A bracket is the diagrammatic representation of the series of games played during a tournament, named as such because it appears to be a large number of interconnected (punctuational) brackets.
There are several kinds of brackets, adapted to different types of tournaments. The most common are:
The "art" of filling in brackets, especially in NCAA basketball, is referred to as bracketology.
When there are only two different conferences, there are two sides of the bracket. One conference is on one side, while the other is on the opposite side. Teams that qualify for the post-season tournament only compete against teams in their own conference, until only one team from each conference remains. These two teams, called the conference champions, play each other to determine the best in the league. In other leagues, like the NHL, have two conferences but are divided into divisions, usually by region. In the post-season tournament, only the teams with the best records qualify, with the exception of the divisoin leader haveing an automatic entry into the tournament.
Most professional post-season tournaments are single-elimination format. If a bye is required, the top seeded teams usually gets the bye. There is usually no third place match to separate the third and fourth place teams.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Bracket (tournament)".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world