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2025 National Invitation Tournament

Men's college basketball tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2025 National Invitation Tournament (NIT) was a single-elimination tournament of thirty-two NCAA Division I men's college basketball teams not selected to participate in the 2025 NCAA tournament. The tournament commenced on March 18th and concluded on April 3rd. The first three rounds were played on campus sites, with the semifinal and final rounds played at Hinkle Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.[1]

Quick facts Season, Teams ...

Six programs made their debut in the NIT: Cal State Northridge, Jacksonville State, North Alabama, Northern Colorado, Samford, and UC Riverside.

The University of Tennessee–Chattanooga Mocs defeated the University of California–Irvine Anteaters 85–84 in overtime to claim the championship. The All-Tournament Team was composed of Trey Bonham (Chattanooga), Justin Hohn (UC Irvine), Honor Huff (Chattanooga), Devin Tillis (UC Irvine) and Atin Wright (North Texas); Bonham was also selected Most Outstanding Player.

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Participants

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Teams and pairings for the 2025 NIT were released by the NIT Committee on March 16, 2025. Thirty-two teams qualified for the NIT, including exempt qualifiers, automatic qualifiers, and at-large selections.[2] In 2024, the Seton Hall Pirates won the NIT championship.

Non-NCAA tournament teams from the Big East, Big Ten and Big 12 conferences were contractually prohibited from playing in any other postseason tournament, including the NIT, if they declined an invitation or removed themselves from consideration for a bid to the College Basketball Crown.[3]

Exempt qualifiers

For the 2025 NIT, exempt bids were extended to two teams from the Atlantic Coast (ACC) and Southeastern (SEC) conferences, plus one team each from the top twelve conferences (potentially excluding the ACC and SEC) as rated by the Pomeroy College Basketball Ratings (KenPom) on March 16, 2025. The twelve conferences that earned exempt bids based on their KenPom ratings[4] were

Whether the twelve exempt-bid conferences excluded or included the ACC and SEC is unclear. Multiple sources indicated that there would be sixteen exempt bids extended.[2][5] This would be possible only if four exempt bids were extended collectively to the ACC and SEC, and twelve other exempt bids were extended. Nevertheless, two days before NIT selections were to be made, a tweet from the NIT's account included a graphic purporting to show the twelve conferences that were then leading in the KenPom ratings, and those twelve conferences included the ACC and SEC. This would result in only fourteen exempt bids if the ACC and SEC could not receive a third exempt bid by being in the top twelve conferences. A CBS Sports article in which the tweet was embedded maintained there would be sixteen exempt bids. The two conferences listed above that were excluded from the graphic were the Ivy and the WAC.[6] Because the tweet is the only source indicating the ACC and SEC were taken into account when ranking the top twelve conferences, it may have been erroneous. Had the SEC been eligible for a third exempt bid, it would not have been able to receive it, as only two of its members failed to qualify for the NCAA tournament.

Further, it appears that Utah Valley, the team entitled to the WAC's exempt bid, could not host due to scheduling issues with their arena,[7] which would mean the WAC did earn an exempt bid. However, local media reporting Utah Valley's NIT bid merely speculated and did not express certainty regarding why they were playing on the road. The Utah Valley athletics website offered no explanation for the team opening the NIT away from home.[8] Without a definitive statement from the NCAA, the status of teams participating in the tournament as either exempt or at large remains unclear. If the WAC did not have an exempt bid, Utah Valley earned an automatic bid, because they were the WAC regular-season champion, did not win the conference tournament, and had a KNIT score better than 125.

The teams accepting exempt bids are shown below. No schools from the Big East, Big Ten, Ivy, or SEC accepted invitations, creating five additional at-large berths.

