The 1985 Villanova Wildcats (#8 seed) defeated the defending National Champions Georgetown Hoyas.
A #16 seed has never beaten a #1 seed in March Madness.
George Mason was an 11 seed in the 2006 March Madness and a 12 seed in the 2008 March Madness.
15th
11
It has never happened before.
Probably a 3 but maybe a 4 but no higher than a 4
In March Madness 1983 when the Wolfpack defeated the Cougars in the finals, NC State was the #6 seed in the West Region.
Seeding in March Madness is based on a team's performance during the regular season. The selection committee ranks teams from 1 to 16 in each region, with the top seed facing the lowest seed in the first round. Seeding impacts the matchups teams face throughout the tournament, with higher seeds generally expected to have an easier path to the later rounds. However, upsets can occur, and lower-seeded teams have the opportunity to make a deep run in the tournament. Overall, seeding plays a significant role in determining the competitiveness and outcomes of March Madness.
In a very competitievematch-up,#1 seedDuke defeated Butler (a #5 seed) 61-59.
One seeds have always beaten the 16 seeds.
16 seed, beat duke last year
right now it is in the future but not because I'm a ku fan but by the way they've played this season i think they will be a #1 overall seed