Brit, I assume this is where it starts from

  • @GoodEvil12
    @GoodEvil12 Před 2 lety

    This is so heckin exciting BAAAAAAAAAAAAAT Im getting the chills BatChest

  • @99dndd
    @99dndd Před 2 lety +4

    Straight knockout is always more dramatic that best of 7.

  • @jackscullion8442
    @jackscullion8442 Před 2 lety +1

    Which stream did he do his bracket on?

  • @TheHouseofJHouse
    @TheHouseofJHouse Před 2 měsíci

    What determines where and in which region a team will play?
    Ex: Arizona #1 in the South? 🥴
    Thank you in advance.

  • @reggiejames8626
    @reggiejames8626 Před rokem

    Do you have a crash course on soccer/football?

  • @dylankennedy2115
    @dylankennedy2115 Před 2 lety +5

    Zealand I watched this video just to hear you say Notre dame dramatically and you called them Indiana, I have never been so betrayed by a content creator before in my life

  • @seshadhri_s
    @seshadhri_s Před 2 lety

    I follow the NBA as a Thunder fan but not so much college basketball even though I do know the main players who are likely to be lottery picks in the upcoming draft. It's pretty cool to see March Madness explained in a football channel

    • @martinabdou6280
      @martinabdou6280 Před 2 lety

      The NCAA is your nba season with the amount of picks you have

    • @seshadhri_s
      @seshadhri_s Před 2 lety

      @@martinabdou6280 Haha true that 😂

  • @Mario-tf9sv
    @Mario-tf9sv Před 2 lety +1

    I get this in December

  • @ahmedelsaidy1995
    @ahmedelsaidy1995 Před 2 lety +3

    I saw Marsch Madness last Friday and it was the match of the year in Premier League season

  • @LordWay
    @LordWay Před 2 lety

    Thanks for explaining march madness Z

  • @Mash027
    @Mash027 Před 2 lety +5

    Can you make a video explaining/comparing the youth system in football with college sports in the U.S? Because honestly i still dont get the hype around it. Why does university gives so much importance to sports? Dont the U.S have sports academies? Run either by a club or an sport institution where the development of the players is (likely) to be the focus? I'm also really curious about the financial aspect of it, seeing it as one of the biggest televised event. And does that money help up developing those players. I'm honestly curious because college sports in my country is just a pasttime activity and seeing these young people spent their whole university days for a sport is mindboggling to me.

    • @dapir8731
      @dapir8731 Před 2 lety +9

      I can give a brief explanation of it addressing some of the points you brought up. So for most "American" (i.e. football, basketball, baseball, etc.) sports, you don't really have academies. There are some here and there, but really all of the attention from the professional level falls on college performance. So while being a part of one of these academies might help you progress in your skills, it doesn't hold the same weight when making the step to the professional level like it would in soccer (football). For example, there is a 0% chance someone would get drafted to the NFL if they didn't play in college. Basketball and baseball are a little looser in that they will draft potential all time greats from high school (LeBron is an example of this happening) but those are really the only options here.
      Each level will have scouting and also a general lifetime career path as well. I can give a breakdown of hierarchy, this will mostly pertain to football as that's what I'm most familiar with and participated in growing up, but it generally applies to all sports here:
      youth club team -> high school -> college -> professional
      So read that as the top high schools will probably look to recruit from people in well known youth leagues or academies, college will look to recruit from high school, and pro leagues look to recruit from college. Most scouting tier lists are available starting at the high school level. So if you really wanted to you could look up the top rated high school player at any given position in the nation right now.
      When it comes to the financial aspect of it, I can give a few examples of where money comes from. Lots of big name sports high schools are private schools, so they get funding through people donating. When it comes to college sports, just as Zealand mentioned in the video above they are a lot older than professional sports in our country. So there is a history of that being the main attraction. With that comes lot of televised commercials and marketing, as well as private colleges getting donations (like high schools). There is a very controversial topic that has been going on since I was a kid about how NCAA (the best division of college) athletes are NOT allowed to make money off of their sports skills/notoriety. I believe the NCAA is finally taking steps to change this but you can assume how the league makes money if its best players aren't allowed to make anything off it.
      Hopefully that paints a better picture, it's very interesting to me how different my country's sports system is to the rest of the world since I was raised just thinking this is how it always is haha. If you have any other questions feel free to let me know, I would be happy to answer!

