Luis Far From Only All-American to Struggle in NCAA Tournament Competition
Granted, the Big East Conference's POY was in throes of a dismal shooting performance (3-for-17 from the floor with zero assists in 30 minutes), but questions lingered as to why All-American guard RJ Luis Jr. was benched for final five minutes of St. John's second-round defeat against Arkansas. Even before aggrieved Luis promptly entered transfer portal, it had to be doubly frustrating for coach Rick Pitino as another "Jr." A-A guard Walter Clayton Jr. excelled for Final Four-bound Florida after playing under Pitino at Iona in 2021-22 and 2022-23. Still, there is a long history of current and future All-Americans struggling in the NCAA playoffs. For instance, three-time All-American center Hunter Dickinson went scoreless for Kansas in the second half this year against Arkansas when the Jayhawks incurred an opening-round playoff defeat for the first time since 2006; All-American guard Mark Sears scored a modest six points in regional final loss for Alabama two days after exploding for 10 three-point field goals, and A-A guard Zakai Zeigler contributed only five points for Tennessee in regional final setback.
If the stars were aligned a year ago and rejection of one-and-done was in offing, they could have returned and become conquering heroes. But freshman phenoms Reed Sheppard and D.J. Wagner, after absorbing significant criticism from Kentucky zealots as frosh flops combining for only one field goal in the Wildcats' upset loss against Oakland in South Regional opener, moved on to next chapter of their hoop lives via NBA draft as undergraduate and transfer portal. If it's any consolation to Sheppard and Wagner specifically plus Big Blue Nation generally, they should be aware 1978 Final Four Most Outstanding Player Jack Givens of UK also laid a goose egg by going scoreless in his NCAA Tournament debut. In fact, Sheppard's father, Jeff, scored fewer than five points in half of his first 12 playoff games with UK before becoming 1998 Final Four Most Outstanding Player.
For what it's worth in comparing Big Blue standouts, Reed Sheppard matched consensus All-American Ralph Beard's three-point outputs in two NCAA tourney outings for UK's 1949 national champion and outscored NBA prolific point producer Devin Booker, who had only two points in his debut against Hampton in 2015 before averaging more than 22 ppg each of the past eight seasons with the Phoenix Suns. Additional fizz-free UK luminaries included celebrated center Sam Bowie scoring only two points and fouling out in UK's setback against Duke as a freshman in 1980; Michael Bradley was scoreless in two playoff games as a freshman with 1998 kingpin prior to transferring and becoming an All-American with Villanova in 2000-01; Willie Cauley-Stein going scoreless in Midwest Regional defeat against arch-rival Louisville in 2014 before contributing only two points as All-American the next year in 33 minutes of loss against Wisconsin at Final Four; freshman All-American DeMarcus Cousins contributed only five points in 2010 opener against East Tennessee State; national POY Anthony Davis was named Final Four MOP in 2012 despite his 1-of-10 FG shooting in NCAA Tournament final; Tony Delk going scoreless in 1992 playoff game against Utah and had two other tourney tilts with fewer than five points as freshman for Final Four squad; all-time great Cliff Hagan managed only four points in playoff win against St. John's in 1951; eventual All-American Vern Hatton contributed just four points in tourney setback against Iowa in 1956; Thad Jaracz, an A-A as a sophomore, was limited to two points in playoff game as senior in 1968; three-time All-American Wallace "Wah Wah" Jones scored fewer than five points in two of three tourney games as senior for 1949 NCAA kingpin; freshman All-American Michael Kidd-Gilchrist contributed only two points in second-round victory against Iowa State for 2012 champion; eventual All-American Jim Line was scoreless in 1948 Final Four outing against Holy Cross; All-American Kyle Macy was restricted to two points in 1978 playoff tilt against Miami (Ohio); eventual All-American Ron Mercer was scoreless in 1996 regional final against Wake Forest; eventual All-American Tayshaun Prince scored a total of nine points in 62 minutes in his first three playoff assignments as a freshman in 1999; All-American Frank Ramsey made only 2-of-19 FGAs in 1951 Final Four contest against Illinois; eventual two-time All-American Rick Robey was restricted to two points while fouling out of 1975 NCAA final against UCLA; eventual A-A Jack Tingle was scoreless in 1945 regional third-place outing; freshman A-A Karl-Anthony Towns scored one point in a Sweet 16 outing against West Virginia in 2015; eventual A-A Melvin Turpin tallied only two points as a freshman in 1981 opening-round defeat against UAB; freshman Tyler Ulis scored a total of five points in back-to-back 2015 Midwest Regional contests before becoming consensus first-team A-A the next year; eventual three-time NBA All-Star Antoine Walker scored only two points as a freshman in 1995 regional final loss against North Carolina; eventual All-American Kenny Walker supplied only two points in 1983 regional final loss against Louisville plus four points in 1984 Final Four setback against Georgetown, and eventual A-A Kyle Wiltjer (after transferring to Gonzaga) was scoreless in a pair of UK playoff games as a freshman in 2012.
Additional eventual MOPs joining Givens in a zilch/zero/nada category were Kansas' B.H. Born (1953), Marquette's Butch Lee (1977), UCLA's Ed O'Bannon (1995), UCLA's Richard Washington (1975) and UCLA's Sidney Wicks (1970). Born scored a total of only seven points in four playoff games the year before becoming MOP. Incredibly, Givens and Lee were blanked in the same game in their freshman season when UK mauled Marquette (76-54) in 1975 Mideast Regional opening round. O'Bannon was scoreless as a medical redshirt freshman in 1992 playoff contest against Louisville. Washington was scoreless as a freshman in 1974 West Regional semifinals when the Bruins outlasted Dayton (111-100 in triple overtime). Wicks, after one season in junior college, was blanked as a sophomore in the 1969 West Regional semifinals when UCLA defeated New Mexico State (53-38) and also went scoreless at the national semifinals when the Bruins defeated Drake (85-82).
If it was easy to excel, then everyone would do it every game. Even all-time leading playoff scorer Christian Laettner (Duke) had three tourney games with fewer than nine points. You can also ask ACC Player of the Year RJ Davis of North Carolina after he went 4-for-20 from the floor (missing all nine attempts beyond the three-point arc) in elimination loss against Alabama about the same time a former Tar Heel teammate - Arizona All-American Caleb Love - also went 0-for-9 from three-point territory. Sizzling scorers learn anew it's not always a walk in the park in postseason play. For instance, two-time national Player of the Year Zach Edey went scoreless as a freshman in 2020-21 when Purdue was eliminated by North Texas. Elsewhere, Hall of Famer Bob Cousy scored more than six points only once in his first six playoff games with Holy Cross in 1947 and 1948. UCLA All-American Keith Erickson, after erupting for 57 points in two 1965 West Regional outings, scored a total of five points in two Final Four contests. Shane Battier (Duke) became 2001 POY and MOP after scoring five or six points in four consecutive playoff contests as a sophomore and four points in a tourney tilt as freshman. Gary Bradds, a sophomore backup to national POY Jerry Lucas in 1962 before earning same award himself two years later, was scoreless for Ohio State in Mideast Regional final victory against Kentucky. Consensus national POY Trey Burke scored only six points on 2-of-12 field-goal shooting in Michigan's opening-round win against South Dakota State in 2013. Virginia's Kyle Guy was scoreless as a freshman in 2017 playoff defeat against Florida before becoming an All-American and F4 MOP two years later. Luke Hancock scored a total of 17 points in Louisville's first three playoff games in 2013 before becoming Final Four MOP that year. Kansas' Danny Manning managed only four points in 1986 Final Four setback against Duke before becoming F4 MOP and national POY two years later. Cincinnati's Kenyon Martin was scoreless as a freshman in 1997 playoff loss against Iowa State three years before becoming national POY. Indiana's Scott May, hampered by a broken left arm, scored a total of two points in 11 minutes in three 1975 NCAA playoff games before earning national POY acclaim the next season. Connecticut guard Shabazz Napier scored fewer than five points in four of his last five games as a freshman for 2011 NCAA champion before becoming a consensus first-team All-American and F4 MOP three years later. Connecticut unanimous first-team All-American Emeka Okafor was restricted to two points in 2004 regional final against Alabama before becoming F4 MOP. Houston's Akeem Olajuwon was limited to two points in a pair of 1982 playoff contests before becoming an All-American and F4 MOP two years later. Michigan State's Shawn Respert scored three points in 30 minutes against Missouri State in his first NCAA playoff game as a medical redshirt freshman in 1992 before becoming NABC national POY three years later. Michigan State's Denzel Valentine went scoreless in his playoff debut as a freshman in 2013 prior to becoming national POY in 2016. National POY Bill Walton scored only four points against Weber State in his inaugural playoff game for UCLA as a sophomore in 1972.
