Power Seven Conferences

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Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Power Seven Basketball Conferences, sometimes called the Premier Seven, P7, or simply Multi-Bid Conferences are NCAA Division I basketball conferences that have historically placed the majority of the teams into the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship. While some mid-major conferences do, from time to time, earn multiple bids to the event, the conferences included in this group typically experience more than a few programs being included in the championships on a regular basis. Though they are only seven of the 32 conferences, they account for over half the bids to the post season and nearly all of the at-large selections to the NCAA tournament. This group also receives many selections to the National Invitation Tournament. It is the diversity in programs that make up the post season field and find success that distinguishes this group from some other top heavy conferences like the American Athletic Conference, Missouri Valley Conference, West Coast Conference and Mountain West Conference that also may have multiple bids to the NCAA tournament on any given year but have only a few programs typically finding success at the national level.

This group of conferences, includes the football centric Power Five conferences in addition to the premier basketball centric conferences: Atlantic 10 Conference and Big East Conference which primarily comprise private schools with rich basketball traditions.

The Power Seven distinction has been made, primarily, since the early-2010s NCAA conference realignment.

Post Season Selections from the Power Seven

NCAA Tournament Selections[1]

A ^ indicates that a team from that conference won the national championship, while a * indicates that a team from that conference made it to the Final Four of the tournament. Note that automatic bids are awarded to each of the 32 conferences, so at least 25 bids will go to non-Power Seven conferences.

Year ACC Atlantic 10 Big 12 Big East Big Ten Pac-12 SEC Others
Non-Auto
Others
Auto
2016 7* 3 7* 5^* 7 7 3 4 25
2015 6^ 3 7 6 7** 4 5* 5 25
2014 6 6 7 4 6* 6 3** 5^ 25
2013 4 5 8 7^* 7* 5 3 4* 25
Total 23 17 29 22 27 22 14 18 100
Final Fours 2 0 1 4 4 0 3 2 0
Championships 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0

NIT Selections [2]

A * indicates that a team from that conference won the National Invitation Tournament.

Conference 2016 2015 2014 2013 Total
ACC 3 2 2 3 10
Atlantic 10 *3 3 0 3 9
Big 12 0 0 1 *1 2
Big East 1 0 2 1 4
Big Ten 1 1 *2 1 5
Pac-12 1 *2 2 3 8
SEC 4 3 3 3 13
Total 13 11 12 15 51

Furthest Advancing Program

Conference 2016 2015 2014 2013
ACC North Carolina (1st)
Finals
Duke (2nd)
National Champion
Virginia (1st)
Sweet 16
Duke (2nd)
Elite 8
Atlantic 10 Saint Joseph's (4th)
VCU (1st)
Round of 32
Dayton (2nd)
Round of 32
Dayton (6th)
Elite 8
La Salle (4th)
Sweet 16
Big 12 Oklahoma (3rd)
Final 4
Oklahoma (3rd)
West Virginia (4th)
Sweet 16
Baylor (6th)
Iowa State (3rd)
Sweet 16
Kansas (1st)
Sweet 16
Big East Villanova (1st)
National Champion
Xavier (6th)
Sweet 16
Creighton (2nd)
Villanova (1st)
Round of 32
Louisville (1st)[n 1]
National Champion[n 2]
Big Ten Indiana (1st)
Maryland (3rd)
Wisconsin (3rd)
Sweet 16
Wisconsin (1st)
Finals
Wisconsin (2nd)
Final 4
Michigan (4th)
Finals
Pac-12 Oregon (1st)
Elite 8
Arizona (1st)
Elite 8
Arizona (1st)
Elite 8
Arizona (2nd)
Oregon (3rd)
Sweet 16
SEC Texas A&M (1st)
Sweet 16
Kentucky (1st)
Final 4
Kentucky (2nd)
Finals
Florida (1st)
Elite 8
All other Division I conferences
(25 of 32 conferences)
Gonzaga (WCC 1st)
Sweet 16
Gonzaga (WCC 1st)
Elite 8
Connecticut (American 3rd)
National Champion
Wichita State (MVC 2nd)
Final 4

( ) Number in parenthesis is the team's regular season finish in the conference standings.

Notes
  1. Following the 2012–13 season, the Big East split into two leagues. The so-called "Catholic 7", consisting of the Big East schools that did not play FBS football, left the league to form a new basketball-focused conference that assumed the Big East name and basketball history. The conference charter was maintained by the FBS schools that are now known as the American Athletic Conference. Louisville spent only one season in The American before joining the ACC in 2014.
  2. Among schools that would remain in the reconfigured Big East, Marquette, which tied for the regular-season Big East title, advanced the farthest, making the Elite Eight..

See also

References