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The final KNIT (average of Bart Torvik "T-Rank" Ranking (BTR), ESPN Basketball Power Index (BPI), Ken Pomeroy Rating (KPR), Kevin Pauga Index (KPI), NCAA Evaluation Tool (NET), Strength of Record (SOR) ranking, and Wins Above Bubble (WAB) ranking) scores of non-NCAA tournament teams from conferences that earned exempt bids through the close of play on March 16, 2025 (Selection Sunday) are summarized in the tables below. Teams in bold accepted a bid; teams in italics were extended an automatic bid but rejected it. Some Big East, Big Ten, and Big 12 teams were contractually obligated to decline.

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All exempt qualifiers were given the opportunity to host first-round games.

Automatic qualifiers

Additionally, automatic bids were given to regular-season conference champions with an average ranking (or "KNIT" score)[5] of 125 or better across the BTR, BPI, KPR, KPI, NET, SOR and WAB rankings.[15]

The final KNIT scores through the close of play on March 16, 2025 (Selection Sunday), of teams that were conference regular-season champions, failed to win their conference tournament and are not from conferences receiving an exempt bid are summarized in the table below.

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Teams qualifying for and accepting automatic bids were as follows:

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At-large bids

The following teams were awarded at-large bids.

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The NCAA caused confusion on Selection Sunday, by failing to communicate with at least one program invited to the NIT prior to the initial release of the bracket. Instead, it appears the NCAA assumed that mid-major schools would not decline an NIT bid. UC Riverside had already confirmed their participation in the 2025 College Basketball Invitational, before learning they had been invited to the NIT. For a brief time, NIT and CBI brackets co-existed showing UC Riverside playing in both tournaments.[16] Participation in multiple postseason tournaments is not permitted under NCAA rules. After UC Riverside's commitment to play in the CBI came to the attention of the NCAA, instead of communicating with UC Riverside, they contacted South Alabama, the top remaining at-large team, and extended an NIT invitation to them. As the NCAA was communicating with South Alabama, UC Riverside was in contact with CBI organizers to decline their invitation to that tournament, so they could play in the NIT. After their commitment to the CBI was dissolved, UC Riverside contacted the NCAA and accepted their bid to the NIT. Just an hour after extending the invitation, the NCAA contacted South Alabama and informed them their bid to the NIT had been revoked.[17][18]

Declined bids

Teams contractually obligated to decline

Teams from the Big East, Big Ten and Big 12 conferences that were offered a bid or preemptively declined the opportunity to play in the 2025 College Basketball Crown were thereby contractually forbidden from playing in the NIT.[3] Teams that fulfilled their obligations to decline were:

Other teams declining bids

Participated in 2025 College Basketball Crown.

Ivy League teams

As described in detail above, it is unclear whether the Ivy League was an exempt-bid conference. If it was, all seven of its non-NCAA tournament teams declined bids to the NIT, since no Ivy League teams participated.

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Field synopsis

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Rankings, ratings and records were through March 16, 2025 Selection Sunday and prior to any additional post-season activity. This also includes a "KNIT" score, which is leveraged as a criteria and evaluation tool for the National Invitation Tournament selection committee; it average of the following seven metrics, then ranks based on the results:

More information Bid, Seed ...
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Bracket

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All seeded teams hosted their first-round games, except for Dayton, because the First Four of the 2025 NCAA tournament was played on their home court. Dayton had another scheduling conflict with their arena and consequently played their second-round game on the road as well. All other second-round games were hosted by the higher seeded team. Seeded teams playing unseeded opponents hosted quarterfinal games. Hosts of other quarterfinal games are noted in the brackets below.

Dallas Region

First round
March 18–19
Campus sites
Second round
March 23
Campus sites
Quarterfinal
March 25
Campus site
         
1 SMU 73
Northern Iowa 63
1 SMU 83
4 Oklahoma State 85
4 Oklahoma State 89
Wichita State 79
4 Oklahoma State 59
2 North Texas[a] 61
2 North Texas 75
Furman 64
2 North Texas 65
3 Arkansas State 63
3 Arkansas State 103
Saint Louis 78
Note
  1. North Texas traveled to Stillwater, Oklahoma to play an away game due to a faculty/staff appreciation luncheon and the American Dance/Drill Team Nationals taking place at UNT Coliseum.[35]