Former NBA sensation Clyde Drexler averaged more than 17 points per game each of his last 13 NBA seasons, but he glided to more than 17 points in just one of 11 NCAA Tournament contests for the University of Houston from 1981 through 1983 (including only four in national title game). Elsewhere, eventual All-American Luther Head scored fewer than six points in three of his first five playoff assignments with Illinois in 2002 and 2003; two-time All-American Bobby Hurley (Duke) scored fewer than six points in six of his first eight playoff games; UCLA's Marques Johnson, national POY as a senior, went scoreless as a freshman in Final Four game against North Carolina State; eventual consensus All-American Bobby Jones (North Carolina) scored a total of nine points in his first two playoff games as a sophomore; eventual NCAA unanimous All-American Stacey King contributed only two points in a pair of playoff games as an Oklahoma sophomore in 1987; two-time Kansas State All-American Dick Knostman scored fewer than four points in three of four playoff assignments as a sophomore in 1951; eventual All-American Kyle Korver made only 4-of-23 three-point field-goal attempts in his first two tourney contests (both opening-round losses) with Creighton in 2000 and 2001; eventual All-American Ty Lawson scored a total of nine points on 4-of-19 FG shooting in back-to-back playoff games for North Carolina in 2007; Quincy Lewis contributed only two points on 1-of-9 FG shooting in Minnesota's 1997 Final Four loss against Kentucky before All-American made only 3-of-19 shots from floor in 1999 playoff opener defeat against Gonzaga; eventual UCLA All-American Dave Meyers scored a total of eight points in his last three playoff games for 1973 champion; eventual North Carolina All-American Eric Montross scored one point as freshman in 1991 regional final; premier playmaker Steve Nash struggled while making only one field goal in three of five playoff contests for Santa Clara in the mid-1990s, shooting a paltry 29.2% from the floor in his postseason games; eventual Duke All-American DeMarcus Nelson scored fewer than five points in five playoff games from 2005 through 2008; Connecticut All-American A.J. Price went scoreless in 2008 opening-round loss against San Diego (injured midway through first half), and eventual Marquette A-A Jerome Whitehead supplied only two points in back-to-back games in 1977.
Two-time NBA slam-dunk champion Jason Richardson (5th pick overall in 2001) was grounded by the NCAA playoffs, going scoreless in three consecutive contests as a Michigan State freshman in 2000 before earning All-American acclaim the next year. Ditto eventual All-American Clifford Rozier with North Carolina in 1991 before transferring to Louisville. Eventual All-Americans Clyde Bradshaw (DePaul), Rakeem Christmas (Syracuse), L.J. Cryer (Baylor before transferring to Houston), Rui Hachimura (Gonzaga), Brian Evans (Indiana), Yogi Ferrell (Indiana), Collin Gillespie (Villanova), Brendan Haywood (North Carolina), Al Horford (Florida), Mark Randall (Kansas), Thomas Robinson (Kansas), Jamal Shead (Houston), Charles E. Smith IV (Georgetown), Ken Spain (Houston), Jeff Withey (Kansas) and Tyler Zeller (North Carolina) each went scoreless in two NCAA playoff games. Cole Aldrich (Kansas) had three scoreless outings as freshman for 2008 NCAA champion, eventual All-American Alan Henderson (Indiana) did likewise in consecutive playoff contests as a sophomore in 1993, Wisconsin's Frank Kaminsky went scoreless in all three playoff games as a freshman in 2012 before becoming unanimous national POY three years later for tourney runner-up, North Carolina's Luke Maye went scoreless in four playoff outings in 2016 and 2017 before becoming an A-A, eventual A-A Jason Terry (Arizona) went scoreless in a total of three tourney tilts in 1996 and 1998 and eventual A-A Scottie Wilbekin (Florida) went scoreless in three consecutive playoff outings as a freshman in 2011.
Also going scoreless in a tourney game were eventual All-Americans Grayson Allen (Duke), Justin Anderson (Virginia), Udoka Azubuike (Kansas), James Bailey (Rutgers), Keita Bates-Diop (Ohio State), Charlie Bell (Michigan State), A.L. Bennett (Oklahoma A&M), Jim Bredar (Illinois), Mikal Bridges (Villanova), Don Burness (Stanford), Sherron Collins (Kansas), Darren Collison (UCLA), Bonzie Colson (Notre Dame), Brian Cook (Illinois), Marcus Denmon (Missouri), Dan Dickau (Washington before transferring to Gonzaga), Michael Dickerson (Arizona), Chris Duhon (Duke), Mike Dunleavy Jr. (Duke), Mike Farmer (San Francisco), Danny Ferry (Duke), Kendall Gill (Illinois), Ben Gordon (Connecticut), Devonte' Graham (Kansas), Gary Grant (Michigan), Aaron Gray (Pittsburgh), Roy Hamilton (UCLA), Derek Harper (Illinois), Josh Hart (Villanova), Udonis Haslem (Florida), Joe Hassett (Providence), Mark Jackson (St. John's), Corey Kispert (Gonzaga), Ted Kitchel (Indiana), Trajan Langdon (Duke), Rudy Macklin (Louisiana State), Gale McArthur (Oklahoma A&M), Billy McCaffrey (Duke before transferring to Vanderbilt), Derrick McKey (Alabama), Brandon Miller (Alabama), Todd Mitchell (Purdue), Marcus Morris (Kansas), Kris Murray (Iowa), Dikembe Mutombo (Georgetown), Joakim Noah (Florida), Kelly Olynyk (Gonzaga), Mason Plumlee (Duke), Juan "Pepe" Sanchez (Temple), Nik Stauskas (Michigan), Earl Tatum (Marquette), Jordan Taylor (Wisconsin), Deshaun Thomas (Ohio State), Denzel Valentine (Michigan State), Mark West (Old Dominion), Terrence Williams (Louisville) and Andy Zimmer (Indiana) before Alabama freshman phenom Brandon Miller duplicated their inability to dent the scoreboard in 2023 opener against a #16 seed. Miller's goose egg was the most disappointing playoff performance by a Bama standout since eventual four-time NBA All-Star Latrell Sprewell went 2-for-15 from the floor in a reversal against North Carolina in 1992.
Ferry scored fewer than 10 points in six straight tourney tilts before averaging 20 ppg in his last 11 playoff outings; three-time All-American Grant Hill (Duke) failed to tally more than 14 points in all of his first 11 postseason outings in 1991 and 1992; Kirk Hinrich (Kansas) scored fewer than four points in playoff games as an All-American in 2002 and 2003, and Syracuse All-American Kris Joseph never scored more than 12 points in 11 NCAA playoff contests from 2009 through 2012. Sometimes it only matters when you score points. All-American Lorenzo Charles had a woeful four-point game against heavily-favored Houston in 1983 NCAA Tournament final but his second basket (dunk at buzzer) lifted North Carolina State to an upset win. Memo to UK Fans: If Sheppard had returned to UK, you shouldn't have expected him to duplicate Austin Carr's prolific playoff scoring with Notre Dame after a slow start. Carr collected only six points in a loss against Miami (Ohio) in 1969 before averaging 47.2 ppg in his next six tourney contests in 1970 and 1971.
Training Ground: VCU is First School to Lose Nine Different Head Coaches
Ryan Odom's departure to Virginia enabled Virginia Commonwealth to become the first school to lose nine head coaches over the years to other major colleges or the NBA. VCU, which moved up to NCAA Division I level in the mid-1970s, had six bench bosses bid adieu for power-conference members in the last 20 years.
Incredibly, Tulsa lost four coaches in a seven-year period from 1995 to 2001. The following list shows Idaho (11 years from 1983 to 1993), Princeton (12 years from 2000 to 2011), Murray State (14 years from 1985 to 1998), New Orleans (14 years from 1994 to 2007), Penn (15 years from 1971 to 1985), Louisiana Tech (16 years from 1974 to 1989) and Xavier (16 years from 1994 through 2009) losing four coaches in comparable short spans:
Virginia Commonwealth (nine head coaches departed for other schools) - Dana Kirk (Memphis State/1979), J.D. Barnett (Tulsa/1985), Mike Pollio (Eastern Kentucky/1989), Jeff Capel III (Oklahoma/2006), Anthony Grant (Alabama/2009), Shaka Smart (Texas/2015), Will Wade (Louisiana State/2017), Mike Rhoades (Penn State/2023), Ryan Odom (Virginia/2025)
Murray State (eight) - Ron Greene (departed for Indiana State/1985), Steve Newton (South Carolina/1991), Scott Edgar (Duquesne/1995), Mark Gottfried (Alabama/1998), Mick Cronin (Cincinnati/2006), Billy Kennedy (Texas A&M/2011), Steve Prohm (Iowa State/2015), Matt McMahon (Louisiana State/2022)
Xavier (eight) - Ned Wulk (Arizona State/1957), Bob Staak (Wake Forest/1985), Pete Gillen (Providence/1994), Skip Prosser (Wake Forest/2001), Thad Matta (Ohio State/2004), Sean Miller (Arizona/2009), Chris Mack (Louisville/2018), Sean Miller (Texas/2025)
Idaho (seven) - Dave MacMillan (Minnesota/1927), Dave Strack (Michigan/1960), Joe Cipriano (Nebraska/1963), Don Monson (Oregon/1983), Tim Floyd (New Orleans/1988), Kermit Davis (Texas A&M/1990), Larry Eustachy (Utah State/1993)
Kansas State (seven) - Jack Gardner (Utah/1953), Tex Winter (Washington/1968), Cotton Fitzsimmons (Phoenix Suns/1970), Lon Kruger (Florida/1990), Dana Altman (Creighton/1994), Bob Huggins (West Virginia/2008), Frank Martin (South Carolina/2012)
Louisiana Tech (seven) - Scotty Robertson (New Orleans Jazz/1974), J.D. Barnett (Virginia Commonwealth/1979), Andy Russo (Washington/1985), Tommy Joe Eagles (Auburn/1989), Jim Wooldridge (assistant with Chicago Bulls/1998), Michael White (Florida/2015), Eric Konkol (Tulsa/2022)
Montana (seven) - Jud Heathcote (Michigan State/1976), Jim Brandenburg (Wyoming/1978), Mike Montgomery (Stanford/1986), Stew Morrill (Colorado State/1991), Pat Kennedy (Towson/2004), Larry Krystkowiak (assistant with Milwaukee Bucks/2006), Wayne Tinkle (Oregon State/2014)
Penn (seven) - Howie Dallmar (Stanford/1954), Jack McCloskey (Wake Forest/1966), Dick Harter (Oregon/1971), Chuck Daly (assistant with Philadelphia 76ers/1977), Bob Weinhauer (Arizona State/1982), Craig Littlepage (Rutgers/1985), Fran Dunphy (Temple/2006)
Tulsa (seven) - Ken Hayes (New Mexico State/1975), Nolan Richardson Jr. (Arkansas/1985), Tubby Smith (Georgia/1995), Steve Robinson (Florida State/1997), Bill Self (Illinois/2000), Buzz Peterson (Tennessee/2001), Danny Manning (Wake Forest/2014)
Deal or No Deal: Contracts Don't Mean Much to Many NCAA DI Head Coaches
Should I stay or should I go? It's a good thing universities play in mammoth arenas because the egos of their "Pompous Pilots" wouldn't fit any other place. Reverberations will be felt for years after Arkansas' romance prying John Calipari loose from Kentucky.
