Everyone is aware that soccer is a very popular sport on this planet, yes? Particularly in Europe, yes? Are you aware that every year’s standings in the top European soccer leagues provide the membership and participants for something going on during the following season called UEFA Champions League?
I feel like you should be aware of this. The final for the 2025-26 Champions League — Paris-Saint Germain from France versus Arsenal from England— is happening the Saturday after this is being published.
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It’s a really neat concept. If you win one of the 53 national leagues that are a part of the Union of European Football Associations, everyone from England at #1 all the way down through the UEFA rankings to #53 San Marino, you’re automatically in the Champions League the next year. League of Champions, get it? If you play in one of the bigger national leagues — for 2025-26, it’s the top 15 — you can qualify for the Champions League by finishing towards the top of your league, not only by winning it. England, Italy, Spain, Germany, and France were granted four spots this year, Netherlands got three, and nine more countries got two teams each for a total of 82 teams.
Once the teams are decided, UEFA sorts everyone into a ranking system and then everyone except for the top teams — 29 in this year’s league — have to play through a series of qualifying rounds to get to what they called the league phase this past year. If you’re not familiar with Champions League, but you are familiar with the United States playing in the World Cup, think of it like CONCACAF creating a system to decide who gets to be in the World Cup. Same idea. The league phase creates teams for a knockout playoff bracket, and that turns into 16 teams remaining, 8, 4, and then two teams left for the title.
It’s a lot of words to explain a relatively simple concept, sure. It’s also a really fun concept, as you get guaranteed matches between the tippy top clubs all across Europe because everyone plays home and away as a part of not only the league phase, but also the qualifying rounds and the knockout rounds. Soccer does love their two game playoff system, just to even out any weirdness from one 90 minute game.
You know what has a collection of leagues competing with each other under one banner? COLLEGE BASKETBALL.
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You know what has a real problem with the non-conference/November and December portion of their schedule relative to the amount of attention it gets? COLLEGE BASKETBALL.
I propose to you that we solve this problem with a Men’s College Basketball Champions League.
This is not a new idea by me, of course. I am standing on the shoulders of giants, as John Infante had the idea back before Andy Glockner wrote about it for Sports Illustrated in 2012 and the two of them joined Matt Norlander for a CBS Sports podcast about it in 2013. Friend Of The Show Andrei Greska even brought the idea back up in 2019 for an article on Paint Touches. This isn’t even the first year that we’ve mocked up a CBBCL here on Anonymous Eagle, as we did that in each of the last four years.
It was fun to spend the last calendar year bringing up the idea of a CBBCL every single time someone talked about how college hoops needs to do a better job drawing attention to itself, so we’re doing it again, with a brand new fresh set of teams from last year’s standings. I’m probably going to do one of these every year until someone in the college basketball brain trust gets off their butt and starts to put together television partners to get this done. That’s the point of this, by the way: Big time games in November and December to draw eyeballs to college basketball. Everything I’m about to lay out for you here would count as part of the 2026-27 regular season for college basketball. All of the games you’re about to hear about would count as part of a team’s NCAA tournament selection profile for the national championship tournament in March 2027.
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We have 31 conferences, so all 31 regular season champions get in. In case of a tie in the standings, the top seed for the conference tournament gets in. 32 is the number you want for group play so the top two teams in each group create your Round of 16 for the first part of the knockout bracket. If you wanted to make it a pure Champions League, you could do it that way with every regular season champ and, I dunno, the most recent NCAA champion that didn’t win a league this past year to round out to 32. But we’re also trying to get some money kicking around here so we’ll make a concession to television partners and expand the field to 48. Top 24 teams get into group play automatically, the next eight get a bye into the second round of qualifying, and the remaining 16 teams play each other in the first round of qualifying.
