The College Basketball Crown will unfold over a week in Las Vegas next April, featuring two automatic qualifiers apiece from the Big Ten, Big 12 and Big East that didn’t earn NCAA tournament bids, as well as 10 additional at-large teams selected by a committee. All games will be broadcast on either Fox or FS1.
Big East Commissioner Val Ackerman called the tournament “an exciting and innovative addition to the college basketball calendar.”
“We’re confident that the formidable capabilities of Fox Sports, AEG and their event partners will translate into a high-quality postseason opportunity for our coaches, players and schools,” she said.
The Big East protested how many of its teams were excluded from the NCAA tournament. St. John’s coach Rick Pitino opted not to participate in the NIT after the program didn’t make the NCAA field, instead focusing on recruiting next season’s roster.
What the new tournament’s arrival means for the other March Madness alternatives remains to be seen. Dan Gavitt, the NCAA’s senior vice president of basketball, told ESPN in November that “the viability” of the National Invitation Tournament — which is run by the NCAA and has been ongoing since 1938 — could be “in jeopardy.”
Now another consolation tournament is joining the fray, with big-time support behind it.