Much of the excess in the canonization of coaches is perpetuated by coaches-turned-television commentators who shamelessly fawn over their former colleagues. Instead, the analysts should be more concerned about encouraging mentors to spare fans the pious blather about school loyalty and the sanctity of a contract.
Granted, it's survival of the fittest amid the offer-you-can't-refuse backdrop. But in many instances, schools have been little more than convenient steppingstones for "larger-than-life" coaches along their one-way street to success. It's understandable in many instances why mercenaries are leaving the minute they're appointed because coaches are in a distasteful "hired-to-be-fired" vocation, where a pink slip is only one losing season or poor recruiting class away.
If not about the money and perks, why did obsessive Buzz Williams reportedly file FOIA requests annually for the contracts of every basketball and football coach for every NCAA Division I public institution to discern how an agreement should be created?
Whatever the case, it's a black eye on the sport when loyalty seems to have become too much of a one-way street. At times, it makes one wonder how the bench bosses can look themselves in the mirror. Five of Tulsa's six coaches in one stretch - Nolan Richardson, Tubby Smith, Steve Robinson, Bill Self and Buzz Peterson - abandoned ship for more prestigious positions despite each of them having at least three years remaining on their deals.
More than 75 different active coaches had at least three years remaining on their pacts when leaving for greener pastures. Ryan Odom and Will Wade recently joined the following alphabetical list of mentors departing three or four schools before their contracts expired:
Steve Alford - three years remaining on contract when he left Southwest Missouri State for Iowa; four when left Iowa for New Mexico, and 10 when left New Mexico for UCLA
Chris Beard - three years remaining on contract when he left UALR for UNLV; five when left UNLV for Texas Tech, and four when left Texas Tech for Texas
John Calipari - 10 years remaining on contract when he left Massachusetts for the NBA's New Jersey Nets; four when left Memphis for Kentucky, and five when left Kentucky for Arkansas
Jim Christian - five years remaining on contract when he left Kent State for Texas Christian; three when left TCU for Ohio University, and three when left Ohio University for Boston College
Trent Johnson - five years remaining on contract when he left Nevada for Stanford; one when left Stanford for Louisiana State, and two when left LSU for Texas Christian
Lon Kruger - four years remaining on contract when he left Kansas State for Florida; five when left Florida for Illinois; four when left Illinois for the Atlanta Hawks, and two when left UNLV for Oklahoma
Cuonzo Martin - four years remaining on contract when he left Missouri State for Tennessee; two when left Tennessee for California, and four when left Cal for Missouri
Ritchie McKay - two years remaining on contract when he left Portland State for Colorado State; four when left Colorado State for Oregon State, and four when left Oregon State for New Mexico
Ryan Odom - two years remaining on contract when he left UMBC for Utah State; three when left Utah State for Virginia Commonwealth, and four when left Virginia Commonwealth for Virginia
Kevin O'Neill - three years remaining on contract when he left Marquette for Tennessee; four when left Tennessee for Northwestern, and two when left Northwestern for the New York Knicks (assistant)
Buzz Peterson - nine years remaining on contract when he left Appalachian State for Tulsa; four when left Tulsa for Tennessee; two when left Coastal Carolina for the Charlotte Bobcats (director of player personnel), and four when left Appalachian State again for UNC Wilmington
Rick Pitino - five years remaining on contract when he left Providence for New York Knicks; three when left Kentucky for Boston Celtics, and two when left Iona for St. John's
Bill Self - two years remaining on contract when he left Oral Roberts for Tulsa; five when left Tulsa for Illinois, and five when left Illinois for Kansas
Kyle Smith - left Columbia for San Francisco; left San Francisco for Washington State, and three years remaining on contract when left Washington State for Stanford
Tubby Smith - three years remaining on contract when he left Tulsa for Georgia; six when left Georgia for Kentucky; four when left Kentucky for Minnesota, and three when left Texas Tech for Memphis
Mark Turgeon - two years remaining on contract when he left Jacksonville State for Wichita State; nine when left Wichita State for Texas A&M, and four when left Texas A&M for Maryland
Will Wade - four years remaining on contract when he left Chattanooga for Virginia Commonwealth; seven when left Virginia Commonwealth for Louisiana State, and four when left McNeese for North Carolina State
Kevin Willard - left Iona for Seton Hall; three years remaining on contract when left Seton Hall for Maryland, and four when left Maryland for Villanova
Buzz Williams - involved in lawsuit with New Orleans when he left to become Marquette assistant; six years remaining on contract when left Marquette for Virginia Tech; four when left Virginia Tech for Texas A&M, and three when left Texas A&M for Maryland
Deal or no deal? The length of contracts doesn't seem to carry any weight as a factor in the equation as long as your brain cells or ethical standards don't put any stock into length of an existing pact. Dusty May had nine years remaining on his pact with FAU upon departing for Michigan. Following is an alphabetical list detailing coaches reportedly still having contractual obligations of more than five seasons when they left a school for greener pastures during their careers:
- Steve Alford (10 years remaining on contract) - left New Mexico (following 2012-13 season)/hired by UCLA
- Rick Barnes (6) - Clemson (1997-98)/Texas
- John Beilein (6) - Richmond (2001-02)/West Virginia
- Tony Bennett (6) - Washington State (2008-09)/Virginia
- Dave Bliss (6) - New Mexico (1998-99)/Baylor
- Mike Brey (7) - Delaware (1999-00)/Notre Dame
- John Calipari (10) - Massachusetts (1995-96)/New Jersey Nets
- Jeff Capel III (6) - Virginia Commonwealth (2005-06)/Oklahoma
- Tom Crean (9) - Marquette (2007-08)/Indiana
- Keith Dambrot (6) - Akron (2016-17)/Duquesne
- Kermit Davis (6) - Middle Tennessee State (2017-18)/Mississippi
- Jamie Dixon (7) - Pittsburgh (2015-16)/Texas Christian
- Matt Doherty (6) - Florida Atlantic (2005-06)/Southern Methodist
- Bryce Drew (7) - Valparaiso (2015-16)/Vanderbilt
- Larry Eustachy (6) - Utah State (1997-98)/Iowa State
- Dennis Felton (6) - Western Kentucky (2002-03)/Georgia
- Tim Floyd (6) - New Orleans (1993-94)/Iowa State
- Tim Floyd (8) - Iowa State (1997-98)/Chicago Bulls
- Travis Ford (7) - Massachusetts (2007-08)/Oklahoma State
- Billy Gillispie (8) - Texas A&M (2006-07)/Kentucky
- Brian Gregory (7) - Dayton (2010-11)/Georgia Tech
- Leonard Hamilton (7) - Miami (Fla.) (1999-00)/Washington Wizards
- Fred Hoiberg (8) - Iowa State (2014-15)/Chicago Bulls
- Chris Holtmann (8) - Butler (2016-17)/Ohio State
- Ben Howland (6) - Pittsburgh (2002-03)/UCLA
- Danny Hurley (6) - Rhode Island (2017-18)/Connecticut
- Johnny Jones (6) - North Texas (2011-12)/Louisiana State
- Jeff Lebo (8) - Chattanooga (2003-04)/Auburn
- Gregg Marshall (8) - Winthrop (2006-07)/Wichita State
- Thad Matta (9) - Xavier (2003-04)/Ohio State
- Dusty May (9) - Florida Atlantic (2023-24)/Michigan
- Fran McCaffery (7) - Siena (2009-10)/Iowa
- Bucky McMillan (at least 6 after extension in 2024) - Samford (2024-25)/Texas A&M
- Sean Miller (9) - Xavier (2008-09)/Arizona
- Wes Miller (8) - UNC Greensboro (2020-21)/Cincinnati
- Paul Mills (6) - Oral Roberts (2022-23)/Wichita State
- Dan Monson (10) - Gonzaga (1998-99)/Minnesota
- Lute Olson (7) - Iowa (1982-83)/Arizona
- Buzz Peterson (9) - Appalachian State (1999-00)/Tulsa
