March Madness continues as college hoop teams around the country compete during "Championship Week" for a spot in the Men's NCAA Tournament.
Some teams have been on the bubble, while others have been eliminated from contention after losing during their respective conference tournament.
With the NCAA tournament beginning on March 17, Cal and Stanford were among of the schools on the bubble watch for a spot in the big dance.
Here's how things look for both teams:
Stanford's fate decided on last-second basket
Goals of a NCAA tournament appearance could be in jeopardy for the No. 10-seed Stanford Cardinal (20-12, 9-9 ACC) after being eliminated in the first round of the ACC tournament in an upset against No. 15 Pittsburgh (13-19, 5-13 ACC), 64-63, in the final seconds of the game.
The Cardinal tied the game after their freshman standout Ebuka Okorie drove past two Pitt defenders as he made a layup after a bump from Panthers forward Cameron Corhen with 26 seconds left.
Okorie knocked down the ensuing extra free throw to give Stanford a one-point lead. He ended the game with 14 points.
After a timeout, Pitt guard Damarco Minor launched a 3-pointer that ironed short as both teams scrambled to grab an offensive rebound. Pitt was able to secure the ball once again under 10 seconds left.
Minor drove through the lane attempted and missed a floater but was able to find his own rebound for a tip-in with 0.4 left in the game at the Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina.
Stanford head coach Kyle Smith called it a "classic postseason grind" following the game.
"Hats off. Pittsburgh just really competed really hard, especially on the glass," Smith told reporters. "We give up 20 offensive rebounds, which resulted in a lot of second chance points for them. I'm proud of our way guys, down eight at halftime, took a big punch. We came back."
He added: "Really proud Ebuka [we] challenged him to play the right way and he did. As a point guard really got us back in there, made a big shot, made his free throw. We needed one stop. We just couldn't come up with it. And hopefully we'll we'll learn on that. But we defended well enough to win. We took care of the ball, shot it well enough, but we just couldn't keep them off the glass."
The loss could sway the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Committee on whether or not Stanford will make an appearance in the anticipated NCAA tournament that begins March 17.
Smith said he be "shocked" if the Cardinal weren't selected to compete, especially being in the ACC, one of the best and respected basketball conferences.
"We have one of the best players in the country," he told reporters on whether Stanford should still be considered for the tournament. "We've got a lot of Quad-1 wins in a really competitive conference, and it'd be a shame if Oklahoma gets to go last year being 6-12 in the SEC and the ACC doesn't get rewarded the right way. ... I thought it was a farce last year when SEC got this narrative or whatever."
The selection committee announces which teams are in and which are out on Sunday, March 15.
"I think we led all the Power Four conferences and Quad-1 wins, and had the most wins and winning percentage versus other Power Four. So arguably, we're really the best conference," Smith said. "We made it a big point to earn the respect. This is the basketball conference. Stanford is an elevated the program because of the ACC, Cal too."
ACC tournament: No. 9 California vs. No. 8 Florida State
The No. 9-seed California Golden Bears (21-10, 9-9 ACC) earned a first round-bye and will open the ACC tournament play in the second round against the No. 8 Florida State Seminoles (17-14, 10-8 ACC) on March 11 at 7 p.m. ET. Winner takes on Duke in the quarterfinals on Thursday.
A loss for Cal would severely damage their chances for an appearance in the NCAA tournament.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cal, Stanford bubble watch: How teams look in men's ACC tournament