NCAA.com | March 22, 2018 Wichita State head coach Gregg Marshall to join Thursday and Friday’s NCAA tournament coverage as guest studio analyst Share Turner Sports and CBS Sports have added Wichita State Head Coach Gregg Marshall as a guest studio analyst for coverage of the 2018 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Regional Semifinals on CBS and TBS. Marshall will join the Atlanta studio team – host Ernie Johnson and analysts Brendan Haywood, Candace Parker and Seth Davis – tonight, Thursday, March 22, and tomorrow, Friday, March 23. Marshall has spent the last 11 seasons of his 20-year head coaching career at Wichita State, where he has led the Shockers to a 286-98 (.745) record and seven consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances, highlighted by a trip to the Final Four in 2013. For the eighth consecutive year, Turner Sports and CBS Sports are providing live coverage of all 67 games from the 2018 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship across four national television networks – TBS, CBS, TNT and truTV – and NCAA March Madness Live. This year’s tournament continues with the Regional Semifinals, tonight, Thursday, March 22, at 6 p.m. on TBS and CBS. This year’s NCAA Final Four National Semifinals on Saturday, March 31, along with the National Championship on Monday, April 2, will be televised by TBS, with corresponding TeamCast presentations on TNT and TruTV. Five new members appointed to NCAA DI men's basketball committee The DI men's basketball committee will feature five new members for the 2021-22 season. The roster expands to 12 for the first time. READ MORE March Madness 365 with Andy Katz podcast NCAA.com's Andy Katz covers the newsmakers in college basketball all year long. New episodes every Tuesday. READ MORE 10 men's basketball programs who were big winners after a flurry of roster moves Here are Andy Katz's top 10 winners, based on which players returned from the portal to their previous school, which schools added a talented player or two from the portal and which players elected to return to school rather than declare for the NBA draft. READ MORE