- Skip Prosser (6) - Xavier (2000-01)/Wake Forest
- Oliver Purnell (6) - Clemson (2009-10)/DePaul
- Mike Rice Jr. (7) - Robert Morris (2009-10)/Rutgers
- Steve Robinson (7) - Tulsa (1996-97)/Florida State
- Kelvin Sampson (6) - Washington State (1993-94)/Oklahoma
- Shaka Smart (8) - Virginia Commonwealth (2014-15)/Texas
- Tubby Smith (6) - Georgia (1996-97)/Kentucky
- Brad Stevens (9) - Butler (2012-13)/Boston Celtics
- Mark Turgeon (9) - Wichita State (2006-07)/Texas A&M
- Brad Underwood (6) - Stephen F. Austin (2015-16)/Oklahoma State
- Will Wade (7) - Virginia Commonwealth (2016-17)/Louisiana State
- Buzz Williams (6) - Marquette (2013-14)/Virginia Tech
One-in-Five Chance: No First Four Participant Registered Win in First Round
Only 20% of Preliminary Round/First Four winners went on to post another victory in their next assignment (15-of-75 from 1983 through 2025; no round of such competition from 1985 through 2000). In 2023, it marked the first time two teams coming off a Preliminary Round/First Four success also emerged victorious in their next outing. A four-year streak if subsequent First Four success was halted this season. Following is a chronological list of the 15 Preliminary Round/First Four participants going on to win a first-round game in regular 64-team bracket:
| Year | Regional | NCAA First-Round Victory for Preliminary Round/First Four Winner |
|---|---|---|
| 1983 | West | #12 Princeton 56 (Robinson/Simkus game-high 20 points), #5 Oklahoma State 53 (Clark 15) |
| 1984 | East | #12 Richmond 72 (Newman 26), #5 Auburn 71 (Barkley 23) |
| 2011 | South | #11 Virginia Commonwealth 74 (Rozzell 26), #6 Georgetown 56 (Thompson 24) |
| 2012 | Midwest | #12 South Florida 58 (Collins/Rudd Jr. 17), #5 Temple 44 (Wyatt 19) |
| 2013 | West | #13 La Salle 63 (Wright 21), #4 Kansas State 61 (Henrique/Southwell 17) |
| 2014 | Midwest | #11 Tennessee 86 (Stokes 26), #6 Massachusetts 67 (Esho/Williams 12) |
| 2015 | East | #11 Dayton 66 (Pierre 20), #6 Providence 53 (Henton 18) |
| 2016 | South | #11 Wichita State 65 (VanVleet 16), #6 Arizona 55 (Allen 11) |
| 2017 | East | #11 Southern California 66 (Stewart 22), #6 Southern Methodist 65 (Ojeleye 24) |
| 2018 | Midwest | #11 Syracuse 57 (Dolezaj 17), #6 Texas Christian 52 (Williams 14) |
| 2021 | East | #11 UCLA 73 (Juzang 27), #6 Brigham Young 62 (Barcello 20) |
| 2022 | West | #11 Notre Dame 78 (Ryan 29), #6 Alabama 64 (Ellis 16) |
| 2023 | Midwest | #11 Pittsburgh 59 (Cummings 13), #6 Iowa State 41 (Holmes/Kascheur 12) |
| 2023 | East | #16 Fairleigh Dickinson 63 (Moore 19), #1 Purdue 58 (Edey 21) |
| 2024 | South | #10 Colorado 102 (Simpson 23), #7 Florida 100 (Clayton 33) |
NOTE: VCU '11 and UCLA '21 advanced to Final Four. La Salle '13, Tennessee '14 and Syracuse '18 reached Sweet 16.
Shock Treatment: No Bottom of Bracket Racket For First Time Since 2017
In the first six years of the NCAA tourney seeding process from 1979 through 1984 when the playoff field ranged from 40 to 53 teams, the bottom of the bracket racket included a total of 13 No. 1 and 2 seeds losing their openers. Notwithstanding the misleading media's spin, the NCAA tourney hasn't been saturated with authentic upsets since the playoff field expanded to at least 64 teams in 1985. On the other hand, this year marked only the sixth time in that span failing to provide a first-round shocker from the bottom of the bracket (1994, 2000, 2004, 2007, 2017 and 2025).
Teams seeded 13th or worse defeated teams seeded among the top four in a regional a total of 68 times in the last 40 tourneys. At least Kentucky's stunning reversals against Saint Peter's and Oakland weren't as ugly as a couple of sorry SEC setbacks when Navy overwhelmed LSU by 23 points in 1985 and Siena smothered Vanderbilt by 21 in 2008.
Arizona's similar shocking defeat against Santa Clara in 1993 materialized despite the Wildcats reeling off 25 unanswered points in a stretch bridging the last five minutes of the first half and the first five minutes of the second half. Gary Waters is the only coach to win two opening-round games in this category while in charge of two different schools (Kent State in 2001 and Cleveland State in 2009).
Until Virginia's 1 vs. 16 debacle seven years ago, Michigan State was the only #2 seed to lose its playoff opener after spending a portion of the regular season atop the AP national poll. Following is a rundown of the first 67 first-round knockouts by the bottom of the bracket (#13 through #16 seeds) since the NCAA field expanded to at least 64 teams in 1985:
#16 seed (2 victories)
| Year | #16 Seed Winner | Coach | #1 Seed Loser | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Maryland-Baltimore County | Ryan Odom | Virginia | 74-54 |
| 2023 | Fairleigh Dickinson | Tobin Anderson | Purdue | 63-58 |
#15 seed (11 victories)
| Year | #15 Seed Winner | Coach | #2 Seed Loser | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991 | Richmond | Dick Tarrant | Syracuse | 73-69 |
| 1993 | Santa Clara | Dick Davey | Arizona | 64-61 |
| 1997 | Coppin State | Ron "Fang" Mitchell | South Carolina | 78-65 |
| 2001 | Hampton | Steve Merfeld | Iowa State | 58-57 |
| 2012 | Lehigh | Dr. Brett Reed | Duke | 75-70 |
| 2012 | Norfolk State | Anthony Evans | Missouri | 86-84 |
| 2013 | Florida Gulf Coast | Andy Enfield | Georgetown | 78-68 |
| 2016 | Middle Tennessee State | Kermit Davis Jr. | Michigan State | 90-81 |
| 2021 | Oral Roberts | Paul Mills | Ohio State | 75-72 (OT) |
| 2022 | Saint Peter's | Shaheen Holloway | Kentucky | 85-79 (OT) |
| 2023 | Princeton | Mitch Henderson | Arizona | 59-55 |
#14 seed (22 victories)
#13 seed (33 victories)
Transferring Talent: > 60% of A-As Last Two Years Began Careers Elsewhere
"Stepping onto a brand new path is difficult, but not more difficult than remaining in a situation which is not nurturing." - Maya Angelou
Whether schools are simply filling out a roster with a backup or chasing a pot of gold at the end of a Larry Bird-created rainbow jumper, they seem to be looking around every corner and under every rock for a transfer. Bird left a potential powerhouse at Indiana but never played for the Hoosiers before becoming national player of the year with Indiana State. Bird became a three-time All-American in the late 1970s not long after a 12-season span from 1961-62 through 1972-73 when there was exactly zero A-As who previously played varsity basketball for another four-year university. These days, wining and dining transfers has become more critical than wooing prize high school prospects. Incredibly, the transfer portal led to 22 of the total of 34 All-Americans over past two seasons transferring from other schools - 13 of them via mid-major schools comparable to Indiana State (Colorado State/East Carolina/George Mason/Illinois State/Iona/Massachusetts/Morehead State/New Mexico/North Florida/Northern Colorado/Ohio University/South Dakota State/Tulsa).
How many All-Americans over the years actually played varsity basketball for two different four-year schools? The average was about one every two years until the transfer portal yielded five such A-As each of the previous two campaigns prior to exploding in volume this campaign. Duke and Kansas, two of the five schools with the most All-Americans in history, had their first transfer in that category during the previous decade - Duke guard Seth Curry (Liberty) and KU center Jeff Withey (Arizona). Of course, the premier player in this category in 2021-22 was Kentucky center Oscar Tshiebwe, who transferred from West Virginia after averaging 10.6 ppg and 8.9 rpg for the Mountaineers in 2019-20 and first semester of 2020-21. Tshiebwe became the first transfer ever to become national player of the year after competing in games with another four-year school. He was the first player to average more than 15 rpg since Alcorn State's Larry Smith in 1979-80 (15.1). UK lost five players who became A-As elsewhere including one of five such transfers at Gonzaga.
