NCAA Final Four (Philippines)


The NCAA Final Four most often refers to the playoffs of the National Collegiate Athletic Association seniors' basketball tournament.
The term "final four" came from National Collegiate Athletic Association of the United States' men's Division I basketball tournament which is colloquially called as the "final four".
The final four was instituted in 1998; prior to that the first and second round winners, plus the team with the best overall standing if it did not win either round, participated in the championship round to determine the champion.

Format

Statistics

Seniors Tournament

Appearances

Notes:

Win-loss statistics

Semifinals and knockout games

Finals
Entire playoffs

Finals statistics

The most frequently played matchups are:
MatchupSemifinalsFinalsTotal
SSC-R vs. Letran628
San Beda vs. Letran257
SSC-R vs. JRU617
San Beda vs. Perpetual606
San Beda vs. SSC-R134
Letran vs. JRU213
Letran vs. PCU213
San Beda vs. JRU213
Mapúa vs. San Beda303
San Beda vs. Arellano022
San Beda vs. Lyceum022
SSC-R vs. CSB022
Letran vs. Mapúa202
Letran vs. Lyceum202

Seeds

In the 22 tournaments the Final Four format has been applied, the higher seed has beaten the lower seeds in the semifinals due to their twice to beat advantage, for the most part:
  1. The #1 seed has beaten the #4 seed 17 out of 19 times
  2. *The #1 seed has beaten the #4 seed 13 times on the first game.
  3. *The #1 seed has beaten the #4 seed 4 times on the second game
  4. *The only times the #1 seed was beaten by the #4 seed were during the San Sebastian-Letran matchup in Season 75, and the JRC-San Sebastian matchup in Season 76.
  5. The #2 seed has beaten the #3 seed 17 out of 19 times.
  6. * The #2 seed has beaten the #3 seed 12 times on the first game.
  7. * The #2 seed has beaten the #3 seed 5 times on the second game.
  8. *The only times the #2 seed was beaten by the #3 seed were during the Perpetual Help-CSB matchup in Season 76, and the San Sebastian-Letran matchup in Season 88.
  9. The #2 seed has beaten the #4 seed once
  10. *The only time the #2 seed has beaten the #4 seed was during the San Beda-San Sebastian matchup in Season 93 due to the stepladder format.
  11. The #3 seed has beaten the #4 seed 2 out of 3 times
  12. * With San Beda sweeping the elimination round, there were two semifinal rounds for 2010 and 2019.
  13. * With Lyceum sweeping the elimination round, there were two semifinal rounds for 2017.
  14. The #1 seed skipped the semifinals thrice
A victory of the #3 and #4 seeds in a series are considered big upsets considering that the #3 and #4 seed have to win twice, not to mention the perceived superiority of the #1 and #2 seeds when compared to the #3 and #4 seeds.
In the finals, the advantage of the #1 seed isn't as pronounced since the competing teams have to win the same number of games:
  1. The #1 seed has beaten the #2 seed 13 of 18 times
  2. The #2 seed has beaten the #1 seed 5 of 18 times
  3. The #1 seed has beaten the #3 seed 1 of 2 times
  4. The #3 seed has beaten the #1 seed 1 of 2 times
  5. The #3 seed has beaten the #4 seed once
  6. *This occurred in 2000 in which both lower seeded teams upset the teams with the twice to beat advantage. This was the only time were both teams possessing the twice to beat advantage failed to qualify for the finals in both the NCAA and the UAAP.
  7. The #4 seed has beaten the #2 seed once
  8. The #1 seed has won the championship 14 of 22 times

    Individual single-game records

Stats since the 2001 season.
StatisticNameTotalSchoolOpponentStage
Most pointsKevin Alas432012 Semifinals
Most reboundsAllwell Oraeme242016 Semifinals
Most assistsRoldan Sara112016 Finals
Most stealsRoldan Sara112016 Finals
Most blocksRaymond Almazan
Mark Andaya
92013 Semifinals
2005 Semifinals

Juniors Tournament

Appearances

Notes:
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Television and radio

The Final Four is the culmination of the NCAA basketball season and is heavily covered by the media. With the NCAA as one of the leading collegiate leagues in the country, the Final Four games are broadcast live throughout the country.
Beginning in 2015, the NCAA, and the Final Four games, are broadcast by ABS-CBN's UHF channel ABS-CBN Sports+Action nationwide, being produced by ABS-CBN Sports. Previously, Studio 23 covered the NCAA from 2002 until 2011. Prior to Studio 23, the games were broadcast irregularly by different broadcast partners. From 2009 to 2011 and since 2015, the games are also aired in high definition, through Balls subsidiary Balls HD.
Previous nationwide providers of the NCAA were GMA Network from 1974 until 1988, Vintage Television on IBC from 1998 until 1999 and PTV Channel 4 from 2000 until 2001 season. PTV's coverage was produced by MCI Group and later Silvestar Sports.
In 2012, the NCAA, and the Final Four games were broadcast by TV5's VHF channel IBC's AKTV, being produced by Sports5. From 2013 to 2014 TV5 took over the seniors' games coverage after AKTV was dissolved.