The only person left out of millions who entered men's and women's NCAA tournament brackets in ESPN's competition is an eighth-grader from suburban Pittsburgh. His name is Otto Schellhammer, and you can bet the 14-year-old is enjoying his one shining moment.
TSA officers share how they're scraping by without payCharlie Kirk's mentor and cheerleading pioneer Jeff Webb dies at 76 after a 'tragic accident'Composer of iconic 'Lion King' chant sues comedian over 'Circle of Life' translationAP Entertainment WireViral phenomenon in Argentina has young people identifying themselves as animalsOtters enjoy a snow day in Maryland during winter stormAt Middle Creek, timing and distance shape a photo of migrating geeseThe World in PicturesAs demand for GLP-1 pills and shots surges, healthy habits are still keyWelcome to allergy season.
Here's how to protect yourselfJury finds Instagram and YouTube liable in a landmark social media addiction trialSoil is the foundation of your garden. Keep it healthy!Llega a La Habana el primer barco de una flotilla internacional de solidaridadIran dismisses US ceasefire plan and issues its own counterproposalDemocrat flips seat in special election for Florida district that includes Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resortHall of Famer Frank Thomas files lawsuit seeking damages against White Sox, Fanatics, Nike‘Stand by Me’ stars reflect on the movie, Rob Reiner and its return to theaters 40 years laterViral phenomenon in Argentina has young people identifying themselves as animalsOtters enjoy a snow day in Maryland during winter stormAt Middle Creek, timing and distance shape a photo of migrating geeseThe World in PicturesAs demand for GLP-1 pills and shots surges, healthy habits are still keyWelcome to allergy season. Here's how to protect yourselfJury finds Instagram and YouTube liable in a landmark social media addiction trialSoil is the foundation of your garden. Keep it healthy!Llega a La Habana el primer barco de una flotilla internacional de solidaridadSportsOtto Schellhamer, an eighth-grader who has the only perfect bracket after the opening weekend of the men’s and women’s NCAA college basketball tournaments, poses in his backyard in Plum Borough, Pa., Wednesday, March 25, 2026. TCU guard Donovyn Hunter places the team placard on the bracket board after the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Sunday, March 22, 2026, Fort Worth, Texas. UCLA center Lauren Betts reacts while holding up the UCLA bracket sticker after UCLA defeats Oklahoma State in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. UCLA center Lauren Betts places the UCLA bracket sticker on the board after UCLA defeats Oklahoma State in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. TCU poses for a photo with a March Madness bracket after the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Sunday, March 22, 2026, Fort Worth, Texas. Otto Schellhamer, an eighth-grader who has the only perfect bracket after the opening weekend of the men’s and women’s NCAA college basketball tournaments, poses in his backyard in Plum Borough, Pa., Wednesday, March 25, 2026. Otto Schellhamer, an eighth-grader who has the only perfect bracket after the opening weekend of the men’s and women’s NCAA college basketball tournaments, poses in his backyard in Plum Borough, Pa., Wednesday, March 25, 2026. TCU guard Donovyn Hunter places the team placard on the bracket board after the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Sunday, March 22, 2026, Fort Worth, Texas. TCU guard Donovyn Hunter places the team placard on the bracket board after the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Sunday, March 22, 2026, Fort Worth, Texas. UCLA center Lauren Betts reacts while holding up the UCLA bracket sticker after UCLA defeats Oklahoma State in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. UCLA center Lauren Betts reacts while holding up the UCLA bracket sticker after UCLA defeats Oklahoma State in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. UCLA center Lauren Betts places the UCLA bracket sticker on the board after UCLA defeats Oklahoma State in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. UCLA center Lauren Betts places the UCLA bracket sticker on the board after UCLA defeats Oklahoma State in the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament, Monday, March 23, 2026, in Los Angeles. TCU poses for a photo with a March Madness bracket after the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Sunday, March 22, 2026, Fort Worth, Texas. TCU poses for a photo with a March Madness bracket after the second round of the NCAA college basketball tournament Sunday, March 22, 2026, Fort Worth, Texas. — from more than 40 million entries across all the major contests — was produced not by some college basketball expert or betting guru but an eighth grader from suburban Pittsburgh. “I know people say this a lot about March Madness,” Schellhammer told The Associated Press, sitting beside his mom, Amy, between school and lacrosse practice on Wednesday, “but it was 100% luck. I know basically nothing about any type of basketball.Oh, he’ll be watching now. Schellhammer has correctly picked the first 48 women’s games in ESPN’s Tournament Challenge, leaving him just 15 away from perfection. He has Texas cutting