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"I really was torn myself with what to do, so taking the field to 68 seems like a good step," North Carolina coach Roy Williams said. "This will give them time to decide if this just an intermediate step to a larger event or not. There are so many good teams, and adding three more helps get some of them in the bracket without tarnishing the specialness of the tournament."
Connecticut's Jim Calhoun was against a larger field all along.
"We would have made 96-team field this year. We would have been in that next group. I didn't think we were good enough to make the field based on what the tournament has been," he said. "It's a great thing, a special thing and it should stay that way. There will be more pressure now on teams to make it but I like the idea of it being special as opposed to not. I'm concerned with messing with something that's been so good."
Big East commissioner John Marinatto said a bigger field isn't necessarily in the future.
"Everyone says to me it seems like it's inevitable, but nobody I've talked to embraces it," he said of a 96-team field. "So why is it inevitable?"
And Southeastern Conference commissioner Mike Slive said that because the NCAA increased revenue without drastically affecting the integrity of the tournament Thursday's announcement was a "win-win for everybody."
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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