Ƶ

basketball-men-d1 flag

Daniel Wilco | sifoeeprocess.com | February 11, 2025

Why basketball teams cut down the nets

Watch Nova's full net-cutting ceremony

Every April, when the last game of March Madness is over, but before "One Shining Moment" plays to commemorate the end of the Ƶ tournament, a completely normal but absolutely strange tradition plays out: Players and coaches from the championship-winning school climb a ladder — scissors in hand — and cut off parts of the net from the hoop used in the game.

RELATED: What is March Madness: The Ƶ tournament, explained

The tradition isn’t just for the national championship game of the Ƶ tournament. Win your conference tournament? Cut down a net. Win your region and advance to the Final Four? Cut down a net. If there’s a trophy to be had, there’s a net to be cut.

So, how exactly did this tradition start?

Whereas the use of March Madness can be traced to Illinois high school basketball, cutting down nets likely finds its origin in Indiana high school basketball. 

RELATED: When did Ƶ tournament brackets become popular?

Why basketball teams cut down the nets

Everett Case spent 23 years as a high school basketball head coach in his home state of Indiana, where his team won four state championships. In 1946, Case became the coach at North Carolina State, and when the Wolfpack won the Southern Conference tournament in 1947, Case climbed atop his players’ shoulders and cut part of the net to have as a souvenir. 

NC State Athletics Everett Case cuts down the net with NC State Everett Case cuts down the net after his NC State team won the Southern Conference championship in 1947, starting a tradition in college basketball.

This moment is unchallenged as the origin of the tradition at the Ƶ level, but there is some dispute as to whether Case cut his first net with NC State, or whether he brought the ritual from his time in Indiana.

Either way, the practice has become ingrained in college basketball since. It's spread to the women's college basketball tournament and to high school basketball programs across the country. At the end of a season, one team will be snipping some nylon. It's gotten so big that the Ƶ championship now has an official ladder (Werner) and scissors (Fiskars). 

Of course, mixing ladders, scissors, and adrenaline have resulted in to players and coaches, but the tradition lives on. 

Cutting down the nets wasn't the only tradition Case brought to NC State. The coach instituted a pep band, noise meter, and spotlight for introducing players, all while leading NC State to a 377-134 record.

The head coach was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006.

Martin Newton named chair of DI Men’s Basketball Committee for 2026-27 season

Samford Director of Athletics Martin Newton has been named chair of the Ƶ Division I Men’s Basketball Committee for the 2026-27 season. Newton will serve as vice chair for the coming season, supporting Keith Gill, the Sun Belt Conference commissioner and 2025-26 chair.
READ MORE

2025 Players Era Festival: Schedule, teams, TV channels for the college basketball event

Here's everything you need to know about the Players Era Festival, an 18-team men's basketball and four-team women's basketball event in Las Vegas scheduled during Thanksgiving week.
READ MORE

These college basketball teams and conferences have the most NBA first-round draft picks

Kentucky, North Carolina and Duke are the college basketball teams with the most first-round picks in NBA draft history.
READ MORE
Division I
Men's Basketball Championship
April 4 & 6, 2026
Lucas Oil Stadium | Indianapolis, IN