Irvine Region

First round
March 18–19
Campus sites
Second round
March 23
Campus sites
Quarterfinal
March 26
Campus site
         
1 UC Irvine 82
Northern Colorado 72
1 UC Irvine 66
Jacksonville State 61
4 Georgia Tech 64
Jacksonville State 81
1 UC Irvine 81
UAB 77OT
2 Santa Clara 101
UC Riverside 62
2 Santa Clara 84
UAB 88
3 Saint Joseph's 65
UAB 69

San Francisco Region

First round
March 18–19
Campus sites
Second round
March 23
Campus sites
Quarterfinal
March 26
Campus site
         
1 San Francisco 79
Utah Valley 70
1 San Francisco 76
Loyola Chicago 77
4 San Jose State 70
Loyola Chicago 73
  Loyola Chicago[a] 72
Kent State 62
2 Stanford 87
Cal State Northridge 70
2 Stanford 75
Kent State 77
3 St. Bonaventure 56
Kent State 75
Note
  1. Loyola Chicago was selected as the quarterfinal host.

Dayton Region

First round
March 18–19
Campus sites
Second round
March 22
Campus sites
Quarterfinal
March 25
Campus site
         
1 Dayton[a] 86
Florida Atlantic 79
1 Dayton[b] 72
Chattanooga 87
4 Middle Tennessee 1033OT
Chattanooga 109
Chattanooga 67
3 Bradley 65
2 George Mason 86
Samford 69
2 George Mason 67
3 Bradley 75
3 Bradley 71
North Alabama 62
Notes
  1. Dayton traveled to Boca Raton, Florida to play an away game due to the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament First Four taking place at UD Arena.
  2. Dayton traveled to Chattanooga, Tennessee to play an away game due to the OHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships taking place at UD Arena.[36]

Semifinals and final

Semifinals
April 1
Hinkle Fieldhouse
Final
April 3
Hinkle Fieldhouse
      
2 North Texas 67
1 UC Irvine 69
1 UC Irvine 84OT
  Chattanooga 85
  Loyola Chicago 73
Chattanooga 80
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Game summaries

