A few years back, a recurring Bob Sturm NFL Super Bowl franchise ranking system inspired me to create a college basketball equivalent. The formula changed a bit in the first couple of seasons based on suggestions from nerds, but the idea remains largely the same.

A recap of the system:

  1. The rankings encapsulate every year since the field went to 64 teams in 1985, so there’s now 40+ years of data included. (2020 is skipped for obvious reasons.) This has helped smooth out some of the bumps along the way and better keep teams with a shorter run of success in a proper placement. Imagine how different these rankings would have been in the mid-1990s; programs like Arkansas and UNLV would be sitting way higher than they do now.

  2. The list mostly consists of teams who have made it to a Final Four, because to make the top 25 with a program who never went to the final weekend is pretty unlikely. So far Xavier is the only program I’ve found to accrue enough points to warrant monitoring without making the Final Four. I also track almost all of the Big 12 schools for the hell of it, but Iowa State, Kansas State, Baylor, and TCU haven’t gotten far enough to do much damage in these rankings. (Baylor did jump 17 spots due to the title, but there’s still a lot of bad years to overcome.) I’ll eventually add the rest of the SEC. Yes, even Ole Miss, unfortunately.

  3. The point system was using the Fibonacci number to retain a relative value for advancing in the tournament. Using 1 point per round unintentionally punished teams who made it further; a team who made the 2nd round got twice the points (2) as a team who lost in the first round (1), but a team who made the Elite Eight (4) only got 1⁄3 more than a Sweet Sixteen team (3). It made the rankings even dumber than they already are, so I went with our sweet Italian math genius’ numbers instead. (Little-known fact, he once gave birth to a seal. He wasn’t even showing! Why he’s not on the Euro is beyond me.) Then the NCAA expanded to 68 teams and I had to modify it a bit because nothing in life worth doing is easy, especially the things not worth doing.

    1. I’m using March Madness as a proxy for program strength as the best teams make the tournament and make runs regularly, but it’s fair to consider there are weaknesses in this measurement. If there was a way to synthesize regular-season achievements into this, I would, but...it sounds like a lot of work so...uhh, here you go.

(Side note: moving from Substack to Beehiiv means I can insert tables again. Goodbye, clunky-ass screenshots; you will not be missed.)

The point system is as follows:

Round Achieved

Points

First Four

1

Round of 64

3

Round of 32

4

Sweet 16

7

Elite 8

11

Final Four

18

Title Game

29

Championship

47

I should mention these points are not cumulative; a team who wins the national title gets 47 points, not 120.

For the first time since I started doing these rankings nearly a decade ago, there is a new team in the top 4. Despite losing the title game, UConn is now fourth, passing Kentucky. It’s testament to what Dan Hurley has done (and to a lesser extent, what Kentucky has not done) that they have closed a nearly 100-point gap in the span of a few years. Duke, UNC, Kansas, and Kentucky were miles ahead of everyone else a decade ago, now there’s a 5th blue blood in this ranking.

Without further ado, here are the top-25 rankings after the 2025 NCAA Tournament:

Team

Total Points

2025 Points

2026 Rank

2025 Rank

Change

Duke

606

595

1

1

0

UNC

510

507

2

2

0

Kansas

480

476

3

3

0

UConn

444

415

4

5

+1

Kentucky

438

434

5

4

-1

Mich St.

327

320

6

6

0

Michigan

318

271

7

11

+4

Arizona

317

299

8

8

0

Florida

314

310

9

7

-2

Villanova

277

274

10

9

-1

Syracuse

273

273

11

10

-1

UCLA

269

265

12

12

0

Louisville

264

260

13

13

0

Arkansas

212

205

14

15

+1

Gonzaga

210

206

15

14

-1

Indiana

204

204

16

16

0

Purdue

200

189

17

17

0

OU

187

187

18

18

0

Illinois

181

163

19

21

+2

Wisconsin

178

175

20

19

-1

Maryland

174

174

21

20

-1

Texas

169

162

22

21

-1

Ohio State

163

160

23

23

0

Georgetown

156

156

24

24

0

Virginia

146

142

25

26

+1

The next 5 up:

Team

Total Points

2025 Points

2026 Rank

2025 Rank

Change

UNLV

143

143

26

25

-1

Memphis

139

139

27

27

0

Alabama

135

128

28

29

+1

Xavier

131

131

29

28

-1

Cincinatti

120

120

30

29

-1

Tennessee

120

109

30

35

+5

The Rest of the List

You can look at the source data here if you like, including may haphazard attempts at conditional formatting which work much better in Excel than Google Sheets. If you think there’s a school that should be getting tracked feel free to mention it in the comments and I’ll look, but if they haven’t at least made a couple of Elite Eights they probably won’t be in the running for a high spot. Here are all of the teams I’ve got in the list right now who aren’t in the top-30, in the order they’re currently ranked in my list:

Team

Points

2026 Rank

2025 Rank

Change

Oklahoma State

117

32

31

-1

Iowa State

116

33

35

+2

Butler

115

34

32

-2

Baylor

115

34

32

-2

Georgia Tech

113

36

34

-2

N.C. State

108

37

37

0

Utah

105

38

37

-1

Texas Tech

105

38

41

+3

LSU

104

40

38

-2

West Virginia

104

40

38

-2

Marquette

103

42

40

-2

Missouri

103

42

42

0

Houston

102

44

44

0

Oregon

100

45

42

-3

Auburn

95

46

44

-2

St. John's

92

47

48

+1

Stanford

90

48

46

-2

Seton Hall

88

49

47

-2

Kansas State

84

50

49

-1

San Diego State

80

51

50

-1

Miami

74

52

51

-1

VCU

72

53

52

-1

Providence

68

54

52

-2

Minnesota

66

55

54

-1

Wichita State

60

56

55

-1

Miss. St.

60

56

55

-1

Massachusetts

53

58

57

-1

George Mason

34

59

58

-1

South Carolina

33

60

59

-1

Loyola Chicago

28

61

60

-1

TCU

25

62

62

0

Florida Atlantic

24

63

61

-2

There could be somebody I’m missing who should be in there - I’m tracking 63 teams currently, and there are north of 350 D-I programs now - but I think I’ve got most of the ‘notable’ programs of the last ~40 years included.

EDIT 04/11/2026: Updated the tables to accurately reflect 2025 rankings.

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