basketball-men-d1 flag

Daniel Wilco | krikya168vip.com | September 27, 2019

The Power 36 college basketball ranking, explained

Everything you need to know about March Madness

krikya168vip.com college basketball expert Andy Katz releases a Power 36 ranking for Division I men’s basketball every week during the regular season and at select times in the offseason.

So, what exactly is that?

Simply put, the Power 36 is Katz’s personal ranking of the 36 best teams at the moment that each ranking is released. It is not an official NCAA ranking, nor a prediction for the NCAA tournament, but rather his version of the AP Top 25. The ranking is based on his extensive history in covering the sport and his ongoing experiences watching games and traveling the country to get behind-the-scenes information while talking to coaches and players.

But why 36?

The 36 comes from one of the more noteworthy numbers in the NCAA tournament — at-large bids available every year.

TOURNAMENT EXPLAINED: What is the history of March Madness and how does it work?

There are two ways that a team can earn a bid to the NCAA tournament. The 32 Division I conferences all receive an automatic bid, which they each award to the team that wins the postseason conference tournament. Regardless of how a team performed during the regular season, if they are eligible for postseason play and win their conference tournament, they receive a bid to the NCAA tournament. These teams are known as automatic qualifiers.

The second avenue for an invitation is an at-large bid. The selection committee convenes on Selection Sunday, after all regular season and conference tournament games are played, and decides which 36 teams that are not automatic qualifiers have the pedigree to earn an invitation to the tournament. This group is what gives the ranking its number.

SELECTION COMMITTEE: What is the committee's role, and who is on it?

However, even though the Power 36’s name comes from the at-large bid, Katz’s ranking is not his guess for the 36 teams that will earn at-large bids in the tournament since any team could win their conference and earn an automatic bid (simultaneously disqualifying them from eligibility for an at-large bid).

But don’t worry. Katz will also be filing multiple full NCAA tournament field predictions throughout the season, where he will attempt to divine the full field of 68 before Selection Sunday. 

MARCH MADNESS BRACKETOLOGY: The ultimate guide

In case you were wondering, in his last prediction of the 2019 season, Katz got 67 of the 68 teams in the field correct. So stay tuned this year.

No. 5 Houston drops third straight in loss to No. 14 Kansas

No. 5 Houston dropped its third straight game Monday night, falling 69–56 to No. 14 Kansas
READ MORE

March 'maybes' shake up the college basketball landscape

As March nears, Duke strengthens its claim to a No. 1 seed, Arizona boosts its title hopes, and programs like Kansas, Kentucky and Indiana confront growing uncertainty in a shifting college basketball landscape.
READ MORE

Top 10 men's basketball games to watch this week, according to Andy Katz

With March Madness fast approaching, Andy Katz has revealed his top 10 games to watch. The week begins Monday with Louisville visiting North Carolina and Houston traveling to Kansas in two highly anticipated matchups.
READ MORE
Division I
Men's Basketball Championship
April 4 & 6, 2026
Lucas Oil Stadium | Indianapolis, IN