Arbitrarily, I assigned multiple spots in the CBBCL to the top eight leagues in the 2025-26 season according to KenPom.com’s conference rankings. Those are, in order:
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Mountain West — 2 spots
-
West Coast Conference — 2 spots
All of these spots would be decided by the regular season standings, with seeding in the conference tournament breaking any ties that need to be broken along the way. This adds an extra amount of drama to conference play, as there’s a big difference, for example, between finishing second and third in the Mountain West. These allotments don’t have to be permanent, either. Two years ago, the Big 12 was the best league, and they had 4 spots. You could come up with a system that’s a rolling average of conference strength to decide who gets how many spots in the CBBCL field. I just went with KenPom’s rankings from this past season because it was easy to find and use.
These are just made up assignments by the way, other than we can only distribute 17 extra spots to get to 48 teams for the CBBCL. If you wanted to drop a spot from the SEC and give two spots to the ninth best conference — Missouri Valley in this circumstance — you could do that. If you wanted to make it just the top two from each of the top 16 conferences with three teams from the best league, fine, but again: We are trying to make television partners interested in throwing gobs of cash at everyone to put these games on the air.
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This year, the 2026 NCAA Tournament champion is Michigan. The Wolverines earn a spot in the CBBCL field by way of finishing first in the Big 10. If the NCAA champ was from outside the qualifying teams, then you can boot out the lowest ranked team from a multi-bid conference if you want. You could reserve a spot for the previous year’s CBBCL champion as well. There’s a lot of ways to go about this, this is just one.
With all of that in mind, here’s the list of the 48 teams participating in my CBBCL format based on last year’s results. They are sorted by their final NCAA NET rankings, which is the order that we will use to determine which teams go into what part of the qualifying process. I used the final NET that the NCAA generated late in the national championship tournament instead of KenPom because that way we have multiple ranking systems at work to put teams into the field. That feels like a better process, but if someone wants to yell at me about the mathematical science of it, well, that’s what the comments section is for.
|
Team |
NET Ranking |
|---|---|
|
Michigan |
1 |
|
Duke |
2 |
|
Arizona |
3 |
|
Florida |
4 |
|
Illinois |
5 |
|
Houston |
6 |
|
Connecticut |
9 |
|
Gonzaga |
10 |
|
Michigan State |
11 |
|
Nebraska |
12 |
|
St. John’s |
13 |
|
Alabama |
14 |
|
Vanderbilt |
15 |
|
Virginia |
16 |
|
Tennessee |
17 |
|
Arkansas |
18 |
|
Texas Tech |
20 |
|
Kansas |
21 |
|
Saint Mary’s |
24 |
|
Utah State |
25 |
|
Saint Louis |
29 |
|
Miami FL |
32 |
|
Villanova |
34 |
|
VCU |
44 |
|
SECOND ROUND HOSTS |
|
|
South Florida |
45 |
|
San Diego State |
48 |
|
Belmont |
64 |
|
Miami OH |
65 |
|
High Point |
68 |
|
Yale |
74 |
|
Utah Valley |
86 |
|
Stephen F. Austin |
89 |
|
FIRST ROUND |
|
|
UNC Wilmington |
100 |
|
Liberty |
102 |
|
North Dakota State |
116 |
|
UC Irvine |
120 |
|
Wright State |
125 |
|
Troy |
137 |
|
East Tennessee State |
139 |
|
Navy |
141 |
|
Portland State |
145 |
|
Central Arkansas |
166 |
|
Tennessee State |
176 |
|
Merrimack |
178 |
|
Howard |
194 |
|
LIU |
198 |
|
UMBC |
199 |
|
Bethune Cookman |
260 |
The first round of qualifying is those 16 teams at the bottom of the list. For my system here, I just went with one head-to-head game with the top eight teams in the NET hosting the other eight teams. As the best team in Round 1, UNC Wilmington hosts Bethune Cookman, the lowest ranked conference champion. Liberty hosts UMBC, and so on and so forth.
