NCAA approves 68-team men’s basketball tourney

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The road to the Final Four will have a new look next season.

On Thursday, the NCAA's board of directors approved expansion from 65 to 68 teams and endorsed a proposal to add three
more opening-round games to the schedule. The board also approved new rules governing concussions, and may sanction schools
that do not comply.

It's only the second time in a quarter-century the NCAA has increased the number of teams competing for the men's
national championship.

Now it's time to start mapping out the details, which could include putting at-large teams in the early games.

"The (men's basketball) committee will have to study any variety of options and certainly the notion of looking
at options involving the last at-large teams in would be one possible option," NCAA vice president Greg Shaheen told
The Associated Press. "We would expect the committee to examine all of the options."

The decision was not a surprise.

NCAA officials recommended the 68-team field last week after the public loudly complained that going to 80 or 96 teams would
water down the NCAA's marquee event, and network executives insisted they did not need more tourney games to make a profit
on the next television contract.

So the NCAA backed the most modest expansion, at least for now. The board gave unanimous consent to the 68-team field with
a caveat — it wants the "play-in" games to have more significance.

"Expanding to 68 teams gave us an opportunity to involve more teams in the championship, and in doing that, we were
able to enhance the experience of the opening-round game," Clemson president James Barker, the committee chairman, said
in a statement.

The format must still be approved by the men's basketball committee later this summer, and Shaheen is hoping its done
by July. The NCAA went from 64 to 65 teams in 2001, after increasing from 48 to 64 teams in 1985.

More teams won't be the only change fans see next March.

Thanks to the new 14-year, $10.8 billion television package with CBS and Turner Broadcasting, also announced last week, fans
can choose which games they want to watch. It will be the first time every tourney game will be televised live nationally.
One game will be carried by CBS, with others carried on TNT, TBS and truTV.

It's a smaller overhaul than fans expected after NCAA officials spoke extensively about the format for a 96-team field
four weeks ago, but it hasn't stopped the talk about additional expansion.

The new TV deal gives the NCAA sole authority to expand again, a possibility some observers believe will happen in the near
future. Don't bet on it.

"Field size of any event is something people like to debate, but it's not something the committee is interested
in taking on in the foreseeable future," Shaheen said.

Tourney expansion was only part of the board's busy schedule Thursday.

The board approved a measure that requires schools in all three divisions to devise a concussion policy. It must include
provisions that explain players be removed from games or practice if they show concussion-like symptoms

Players diagnosed with a concussion must then sit out the rest of the day and will have to be evaluated by a medical professional
experienced in dealing with concussions. Players can return to action only if they are cleared by team physician or a doctor
who has been approved by the team physician.

Athletes also must sign a statement accepting responsibility for reporting injuries and illnesses to the team doctors, and
if a school does not comply, the board has asked for recommendations to sanction schools.

The new rules will take effect this fall, ending a debate that has been ongoing since December.

In other business, the board endorsed a recommendation requiring football players to complete nine credit hours during the
fall semester to be eligible for the following season. And the Committee on Academic Performance wants to eliminate waivers
for Football Bowl Subdivision teams that lose players who are academically ineligible after completing their eligibility.
The board believes the elimination of those waivers will force schools to place greater emphasis on retaining athletes.

Both proposals are expected to be added to the 2010-11 legislative calendar.

As usual, though, it was the men's basketball tournament drew the attention.

"The basketball committee very intensely got into determining the tournament structure in the last two years, so it's
been an extensive journey," Shaheen said. "But we also recognize it's just one of the 88 championships, so we've
still got a lot of work to do. We still have a significant amount of (television) rights to work on."

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