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That used to be true, when the NIT was sponsored by the MIBA, a group of NYC schools. That was certainly true in 1997, when UConn got in with a 14-14 record and went to the semi-finals. But since the NCAA took over in 2005, things have changed. The NCAA has explicitly stated that performance, not drawing potential, is primary. For example, regular season conference champions who do not make the NCAA tourney, now get preference over all others. Further, the selection committee is no longer a group of NYC metropolitan-area coaches and ADs. Nor does ESPN any longer have any say in the matter. It is a national committee which happens, at present, to be very Mid-Western and very lightly representative of the Northeast. Bottom-line, the NIT is not operated today as a fund-raiser for Northeast schools or a commercial-draw for ESPN. The NCAA views it as a national consolation tourney for worthy teams that don't quite make it to the NCAAs. Net-net, UConn needs to win some games.
66 teams make the dance. 32 more make the NIT. Yes, there are auto-bids for both, but I'm more confident than you that winning 3 of our last 4 and at least 1 in the tourney is sufficient for the NIT. I don't think they care how many AAC teams are in -- I think they try to do exactly what the NCAA does -- take their autobids (conference regular season champs who didn't make the dance) and then fill up the brackets with best teams available. If we wiin those games and have both Net and Ken Pom in the low 60s, I'm more confident than you.