    • @Mash027
      @Mash027 Před 2 lety

      @@dapir8731 Thanks for clearing some things up! can you tell me a bit more about the financial aspect affecting the college as an education institution? i'm sure that seeing the commercial attraction of the event, there will be alot income for the participating colleges. and as you say, most top highschool and colleges are private. so as an organization, there will be some(or more) incentive to focus on the sporting aspect.
      i'm asumming that there is a disparity between educational and sporting aspect in terms of funding.
      and seeing that college and high school sports are an integral aspect for the professional league, there is alot of pressure for both the institution and students to do good in the sports, knowing that there might be scouts watching them. doesn't it impact the educational aspect for them?

    • @Mash027
      @Mash027 Před 2 lety +1

      and yes, it is very interesting to know about other countries sporting system. i'm especially curious about the country with the most top flight sports in the world. because my country Indonesia, just copied the football/soccer system used in Eropa.
      Except for badminton, that sports are in the hands of cigerattes companies. They do all the things from scouting, developing, marketing and even the leagues. Sadly, that's also the sports where my country is the best at.

    • @TheJalinmyles
      @TheJalinmyles Před 2 lety

      @@Mash027 so if you are a really good athlete for the sport you were scouted for the school will give you a athletic scholarship for school and then if you aren’t as good you can walk on(try out) or get scouted and you may have to wait for a scholarship to open up.

    • @TheJalinmyles
      @TheJalinmyles Před 2 lety

      @@Mash027 NCAA is kind of shady too because between football and basketball their post season generates millions to billions of dollars in revenue and wouldn’t compensate the athletes saying it supports other sports and such things while their coaches are sometimes the highest earning educators in the state the college is in.

  • @plus12gaming
    @plus12gaming Před 2 lety +1

    One of the few American sports where they don't wear padding.

  • @JustJoeMCR
    @JustJoeMCR Před 2 lety

    As a football and basketball fan love this vid.
    I got Duke winning it all this year as coach K’s send off

  • @user-rd8pi6ip8g
    @user-rd8pi6ip8g Před měsícem

    Do u have to be 18 plus to make a bracket and like hypothetically if someone under 18 wins do they get the money

  • @shinybernard0455
    @shinybernard0455 Před 2 lety

    As italian this is very interesting to watch, but I was thinking: what do you do if you get kicked out in the first matches? You're season is over? Like you played for 4 months and that's it? I think the priority of a young sport system must be to make guys play that sport, because it's healthya and because it makes your movement grow. In my opinion it's not fair to let only the best ones to play, it goes against the ideology of sport. But it's just a wondering, what do you think about this?

    • @scott2353
      @scott2353 Před 2 lety +1

      Every player in this tournament is an adult. Thus, it’s better to look at college sports in the USA as “pre professional” rather than “youth sports.” Every team plays a minimum of around 25-30 games every season. March madness is playoffs, not the regular season itself

    • @ZealandonYT
      @ZealandonYT  Před 2 lety +1

      Everyone in the tournament is 18-23 years old, so the sport has transitioned to serious and competitive
      For a lot of the schools it is an honor just to make the tournament

    • @shinybernard0455
      @shinybernard0455 Před 2 lety

      Ok I see, thanks for the insights

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      Yep, once you lose you are out. That's just how it goes.
      This isn't all bad though. For a lot of schools, it's just about making it as far as possible and hoping you set the ground work for future teams and players.