All times are in Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

First round

March 18
7:00 p.m.
Kent State 75, St. Bonaventure 56
Scoring by half: 29-28, 46-28
Pts: V. Davis - 14
Rebs: C. Hornbeak - 12
Asts: J. Sumlin - 4
Pts: C. Moore - 16
Rebs: L. Jones - 7
Asts: M. Council Jr. - 4
San Francisco Region
Reilly Center
St. Bonaventure, NY
Attendance: 3,024
Referees: A. Fiore, T. Kelly, M. Luckie
March 18
7:00 p.m.
Jacksonville State 81, Georgia Tech 64
Scoring by half: 45-33, 36-31
Pts: J. Pierre Jr. - 30
Rebs: M. Nicholson - 9
Asts: J. Pierre Jr. - 7
Pts: 2 Tied - 7
Rebs: 2 Tied - 5
Asts: J. McCollum - 7
Irvine Region
McCamish Pavilion
Atlanta, GA
Attendance: 1,623
Referees: E. Lewis, C. Mooney, J. Pon
March 18
8:00 p.m.
Chattanooga 109, Middle Tennessee 103 (3OT)
Scoring by half: 43-48, 41-36 Overtime: 4-4, 11-11, 10-4
Pts: B. Wieland - 31
Rebs: G. Keeslar - 11
Asts: T. Bonham - 6
Pts: C. Weston - 31
Rebs: E. Mostafa - 16
Asts: 2 Tied - 5
Dayton Region
Murphy Center
Murfreesboro, TN
Attendance: 3,505
Referees: B. Harris, J. Hicks, M. Swoboda
ESPNU
March 18
9:00 p.m.
Saint Louis 78, Arkansas State 103
Scoring by half: 37-50, 41-53
Pts: R. Avila - 22
Rebs: A. McCottry - 10
Asts: A. McCottry - 3
Pts: I. Nelson - 26
Rebs: I. Nelson - 10
Asts: 2 Tied - 7
Dallas Region
First National Bank Arena
Jonesboro, AR
Attendance: 3,143
Referees: H. Allen, C. Ford, G. Shannon
ESPN2
March 18
9:00 p.m.
Wichita State 79, Oklahoma State 89
Scoring by half: 35-40, 44-49
Pts: X. Bell - 24
Rebs: C. Washington - 11
Asts: 2 Tied - 2
Pts: B. Thompson - 23
Rebs: B. Newman - 12
Asts: K. Brantley - 4
Dallas Region
Gallagher-Iba Arena
Stillwater, OK
Attendance: 2,295
Referees: R. Anders, R. Felder, M. Rafferty
ESPNU
March 18
11:00 p.m.
UC Riverside 62, Santa Clara 101
Scoring by half: 33-44, 29-57
Pts: N. Pickens - 15
Rebs: 4 Tied - 4
Asts: B. Hargress - 5
Pts: T. Bryan - 17
Rebs: 2 Tied - 7
Asts: E. Mahi - 5
Irvine Region
Leavey Center
Santa Clara, CA
Attendance: 672
Referees: D. Dean, M. Fulton, J. Garretson
ESPN2
March 18
11:00 p.m.
Cal State Northridge 70, Stanford 87
Scoring by half: 29-46, 41-41
Pts: K. Jones - 18
Rebs: G. Lewis - 7
Asts: T. Beard - 4
Pts: M. Raynaud - 22
Rebs: M. Raynaud - 11
Asts: J. Blakes - 4
San Francisco Region
Maples Pavilion
Stanford, CA
Attendance: 1,119
Referees: L. Barney, M. Cichocki, P. Larson
ESPN2
March 19
7:00 p.m.
Dayton 86, Florida Atlantic 79
Scoring by half: 44-38, 42-41
Pts: J. Bennett - 30
Rebs: M. Smith - 5
Asts: E. Cheeks - 4
Pts: K. Glenn - 18
Rebs: B. Miller - 7
Asts: L. Walker - 7
Dayton Region
Eleanor R. Baldwin Arena
Boca Raton, FL