Mississippi State lost a transfer All-American when Ben Hansbrough departed for Notre Dame but the Bulldogs had their own player in this category earlier this century after Lawrence Roberts left Baylor. In an era when transfers have almost become an obsession for various reasons, there was a modest uptick in the ratio with seven All-Americans in this category in a six-year span from 2000 through 2005 before Louisville's Luke Hancock (George Mason) became Final Four Most Outstanding Player. The 10 transfer All-Americans this year - including JT (Toppin), LJ (Cryer), PJ (Haggerty) and RJ (Luis) - joined the following alphabetical list of A-As who began their collegiate careers at another four-year school:
*Attended junior college between four-year school stints.
NOTES: Burgess was an Air Force veteran. . . . Clayton, Haggerty, Lanier, Luis, Tonje and Toppin increased the total to 27 of All-Americans who previously played for a mid-major or non-Division I school.
College Exam: Day #7 Featuring One-and-Only NCAA Tourney Trivia Challenge
Unless you're still busy hoarding toilet paper, seeking translator to figure out what Plagiarist Biledumb is talking about or cowering in fetal position because of alleged impending climate-change catastrophe, it's your opportunity to start taking online tests for 23 quarantined days symbolic of normal time frame from Selection Sunday to Monday evening championship contest.
We need something to occupy our minds during quarantine from much of the invective-infected #MessMedia. Emphasizing a "one-and-only" theme for a "one-and-only" event, here is Day 7 of a treasure-trove of tantalizing NCAA Tournament trivia questions from CollegeHoopedia.com tracking the only coach, conference, player or school to be linked to a distinguished or dubious achievement (click here for answers or conduct research digesting historical morsels in CollegeHoopedia's year-by-year highlights):
1. Name the only coach to grace the NCAA playoffs in five decades. Hint: He achieved the feat with four different universities.
2. Who is the only player to score a team-high point total in his prominent school's first NCAA Tournament victory the same year he earned All-American honors as a quarterback for a national football champion? Hint: He later became executive director of the Pro Football Hall of Fame after coaching two different universities when they participated in the Rose Bowl.
3. Who is the only individual to be more than 10 games below .500 in his initial campaign as a major-college head coach and subsequently guide a team to a national championship? Hint: He won his last 10 NCAA Tournament games decided by fewer than five points. In his last two playoff appearances with the former titlist, it became the only school to receive at-large bids in back-to-back years with as many as 14 defeats entering the tourney.
4. Name the only school to be denied three NCAA Tournament berths because it was on probation. Hint: The three times the school didn't participate in the national playoffs because of NCAA probation were from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s.
5. Who was the only player to score more than 40 points in his first tournament game? Hint: The university left the Division I level for 28 years and was UCLA's first victim when the Bruins started a 38-game winning streak in the playoffs. He and his twin brother were infielders together with the Pittsburgh Pirates.
6. Name the only school to deploy just five players in an entire championship game. Hint: The school, participating in the playoffs for the first time that year, set a record for largest winning margin with a 69-point victory in its first-round game. The school is the only former NCAA champion never to compete against legendary coaches Bob Knight and Dean Smith.
7. Who is the only individual to go as many as 25 years between coaching teams in the NCAA Tournament? Hint: His first two playoff teams were eliminated in their tourney openers by eventual championship game participants.
8. Name the only school to have more than one two-time first-team All-American never reach the Final Four. Hint: One of the players is the only three-time first-team All-America to fail to appear in the NCAA playoffs. The school is the only top four seed to lose a first-round game by more than 20 points.
9. Who is the only player to have season scoring averages of fewer than 10 points per game in back-to-back years he was named to the All-NCAA Tournament team? Hint: His school reached the national championship game each season and had two different centers named Final Four Most Outstanding Player. Also, he is part of the only set of brothers to play together in two NCAA title games. One of their teammates became a marquee coach.
10. Who is the only individual to play for an NCAA basketball champion and in a major league baseball World Series? Hint: He was primarily a relief pitcher for six different teams in 13 big league seasons from 1975 through 1989.
Answers (Day 7)
Day 6 Questions and Answers
Day 5 Questions and Answers
Day 4 Questions and Answers
Day 3 Questions and Answers
Day 2 Questions and Answers
Day 1 Questions and Answers
Exit Strategy: > 10 Playoff Coaches Seek Greener Pastures Third Year in Row
By the time March Madness reached Elite Eight competition, it already became the sixth consecutive campaign a minimum of seven NCAA tourney coaches capitalized on notoriety to move on to new outposts (Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, North Carolina State, Texas, Villanova, Virginia and Xavier). They all think duplicating what Michigan did in hiring Dusty May after last season can happen to them (losing 24 games one season before reaching Sweet 16 the next year). Virginia Commonwealth, after losing a stunning number of six coaches in last 20 years on heels of playoff appearance, lured a playoff pilot of its own by negotiating deal with Bryant's Phil Martelli Jr.
Maddeningly to many jilted fans, an average of four coaches per tourney left NCAA playoff teams since seeding started in 1979. In every year since 1968, directing a team to the NCAA Tournament has been a springboard to what many believed was bigger-and-better things at a "poach-a-coach" school. Connecticut has had two mentors in this category go on to direct the Huskies to national crowns (Jim Calhoun from Northeastern and Danny Hurley from Rhode Island).
"Movin' On Up" doesn't always work out. On the heels of a 20-win campaign, ACC-bound SMU fired Rob Lanier after only two seasons upon him leaving Georgia State. Time will tell for Ed Cooley after he left a "lifetime" contract with Providence two years ago for more dough to clean up the mess another All-American (Patrick Ewing) left behind at Georgetown. Following are head coaches since the tourney field expanded to at least 64 entrants in 1985 who had a change of heart and accepted similar job at a different major college promptly after directing team to the NCAA playoffs:
1985 (six) - J.D. Barnett (Virginia Commonwealth to Tulsa), Craig Littlepage (Penn to Rutgers), Nolan Richardson Jr. (Tulsa to Arkansas), Andy Russo (Louisiana Tech to Washington), Tom Schneider (Lehigh to Penn), Eddie Sutton (Arkansas to Kentucky)
1986 (four) - Jim Calhoun (Northeastern to Connecticut), Paul Evans (Navy to Pittsburgh), Clem Haskins (Western Kentucky to Minnesota), George Raveling (Iowa to Southern California)
1987 (two) - Jim Brandenburg (Wyoming to San Diego State), Benny Dees (New Orleans to Wyoming)
1988 (two) - Dave Bliss (Southern Methodist to New Mexico), Tom Penders (Rhode Island to Texas)
1989 (four) - Tommy Joe Eagles (Louisiana Tech to Auburn), Bill Frieder (Michigan to Arizona State), Rick Majerus (Ball State to Utah), Lynn Nance (Saint Mary's to Washington)
1990 (five) - Kermit Davis Jr. (Idaho to Texas A&M), Mike Jarvis (Boston University to George Washington), Lon Kruger (Kansas State to Florida), Mike Newell (UALR to Lamar), Les Robinson (East Tennessee State to North Carolina State)
1991 (four) - Tony Barone (Creighton to Texas A&M), Jim Molinari (Northern Illinois to Bradley), Stew Morrill (Montana to Colorado State), Steve Newton (Murray State to South Carolina)
1992 (one) - Charlie Spoonhour (Southwest Missouri State to Saint Louis)
1993 (one) - Eddie Fogler (Vanderbilt to South Carolina)
1994 (eight) - Tom Asbury (Pepperdine to Kansas State), Rick Barnes (Providence to Clemson), Jeff Capel Jr. (North Carolina A&T to Old Dominion), Kevin O'Neill (Marquette to Tennessee), Skip Prosser (Loyola MD to Xavier), Kelvin Sampson (Washington State to Oklahoma), Ralph Willard (Western Kentucky to Pittsburgh), Jim Wooldridge (Southwest Texas State to Louisiana Tech)
1995 (three) - Dick Bennett (Wisconsin-Green Bay to Wisconsin), Scott Edgar (Murray State to Duquesne), Tubby Smith (Tulsa to Georgia)
1996 (one) - Ben Braun (Eastern Michigan to California)
1997 (five) - Ernie Kent (Saint Mary's to Oregon), Mack McCarthy (UT-Chattanooga to Virginia Commonwealth), Jim O'Brien (Boston College to Ohio State), Steve Robinson (Tulsa to Florida State), Al Skinner (Rhode Island to Boston College), Tubby Smith (Georgia to Kentucky)
1998 (seven) - Rick Barnes (Clemson to Texas), Larry Eustachy (Utah State to Iowa State), Rob Evans (Mississippi to Arizona State), Mark Gottfried (Murray State to Alabama), Mike Jarvis (George Washington to St. John's), Melvin Watkins (UNC Charlotte to Texas A&M), Tim Welsh (Iona to Providence)
1999 (four) - Steve Alford (Southwest Missouri State to Iowa), Dave Bliss (New Mexico to Baylor), Jim Harrick (Rhode Island to Georgia), Dan Monson (Gonzaga to Minnesota)
2000 (four) - Barry Collier (Butler to Nebraska), Ray McCallum (Ball State) to Houston), Buzz Peterson (Appalachian State to Tulsa), Bill Self (Tulsa to Illinois)
2001 (five) - Thad Matta (Butler to Xavier), Dave Odom (Wake Forest to South Carolina), Skip Prosser (Xavier to Wake Forest), Gary Waters (Kent State to Rutgers), Jay Wright (Hofstra to Villanova)
2002 (three) - Stan Heath (Kent State to Arkansas), Steve Merfeld (Hampton to Evansville), Jerry Wainwright (UNC Wilmington to Richmond)
2003 (eight) - Cy Alexander (South Carolina State to Tennessee State), Ed DeChellis (East Tennessee State to Penn State), Dennis Felton (Western Kentucky to Georgia), Ben Howland (Pittsburgh to UCLA), Oliver Purnell (Dayton to Clemson), Bill Self (Illinois to Kansas), Dereck Whittenburg (Wagner to Fordham), Roy Williams (Kansas to North Carolina)
2004 (eight) - Jessie Evans (Louisiana-Lafayette to San Francisco), Ray Giacoletti (Eastern Washington to Utah), Billy Gillispie (Texas-El Paso to Texas A&M), Trent Johnson (Nevada to Stanford), Thad Matta (Xavier to Ohio State), Matt Painter (Southern Illinois to Purdue), Joe Scott (Air Force to Princeton), John Thompson III (Princeton to Georgetown)
2005 (two) - Travis Ford (Eastern Kentucky to Massachusetts), Bruce Pearl (Wisconsin-Milwaukee to Tennessee)
2006 (eight) - Mike Anderson (UAB to Missouri), Brad Brownell (UNC Wilmington to Wright State), Mick Cronin (Murray State to Cincinnati), Mike Davis (Indiana to UAB), Fran Dunphy (Penn to Temple), Greg McDermott (Northern Iowa to Iowa State), Kelvin Sampson (Oklahoma to Indiana), Herb Sendek (North Carolina State to Arizona State)
2007 (four) - Ronnie Arrow (Texas A&M-Corpus Christi to South Alabama), Todd Lickliter (Butler to Iowa), Billy Gillispie (Texas A&M to Kentucky), Gregg Marshall (Winthrop to Wichita State)
2008 (five) - Jim Christian (Kent State to Texas Christian), Tom Crean (Marquette to Indiana), Keno Davis (Drake to Providence), Darrin Horn (Western Kentucky to South Carolina), Trent Johnson (Stanford to Louisiana State)
2009 (three) - John Calipari (Memphis to Kentucky), Anthony Grant (Virginia Commonwealth to Alabama), Sean Miller (Xavier to Arizona)
2010 (five) - Tony Barbee (Texas-El Paso to Auburn), Steve Donahue (Cornell to Boston College), Bob Marlin (Sam Houston State to Louisiana-Lafayette), Fran McCaffery (Siena to Iowa), Oliver Purnell (Clemson to DePaul).