  • @kevinmoynihan5118
    @kevinmoynihan5118 Před 2 měsíci +1

    2:22 I wish this were still true

  • @fpl_djhammer
    @fpl_djhammer Před 2 lety

    my god are the conferences confusing as hell 😂

  • @easyeric601
    @easyeric601 Před 2 lety +2

    If you have access to ESPN’s 30 for 30 documentaries, check out Survive and Advance & I hate Christian Laettner for an introduction into the overall vibe.

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      Survive and Advance really gets to the heart of what the tournament means.
      A #6 Seed Underdog going all the way to knock off an incredibly talented #1 Seed UH team that had the likes of Clyde Drexler and Akeem/Hakeem Olajuwon.

  • @jordylont1879
    @jordylont1879 Před 2 lety +6

    The selection committee sounds so old fashioned and subjective

    • @tthaas
      @tthaas Před 2 lety +2

      It is, and there's always some drama about Selection Sunday because of it (ie, this year, Texas A&M was not selected to play, despite many people arguing that they are a better team than the weakest of the at-large teams. There's other postseason tourneys, the most prestigious of which is the National Invitational Tournament -- the NIT -- and A&M was invited to play in the NIT and is currently in the quarterfinals of it, further proving the point). That's the problem of trying to select the best 68 teams out of a field of 300+ when the season is "only" around 27 games (there's some +/- there, due to preseason invitational tournaments etc), and teams often play each other 2 or even 3 (in the case of conference tournament play) times. There's just not enough hard data to determine who's the 68th versus the 69th best team.

    • @chriswooton2637
      @chriswooton2637 Před 2 lety

      You're correct, it is.

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      It is all subjective. But it is made a lot easier by prior rankings through stuff like the AP Polls. While not the exact metric used by the Committee (as seen by last year with A&M getting screwed AGAIN), it paints a decent picture as to how things will pan out for the first 18-20 at large bids.

  • @Sant270
    @Sant270 Před rokem +1

    I was watching this video because Virginia is doing so well this season, and I never knew how the whole thing worked, and coincidentally, the video was made by a Wahoo.

  • @jelmervanriet790
    @jelmervanriet790 Před 2 lety +4

    That sounds really cool. But i did nearly have a heart attack when you said that a commision just picks the 36 teams they think are the best. How is that even allowed?

    • @SimersFM
      @SimersFM Před 2 lety +2

      Because otherwise it would be like like 6 of the best teams and 20 other pretty good teams and nobody would watch. Imagine a champions league with only the top team in each of the top 5 leagues plus winners of all the other leagues.. no Chelsea, liverpool, dortmund, Real Madrid, Barcelona etc.

    • @patrickstump6809
      @patrickstump6809 Před 2 lety

      They are made up of representatives of all the interested parties and usually get it about right (tho Texas A&M were screwed this year)

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      Most of these 36 come from prior Top 25 Rankings. Most of the time it is very obvious who gets in. A #7 in the country Duke team that just lost to a #5 UNC team in the ACC Tournament is going go get in without a sliver of a doubt. Once you get outside the top 25, things get a lot more heated. Those receiving votes (top 25 is always voted upon each week by the AP Poll) are usually, but not always safe. Those that did fairly well in the season and made a surprising deep run in their tournament are also likely to get in.
      In the end, it's really the last 8-12 teams that become questionmarks and not the 24-28 selected ahead.

  • @ranng6817
    @ranng6817 Před 2 lety +1

    well i know the schedule for march in fm is pretty mad

  • @85NickT
    @85NickT Před 2 lety +2

    Nice, interesting for us non-Americans who have heard about March Madness for a lifetime and still have no idea what it is. The selection process could use more detail though. Feels like it could go a bit "European Super-League" when unavoidable things like ad revenue and financial muscle rear their ugly heads.

    • @BonaFideBC
      @BonaFideBC Před 2 lety +1

      For better or worse, this tournament makes enough money that I actually don't think those kinds of considerations come into play directly when it comes to deciding who gets in. Schools that invest more into their basketball programs will tend to be better and therefore have more chance of getting in, but any team can theoretically make it if their resume impresses the committee enough. Or if they win their conference tournament as Z mentioned.

