Texas Tech Might Join Schools Losing to NCAA Champ Three Tourneys in Row
A total of 10 power-conference members - Boston College, Clemson, Minnesota, Mississippi, Nebraska, Northwestern, Rutgers, South Carolina, Tennessee and Washington - never have incurred an NCAA tourney setback against an opponent capturing the NCAA title that season. On the other end of the spectrum, Kansas has an all-time high 13 such reversals (1940-53-57-66-71-91-93-97 and 2002-03-12-16-18). Right behind KU are Duke (12 defeats), Utah (11), North Carolina (10) and Oklahoma (10).
Texas Tech, losing in the previous two playoffs against titlists Villanova (2018) and Virginia (2019) before 2020 tourney cancellation, earned an at-large bid this season. If Arkansas wins the national title, the Chris Beard-coached Red Raiders will have been eliminated by the eventual national champion for the third consecutive NCAA playoff. They would join the following chronological list of schools in rare category of bowing out in back-to-back-to-back tourneys against kingpin:
School | Coach (Vital Players All Three Years) | Tourney Defeats vs. NCAA Champion in Three Straight Seasons |
---|---|---|
New Mexico State | Lou Henson (Jimmy Collins/Sam Lacey) | Lost to UCLA in 1968 (Regional Semifinal), 1969 (Regional Semifinal) and 1970 (National Semifinal) |
Long Beach State | Jerry Tarkanian (no player in regular rotation all three seasons) | Lost to UCLA in 1970 (Regional Semifinal), 1971 (Regional Final) and 1972 (Regional Final) |
Louisiana State | Dale Brown (Greg Cook/Ethan Martin/Willie Sims) | Lost to Michigan State in 1979 (Regional Semifinal), Louisville in 1980 (Regional Final) and Indiana in 1981 (National Semifinal) |
Houston | Guy Lewis (Eric Dickens/Reid Gettys/Akeem Olajuwon/Michael Young) | Lost to North Carolina in 1982 (National Semifinal), North Carolina State in 1983 (National Final) and Georgetown in 1984 (National Final) |
Duke | Mike Krzyzewski (Danny Ferry/Billy King/John Smith/Quin Snyder/Kevin Strickland) | Lost to Louisville in 1986 (National Final), Indiana in 1987 (Regional Semifinal) and Kansas in 1988 (National Semifinal) |
Michigan | Steve Fisher (Juwan Howard/Ray Jackson/Jimmy King/Jalen Rose) | Lost to Duke in 1992 (National Final), North Carolina in 1993 (National Final) and Arkansas in 1994 (Regional Final) |
Two seasons ago, Texas Tech joined the following chronological list of schools - including Duke three additional times and Villanova twice - eliminated in back-to-back years in NCAA playoffs by teams winning national title those seasons:
- Dartmouth (regular-rotation players both years: George Munroe/James Olsen/Stanley Skaug) - defeated in tourney by champions Wisconsin in 1941 and Stanford in 1942
- NYU (Don Forman/Frank Mangiapane/Dolph Schayes/Sid Tanenbaum) - Oklahoma A&M in 1945 and 1946
- St. John's (Ron MacGilvray/Jack McMahon/Bob Zawoluk) - Kentucky in 1951 and Kansas in 1952
- Utah (Gary Bergen/Morris Buckwalter/Art Bunte/Curtis Jenson) - San Francisco in 1955 and 1956
- Ohio State (Gary Gearhart/John Havlicek/Bob Knight/Jerry Lucas/Mel Nowell) - Cincinnati in 1961 and 1962
- Duke (Jay Buckley/Denny Ferguson/Buzz Harrison/Ron Herbster/Jeff Mullins/Hack Tison) - Loyola of Chicago in 1963 and UCLA in 1964
- San Francisco (Joe Ellis/Ollie Johnson/Erwin Mueller) - UCLA in 1964 and 1965
- Houston (Don Chaney/Elvin Hayes/Theodis Lee/Vern Lewis/Ken Spain) - UCLA in 1967 and 1968
- Santa Clara (Dennis Awtrey/Chris Dempsey/Joe Diffey/Terry O'Brien/Bud Ogden/Ralph Ogden) - UCLA in 1968 and 1969
- Michigan (Dave Baxter/Wayman Britt/Steve Grote/John Robinson) - UCLA in 1975 and Indiana in 1976
- UNLV (Eric Booker/Paul Brozovich/Jeff Collins/Danny Tarkanian) - North Carolina State in 1983 and Georgetown in 1984
- Dayton (Dan Christie/Damon Goodwin/Ted Harris/Larry Schellenberg/Sedric Toney/Jeff Zern) - Georgetown in 1984 and Villanova in 1985
- North Carolina (Brad Daugherty/Steve Hale/Curtis Hunter/Warren Martin/Dave Popson/Kenny Smith/Ranzino Smith/Joe Wolf) - Villanova in 1985 and Louisville in 1986
- Auburn (Frank Ford/Terrance Howard/Mike Jones/Jeff Moore/Chris Morris/Gerald White) - Louisville in 1986 and Indiana in 1987
- Louisiana State (Oliver Brown/Jose Vargas/Anthony Wilson/Bernard Woodside) - Louisville in 1986 and Indiana in 1987
- Duke (Alaa Abdelnaby/Robert Brickey/Danny Ferry/Billy King/John Smith/Quin Snyder/Kevin Strickland) - Indiana in 1987 and Kansas in 1988
- Xavier (Tyrone Hill/Stan Kimbrough/Derek Strong/Jamal Walker) - Kansas in 1988 and Michigan in 1989
- Iowa (Val Barnes/Rodell Davis/Acie Earl/James Moses/Troy Skinner/Kevin Smith/Chris Street/James Winters) - Duke in 1991 and 1992
- Duke (William Avery/Shane Battier/Elton Brand/Chris Burgess/Chris Carrawell/Trajan Langdon) - Kentucky in 1998 and Connecticut in 1999
- Kansas (Nick Collison/Kirk Hinrich/Keith Langford/Aaron Miles) - Maryland in 2002 and Syracuse in 2003
- Villanova (Randy Foye/Jason Fraser/Kyle Lowry/Mike Nardi/Allan Ray/Will Sheridan) - North Carolina in 2005 and Florida in 2006
- UCLA (Alfred Aboya/Aaron Affalo/Darren Collison/Lorenzo Mata-Real/Luc Richard Mbah a Moute/Michael Roll) - Florida in 2006 and 2007
- Villanova (Dwayne Anderson/Shane Clark/Dante Cunningham/Corey Fisher/Antonio Pena/Reggie Redding/Scottie Reynolds/Corey Stokes) - Kansas in 2008 and North Carolina in 2009
- Butler (Zach Hahn/Matt Howard/Shelvin Mack/Ronald Nored/Shawn Vanzant) - Duke in 2010 and Connecticut in 2011
- Michigan State (Matt Costello/Branden Dawson/Alvin Ellis/Gavin Schilling/Travis Trice/Denzel Valentine) - Connecticut in 2014 and Duke in 2015
- Texas Tech (Jarrett Culver/Brandone Francis/David Moretti/Norense Odiase) - Villanova in 2018 and Virginia in 2019