NCAA men's basketball tournament 2026

OVERALL SCHEDULE

Selection Sunday: Sunday, March 15

First Four: March 17-18

First round: March 19-20

Second round: March 21-22

Sweet 16: March 26-27

Elite Eight: March 28-29

Final Four: April 4, Indianapolis

NCAA championship game: April 6, Indianapolis

DATES OF FIRST AND SECOND WEEKEND SITES

First Four

March 17-18, Dayton, Ohio

First and second rounds

March 19-21, Greenville, S.C.

March 19-21, Oklahoma City

March 19-21, Portland, Ore.

March 19-21, Buffalo, N.Y.

March 20-22, Tampa, Fla.

March 20-22, Philadelphia

March 20-22, San Diego

March 20-22, St. Louis

Regionals (Sweet 16 & Elite Eight)

March 26-28, Houston (South Regional)

March 26-28, San Jose, Calif. (West Regional)

March 27-29, Washington, D.C. (East Regional)

March 27-29, Chicago (Midwest Regional)

Final Four

April 4-6, Indianapolis 

Arizona by the numbers in the NCAA Tournament

University of Arizona basketball coach Lute Olson holds the Division I NCAA Championship trophy after his team defeated Kentucky to win it all on March 31, 1997.

APPEARANCES

1: National championship (1997)

2: Championship games (1997, 2001)

4: Final Fours (1988, 1994, 1997, 2001)

11: Elite Eights 

21: Sweet 16s (not including 2017 appearance that was vacated because of NCAA sanctions)

35: Tournaments (not including 1999, 2008, 2017 and 2018 appearances that were vacated over NCAA sanctions) 

RECORDS

6: (Fewest) Turnovers (Duke, 2025; Gonzaga, 2014)

12: Blocks (Weber State, 2014)

13: 3-pointers made (Long Beach State, 2024)

15: Steals (Gonzaga, 2014)

27.6: Lowest field goal percentage allowed (Harvard, 2013)

40: Margin of victory (Cornell, 1988)

43: Free throws made (Illinois, 2001)

47: (Fewest) points allowed (Jackson State, 2000)

56: Free throws attempted (Illinois, 2001)

66.0: Shooting percentage (Oklahoma State, 2005)

60.0: 3-point shooting percentage (Harvard, 2013; Duke, 2011)

61: Rebounds (UNLV, 1976)

94.4: Free-throw percentage (Purdue, 2007; Butler, 2001)

114: Points scored (vs UNLV, 1976)

INDIVIDUAL GAME RECORDS

6: 3-pointers made (Mike Bibby, North Carolina, 1997)

6: Steals (Gilbert Arenas, Michigan State, 2001)

7: Blocks (Loren Woods, Illinois, 2001; Anthony Cook, UTEP, 1987)

13: Field goals made (Sean Elliott, Oklahoma, 1988; Herman Harris, UNLV, 1976)

13: Assists (Reggie Geary, Iowa, 1996)

14: Free throws made (Miles Simon, Kentucky, 1997)

17: Free throws attempted (Miles Simon, Kentucky, 1997)

18: Rebounds (Aaron Gordon, Wisconsin, 2014)

35: Points (Caleb Love, Duke, 2025)

INDIVIDUAL CAREER RECORDS

2: 30-point games (Miles Simon, 1995-98; Khalid Reeves, 1991-94)

8: Double doubles (Channing Frye, 2002-05)

30: 3-pointers made (Salim Stoudamire, 2002-05)

30: Steals (Jason Terry 1996-99)

38: Blocks (Channing Frye, 2002-05)

Arizona's Mustafa Shakur guards Utah's Tim Drisdom during a game at McKale Center, Dec. 11, 2004.

61.1: 3-point percentage (Mustafa Shakur, 2004-07)

67: Assists (Luke Walton, 2000-03)

72: Free throws made (Jason Gardner, 2000-03)

72.4: Field goal percentage (Christian Koloko, 2020-22)

88: Field goals made (Sean Elliott, 1986-89)

87: Free throws attempted (Jason Gardner, 2000-03)

115: Rebounds (Channing Frye, 2002-05)

260: Points (Miles Simon, 1995-98)

ARIZONA RECORD BY SEED

Seed | Record | Years

No. 1 | 16-6 | 88, 89, 98, 00, 03, 14

No. 2 | 19-9 | 90, 91, 93, 94, 01, 15, 17, 23, 24

No. 3 | 7-4 | 92, 96, 02, 05

No. 4 | 8-3 | 97, 99*, 18, 25

No. 5 | 3-2| 95, 11

No. 6 | 2-2 | 13, 16

No. 8 | 1-2 | 06, 07

No. 9 | 0-2 | 86, 04

No. 10 | 0-3 | 85, 87, 08*

No. 12 | 2-1 | 09

RECORD BY SITE

Site | Record | Year

Albuquerque | 2-2 | 2002

Anaheim | 4-4 | 2014

Atlanta, Ga. | 0-1 | 1992

Birmingham, Ala. | 2-0 | 1997

Boise, Idaho | 4-1 | 2018

Charlotte, N.C. | 0-1 | 1994

Dayton, Ohio | 0-1 | 1995

Denver | 0-2 | 1996

Indianapolis | 2-1 | 2009

Kansas City, Mo. | 2-1 | 2001

Long Beach | 1-2 | 1990

Los Angeles | 6-4 | 2024

Memphis, Tenn. | 2-0 | 1997

Miami, Fla. | 2-0 | 2009

Milwaukee, Wis. | 0-1 | 1999*

Minneapolis | 1-1 | 2001

New Orleans | 0-1 | 2007

Newark | 0-1 | 2025

Omaha, Neb. | 0-1 | 1977

Philadelphia | 1-1 | 2006

Portland, Ore. | 2-0 | 2015

Providence, R.I. | 0-1 | 2016

Raleigh, N.C. | 0-1 | 2004

Rosemont, Ill. | 1-1 | 2005

Sacramento | 4-1 | 2023

Salt Lake City | 11-2 | 2024

San Antonio | 2-0 | 2001

Arizona head coach Sean Miller high-fives fans as he leaves the court after the University of Arizona vs. Gonzaga game at the NCAA Tournament at San Diego State University on March 23, 2014. Arizona won 84-61, advancing to the Sweet Sixteen.

San Diego | 2-0 | 2014

San Jose. | 0-2 | 2017

Seattle | 4-1 | 2025

Tempe | 3-0 | 1996

Tucson | 0-1 | 1987

Tulsa, Okla. | 2-0 | 2011

Washington, D.C. | 0-1 | 2008*


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Contact sports reporter Bruce Pascoe at bpascoe@tucson.com. On X(Twitter): @brucepascoe