Attendance: 1,846
Referees: L. Brandes, E. Lewis, J. Nieves
ESPN+
March 19
7:00 p.m.
Samford 69, George Mason 86
Scoring by half: 24-45, 45-41
Pts: J. Brownell - 27
Rebs: T. Fort - 9
Asts: R. Jones - 8
Pts: K. Johnson - 20
Rebs: Z. Anderson - 10
Asts: K. Johnson - 5
Dayton Region
EagleBank Arena
Fairfax, VA
Attendance: 2,021
Referees: T. Crisp, R. Sassano, B. Stirt
ESPN+
March 19
7:00 p.m.
UAB 69, Saint Joseph's 65
Scoring by half: 32-33, 37-32
Pts: Y. Lendeborg - 16
Rebs: Y. Lendeborg - 17
Asts: A. Vasquez - 4
Pts: X. Brown - 21
Rebs: J. Ajogbor - 10
Asts: 2 Tied - 4
Irvine Region
Michael J. Hagan Arena
Philadelphia, PA
Attendance: 1,004
Referees: R. Riley, W. Rutecki, J. Switzer
ESPN+
March 19
8:00 p.m.
Furman 64, North Texas 75
Scoring by half: 34-32, 30-43
Pts: E. Bronson - 15
Rebs: D. Molnar - 5
Asts: P. Smith Jr. - 6
Pts: J. Floyd - 19
Rebs: 2 Tied - 6
Asts: J. Floyd - 7
Dallas Region
UNT Coliseum
Denton, TX
Attendance: 2,138
Referees: R. Clyburn, S. Land, S. Seales
ESPN+
March 19
8:00 p.m.
North Alabama 62, Bradley 71
Scoring by half: 21-39, 41-32
Pts: D. Bacchus - 19
Rebs: C. Williams - 12
Asts: 2 Tied - 2
Pts: D. Hannah - 17
Rebs: C. Dillon - 8
Asts: C. Davis - 4
Dayton Region
Carver Arena
Peoria, IL
Attendance: 2,950
Referees: J. Albrecht, J. Duke, G. Jeffers
ESPN2
March 19
9:00 p.m.
Northern Iowa 63, SMU 73
Scoring by half: 32-33, 31-40
Pts: T. Campbell - 16
Rebs: B. Schwieger - 9
Asts: 2 Tied - 4
Pts: B. Edwards - 16
Rebs: B. Edwards - 10
Asts: B. Edwards - 7
Dallas Region
Moody Coliseum
University Park, TX
Attendance: 2,418
Referees: R. Anders, J. Heater, C. Shaw
ESPN+
March 19
10:00 p.m.
Northern Colorado 72, UC Irvine 82
Scoring by half: 41-37, 31-45
Pts: B. Wisne - 16
Rebs: I. Hawthorne - 12
Asts: L. Reynolds - 5
Pts: D. Tillis - 24
Rebs: B. Leuchten - 10
Asts: J. Hohn - 5
Irvine Region
Bren Events Center
Irvine, CA
Attendance: 1,241
Referees: R. Holmes, M. Rukasin, K. Smith
ESPNU
March 19
11:00 p.m.
Utah Valley 70, San Francisco 79
Scoring by half: 32-37, 38-42
Pts: C. Welling - 20
Rebs: C. Welling - 11
Asts: T. Leonhardt - 6
Pts: M. Thomas - 21
Rebs: M. Thomas - 10
Asts: R. Beasley - 6
San Francisco Region
The Sobrato Center
San Francisco, CA
Attendance: 1,309
Referees: R. Ames, S. Lehigh, D. White
ESPN2
March 19
11:00 p.m.
Loyola Chicago 73, San Jose State 70
Scoring by half: 42-35, 31-25
Pts: D. Watson - 24
Rebs: F. Nwaokorie - 9
Asts: 3 Tied - 3
Pts: J. Uduje - 18
Rebs: R. Vaihola - 9
Asts: R. Vaihola - 3
San Francisco Region
Provident Credit Union Event Center
San Jose, CA
Attendance: 3,627
Referees: C. Hogan, D. Nguyen, J. Phillips

