Selection Sunday is finally here.

And with that, there's a group of NCAA Tournament bubble teams sweating big-time leading up to the selection show at 6 p.m. ET. on CBS.

While conference tournaments helped some bubble teams bolster their résumés with Quadrant 1 wins, other teams with borderline credentials weren't as fortunate.

Now, they wait. 

The NCAA selection committee will dissect each team's entire body of work from November up until now, with the difference between a No. 11 at-large seed in the NCAAs and a consolation NIT bid all too close. 

Here's a look at the 10 teams feeling the most anxiety on Selection Sunday (and where they land in USA TODAY Sports' bracketology).

 

Notre Dame

The Fighting Irish (22-10, 15-5 ACC) can credit Virginia Tech's rise for much of its fall after getting bounced by the eventual ACC tournament champion Hokies in the quarterfinals. Still, Notre Dame has a profile that's worthy of inclusion – even if it's bound to be close. One thing to like on this résumé is a Quadrant 1 win over Kentucky and the overall win total. But there are just two Quad 1 wins overall and a mediocre NET score in the 50s.

 

Texas A&M

The Aggies (23-11, 9-9 SEC) came out of nowhere to shrink the bubble and shake up the at-large bid equation with their showing in the SEC tournament – where they've ousted Auburn and Arkansas on their way to the title game. Texas A&M has won seven consecutive games, which is helping to offset an eight-game losing streak in January and February that seemingly had doomed its season. Coach Buzz Williams has a group with a résumé worthy of dancing, sporting four impressive Quadrant 1 wins and a NET score in the 50s. 

 

Rutgers

The Scarlet Knights (18-13, 12-8 Big Ten) have an atrocious NET score in the 70s and one of the worst non-conference strength of schedules in the entire country – ranking 327th. What will likely perplex the selection committee, though, are six Quadrant 1 victories. That's more than any bubble team in the last decade. If coach Steve Pikiell's team gets in, it'll be because the committee valued quality wins over its own system.