2023 Bracketology 6.0

Welcome to the sixth look at Bracketology from Lacrosse Bucket!

It is conference championship week. Sunday is Selection Sunday and the NCAA Tournament field will be set. Here is one last look before things get underway this week.

Let’s get into it!

How It Works

Here is a refresher as to how the NCAA Tournament works for those of you who may be unaware or have forgotten. The 2023 NCAA Men’s Lacrosse Tournament will feature eight seeded teams and nine non-seeded teams. Those teams will make up the 17-team bracket.

Nine teams will be automatic qualifiers (AQ) and those will all be conference champions from the America East, ASUN, Atlantic 10, Big East, Big Ten, CAA, Ivy League, MAAC, and Patriot League. Remember, the ACC does not have an AQ because a conference needs six teams to qualify for an AQ. The ACC only has five teams. With nine AQ’s, that leaves eights spots for at-large selections.

The NEC and SoCon disbanded as men’s lacrosse conferences after last season and the A10 jumped into the landscape. Those moves in conference realignment make the NCAA Tournament go back down to just one play-in game. That game will feature the two lowest ranked AQs and the winner will play the No. 1 overall seed in the first round.

Now how does the NCAA selection committee pick teams for at-large bids and seed teams for the tournament? According to the committee, they consider a multitude of things. The committee looks at record, strength of schedule index (based on team’s 10 highest-rated games), RPI results, average RPI wins and losses, head-to-head results, record against ranked teams (1-5, 6-10, 11-15, 16-20, and 21+), significant wins and losses, location of games, results versus common opponents, and any polls do not matter.

You can find the official NCAA pre-championship manual here.

Projected Automatic Qualifiers

We still have a lot of lacrosse to be played, but if the tournament started today this is what the AQ situation would look like. These selections are based on who has the top seed in each of the league tournaments.

ConferenceTeamRecordConference RecordRPI RankSOS Rank
America EastVermont9-47-01645
ASUNUtah10-49-01836
A10Saint Joseph’s10-45-02340
Big EastGeorgetown10-35-0820
Big TenJohns Hopkins11-44-141
CAADelaware10-36-13260
Ivy LeagueCornell11-25-1714
MAACManhattan10-47-24173
Patriot LeagueBoston U.10-37-11329

Data from Lacrossereference.com – 5/1 (12:00pm)


Possible At-Large Selections

As previously mentioned, after those nine automatic qualifiers are set in stone, there are still eight other teams that will get in via at-large berths. This portion of the selection process is always fun, but maybe even more so this year with how tight things have seem to be across the landscape.

For this section this week, we are listing 16 teams that are in contention for a possible at-large bid after removing the projected AQs. Teams are listed in order based on their RPI rank. And as always, some of these teams listed have little to no chance of getting unless they get an AQ.

ConferenceTeamRecordConference RecordRPI RankSOS Rank
ACCDuke12-25-114
ACCVirginia11-34-226
ACCNotre Dame9-23-232
Big TenPenn State9-34-1512
Big TenMaryland9-43-268
Ivy LeagueYale8-43-397
Ivy LeaguePenn6-54-2103
Big EastDenver8-43-11122
Big EastVillanova10-33-11223
ACCNorth Carolina7-61-41415
Big TenRutgers8-61-41513
Ivy LeaguePrinceton6-64-3175
Patriot LeagueArmy West Point10-37-11943
America EastBryant10-45-22054
ACCSyracuse8-71-52111
Big TenMichigan7-62-32217

Data from Lacrossereference.com – 5/1 (12:00pm)


Bids Per Conference

Before getting into what I think the bracket could look like at this time, let’s take a look at how many bids each conference could receive at the moment. There are a few conference that are sure to get multiple bids while other may get just get one bid. Some of the bottom conferences will obviously only get that one AQ, as usual.

ACC – Three

Big Ten – Three

Big East – Two or Three

Ivy League – Two

Patriot League – One

America East – One

ASUN – One

A10 – One

CAA – One

MAAC – One


2023 Projected Bracket 6.0

Without further ado, here is the first project for this season. Expect things to change quite a bit in the coming weeks as we inch closer to selection Sunday.

Last Four in: Maryland, Yale, Denver, Villanova

First Four out: Penn, North Carolina, Rutgers, Princeton

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