And so that brings us to an Opening Day/Week/whatever makes you happy of the season lineup that looks like this:
|
Home |
Away |
|---|---|
|
UNC Wilmington |
Bethune Cookman |
|
Liberty |
UMBC |
|
North Dakota State |
LIU |
|
UC Irvine |
Howard |
|
Wright State |
Merrimack |
|
Troy |
Tennessee State |
|
East Tennessee State |
Central Arkansas |
|
Navy |
Portland State |
Are there any immediate headliner games in there? No, there’s not, but people tune in to watch the First Four games with the 16 seeds involved because there’s something on the line. Opening night or two of the season, maybe a special opening week earlier than any other games, and you get all of these contests with a spot in the second round of qualifying on the line. We’re talking about playing these games on campus, so imagine the scene at the Naval Academy in Annapolis with the rest of the midshipmen going nuts for Navy in a nationally televised game, and so on. If you wanted to stretch things out a bit here and turn this into the two leg thing that UEFA does where you have to win the two games with a better aggregate score so both teams get to sell tickets to a home game, you could, but I think you’re just getting a little too goofy with basketball at that point.
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For the purposes of pushing this along to pool play, I used a 1-8 random number generator to pick some upsets just because. I got two — Merrimack and UMBC — and then I resorted the winners into their NET ranking order, and paired them off against the eight teams that got the bye into the second round. The teams that got the bye get to be the home teams here, and the same thing as before where South Florida, the best team with a bye, hosts UMBC, the lowest ranked team to advance.
If you wanted to do these two rounds by random draw instead, just for the entertainment value of putting two selection shows on TV, you absolutely could do that. Draw all 16 spots, home and away, to decide who plays where, repeat for the second round. A little over the top for our purposes here since we’re not actually playing the games and just flipping coins, but it’s an option.
That gets us a Round Two schedule that looks like this:
|
Home |
Away |
|---|---|
|
South Florida |
UMBC |
|
San Diego State |
Merrimack |
|
Belmont |
Navy |
|
Miami OH |
East Tennessee State |
|
High Point |
Troy |
|
Yale |
UC Irvine |
|
Utah Valley |
North Dakota State |
|
Stephen F. Austin |
UNC Wilmington |
Once again, these eight games were subject to the random number generator to pick two upsets to get us to a group stage. This means that UNC Wilmington and Navy won road games to get into our group stage, and they’re going to get to host three home games against three of the 24 teams that got a free pass into that part of the tournament.
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That gives us our 32 teams for group play, and they split into these four pots:
Pot 1: Michigan, Duke, Arizona, Florida, Illinois, Houston, Connecticut, Gonzaga
Pot 2: Michigan State, Nebraska, St. John’s, Alabama, Vanderbilt, Virginia, Tennessee, Arkansas
Pot 3: Texas Tech, Kansas, Saint Mary’s, Utah State, Saint Louis, Miami (FL), Villanova, VCU
Pot 4, which is all eight Round 2 winners: South Florida, San Diego State, Miami (OH), High Point, Yale, Utah Valley, UNC Wilmington, Navy
I did the random draw to decide the teams for group play because this part absolutely should have a televised selection show. You bring in big names from the college basketball landscape — promise a colar to Roy Williams, and he’d be perfect for this — to pull out the balls with the strips of paper in them, you have Rece Davis hosting the whole thing, make a whole spectacle of it, guaranteed ratings on a Tuesday night in mid-November.