2011 (seven) - Mike Anderson (Missouri to Arkansas), Patrick Chambers (Boston University to Penn State), Ed DeChellis (Penn State to Navy), Sydney Johnson (Princeton to Fairfield), Lon Kruger (UNLV to Oklahoma), Jim Larranaga (George Mason to Miami FL), Mark Turgeon (Texas A&M to Maryland)
2012 (six) - Larry Eustachy (Southern Mississippi to Colorado State), Jim Ferry (Long Island to Duquesne), John Groce (Ohio University to Illinois), Frank Martin (Kansas State to South Carolina), Tim Miles (Colorado State to Nebraska), Sean Woods (Mississippi Valley State to Morehead State)
2013 (two) - Steve Alford (New Mexico to UCLA), Andy Enfield (Florida Gulf Coast to Southern California)
2014 (three) - Danny Manning (Tulsa to Wake Forest), Cuonzo Martin (Tennessee to California), Saul Phillips (North Dakota State to Ohio University)
2015 (two) - Bobby Hurley (Buffalo to Arizona State), Shaka Smart (Virginia Commonwealth to Texas)
2016 (seven) - Chris Beard (UALR to UNLV to Texas Tech), Jamie Dixon (Pittsburgh to Texas Christian), Scott Nagy (South Dakota State to Wright State), Steve Pikiell (Stony Brook to Rutgers), Tubby Smith (Texas Tech to Memphis), Kevin Stallings (Vanderbilt to Pittsburgh), Brad Underwood (Stephen F. Austin to Oklahoma State)
2017 (six) - Chris Holtmann (Butler to Ohio State), Kevin Keatts (UNC Wilmington to North Carolina State), Archie Miller (Dayton to Indiana), Brad Underwood (Oklahoma State to Illinois), Will Wade (Virginia Commonwealth to Louisiana State), Paul Weir (New Mexico State to New Mexico)
2018 (three) - Mike Davis (Texas Southern to Detroit), Danny Hurley (Rhode Island to Connecticut), Chris Mack (Xavier to Louisville)
2019 (seven) - John Brannen (Northern Kentucky to Cincinnati), Mick Cronin (Cincinnati to UCLA), Ron Hunter (Georgia State to Tulane), Eric Musselman (Nevada to Arkansas), Nate Oats (Buffalo to Alabama), Buzz Williams (Virginia Tech to Texas A&M), Mike Young (Wofford to Virginia Tech)
2021 (eight) - Chris Beard (Texas Tech to Texas), Joe Golding (Abilene Christian to Texas-El Paso), Pat Kelsey (Winthrop to College of Charleston), Shantay Legans (Eastern Washington to Portland), Wes Miller (UNC Greensboro to Cincinnati), Porter Moser (Loyola of Chicago to Oklahoma), Shaka Smart (Texas to Marquette), Craig Smith (Utah State to Utah)
2022 (seven) - Todd Golden (San Francisco to Florida), Shaheen Holloway (Saint Peter's to Seton Hall), Chris Jans (New Mexico State to Mississippi State), Rob Lanier (Georgia State to Southern Methodist), Matt McMahon (Murray State to Louisiana State), Lamont Paris (Chattanooga to South Carolina), Kevin Willard (Seton Hall to Maryland)
2023 (11) - Amir Abdur-Rahim (Kennesaw State to South Florida), Tobin Anderson (Fairleigh Dickinson to Iona), Chris Beard (Texas* to Mississippi), Ed Cooley (Providence to Georgetown), Steve Lutz (Texas A&M-Corpus Christi to Western Kentucky), Paul Mills (Oral Roberts to Wichita State), Ryan Odom (Utah State to Virginia Commonwealth), Rick Pitino (Iona to St. John's), Mike Rhoades (Virginia Commonwealth to Penn State), Micah Shrewsberry (Penn State to Notre Dame), Danny Sprinkle (Montana State to Utah State)
2024 (11) - Mark Byington (James Madison to Vanderbilt), John Calipari (Kentucky to Arkansas), Darian DeVries (Drake to West Virginia), Pat Kelsey (College of Charleston to Louisville), Steve Lutz (Western Kentucky to Oklahoma State), Dusty May (Florida Atlantic to Michigan), Dan Monson (Long Beach State to Eastern Washington), Mark Pope (Brigham Young to Kentucky), Kyle Smith (Washington State to Stanford), Preston Spradlin (Morehead State to James Madison), Danny Sprinkle (Utah State to Washington)
2025 (12) - Lennie Acuff (Lipscomb to Samford), Alan Huss (High Point to Creighton as head-coach-in-waiting), Phil Martelli Jr. (Bryant to Virginia Commonwealth), Ben McCollum (Drake to Iowa), Niko Medved (Colorado State to Minnesota), Sean Miller (Xavier to Texas), Ryan Odom (Virginia Commonwealth to Virginia), Eric Olen (UC San Diego to New Mexico), Richard Pitino (New Mexico to Xavier), Will Wade (McNeese to North Carolina State), Kevin Willard (Maryland to Villanova), Buzz Williams (Texas A&M to Maryland)
*Fired in mid-season.
Bumpy Ride: Fifteen Former NCAA Titlists Lost Playoff Game By > 28 Points
North Carolina, trailing by 18 points at halftime in eventual seven-point setback against Ole Miss in first round, had researchers scurrying at intermission to discern the Tar Heels' most-lopsided loss in NCAA playoff history. Well, the Tar Heels crashed and burned against Purdue by 27 points at the 1969 Final Four.
In the second round, Baylor, four years removed from an NCAA title, was dumped by Duke by 23 points. An embarrassing NCAA Tournament defeat is almost inevitable. For instance, it was a jolt to Indiana fans when the Hoosiers were smothered by Saint Mary's, 82-53, in the first round of the 2022 East Regional. But their ardent followers could take some solace in fact that 13 other former champions lost an NCAA Tournament game by as many points over the years.
On the other end of the setback spectrum, is a traditional blueblood other than Connecticut, Duke, Georgetown, Kansas, Kentucky, North Carolina, UCLA or Villanova the only former national kingpin never to lose an NCAA playoff game by fewer than 15 points? No, but the ex-champ holding this distinction boasts school colors of Blue and Gold. It's La Salle, the 1954 titlist which subsequently lost three separate tourney games by 14 points.
