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Women's Bracketology: 2023 NCAA tournament

The women's NCAA tournament will undergo significant change for the second consecutive season. The field expanded to 68 teams last year. This season, the customary four regional sites have been reduced to two: Seattle and Greenville, South Carolina. The top 16 teams will continue to host the first and second rounds, and the First Four games will again be played at the site of the first-round games to which they feed. Defending champion South Carolina is the heavy favorite, and the Gamecocks seek to become the first repeat champions since UConn in 2015-16. The Final Four is March 31 and April 2 at American Airlines Center in Dallas.

Bracket Watch

Oregon is out of the field. Seven consecutive losses dropped the Ducks to 14-13, yet they continue to carry a No. 24 NET ranking. It's the most contradictory profile we've seen in the Bracketology era -- essentially a .500 record with a key metric in the 20s. Both the previously utilized RPI and the current NET rankings have occasional anomalies, but nothing quite as extreme. A pair of Rutgers squads is the closest any team's résumé has looked. In 2010, the Scarlet Knights were 18-14 with an RPI of 24 and a fourth-ranked strength of schedule. That team suffered a three-game losing streak in February but managed a No. 9 seed. The following year, Rutgers was a 7-seed with an 18-12 record and an RPI of 23. Like 2010 Rutgers, Oregon could get to 18-14 with two wins to cap the regular season and two more in the Pac-12 tournament -- and it would likely get them in the NCAA tournament. A split or worse and the Ducks won't hear their name on Selection Sunday.

68-Team Bracket

Conference Breakdown

Photo illo by ESPN Illustration, additional photos courtesy of Getty Images, Associated Press, Imagn, Icon Sportswire, EPA/Shutterstock

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