|
Pot |
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
F |
G |
H |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1 |
Arizona |
Florida |
Duke |
Gonzaga |
Connecticut |
Houston |
Michigan |
Illinois |
|
2 |
Virginia |
Nebraska |
Arkansas |
Vanderbilt |
Tennessee |
Michigan State |
Alabama |
St. John’s |
|
3 |
Utah State |
Villanova |
Kansas |
VCU |
Saint Mary’s |
Saint Louis |
Miami (FL) |
Texas Tech |
|
4 |
Navy |
Miami (OH) |
Utah Valley |
Yale |
High Point |
San Diego State |
UNC Wilmington |
South Florida |
When I did the draw, it was just Pot 1/Group A, Pot 1/Group B, and so on and so forth. I’m not actually trying to schedule games here, so I didn’t do the “Group A, Position 3” part like you see in the World Cup draw. I would presume that the actual selection would do that, since you want the games going off in a particular order and preassigning positions to games makes all the sense in the world. All we’re trying to do here is show you (and hopefully an actual decision maker or 42) how great it would be to get all of these games on the schedule in November and December when there’s not much else going on in college hoops.
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There were hitches along the way in the random draw. With four SEC teams and two Big Ten teams in Pot 2 and three spots where they couldn’t go because of how Pot 1 went, we had to create some rules ahead of time. As SEC teams came up in the draw, they passed over Group B until we got to F. Alabama came up there, but that left two Big Ten teams for three spots, two of which involved Michigan and Illinois. Therefore, Alabama goes to G with Michigan, Nebraska came up next and went to B, sending Michigan State to F and St. John’s to H by default.
Each of the groups would play a home-and-home series against each other. Using Group A as an example, that means Arizona would go on the road against Virginia, Utah State, and Navy as well as host all three teams. All of these games would count as regular season games for the 2027 NCAA tournament selection process, so that adds a bit of importance to the whole thing as well. How is Saint Louis going to look to the selection committee if they don’t win the automatic bid in the Atlantic 10 but still got six total games against Houston, Michigan State, and San Diego State, three home and three road? Probably going to help their chances of an at-large bid, right? Is there a chance they go 0-6? Sure, but that’s still the opportunity to play six games that no one was going to schedule against the Billikens without this putting it into place. Is it possible that we get a multi-bid league from one of the mid-majors as a result of this? Definitely possible, right? If nothing else, it pushes things in that direction, and that always makes things a little more interesting when it comes to selection time, especially as the NCAA expands the field to 76 teams. It’s going to be a lot harder for mediocre to slightly bad high major programs to sneak into the tournament if Yale bolstered their slate with six games against Gonzaga, Vanderbilt, and VCU, right?
After the six group stage games are played, the top two teams in each group advance to the knockout rounds. I’m guessing that we’ll probably need some tiebreakers to figure this out because it seems unlikely that anyone goes a perfect 6-0, but that’s easy enough. Head-to-head and record against top team not in the tie should be enough to sort through most of the tiebreakers.
Imagine the first weekend in December where we get Michigan/St. John’s and Alabama/Illinois as single elimination games because those teams advanced out of their groups to the Round of 16. Or UConn/Michigan State and Houston/Tennessee. You get the idea. Big time games, built up by three weeks of group play, big time stakes. These can be done on neutral sites in a four day swing just like the Sweet 16 and the Elite Eight if someone wants to get fancy and organize it, or maybe the group winners get to host the 16 and 8 rounds and the semifinals/finals are at a neutral site. Or whatever, at this point, we’re just being picky about details. Actually getting this off the ground and moving is more important than where the games are played.
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I would imagine that all of this could get knocked out by January 1st at the latest. If the timing doesn’t work out, then let the CBBCL First & Second Round games start in October, earlier than the regular season for everyone else, and then you get extra attention for the preliminary rounds because they’re the only games going on. We’ll have to come up with some sort of system where the teams eliminated in qualifying play square off against each other to fill in their non-conference schedules since they have to leave their time open to play in the group stage and knockout rounds. We start getting the group play teams that get eliminated and the teams falling in the knockout round as well eventually, so I feel like we can make that work with very little effort, especially when there’s big time TV money flowing in from this endeavor.
I am almost 100% sure that I have left out something very obvious to the reader but not at all obvious to my brain as I put this together. If you have questions or comments or possible improvements or whatever have you, pipe up in the comments section. No bad idea in a brainstorming session, and that’s essentially what this is.
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