UConn Is Already Getting Doubted In A Way Fans Wont Like

Despite consistent success and a demanding schedule, UConn Basketball faces skepticism with a surprising No. 3 seed prediction for the 2026-27 NCAA Tournament.

ESPN’s first crack at the 2026-27 bracket has UConn in a spot the Huskies aren’t used to seeing.

Joe Lunardi released his opening bracketology projection for the new college basketball season on Tuesday, and he slotted UConn as a No. 3 seed. That’s a step down from last season, when the Huskies were a No. 2 seed before reaching the NCAA title game and falling to No.

1 Michigan. UConn has now played in the championship game in three of the last four years and won two of them, so a No. 3 line feels like a bit of a dip for a program that has lived near the top of the sport.

Of course, this is happening with the season still nearly four months away and the tournament about eight months out, so the whole exercise comes with the usual giant grain of salt. Still, bracketology is bracketology, and fans always want to know where the early expectations sit.

One thing that matters in this projection is the tournament itself. The NCAA Tournament is expanding to 76 teams, up from 68, and the old “First Four” setup is growing into 12 games with 24 teams before the first Thursday of the event. Those 12 winners will move into the traditional bracket, which brings the field back to the 64 teams fans are used to seeing on the opening Thursday.

As for why Lunardi may have UConn lower than last year, the roster is part of the answer. The Huskies are without Tarris Reed Jr. and Karaban, both to the NBA, and Solo Ball is out with an injury. That leaves room for Lunardi to view this group as a step behind the one that just made a run to the title game.

Dan Hurley, though, has a track record of keeping UConn at a high level, and he’s added several transfers who could make an impact alongside Braylon Mullins and Silas Demary Jr.

The schedule won’t do the Huskies any favors, either. UConn is set to play what could be one of the hardest slates in college basketball history, with games against Duke, Arizona, Illinois, Kansas, Ohio State and Michigan.

And as always, the games still have to be played.

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