Second round

March 22
11:30 a.m.
Chattanooga 87, Dayton 72
Scoring by half: 42-34, 45-38
Pts: H. Huff - 26
Rebs: T. Bonham - 8
Asts: 2 Tied - 4
Pts: N. Santos - 18
Rebs: N. Santos - 6
Asts: M. Smith - 7
Dayton Region
McKenzie Arena
Chattanooga, TN
Attendance: 2,633
Referees: S. Land, C. McCoy, M. Wallace
March 22
2:00 p.m.
Bradley 75, George Mason 67
Scoring by half: 37-28, 38-39
Pts: 2 Tied - 21
Rebs: C. Thomas - 11
Asts: D. Deen - 6
Pts: K. Johnson - 16
Rebs: 2 Tied - 5
Asts: B. O'Connor - 6
Dayton Region
EagleBank Arena
Fairfax, VA
Attendance: 2,180
Referees: J. Heater, C. Shaw, J. Switzer
ESPN2
March 23
3:00 p.m.
Oklahoma State 85, SMU 83
Scoring by half: 40-41, 45-42
Pts: B. Thompson - 24
Rebs: A. Dean - 6
Asts: 2 Tied - 6
Pts: K. Oquendo - 31
Rebs: S. Yigitoglu - 9
Asts: C. Harris - 10
Dallas Region
Moody Coliseum
University Park, TX
Attendance: 3,106
Referees: A. Flore, J. Pon, R. Sassano
ESPN2
March 23
7:00 p.m.
Loyola Chicago 77, San Francisco 76
Scoring by half: 36-32, 41-44
Pts: J. Dawson - 35
Rebs: S. Edwards Jr. - 8
Asts: J. Quinn - 4
Pts: M. Thomas - 36
Rebs: C. Linguard Jr. - 8
Asts: M. Thomas - 5
San Francisco Region
The Sobrato Center
San Francisco, CA
Attendance: 1,624
Referees: G. Grimshaw, R. Holmes, K. Smith
March 23
7:00 p.m.
Arkansas State 63, North Texas 65
Scoring by half: 33-34, 30-31
Pts: I. Nelson - 16
Rebs: I. Nelson - 14
Asts: T. Todd - 5
Pts: 2 Tied - 16
Rebs: B. Lorient - 8
Asts: J. Floyd - 4
Dallas Region
UNT Coliseum
Denton, TX
Attendance: 2,661
Referees: R. Christian, J. Deering, S. Orkus Jr.
ESPN+
March 23
9:00 p.m.
Jacksonville State 61, UC Irvine 66
Scoring by half: 35-36, 26-30
Pts: J. Pierre Jr. - 15
Rebs: J. Pierre Jr. - 11
Asts: J. Pierre Jr. - 4
Pts: J. Hohn - 22
Rebs: D. Tillis - 9
Asts: 2 Tied - 3
Irvine Region
Bren Events Center
Irvine, CA
Attendance: 1,304
Referees: J. Garretson, R. Lehigh, M. Rukasin
ESPNU
March 23
9:00 p.m.
UAB 88, Santa Clara 84
Scoring by half: 37-44, 51-40
Pts: Y. Lendeborg - 22
Rebs: Y. Lendeborg - 11
Asts: 2 Tied - 7
Pts: C. Stewart - 10
Rebs: C. Tilly - 12
Asts: E. Makhi - 7
Irvine Region
Leavey Center
Santa Clara, CA
Attendance: 742
Referees: R. Ames, B. Cartmell, M. Mojica
ESPN2
March 23
9:00 p.m.
Kent State 77, Stanford 75
Scoring by half: 43-34, 34-41
Pts: J. Sullinger - 34
Rebs: D. Gillespie - 14
Asts: J. Sullinger - 5
Pts: J. Blakes - 23
Rebs: M. Raynaud - 10
Asts: J. Blakes - 5
San Francisco Region
Maples Pavilion
Stanford, CA
Attendance: 1,542
Referees: D. Dean, M. Fulton, D. White

Quarterfinals

March 25
7:00 p.m.
Chattanooga 67, Bradley 65
Scoring by half: 25-38, 42-27
Pts: H. Huff - 21
Rebs: L. Diouf - 7
Asts: 4 Tied - 3
Pts: D. Burch - 14
Rebs: 2 Tied - 6
Asts: D. Deen - 4
Dayton Region
Carver Arena
Peoria, IL
Attendance: 4,954
Referees: J. Baker, T. Kumpf, E. Wilson
March 25
9:00 p.m.
Oklahoma State 59, North Texas 61
Scoring by half: 22-27, 37-34
Pts: 2 Tied - 17
Rebs: A. Dean - 7
Asts: B. Thompson - 3
Pts: A. Wright - 15
Rebs: M. Sissoko - 9
Asts: J. Floyd - 5
Dallas Region
Gallagher-Iba Arena
Stillwater, OK
Attendance: 4,089
Referees: T. Johnson, C. Pasci, L. Santos
ESPN2
March 26
7:00 p.m.
Kent State 62, Loyola Chicago 72
Scoring by half: 33-37, 29-35
Pts: J. Sullinger - 12
Rebs: D. Gillespie - 12
Asts: C. Medley - 4
Pts: M. Rubin - 18
Rebs: M. Rubin - 9
Asts: S. Edwards Jr. - 5
San Francisco Region
Joseph J. Gentile Arena
Chicago, IL
Attendance: 3,554
Referees: A. Bonner, M. Millione, C. Mooney
ESPN2
March 26
9:00 p.m.
UAB 77, UC Irvine 81 (OT)
Scoring by half: 36-31, 33-38 Overtime: 8-12
Pts: C. Coleman - 21
Rebs: Y. Lendeborg - 17
Asts: Y. Lendeborg - 4
Pts: D. Tillis - 22
Rebs: D. Tillis - 11
Asts: 2 Tied - 5
Irvine Region
Bren Events Center
Irvine, CA
Attendance: 1,378
Referees: J. Ford, G. Nelson, J. Shamion