    • @Flash4ML
      @Flash4ML Před 2 lety +1

      I think the system is too strong for that. The Super League was plausible (or at least plausible enough for greedy club owners to try to make it happen) because in football clubs are privately owned by random billionaires who don’t really have restrictions on what they can and cannot do, like splitting their clubs off and making their own “super league” was a realistic idea, at least to them. But the collegiate system in America is too strong and the people in charge of the programs aren’t independent billionaires, they can just be fired. Revenue can definitely play a part in certain areas of college sport, but it won’t break the system down

    • @adamosborn4074
      @adamosborn4074 Před 2 lety

      I'm an American, and I'd say that many of us DO think prestige and money become a factor in selection, unfortunately...that being said, you are choosing 36 teams, and most people feel like whoever gets left out was probably not going to win it all anyway.
      My own school plays in a smaller conference, and I feel has been cut out of the tournament a few times when they clearly deserved to be in. It is frustrating.

  • @josuejimenez5278
    @josuejimenez5278 Před 2 lety

    Hey, how can I get in contact with you? I’d like to talk about advertising.

  • @de132
    @de132 Před 2 lety +1

    Me, an American who watches this tournament every year, watching this video like 3 days before the Final Four: ah yes, fascinating

  • @benjaminguzman3428
    @benjaminguzman3428 Před 2 lety

    Bandwagon UH please

  • @fplmaestro2264
    @fplmaestro2264 Před 2 lety +1

    So like the Papa John's Trophy 😂😂😂

  • @tbkyle9835
    @tbkyle9835 Před 2 lety

    Z, why didn't my LaTech Bulldogs get an invite? Great video

    • @tbkyle9835
      @tbkyle9835 Před 2 lety

      @@williamcross210 ahh, I only follow College Football, but I'm just getting into basketball as well so I was curious

  • @jarzival9950
    @jarzival9950 Před 2 lety

    MY JAYHAWKS JUST WON IT ALL HAHAHAHA

  • @envymeh_
    @envymeh_ Před 2 lety +1

    UNC vs. Baylor basically sums up March madness for you. Yesterday UNC was up 25 against Baylor (the team who won the tournament last year), then their best player gets ejected. Baylor comes back to force overtime. 😮‍💨

  • @zesevic5322
    @zesevic5322 Před 2 lety

    is z talking about ncaa 'perfect bracket' here? I can't watch the full video right now but I want to ask what is the 'perfect bracket', I just heard the term this year. Thank you!

    • @SalmanAli-hn2kt
      @SalmanAli-hn2kt Před 2 lety

      a perfect bracket is when you guess every single game right in march madness tournament there is a 1-9 quintillion odds to get a perfect bracket

    • @tthaas
      @tthaas Před 2 lety

      A "bracket" is when someone puts together a sheet listing what they think will happen this year in the tourney between when the teams are announced and the first games (there's often casual gambling involved in brackets -- people in an office might assign a value to picking winners in each round, and the person with the "best" bracket wins a pool of money put in by participants). A "perfect bracket" -- something that has never been verifiably made -- would be one where every single game is correct (picking randomly, the odds of a perfect bracket are 1 in 9 quintillion). A "busted bracket" is one where at least one game has been picked incorrectly.

    • @zesevic5322
      @zesevic5322 Před 2 lety

      @@tthaas Well, apparently it's just a term for betting on March Madness, at first I thought the "perfect bracket" was that the team in the top seed always win the match without any upsets. But why did the term just become popular this year? Because the NCAA opens up challenges this year for people who can guess 100%?

    • @tthaas
      @tthaas Před 2 lety

      @zesevic no, there's always talk about how many perfect brackets are remaining on the ESPN and Yahoo March Madness contests. It's been a thing for years.

