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Upper Left Bottom Left Upper Right Bottom Right Final Four Sectional hosting controversy When sectional hosts were announced on March 5, there was some controversy as three of the four hosts were placed in the state of
Massachusetts and all four in the
Eastern Time Zone. Most of the controversy came when
Tufts, with its 21–6 regular season record, was granted hosting rights over 26–1
Trinity (TX), with top seed
Christopher Newport unable to host due to the men's sectional being held at CNU the same weekend. Three teams would have to travel via air regardless of where the pod was placed, an unusual occurrence for a Division III sectional. D3sports.com's Pat Coleman observed "[Division III] Texas teams get screwed so often [
by the NCAA], in every sport. This was a chance for a makeup call that was sorely missed, and it's an example Texas teams can point to and say, even when the number of flights is equal, we still get screwed." Further analysis by Coleman showed a long-standing
NCAA policy to deny sectional hosts in
Texas or the larger Region 10 (which also includes the states of
Colorado,
California,
Oregon, and
Washington). Since the sectional concept was introduced to the men's and women's tournaments in 2000, there had been 84 sectionals in each tournament through the 2023 editions. On the women's side, no Region 10 school had hosted a sectional since 2014, and the previous Region 10 host had done so in 2008, meaning that only one of the past 56 sectionals had been held in Region 10. The perceived snubbing of Region 10 was even greater in the men's tournament; only one sectional had been held in Region 10, with none since 2004. ==See also==