Men’s March 2021 Madness Basketball Bracket PDF – A Tight Copy Of The Athletic Download



While we were working on our NCAA Tournament plan, one big project at the top of the list included: a clean, printable March Madness bracket. Thanks to our design department here, we now have one. (Below this story are the download links.) And here’s a link to the women’s printable brackets.

Download your brackets to print, fill, scribble, reprint, reprint, submit, and diligently highlight your wins and losses:

Due to the epidemic, the 2021 NCAA Tournament will be played entirely in Indiana this season. The selection committee passed some new guidelines that could shake things up a bit, including trying to remove the geography and get the teams closer to their national territory, as all games will be played centrally. Here’s a great read on the new rules.

Want a free (or extended year) of Thletic? Bet 1 on one of our Round 1 winners and get 100 free in free year and free bets

We’ll have more coverage than you ever need, with a full bracket by Seth Davis, a full section on women’s coverage, our new “SlingSot” analytical model Dell that points to big up passes, expert selection, profiles, predictions… and more. Peter Keating answered your questions here earlier this week. You can find it in our exclusive NCAA Tournament section of that site.

Our experts have selected them as to who will enter the final four and who will ultimately win the national championship.

Enjoy this bracket – enjoy the tournament! (If you participate, enjoy this deal from BatMMM!) – And good luck to everyone!

Related stories

Seth Davis predicts it for Saturday’s first round games

Land of Hops and Dreams: 1 day, 4 games, 3 arenas and 1 beautiful NCAA Tournament for the author of this game

Max Abmus, Kevin O’Brien believed in Oral Roberts – and for that faith he was rewarded for upsetting a major NCAA Tournament.

Brennan: Was Big Ten overrated? Nah. But in the NCAA tournament Ohio State, Purdue losses happen at real cost

Mark Emmert on ‘unforgivable’ inequality between men’s and women’s NCAA tournaments

(Photo: Trevor Ruzkowski / USA Today)

.