It all starts on Selection Sunday, which is on March 17, 2013 this year. At 6pm
the NCAA Selection Committee announces the 68-team field for the tournament.
Sometime shortly after that, http://dongia.org/ncaa/ will
cease to show last year's results. Instead, it will show those 68
teams on an entry page (60 teams displayed upfront with 4 drop-down
boxes containing the other eight teams) YOU can use to seek (trivial) fame and
(moderate) fortune. All you have to do is try to pick which teams
will win in each and every game of the tournament, right on down to the
champion. If you've never done this before you can just use the
seeding #s (1 through 16) on the edges of the pages next to each team
and you'll have as much chance as anyone. Lower is better: a 16
seed has never beaten a 1 seed, but the odds quickly even out as the
seeds get closer so that a 7/10 matchup is pretty much a 50/50
proposition.
Give
your entry a unique name in the Pick Name field and provide your real,
honest-to-goodness name and email in the other two fields, click Send
Your Entry and you're done! You'll also get an invite to the discussion
forum for the pool as confirmation. Join it if you want to talk trash
with the other participants.
When you click Send Your Entry, the
web page should either tell you if you forgot something, or show the
picks you just made. You may want to print it, and you should
definitely check your entries for correctness!
You won't be
able to see this page again until the next deadline passes (see below)
and I can not make changes once the games have started. Also,
note that your picks do not have to be
logically consistent. By this, I mean that, if you want to, you can
pick a team to lose in one round but win in a later round, even though
both things can't actually happen. You should use the
arrows to carry down your winners from each game rather than the
pull down boxes if you want logically consistent picks. It's faster and
eliminates the risk of entry errors.
As of 2011, the tournament starts off with eight teams
playing in four play-in games - two each on the Tuesday and Wednesday
following Selection Sunday. The four winners of these play-in games
will then join the main draw of the tournament (i.e. the 68-team
field has been whittled down to 64 teams). To accommodate the play-in games, you'll have 3 date options for submitting your picks: 1) by the Tuesday after Selection Sunday at 6pm to submit picks including all four play-in and main draw games; 2) by the Wednesday after Selection Sunday at 6pm to submit picks including Wednesday's play-in and main draw games; and 3) the Thursday after Selection Sunday 17th at 10am to
make your choices for the main draw games only. Shortly after
each
of these deadlines, well before the games tip, the website will be
updated to show
all the picks that have been entered up to that point. The entry page
will also be updated each time to show the winners of the play-in games
or that they are in progress. Obviously, if
you submit your picks after either of the first two deadlines (all
are Eastern Standard Time), you can not get the two bonus points for
the two games played on those days, but you will have had the
opportunity to view the picks of those who did. Also, if you
submit
picks while the play-in games are in-progress and choose a play-in
winner to beat a team in the main draw, you will automatically get
whichever team advanced to the main draw (this will show as "Game1, 2,
3 or 4 Winner", respectively), making it essentially the same as if you
had waited until the play-in games were over and known the winners.
Once the play-in games are in progress, http://dongia.org/ncaa/will
show a page allowing you to either make further picks or see those that
were made before the most recent deadline, so that everyone can know
all the picks made for a given game well
before it starts. This page is always available at
http://dongia.org/ncaa/menu.html and it also has links to the
rules and the past years for which I have records. Once the last
deadline has passed, the main page simply shows the huge grid detailing
all the picks of everyone in the pool. The key of what number
corresponds to each team is at the bottom, and mousing over a number
should show you the team name. It's a bit hard to
read, but if anyone has a better way of showing thousands of game
choices together on a single page, I'd love to hear about it. As
game results come in, columns on this grid will turn green or red
indicating right and wrong picks. You get 1 point for every first
round/"play-in" game you get right, 2 for each correct second round
game, 4 for each third round game, 8 for each Sweet 16 pick, 16 for
accurate Elite 8 selections, 32 for each proper Final Four team, 64 a
piece for predicting Championship contenders and 128 points for
identifying the team that wins it all. Quite simply, whoever has
the most points at the end wins. So, you don't have to pick the
tournament winner to win the pool, but it helps. Also,
traditionally, if you got
fewer points than anyone else EVER had in the history of the pool, you
would win a free entry next year. The low before 2011 was 12 points by
Trish in 2009, but this record was set prior to the expanded tournament.
The lowest point total last year was 39 by Paul H, which is what you now have to score below for the free entry.
By clicking on the column headers, you can sort the results by pick name (the default), points,
and potential (the # of points you've got plus those that it's still possible for you to still
get). You can also click on a pick name to see that set of picks
in bracket form, just like you saw your own when you entered them. Again,
you should have checked your picks for correctness at that point.
Once games have started, I can't make any changes!
Robert Giardalas
260 W 25th St
New York, NY 10001
No matter how you go about it, please send them in as early as possible, so that prizes can go out. Everything that comes in goes back out in prizes. 1st place gets 65%, 2nd gets 25% and 3rd is 10%. If there is a tie, the players split the sum of the places that they would occupy consecutively. For instance, if there is a clear winner, but a two-way tie for second, then those two players split second & third place combined. As a further example, if three or more players tie for first, they split the entire pot evenly amongst them.
Enjoy the games, and thanks to everyone for playing!