Ohio State is the lone power-conference member in this group never to incur an NCAA playoff setback by at least 20 points. Former NCAA champions Wyoming (49 points) and UConn (47) sustained the worst reversals on the following list of most-lopsided losses in NCAA Tournament competition among the 37 former titlists:
| Previous Champion | Largest Margin | Opponent(s) | Most-Lopsided NCAA Tournament Loss(es) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arizona | 39 | #1 seed Louisville | 103-64 in 2009 Midwest Regional semifinal |
| Arkansas | 35 | Cincinnati | 97-62 in 1958 Midwest Regional third-place contest |
| Baylor | 23 | #1 Duke | 89-66 in 2025 East Regional second round |
| California | 20 | Ohio State/#1 Connecticut | 75-55 in 1960 national final/74-54 in 1990 East Regional second round |
| Cincinnati | 24 | #5 Illinois | 92-68 in 2004 Atlanta Regional second round |
| City College of New York | 15 | Holy Cross | 60-45 in 1947 national semifinal |
| Connecticut | 47 | Duke | 101-54 in 1964 East Regional final |
| Duke | 30 | #1 UNLV | 103-73 in 1990 national final |
| Florida | 23 | #3 Michigan | 108-85 in 1988 West Regional second round |
| Georgetown | 24 | #1 Massachusetts | 86-62 in 1996 East Regional final |
| Holy Cross | 39 | #1 Oregon | 91-52 in 2016 West Regional first round |
| Indiana | 29 | #5 Saint Mary's | 82-53 in 2022 East Regional first round |
| Kansas | 34 | #6 Southern California | 85-51 in 2021 West Regional second round |
| Kentucky | 24 | Western Kentucky | 107-83 in 1971 Mideast Regional semifinal |
| La Salle | 14 | San Francisco/Columbia/#9 Wichita State | 77-63 in 1955 NCAA final/83-69 in 1968 East Regional first round/72-58 in 2013 West Regional semifinal |
| Louisville | 23 | #1 North Carolina | 97-74 in 1997 East Regional final |
| Loyola of Chicago | 19 | Western Kentucky | 105-86 in 1966 Mideast Regional first round |
| Marquette | 33 | #2 Kansas | 94-61 in 2003 national semifinal |
| Maryland | 35 | #3 Indiana/#6 UCLA | 99-64 in 1981 Mideast Regional second round/105-70 in 2000 Midwest Regional second round |
| Michigan | 34 | #11 Loyola Marymount | 149-115 in 1990 West Regional second round |
| Michigan State | 20 | #1 Duke/#1 Kansas | 81-61 in 2015 national semifinal/90-70 in 2017 Midwest Regional second round |
| North Carolina | 27 | Purdue | 92-65 in 1969 national semifinal |
| North Carolina State | 21 | #2 Texas | 75-54 in 2006 Atlanta Regional second round |
| Ohio State | 18 | #7 Georgetown | 70-52 in 2006 Minneapolis Regional second round |
| Oklahoma State | 24 | Kansas State | 68-44 in 1951 West Regional final |
| Oregon | 21 | California | 70-49 in 1960 West Regional final |
| San Francisco | 26 | UNLV | 121-95 in 1977 West Regional first round |
| Stanford | 23 | #1 Kansas/#9 Mississippi State | 86-63 in 2002 Midwest Regional second round/93-70 in 2005 Austin Regional first round |
| Syracuse | 29 | #4 Kansas | 87-58 in 2001 Midwest Regional second round |
| Texas-El Paso | 25 | Indiana | 78-53 in 1975 Mideast Regional first round |
| UCLA | 27 | #2 Indiana | 106-79 in 1992 West Regional final |
| UNLV | 23 | #3 Seton Hall | 84-61 in 1989 West Regional final |
| Utah | 31 | #1 Kentucky | 101-70 in 1996 Midwest Regional semifinal |
| Villanova | 26 | #3 Purdue | 87-61 in 2019 South Regional second round |
| Virginia | 37 | #3 Michigan | 102-65 in 1989 Southeast Regional final |
| Wisconsin | 30 | #1 Maryland | 87-57 in 2002 East Regional second round |
| Wyoming | 49 | UCLA | 109-60 in 1967 West Regional semifinal |
False Starts: USU and Mizzou Show Propensity For Early NCAA Playoff Exits
North Carolina A&T appeared in the NCAA playoffs the most times (nine) without winning a tournament game until prevailing in 2013 First Four. But N.C. A&T still has a long way to go to join the ranks of "quick-exit" schools such as Utah State, which joined BYU as the only institutions with as many as 20 opening-round reversals in NCAA tourney. Missouri is on their heels with 17 opening-round defeats after getting dumped by Drake.
Connecticut, after absorbing nine opening-round losses in 17 years from 1951 through 1967, had the most opening-round setbacks for an extended period. But the Huskies didn't incur an opening-round reversal for 28 years until suffering two in a recent five-year span before leaving again early in back-to-back recent playoffs. Similarly, St. John's suffered eight opening-round losses in a 20-year stretch from 1973 through 1992.
Maryland was the first school to incur at least 10 NCAA Tournament defeats but never absorb an opening-round setback until the Terrapins lost to Santa Clara in 1996. One of Mizzou's losses was particularly embarrassing (Norfolk State despite being favored by more than 20 points). The following schools are most prone to sustaining an opening-round NCAA tourney defeat:
School (Playoff Losses) NCAA Tournament Opening-Round Defeats Brigham Young (34) 21 (1950-57-65-69-72-79-80-87-90-92-95-01-03-04-07-08-09-14-15-21-24) Utah State (27) 20 (1939-63-71-75-79-80-83-88-98-00-03-05-06-09-10-11-19-21-23-25) Missouri (30) 17 (1944-78-81-83-86-87-88-90-93-99-00-11-12-13-18-21-25) Princeton (29) 17 (1952-55-60-63-69-76-77-81-89-90-91-92-97-01-04-11-17) Temple (33) 16 (1944-64-67-70-72-79-90-92-95-98-08-09-10-12-16-19) St. John's (32) 15 (1961-68-73-76-77-78-80-84-88-92-98-02-11-15-19) West Virginia (28) 15 (1955-56-57-58-62-65-67-83-86-87-92-09-12-16-23)
Tiny Dancers: Mid-Major At-Large Entrants Upending Power-League Members
Prior to coronavirus cancellation five seasons ago, the national tourney in 2020 was expected to be a bonanza year for mid-majors with Dayton (Atlantic 10), Gonzaga (West Coast) and San Diego State (Mountain West) ranked in national Top 10 polls. When given an opportunity via an at-large invitation to the Big Dance, members from 11 different mid-major conferences have more than held their own against opponents from elite leagues. The greatest example was Virginia Commonwealth, which defeated members from five different power leagues en route to the 2011 Final Four. COVID-19 prevented VCU from possibility of duplicating at-large success three years ago.
It's blatantly clear mid-majors should be given more consideration. After Saint Mary's beat Vanderbilt, mid-major at-large entrants since 1992 included the following success totals against power-league members: Big Eight/Big 12 (24), Big East (19), Big Ten (16), SEC (16), ACC (14) and Pac-12 (11). Kansas has incurred six such setbacks against a mid-major at-large entrant since 1992. The following total of 41 different mid-major at-large entrants went on to win in the NCAA playoffs against a total of 55 different power-conference members (listed in reverse chronological order):
NOTE: Butler (Big East), Cincinnati (Big East), Louisville (Big East and ACC), Utah (Pac-12) and Xavier (Big East) subsequently joined a power conference.
Coach Scheyer Becomes A-A Player in NCAA Tourney With Best Playoff Mark
A modest total of 14 individuals have emerged victorious as both an All-American player and head coach in NCAA Tournament competition. Michigan's Juwan Howard was the only one of them to compile winning NCAA tourney records at least three games above .500 in each category. But Howard, after missing the tourney in back-to-back years, was dismissed by the Wolverines following last season. Duke's Jon Scheyer and Memphis' Penny Hardaway were the only former A-As coaching teams in this year's tourney. Scheyer is at least five games above .500 in each category after the Blue Devils reached the 2025 Final Four.