down the nets on April 5 in Phoenix. While it’s impossible to know whether there are any other perfect brackets in millions of smaller pools all across the country, the NCAA has tracked seven of the largest contests for years, said Mike Benzie, the senior director of content for NCAA Digital. This year they totaled about 36 million men’s entries and 5.2 on the women’s side, which means Schellhammer’s is better than one-in-a-million.He’s one in 41.2 million. “I think it’s absolutely hilarious,” said Amy Schellhammer, who actually did play high school ball. “It’s just so fun to see. It’s exciting. I’m excited he’s into women’s basketball now. He’s been watching and it’s making him more excited about it.” Most people have heard that picking a perfect bracket is harder than winning the lottery, but exactly how hard is it? The late DePaul mathematics professor Jeffrey Bergen calculated the odds at 1 in 9.2 quintillion, assuming every game is a 50-50 proposition, or about 46 million times the number of stars in our galaxy., and the odds of going 63-0 drop to about 1 in 28 billion — or, roughly 96 times harder than winning the Powerball jackpot. “Even in the women’s tournament where the favorites predominantly advance, there are outliers, and it only takes one if your bracket leans into favorites,” said Charlie Creme, the resident women’s bracketologist for ESPN. “Being able to pinpoint just those two or three upsets, knowing they will happen, but just in such a small number, is the maddening part of perfection.”79-72 in the 44th game of the tournament. (If that hadn’t done it, surely No. 9 seed Iowa’s upset ofStill, that run of 43 consecutive winning picks broke the record on the ESPN platform for its men’s contest. On the women’s side, the NCAA found 235 perfect brackets among the major contests going into Monday, when the last games in the second round were played. That number fell to seven when“The first game I watched of March Madness was on Monday,” Schellhammer said. “I came home and I was like, ‘I’ll check and see how my women’s bracket is doing.’ Then I watched Virginia beat Iowa, and that was pretty cool. And then I watched Notre Dame.” Schellhammer still has a long way to go: The best start in the ESPN women’s competition is 57 correct picks, which happened last year. To beat that, he would need to win each of the Sweet 16 games on Friday and Saturday to reach 56-0, and then win the first two games in the Elite Eight starting Sunday — though at that point, why not just win ‘em all? Schellhammer mostly stuck with the favorites in the opening weekend, though picking Virginia to beat Iowa was a big upset. He’s sticking with the favorites through the Sweet 16, too, but then Schellhammer is going out on a mighty long limb: He predicts No. 3 seed TCU will beat the Cavaliers on Saturday night, then knock off No. 1 seed South Carolina, the three-time national champions and the fourth-biggest favorite to win the title again, according to odds from BetMGM Sportsbook.“TCU and South Carolina is definitely one I would probably go back, and not to knock Texas but I’d probably re-pick the championship, because UConn is a powerhouse,” he said. “You never know. If there’s ever going to be an upset it’s going to be in March Madness.”Skretta is a Kansas City-based sports writer for The Associated Press. He covers the Royals, the Chiefs and college sports along with auto racing, the Olympics and other sports.
College Sports Basketball General News Texas PA State Wire TX State Wire Pennsylvania Arizona AZ State Wire Sports Jeffrey Bergen Mathematics College Basketball U.S. News Amy Schellhammer Charlie Creme Iowa Mike Benzie U.S. News
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
USC women blown out by top-seeded South Carolina in NCAA TournamentThe ninth-seeded Trojans (18-14) commit a season-high 26 turnovers and get outrebounded 43-27 in a 101-61 second-round loss to the Gamecocks (33-3).
Read more »
3 Observations From Illinois' Loss to Vanderbilt in the NCAA Women's TournamentThe Illini's season came to an end on Monday, as a very talented Commodores squad was too much to overcome in the NCAA Tournament
Read more »
West Virginia Women's Basketball Eliminated in NCAA Tournament, Looking Ahead to Next SeasonWest Virginia's women's basketball team was eliminated in the second round of the NCAA Tournament despite a close game. Key players like Gia Cooke are expected to have larger roles next season, while the team will need to replace graduating seniors.
Read more »
Syracuse Women’s Hoops Coach Calls Having to Face UConn in NCAA Tournament a ‘Personal Attack’Syracuse got demolished by UConn in the second round of the NCAA tournament on Monday.
Read more »
NCAA Tournament has best opening week on record, averaging 10.1 million viewersThe NCAA Tournament had its best first week on record, averaging 10.1 million viewers through the second round across CBS, TBS, TNT and truTV. According to Nielsen, tournament viewership is up 7% from last year. CBS and TNT began showing all of the games in 2011 after CBS had done early rounds in regional windows from 1991 through 2010.
Read more »
Michigan Could Lose Dusty May Amid NCAA Tournament RunThe Michigan Wolverines could lose coach Dusty May to North Carolina amid the team's run in the NCAA Tournament this spring.
Read more »
