Bracketology
The only man in America with a perfect NCAA Tourney bracket
I should have known this would be a terrible year for my bracket as soon as I wrote about how awesome my bracket-picking skills are. After some high octane implosions (thanks for nothing, Kansas) my bracket has more bullet holes than a Mexican border town.
But according to NBC-Chicago and bnd.com, one teen from Illinois has achieved the impossible — a perfect bracket following the opening two rounds. Alex Herrmann, an autistic 17-year-old who is also a huge basketball fan, predicted Northern Iowa beating Kansas, Ohio University taking down Georgetown, and Cornell surviving Temple and Wisconsin — and every single other upset in this year's tournament.
Herrmann and five of his family members entered brackets in cbssports.com's Bracket Manager tournament, which is separate from the CBS Bracket Challenge that locks entries and offers prize money of up to $5,000 per round. CBS Sports couldn't verify the entry because a bracket manager administrator could theoretically change the picks after play began. Herrmann's admin, his older brother Andrew, told bnd.com that Alex last made adjustments to his picks on Thursday before the games.
Herrmann told bnd.com that he picked his teams "by watching the games through the season. I went with who I thought had the best defense and players."
Bookofodds.com estimates the chances of correctly picking a perfect two opening rounds of March Madness at 1:13,460,000. Roughly the same as winning the lottery — twice.
Most pundits are saying that Herrmann doesn't really have a chance at keeping his bracket perfect — he's picked relative long-shot Purdue, the school his brother attends, to win as national champion over Kansas State.
Then again, maybe they shouldn't be so quick to judge. Unlike everyone else in the country, Herrmann hasn't been wrong yet.