The SMU Mustangs scraped into the 2026 NCAA Tournament as one of the final at-large selections. They’re now out after losing to Miami in the play-in round – and it turns out their spot in the field of 68 might’ve been based on false information.
SMU finished 20-13 through the regular season and ACC Tournament. They landed an 11-seed in the play-in round, facing the 31-1 Miami Redhawks on Wednesday night.
The Redhawks won 89-79, sending the Mustangs home. But SMU played without senior guard B.J. Edwards, who’d been averaging 12.9 points and 5.9 rebounds per game this season – third and second on the team respectively.
Here’s where it gets interesting.
The NCAA Tournament Selection Committee thought Edwards would be available against Miami. That belief played a major role in SMU making the tournament at all.
Selection Committee Chair Keith Gill provides closer insight into this year’s selection process.#MarchMadness pic.twitter.com/cYODBQfpNq
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) March 15, 2026
The Selection Committee Expected Edwards to Play
Selection Committee Chair Keith Gill broke down the final teams when explaining the bracket. Edwards’ expected return was a key factor in SMU sneaking into the field, he said.
Edwards hadn’t played since Feb. 25, when he suffered an ankle injury in a loss to Cal. That was six games before the tournament.
“Six games ago, they lost one of their important players, Edwards, and they’ve lost five of six of those games (since),” Gill said. “He’s coming back. He’s the third-leading scorer, defensive player…”
Except he didn’t come back.
Edwards never stepped on the court Wednesday night. He played zero minutes against the Redhawks; maybe his presence would’ve changed the outcome, maybe it wouldn’t have.
“He just didn’t feel like he was quite game-ready,” head coach Andy Enfield said after the loss. Enfield denied that SMU intentionally misled anyone.
But the optics aren’t great. Teams like Oklahoma, Auburn, San Diego State, and Indiana – all left out of the tournament – are probably wondering what might’ve been. Did SMU’s coaching staff suggest Edwards would play when they knew he wouldn’t be ready?
The timing raises questions. SMU lost five of six games without Edwards down the stretch, yet the selection committee factored in his return when evaluating the Mustangs’ resume. That’s not typically how these decisions work – teams are usually judged on what they’ve actually done, not on who might be coming back.
Whether it was intentional deception or just optimistic medical projections, the result is the same. SMU got in, other bubble teams didn’t, and Edwards never played.