  • @borisb3495
    @borisb3495 Před 2 lety

    Z, why do you think there arent any FM equivalent games for America sports? Surely NFL is ripe to be created into a spreadsheet type computer game

    • @Flash4ML
      @Flash4ML Před 2 lety

      Because American football isn’t as popular as football. FM already isn’t a massively popular game, so idk if there’s a market for a similar game with American football. Also the way their coaching works is different, the offensive and defensive lines are essentially two different teams with different coaches, training exercises, and strategies, as head coach a lot of what you do is interacting with your assistant coaches, the offensive and defensive line coordinators. You could still make a game out of that, and tbh there probably is one, but I don’t think it would succeed like FM

    • @jamieoneill4960
      @jamieoneill4960 Před 2 lety

      I'm going back years here but I'm sure a baseball management sim was knocking about at some point.

    • @silverazorander8441
      @silverazorander8441 Před 2 lety +3

      OOTP Baseball is very close game to FM, very stat driven and you can set up leagues/teams all over the baseball playing world.

  • @garyflockton9395
    @garyflockton9395 Před 2 lety

    Thought this was going to be a Jesse March video :(

  • @Jafooly73
    @Jafooly73 Před 2 lety

    It is a slightly more interesting version of netball ;-)

  • @nabri-nfg3262
    @nabri-nfg3262 Před 2 lety

    I will never forget my freshman year of high school back in 2015 when i predicted duke to win it, then villanova the year after.
    It was all a fluke i didnt know anything about college sports nor do i know now

  • @highergingerbeing5134
    @highergingerbeing5134 Před 2 lety

    so its basically college basketball champions league?

    • @ZealandonYT
      @ZealandonYT  Před 2 lety

      Not a bad way to look at it

    • @troybaxter
      @troybaxter Před měsícem

      Minus Group Stage and 2 Game Aggragate Scores, yes.

  • @cjfast11
    @cjfast11 Před 2 lety +1

    if you're not american you're missing out on my favorite time of year

  • @lucaspereiramartins1485
    @lucaspereiramartins1485 Před 2 lety +1

    Oh, the March Madness.
    Or, as Jon Bois iluminate us: The losers machine.

  • @davypeters6355
    @davypeters6355 Před 2 lety +1

    Never heard of it

  • @jman1276
    @jman1276 Před 2 lety +1

    Another major draw is the amazing upsets and Cinderella stories that come up every single year. UMBC beating Virginia in the only 16 seed to beat a 1 seed. 10 times where a 15 seed upset a 2 seed. Loyola Chicago making the final 4 as an 11 seed. So many last second shots to win games. Miracle runs out of nowhere. This tournament provides ultimate chaos and parity that no other tournament in any sport provides.

  • @Craig_B
    @Craig_B Před 2 lety +2

    So its Americanised FA cup

  • @kerkireos
    @kerkireos Před 2 lety

    I prefer sweet sixteen if you know what i mean

  • @uncleseekx
    @uncleseekx Před 2 lety

    Duke is going down next by the way🙂

  • @louquole
    @louquole Před 2 lety +1

    It's big for the Americans because you guys care about it, you have the teams from schools you studied at, or from a place you lived in, therefore you identify with a team, or maybe you root against a team that beat yours. But the thing is, for those outside the USA, we have no connection to any of these teams and we don't see them like we do with the professional teams. So, I guess not many people from outside the USA would want to follow the competition.

    • @csmall1932
      @csmall1932 Před 2 lety +5

      You could say the same about Americans not caring about soccer...

  • @Ash14760
    @Ash14760 Před 2 lety +1

    It's spelt Marsch Madness and it's every Leeds game at the moment

  • @MurrayC_11
    @MurrayC_11 Před 2 lety

    The real question is why is it called the Midwest when it’s on the Eastern Half of the country?

