March Madness, NCAA

Here’s 14 March Madness bracket options you can fill out online or in printable PDF

Are you an old-school college basketball fan that remembers the days when the March Madness tournament was an uncomplicated 64-team field? And just can’t get into the First Four since it was implemented by the NCAA in 2011? I get it. It’s principle. One play in game was more than enough.

Then you must be happy then that when yesterday was over and to see Drake, UCLA, Texas Southern and Norfolk State advance into the 60 other teams and kicked off the larger NCAA tournament just as you remembered it in 2010. Now that you’re purposely behind. you’re scrambling to find a printable March Madness bracket that suits your more traditional, conservative 64-team outlook.

March Madness 64-team bracket

It’s been a trying year for everyone and this year’s tournament hopes not only to provide some distraction but genuine excitement that brings us back to less-chaotic times like 2019. One way to soothe your nerves is to follow the same regimen you did in previous March Madnesses and that’s by printing out a blank NCAA basketball bracket and at your pace, filling it out. Here’s a few bracket options for you that we’ve design this year for late-comers like you:

Does either one of these bracket options resonate or satisfy your March Madness values? If so you can download and print out both of these in either PDF or image format. To download the first one, you can do so by clicking on the format you prefer PDF | Image (PNG). To print out the second NCAA bracket version (trophy), it’s just as simple as clicking here for the image file and printing that out, or clicking here for the more popular PDF format.

If neither option works for you, Interbasket has a couple other bracket designs for you to choose from.

Online brackets you can fill out online

Even after perusing all those options and you still can’t find one you like, another option for fans that are crunched for time is to type in their March Madness selections into one of the many online brackets from larger sports media sites. We’ve linked to a couple of the bigger sports websites that have interactive brackets including the NCAA’sYahoo’s, ESPN Fantasy’s bracket challenge, and CBS Sport’s 2o21 NCAA Bracket Games. Even the New York Times is getting in on the madness, but with no bracket necessary.

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