Only way I could see the Sunday game mattering is you'd need all of these:
By that third one, I mean that it doesn't change where everyone else is going if you flip the two teams. If it does, that's probably too complicated and the committee would say screw it.
Otherwise, it's been pretty clear that the last day of the conference tournaments doesn't really matter. In 2016 we lost to Kentucky in the SEC Championship Game and we were close on the seed lines going in and still ended up seeded ahead of them, for example.
- The game makes a seed line difference (like on the edge of 1/2)
- The other team is our direct competition for that spot (say it's Florida or Tennessee)
- There's no major downstream ramifications of switching the two teams on the bracket
By that third one, I mean that it doesn't change where everyone else is going if you flip the two teams. If it does, that's probably too complicated and the committee would say screw it.
Otherwise, it's been pretty clear that the last day of the conference tournaments doesn't really matter. In 2016 we lost to Kentucky in the SEC Championship Game and we were close on the seed lines going in and still ended up seeded ahead of them, for example.