    • @patrickstump6809
      @patrickstump6809 Před 2 lety +1

      It has the sane root as middle east so since the Americas are the western hemisphere the middle of the continent is the Midwest.
      It gets extra confusing for the Big Ten since they expanded into Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New Jersey which aren't Midwestern states

    • @MurrayC_11
      @MurrayC_11 Před 2 lety

      @@patrickstump6809 Oh, I didn't expect an actual reason for that other than when the US expanded West that was just the West Side of the frontier

  • @SimonWakefieldUK
    @SimonWakefieldUK Před 2 lety

    This is the problem with American sports, they have to make things so complicated with the structure to the point it makes the league stage almost pointless. I've been watching a fair bit of MLS recently due to playing Sorare but the fact that clubs have to play everyone in their conference twice but then play a selection of people in another conference just once just complicates everything and IMHO causes an imbalance. You can end up getting a tougher set of games from the other conference than another team be it just that they are better teams or because the travel is longer (as playing away seems to have a much bigger impact than it does in say the main European leagues) and then you get all that worked out, you win the league but no-one cares because seemingly in all American sports that's not what people focus on, its winning the knockout that matters which just seems crazy. It would be like winning the Premier League not mattering because all anyone cared about was the FA Cup winners. Would be so much simpler and easier for the rest of the world to care about US sports if you either had one league (with relegation and promotions) or they were fully regional and the winners were the winners and the knockouts were just an additional event that were still meaningful like the FA Cup or the Champions League are but didn't diminish the league.
    It's actually odd as well. America has a habit of always looking to simplify things to make them easier to understand for the masses, be it simplifying spelling so it is written as its sounds or for example comedy where you will make it simpler so everyone gets it (which is why US sitcoms travel way better than many UK ones) but in Sport you seem to want to make it as complicated as possible.

    • @scott2353
      @scott2353 Před 2 lety +3

      I totally understand your critiques of the MLS structure, it’s definitely an imperfect system.
      A few general things to note.
      Single elimination playoffs are the norm in sporting culture in the US. From youth sports all the way to professional sports, virtually every sport and league has this type of setup. For better or worse, it’s just the way it is. While it creates a lot of drama and higher stakes, I totally see how it’s not everyone’s cup of tea.
      Finally, There’s over 350 college basketball teams in division 1 (the highest level of collegiate sports and what Zealand’s whole video is exclusively referring to) alone. The system kind of has to be complicated in order to function properly with so many teams

    • @oscarquintero2209
      @oscarquintero2209 Před rokem

      @@scott2353 Also, the conference system as we know it originated more or less because baseball had two big leagues that kinda-but-not-really-merged-together, both with their own set of teams, scattered across the country, and that became the blueprint for the NFL, NBA, NHL and lastly MLS.
      So it does make a lot of sense if you contextualize it.
      Also, though the regular season/playoff system might seem weird to a European, FIFA does have a similar approach to say the World Cup. You need to play qualis to make it, no one cares about your standings if you get knocked out in the group phase.
      All that matters is the Big Game.

    • @MrMiniPancakes
      @MrMiniPancakes Před 2 měsíci +1

      Go cry

  • @wbbartlett
    @wbbartlett Před 2 lety

    It's a netball thing isn't it? Or is it rounders?

  • @calebburkhart3875
    @calebburkhart3875 Před 2 lety +1

    Why no mention of the women?

    • @calebburkhart3875
      @calebburkhart3875 Před 2 lety

      Hey my ten seed Creighton blue jays made the elite eight on the women’s side maybe you should mention them

  • @azariahstonar4367
    @azariahstonar4367 Před měsícem

    You have no clue what so ever.
    #1
    Research Illinois High School Basketball history.
    March Madness begin in Illinois
    Illinois High School Association sold the term for $$$$$

  • @jrgenb8107
    @jrgenb8107 Před 2 lety +5

    Oh, american thingy.

  • @WeejixDoWx
    @WeejixDoWx Před 2 lety +1

    Seems like making things complicated for the sake of it.

  • @jb0609
    @jb0609 Před 2 lety

    zzzzzzzzzzz.

  • @WimpieKanaal
    @WimpieKanaal Před 2 lety +1

    It is absolutely criminal unpaid child labor.

