Wilt Chamberlain died a little more than 25 years ago; his NBA playing days ended a little more than 50 years ago; obviously, he does not make it into the sporting conversation all that often in 2026. Except, he has been in the news twice in the last week.
- When Bam Adebayo scored 83 points in a game last week, it was the second highest player total in NBA history. Obviously, commenting on that feat meant mentioning the highest player total in NBA history and that would be Wilt Chamberlain and his 100-point game.
- A couple of days ago, a record that Wilt held for more than 60 years fell. Shea Gilgeous-Alexander scored more than 20 points in a game against the Celtics. That was the 127th consecutive game for SGA where he scored 20+ points; Wilt Chamberlain had held that record at 126 consecutive games.
There is a wrinkle to the second item above. In the game that stopped Chamberlain’s streak at 126 games, he was ejected by an official in the first 5 minutes of that game.
Just to keep a couple of similar “Chamberlain milestones” in mind today consider:
- He posted a 92-game streak where he scored 30+ points in each game.
- He led the NBA in regular season scoring 7 times in a row; that “record” is shared with Michael Jordan.
Moving on … Today is an unofficial marker on the annual calendar; I call it National Spleen Venting Day. Every sports radio show in the country that takes calls from listeners must look forward to this day because there is no need for the host to prep for the show; all they need do is to ask for calls about the decisions by the Selection Committee last night in setting the March Madness field for 2026. Then just sit back and have some coffee while everyone calls in to declare their outrage that teams like Northwest Southeast Central State did not get a bid even though they beat two of the teams in the field. Another caller will surely complain that the Ivy League champion should never be seeded higher than the Big Sky champion; how could the Committee not recognize that simple fact.
“Spleen Venting” is limited to one day however; because tomorrow those same sports radio hosts will get another “mail-it-in day” on the air. Tomorrow’s prompt for callers is for the caller to identify his/her favorite “bracket buster” where a lowly-seeded team beats one of the “big guys” and garners most of the headlines for a day or so.
Rather than diving into either of those morasses, I want to discuss another topic that gets brief attention at this time of the year:
- Should the NCAA expand the March Madness field?
Let me cut to the chase and say my answer to that is a definitive, NO! But let me explain why I make that declaration.
There have been calls to expand the field to 96 teams – – an idea that sends shudders down my spinal cord. In 2026, the NCAA sponsors men’s basketball tournaments – – plural. March Madness has 68 teams, and the NIT has 32 teams; ergo, 100 men’s basketball teams will compete in NCAA-sponsored tournaments. So, pretend that the teams worthy of selection to the junior-varsity tournament (the NIT) would be the ones added to the March Madness field should it expand to 96 teams or even 100 teams.
Now look at some of the matchups that will happen in NIT games starting tomorrow night:
- George Mason vs. Liberty
- Seattle U vs St. Thomas (MN)
- Wichita St. vs Wyoming
- Illinois St. vs Kent St.
- Utah Valley vs George Washington
The basketball tournaments put on by the NCAA are entertainment vehicles; the way they “pay their freight” is to sell media rights and attract fans to spend discretionary dollars on the games. I did not bother to list all 16 of the first round NIT games, but please tell me which of the five games listed above would be an event you would be sure to program your DVR to record so that you would not miss it should some unexpected family event come up?
Expanding the March Madness field will produce more of those types of games; and frankly, there are already enough March Madness games of only marginal interest to anyone without a direct tie to either of the teams. In this year’s March Madness field:
- There is a team with a record to date of 18-17
- There are 29 teams in the bracket with double-digit losses to date; that is 43% of the field.
The NCAA men’s basketball tournament is the single best sporting event of the year in toto. Do not dilute the entertainment product; more is not always better. You can piss in a pot of soup and increase the volume – – but it does not improve the soup.
Finally, the basketball tournament brings to mind Bob Knight and so I’ll close with what is probably my favorite quote attributed to him:
“I watched the guy that hits a home run, and he comes across the plate and he points skyward, like thanking for the help from the Almighty to hit the home run. And as he does that, I say to myself, ‘God screwed the pitcher.’ And I don’t know how else you look at it.”
But don’t get me wrong, I love sports………