Three brackets out of the millions entered in the Capital One Bracket Challenge Game weathered that incredible opening weekend and predicted 14 of the Sweet 16 teams correctly.
No bracket in BCG picked all 16 correctly, and none even managed 15 of 16 (among the other major bracket games, we could only find in the top leaderboards that picked 15/16).
Still, of the three wizards that managed to only miss two games in the entire Sweet 16, none got the South regional perfect, which is quite understandable. That regional is the first ever to have no 1, 2, 3, or 4 seed in its four Sweet 16 representatives. Only 405 BCG users went 4-for-4 in the South.
Of the three that went 14-for-16, none correctly picked UMBC’s historic upset (only 2.18 percent of all brackets managed to get that one right), but each one did have faith in Loyola Chicago’s miracle run to the Sweet 16.
The most impressive of the three so far is “” which is in sole possession of first place in our Bracket Challenge Game. Here's a look at the bracket:
The two picks that bracket missed were both 7-2 upsets. The first was Nevada’s thrilling comeback over Cincinnati (the Wolf Pack were picked in 8.6 percent of all BCG brackets), and the other was Texas A&M’s blowout of UNC (Texas A&M was picked over UNC in just 4.2 percent of all brackets).
Another bracket, "" only missed two picks (Kansas State over UMBC, and FSU over Xavier), and sits in 103rd place overall.
But of the three brackets that managed 14-of-16 picks correctly, “” is the only one with all Final Four teams still alive. That bracket picked 5-seed Kentucky, 4-seed Gonzaga, 1-seed Villanova, and 1-seed Kansas. The bracket is currently ranked No. 12 overall.
So, do these three have a good shot at winning the Bracket Challenge Game?
In the past seven years, only one BCG winner has managed to correctly pick more than 13 Sweet 16 teams. But the past four champions have all picked the Final Four and championship game perfectly. If that trend stays true, two of the best Sweet 16 predictors this year won’t have a shot at the title. But, as UMBC showed Friday, there’s a first time for everything.