    • @ZealandonYT
      @ZealandonYT  Před 2 lety +1

      They can get paid now, thankfully

    • @WimpieKanaal
      @WimpieKanaal Před 2 lety

      @@ZealandonYT A tiny and I do mean tiny step has been made. Still no salary, some might make a few hundred promoting their local clothing store but thats about it. Its still a 14bn industry that does not directly pay those that make it possible. And 98% of them will never make it to the pro's so considering it an investment into their future is also a senseless argument. Im still very comfertable calling it unpaid and unfair child labor.

    • @devinc5484
      @devinc5484 Před 2 lety +1

      These are adults. Most taking scholarships and other benefits as payment for playing and others are just grateful to get to keep playing the sport they love.

    • @WimpieKanaal
      @WimpieKanaal Před 2 lety

      @@devinc5484 There is a reason people in college get called kids, they still are. But college ball makes 14bn a year. The top coaches get millions a year. They should be grateful they are making their coach millions and some companies that don't care about them billions? Don't try to justify your watching and liking of this event. It is all kinds of f*'d up.

    • @ZealandonYT
      @ZealandonYT  Před 2 lety

      @@WimpieKanaal If you want to just fire that off I'm all for it because like I said I've written multiple papers on this for my degree
      But it's not child labor, they're of age, it's unfair restriction of wage earning and a monopoly

  • @robwashers
    @robwashers Před 2 lety +1

    just never be interested in a sport that is closed to general public - in that u have to be attending school to play

    • @csmall1932
      @csmall1932 Před 2 lety +2

      Huh???

    • @Flash4ML
      @Flash4ML Před 2 lety +2

      What the hell? I don’t think you get the point of this system lol

  • @oliverd8298
    @oliverd8298 Před 2 lety

    Sounds great. Such a shame it's the absolute worst sport ever

    • @Ayo601
      @Ayo601 Před 2 lety +2

      No that would be the women’s tournament

  • @selwynlee7663
    @selwynlee7663 Před 2 lety +2

    For anyone curious, this vid has zero relevance to football or FM at all. It's an interesting topic perhaps, but it took me for surprise since football and FM is what I come back to this channel for

    • @csmall1932
      @csmall1932 Před 2 lety +1

      You sound like a fun guy to be around...

    • @Flash4ML
      @Flash4ML Před 2 lety +3

      If you’re not interested in this content then don’t watch it and go watch his vods or something, there is endless FM content for you to watch if that’s all you want.

    • @selwynlee7663
      @selwynlee7663 Před 2 lety

      @@Flash4ML it's more of a heads up, I wasn't sure what the nature of the content was from the title alone

    • @jamieoneill4960
      @jamieoneill4960 Před 2 lety

      This was pretty clear in the title, and if not, then within 5 seconds of the video. Thanks for the heads up though

  • @TheRadPlayer
    @TheRadPlayer Před 2 lety +1

    An exploitative sports institution that works ostensible amateur-level players to the bone, with all the proceeds going into the pockets of private, old-money universities and overpaid, often racist, coaches. Especially in Basketball, as recruitment strategies are often predicated on fishing for poor, tall, black teenagers, who wouldn't see a shred of education (or basketball, due to a lack of organized lower leagues.) without breaking their backs for their (usually white) coach's 7-figure yearly salary.
    The student-athlete system ought to be dropped as soon as possible, replaced with contracted, fully-professional U23 teams. Supporting this current institution is incredibly gross, and I have few words to describe how disappointed I am in you promoting it.

    • @ZealandonYT
      @ZealandonYT  Před 2 lety +9

      Hey I worked in college sports for years and wrote multiple papers on why them not getting paid was awful, but now they can make money off their image, which isn’t perfect but it’s a massive step in the right direction along with the removal of transfer rules
      Don’t you go taking your massive hatred and leave it on my doorstep because I made a video explaining March madness

    • @SimersFM
      @SimersFM Před 2 lety

      What a terrible post. Last I checked it was optional for these kids to play basketball and get a paid education. Some of which choose not to go to school, while some others do.

    • @TehStormOG
      @TehStormOG Před 2 lety +1

      no one is forcing them to play lmao, if they are good enough they can go to one of the many professional leagues around the world instead of college