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Every year, the first four full days of March Madness feel like a full-blown basketball carnival: wall-to-wall games, loud crowds, band sections losing their minds, and that beautiful annual feeling that literally anything can happen. This year’s men’s tournament has been a little chalkier than the usual chaos, and honestly, a lot like last year in that respect. In both 2025 and 2026, all 16 of the No. 1 through No. 4 seeds survived the Round of 64, and in both tournaments those top-four seeds went 12-4 in the Round of 32, so the bracket hasn’t been getting shredded the way folks sometimes expect. But even with the favorites holding their ground more often than not, the first weekend still gave us more than enough heat — buzzer beaters, huge comebacks, near-upsets, and a few moments that are absolutely getting replayed every March from here on out.

High Point (No. 12 West) shocks Wisconsin. High Point gave us one of the first real “March is here” moments when the No. 12 seed Panthers stunned No. 5 Wisconsin 83-82 in the West Region for the program’s first NCAA tournament win ever. Chase Johnston hit the go-ahead bucket with 11.7 seconds left — his first two-point field goal of the entire season — which is exactly the kind of ridiculous detail that makes an upset live forever this time of year. High Point kept that same fearless energy in the next round, too. Still, No. 4 Arkansas eventually outlasted the Panthers 94-88 behind a huge 36-point night from Darius Acuff Jr., ending the Cinderella push without taking away from how loud that Wisconsin win was.

VCU (No. 11, East) comes all the way back on North Carolina. VCU’s 82-78 overtime comeback over No. 6 North Carolina was one of the nastiest swings of the tournament so far, especially because the Rams were down 19 and looked dead for long stretches before flipping the whole game. Terrence Hill Jr. caught fire, the pressure kept building on UNC, and by the time overtime hit, it felt like VCU had completely snatched the game’s soul. The Rams couldn’t keep that magic going in the next round, falling 76-55 to No. 3 Illinois. However, that comeback over Carolina is still one of the defining gut-punches of the opening weekend in the East Region.

St. John’s (No. 5, East) hits Kansas with a cold-blooded buzzer-beater for March Madness 2026. St. John’s gave us one of the iciest endings of the bracket when Dylan Darling, who had been scoreless all game, drove in for a buzzer-beating layup to beat No. 4 Kansas 67-65 in the East Region. That shot hit even harder because Kansas had stormed all the way back, so what looked like a Red Storm win in hand suddenly turned into one last possession with everything on the line. Instead of folding, St. John’s found the perfect closing punch, and now Rick Pitino’s group is headed to the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1999, where No. 1 Duke is waiting next.

Iowa (No. 9, South) knocks off Florida and blows the region open. Iowa’s 73-72 upset of No. 1 Florida was one of those finishes that changes the whole feel of a bracket, because the Hawkeyes didn’t just take down a favorite — they sent home the defending national champs. Alvaro Folgueiras drilled the go-ahead three with 4.5 seconds left, capping one of the best final sequences of the weekend and sending Iowa to its first Sweet 16 since 1999. Now the No. 9 seed Hawkeyes have a very real path in front of them, with No. 4 Nebraska up next in an all-Big Ten Sweet 16 matchup in the South Region.

Nebraska (No. 4, South) survives Vanderbilt in a game that felt like it might explode at the buzzer. Nebraska and Vanderbilt delivered one of the most nerve-wracking thrillers of the first weekend, with the Cornhuskers escaping 74-72 after Braden Frager scored the winner late and Vanderbilt nearly answered with a wild heave at the horn. The tension was already crazy, but the ending made it stick because it pushed Nebraska to the first Sweet 16 in program history, which added even more weight to every possession. Now the No. 4 seed Cornhuskers get another high-stakes South Region game against No. 9 Iowa with an Elite Eight trip on the table.

TCU (No. 9, East) and Ohio State (No. 8) helped start March Madness off right. One of the first true nail-biters of the tournament came when No. 9 TCU edged No. 8 Ohio State 66-64 on Xavier Edmonds’ layup with 4.3 seconds left, giving the bracket an instant jolt of drama. TCU had controlled much of the game, then watched Ohio State fight all the way back, which made the final bucket feel even more brutal and more March. The Horned Frogs’ run ended in the next round with an 81-58 loss to No. 1 Duke, but that opening East Region thriller still stands as one of the first games that really made the tournament feel alive.

Texas (No. 11, West) goes from First Four stress to Sweet 16 smoke. Texas deserves a spot here because the Longhorns didn’t just have one shining moment — they built a whole first-weekend run out of them. After getting through the First Four, the No. 11 seed beat No. 6 BYU, then followed that up with a 74-68 win over No. 3 Gonzaga in the West Region, with Cam Heide knocking down the late three that basically slammed the door. That kind of run is what makes March Madness feel different from every other event on the sports calendar, and now Texas gets an even bigger test against No. 2 Purdue in the Sweet 16.

Kentucky (No. 7, Midwest) and Santa Clara (No. 10) gave us an overtime classic. Kentucky-Santa Clara was pure March Madness chaos because the Wildcats looked cooked before Otega Oweh pulled out a ridiculous buzzer-beating banked three from deep to force overtime. Oweh finished with 35 points, and that shot instantly turned a near-disaster into one of the most unforgettable moments of the opening round. Kentucky eventually won 89-84 in OT, but the Wildcats couldn’t keep the momentum rolling and got bounced 82-63 by No. 2 Iowa State in the next round, which only makes that Santa Clara escape feel even more like the emotional peak of their tournament.

So now that the dust has settled on the first weekend, this tournament feels a lot less like a Cinderella takeover and a lot more like a pressure cooker full of big moments, big brands, and a few bracket-shaking surprises. Fans still got the chaos they come to Match for — the TV audience is up 5% from last year and the opening stretch is already the tournament’s best viewership start since 2011 — but the bigger picture is that the Sweet 16 field is now set with heavy hitters still standing, a surging Bug Ten that put six teams through, and a handful of double-digit seeds like Texas still trying to keep the madness alive.

Sweet 16 play starts Thursday, March 26, and with games like Iowa-Nebraska, Illinois-Houston, and St. John’s-Duke on deck, the conversation now shifts from “who survived the first weekend?” to “who’s really built to make a Final Four run?”

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