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What NCAA Tournament expansion means for Iowa basketball

Like it or not, and the vast majority of college fans don’t like it, the NCAA Tournament is expanding. The field, which was 64, then grew to 68, is now ballooning to 76 teams for March Madness.

The expansion would increase the games on Tuesday and Wednesday of the first week of March Madness to six each day, with 24 teams in total appearing in those 12 games. The bracket would remain at its traditional 64-team bracket beginning on Thursday once these additional games conclude.

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Questions remain. Are these additional spots going to go to more middle-of-the-pack power conference teams that finish .500 or barely above with a sub-par record in conference play? Or is the NCAA going to create more access for top mid-major programs that may stumble in the conference tournament?

College basketball fans are pleading for the latter, but we know the almighty dollar runs the NCAA, and if they can sneak in a handful of power conference teams for one more game, that rules the day.

Looking at the NCAA Tournament expansion on a smaller scale, what does this mean for the Iowa Hawkeyes moving forward? It’s simple.

It means one thing: any season the Iowa Hawkeyes fail to make the NCAA Tournament in the newly expanded field is a complete and utter, no ifs, ands, or buts about it, objective failure.

In today’s college basketball climate, the Iowa Hawkeyes compete in one of the best conferences in the sport and are going to have more than enough chances to pick up quality wins. They did it during the 2025-26 college basketball season and made a run to the Elite 8.

Anything less than making the field is a downright failure moving forward. Iowa has the financial resources to compete in the transfer portal. They have the fanbase ready to back this team. And, more importantly than maybe all of it, they have the head coach in Ben McCollum, who knows nothing but winning and success.

What it also does for Iowa is give the Hawkeyes a bit more wiggle room in the Big Ten. Last year, Iowa went 10-10 in the Big Ten and never once was on the bubble. The Hawkeyes were a tournament team for most of the season, with seeding being the only question.

In this new field, you can look at Auburn as an example. They just missed the field for the 2026 NCAA Tournament. They went 7-11 in the SEC. Now, yes, they did play a tough non-conference schedule, but their showing in SEC play left quite a bit to be desired.

In this situation, Iowa realistically has up to two games of breathing room in conference play, which would see them go 8-12 in the Big Ten, to have a shot at the NCAA Tournament. If the Hawkeyes can’t muster up at least eight wins in conference play, they don’t deserve to make the dance.

Making the NCAA Tournament is no longer a goal for the Iowa Hawkeyes. It is the bare minimum expectation.

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This article originally appeared on Hawkeyes Wire : What NCAA Tournament expansion means for Iowa basketball

Reporting by Riley Donald, Hawkeyes Wire / Hawkeyes Wire

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

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