Semifinals

April 1
7:00 p.m.
North Texas 67, UC Irvine 69
Scoring by half: 30-30, 37-39
Pts: A. Wright - 25
Rebs: M. Sissoko - 13
Asts: J. Floyd - 3
Pts: D. Tillis - 16
Rebs: D. Tillis - 11
Asts: J. Hohn - 8
Dallas Region vs. Irvine Region
Hinkle Fieldhouse
Indianapolis, IN
Attendance: 3,288
Referees: D. Carr, B. Smith, V. Voyard-Tadal
April 1
9:30 p.m.
Chattanooga 80, Loyola Chicago 73
Scoring by half: 34-38, 46-35
Pts: T. Bonham - 23
Rebs: G. Keeslar - 7
Asts: G. Keeslar - 5
Pts: J. Dawson - 19
Rebs: 2 Tied - 6
Asts: J. Dawson - 6
Dayton Region vs. San Francisco Region
Hinkle Fieldhouse
Indianapolis, IN
Attendance: 3,288
Referees: C. Armstrong, O. Shortt, E. Young

Final

April 3
9:00 p.m.
Chattanooga 85, UC Irvine 84 (OT)
Scoring by half: 38-37, 38-39 Overtime: 9-8
Pts: 2 Tied - 19
Rebs: 2 Tied - 10
Asts: G. Keeslar - 5
Pts: D. Tillis - 19
Rebs: B. Leuchten - 11
Asts: J. Hohn - 4
Championship
Hinkle Fieldhouse
Indianapolis, IN
Attendance: 2,825
Referees: M. Greenstein, B. Jarrett, M. Potter
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Quality of participating teams compared with College Basketball Crown

Fox Sports leveraged its media rights relationships with the Big East, Big Ten, and Big 12 conferences to create the CBC and thereby create postseason college basketball content for itself. Each of those three conferences committed to send at least two teams to the CBC.[37] In addition, non-NCAA tournament teams from those three conferences were contractually prohibited from playing in any other postseason tournament, including the 2025 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), if they declined an invitation or removed themselves from consideration for a bid to the CBC.[3] Even if Big East, Big Ten, or Big 12 schools might have preferred to play NIT games at home instead of CBC games in Las Vegas or anticipated they might have more attractive matchups in the NIT, they did not have that option, which may have degraded the quality of the NIT field. No Big East or Big Ten teams appeared in the 2025 NIT, and Oklahoma State was the only Big 12 team to accept an NIT bid. Atlantic Coast Conference teams Georgia Tech, SMU, and Stanford were the only other power conference teams to accept bids to the NIT.[38][39] In contrast, eleven of the sixteen CBC participants were from power conferences.

An analysis of the NET rankings as of Selection Sunday[40] for the teams participating in the 2025 CBC and NIT is set forth in the table below.

More information CBC participants, NIT participants ...

Like all metrics used to rank or rate college basketball teams, the NET is imperfect; however, it is consistently applied and represents one way in which teams can be compared. Since the NIT had to fill thirty-two tournament berths, whereas the CBC had only sixteen, data are shown for both the full NIT field as well as the top sixteen teams based on NET rankings. Of course, there are other metrics that could be used to compare the fields of the two tournaments, including the number of power conference teams participating.

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Media

ESPN, Inc. has exclusive rights to all of the NIT games. It telecasts every game across ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPN3, and ESPN+.[41] Westwood One has exclusive radio rights to the semifinals and the championship.

See also

References

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