Indiana's Branch McCracken, who directed the Hoosiers to NCAA tourney titles in 1940 and 1953, is the only one of the first 69 All-Americans becoming major-college mentors to finish his coaching career compiling a higher winning percentage as coach. But McCracken and Whitey Baccus, Tom Churchill, Jack Gray, Moose Krause plus John Wooden were A-As before the NCAA Tournament was introduced in 1939. More than 40 All-Americans who became major-college coaches either did not play or coach in NCAA playoffs. Five Duke graduates are among the following alphabetical list of 24 individuals participating in national tourney as an All-American player and bench boss (nine of them guiding their alma mater):
| All-American/Tourney Coach | Playoff Record as Player | Playoff Record as Head Coach |
|---|---|---|
| Steve Alford | 8-2 with Indiana | 11-13 with Missouri State, Iowa, New Mexico, UCLA and Nevada |
| Tommy Amaker | 8-4 with Duke | 4-5 with Seton Hall and Harvard |
| Alfred "Butch" Beard | 1-3 with Louisville | 0-1 with Howard University |
| Henry Bibby | 12-0 with UCLA | 3-3 with Southern California |
| Jimmy Collins | 7-4 with New Mexico State | 0-3 with Illinois-Chicago |
| Bob Cousy | 5-1 with Holy Cross | 2-2 with Boston College |
| Howie Dallmar | 3-0 with Stanford | 1-1 with Penn |
| Johnny Dawkins | 6-3 with Duke | 3-2 with Stanford and UCF |
| Patrick Ewing Sr. | 15-3 with Georgetown | 0-1 with Georgetown |
| Larry Finch Sr. | 3-1 with Memphis State | 6-6 with Memphis State |
| Sidney Green | 0-1 with UNLV | 0-1 with Florida Atlantic |
| Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway | 1-1 with Memphis State | 2-3 with Memphis |
| Clem Haskins | 2-2 with Western Kentucky | 11-8 with Western Kentucky and Minnesota |
| Walt Hazzard | 6-4 with UCLA | 1-1 with UCLA |
| Juwan Howard | 13-3 with Michigan | 5-2 with Michigan |
| Bobby Hurley Jr. | 18-2 with Duke | 2-4 with Buffalo and Arizona State |
| Danny Manning | 13-3 with Kansas | 0-2 with Tulsa and Wake Forest |
| Chris Mullin | 6-4 with St. John's | 0-1 with St. John's |
| Jeff Mullins | 6-2 with Duke | 0-3 with UNC Charlotte |
| Jeff Ruland | 1-2 with Iona | 0-3 with Iona |
| Jon Scheyer | 9-3 with Duke | 8-3 with Duke |
| John Shumate | 2-1 with Notre Dame | 0-1 with Southern Methodist |
| John Thompson Jr. | 0-1 with Providence | 34-19 with Georgetown |
| Mike Woodson | 2-2 with Indiana | 2-2 with Indiana |
Slow Start: Five All-Americans Averaged < 4 PPG in Their Freshman Seasons
In a microwave atmosphere of instant expectations, please be aware that five All-Americans this season failed to generate national headlines in their freshman campaigns by averaging fewer than 4 ppg - Houston's LJ Cryer (3.4 ppg with Baylor in 2020-21), Villanova's Eric Dixon (3 ppg in 2020-21), Memphis' PJ Haggerty (2.8 ppg with TCU in six games in 2022-23), Tennessee's Chaz Lanier (1.7 ppg with North Florida in 10 games in 2020-21) and Wisconsin's John Tonje (3.6 ppg with Colorado State in 2019-20).
Iowa's Kris Murray (0.6 ppg in 2020-21), posting the lowest-ever freshman scoring average for an eventual All-American, isn't the only standout enduring growing pains early in college career. The following alphabetical list of players averaged fewer than three points per game as a freshman before eventually earning All-American acclaim:
Eventual All-American Pos. A-A School Freshman Scoring Average Cole Aldrich C Kansas 2.8 ppg in 2007-08 Lorenzo Charles F North Carolina State 2.2 ppg in 1981-82 Rakeem Christmas F Syracuse 2.8 ppg in 2011-12 Keith Edmonson G Purdue 1.3 ppg in 1978-79 Aaron Gray C Pittsburgh 1.7 ppg in 2003-04 Erick Green G Virginia Tech 2.6 ppg in 2009-10 Tom Gugliotta F North Carolina State 2.7 ppg in 1988-89 Rui Hachimura F Gonzaga 2.6 ppg in 2016-17 PJ Haggerty G Memphis 2.8 ppg in 2022-23 with TCU Roy Hamilton G UCLA 1.2 ppg in 1975-76 Jeff Jonas G Utah 2.8 ppg in 1973-74 Johnny Juzang G UCLA 2.9 ppg in 2019-20 with Kentucky Frank Kaminsky C-F Wisconsin 1.8 ppg in 2011-12 Ted Kitchel F Indiana 1.7 ppg in 1979-80 Bob Kurland C Oklahoma A&M 2.5 ppg in 1942-43 Tom LaGarde C North Carolina 2.2 ppg in 1973-74 Jock Landale C Saint Mary's 2.1 ppg in 2014-15 Chaz Lanier G Tennessee 1.7 ppg in 2020-21 with North Florida Kenyon Martin C Cincinnati 2.8 ppg in 1996-97 Luke Maye F North Carolina 1.2 ppg in 2015-16 Kris Murray F Iowa 0.6 ppg in 2020-21 John Pilch G Wyoming 2.4 ppg in 1946-47 Thomas Robinson F Kansas 2.5 ppg in 2009-10 Steve Scheffler C Purdue 1.5 ppg in 1986-87 Russ Smith G Louisville 2.2 ppg in 2010-11 Earl Tatum G-F Marquette 1.5 ppg in 1972-73 Kurt Thomas F-C Texas Christian 0.8 ppg in 1990-91 Al Thornton F Florida State 2.8 ppg in 2003-04 B.J. Tyler G Texas 2.9 ppg in 1989-90 with DePaul Scottie Wilbekin G Florida 2.4 ppg in 2010-11 Jeff Withey C Kansas 1.3 ppg in 2009-10 NOTES: Oregon's Wally Borrevik (1.8 ppg in 1940-41), Wisconsin's Gene Englund (2.3 ppg in 1938-39), California's Darrall Imhoff (0.9 ppg in 1957-58), Kansas' Dean Kelley (0.8 in 1950-51), Purdue's Bob Kessler (2.3 ppg in 1933-34), Notre Dame's Leo Klier (2.7 in 1942-43), Oklahoma A&M's Gale McArthur (2.96 ppg in 1948-49), Notre Dame's Bob Rensberger (1.5 ppg in 1940-41) and Stanford's George Yardley (2.9 ppg in 1947-48) averaged fewer than three points per game as sophomores when freshmen weren't eligible to play varsity basketball before becoming All-Americans. . . . Withey originally attended Arizona.
Down & Out: Mizzou Fails to Duplicate Iowa State's Sweet 16 Success in 2022
In the seeding era, Missouri became the 10th school to promptly revive its program and participate in the NCAA Tournament within five years after going winless in a power conference (0-18 in SEC just a year ago before losing to Drake in opening round. Only one year removed from winless league campaign, Mizzou didn't come close to Iowa State's feat of reaching Sweet 16 in 2022 after going winless in Big 12 Conference the previous season. Following is a chronological list of power-league members going from outhouse to penthouse within five campaigns since seeding was introduced in 1979:
| Winless Power-League Member | Conference (Season) | Ensuing NCAA Playoff Appearance (Record) |
|---|---|---|
| Southern California | 0-14 in Pac-8 (1975-76) | #7 seed in 1978-79 (1-1) |
| Georgia Tech | 0-14 in ACC (1980-81) | #2 seed in 1984-85 (3-1) |
| Wake Forest | 0-14 in ACC (1985-86) | #5 seed in 1990-91 (1-1) |
| Texas Tech | 0-16 in SWC (1989-90) | #12 seed in 1992-93 (0-1) |
| Miami (Fla.) | 0-18 in Big East (1993-94) | #11 seed in 1997-98 (0-1) |
| Texas A&M | 0-16 in Big 12 (2003-04) | #12 seed in 2005-06 (1-1) |
| Texas Christian | 0-18 in Big 12 (2013-14) | #6 seed in 2017-18 (0-1) |
| Pittsburgh | 0-18 in ACC (2017-18) | #11 seed in 2022-23 (2-1) |
| Iowa State | 0-18 in Big 12 (2020-21) | #11 seed in 2021-22 (reached Sweet 16), #6 seed in 2022-23 (lost to Pitt) and #2 seed in 2023-24 (2-1) |
| Missouri | 0-18 in SEC (2023-24) | #6 seed in 2024-25 (0-1) |
Youth Movement: Flagg Flagged as Duke's 6th 1st-Team A-A in Last 12 Years
Cooper Flagg is the sixth Duke freshman in the last 12 years to be named a first-team All-American. We may have reached an inflection point in replenishing rosters where experienced transfers - seasoned veterans for "won-and-done" aspirations - are more vital than immature "one-and-done" high school recruits. For instance, Duke and Kentucky ranked 1-2, 1-3 or 2-3 in nine of the previous 11 recruiting classes with the Blue Devils also ranked #1 in 2022 after UK was #2 in 2021. But it didn't mean squat of late in terms of success reaching the Final Four. Duke, which lost in national semifinals in 2022, is the only one of the two bluebloods advancing to the F4 in the previous seven tourneys. Similarly, Memphis ranked atop the recruiting list twice in a three-year span from 2019 through 2021 but the Tigers garnered a grand total of two playoff triumphs since 2014 after winning opener this year.
Prior to pathetic playoff performance two years ago, Brandon Miller (Alabama) was outstanding as a freshman in becoming an NCAA consensus second-team All-American. But he fell short of first-team acclaim. Four years ago, Oklahoma State's Cade Cunningham achieved a distinction luminaries Mark Aguirre, Carmelo Anthony, Stephen Curry, Patrick Ewing, Phil Ford, Tyler Hansbrough, James Harden, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Bernard King, Alonzo Mourning, Shaquille O'Neal, Derrick Rose, Ralph Sampson and Russell Westbrook failed to do. Flagg is the 26th yearling on the following chronological list in this rare-air category named first-team A-A:
| Freshman First-Team All-American | Pos. | College | Year | Freshman All-American Recognition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arnie Ferrin | F | Utah | 1944 | C1 |
| Tom Gola | C-F | La Salle | 1952 | C1 |
| Keith Lee | C | Memphis State | 1982 | C1, AP2 |
| Wayman Tisdale | F-C | Oklahoma | 1983 | AP1, C1, USBWA1, UPI2, NABC3 |
| Chris Jackson | G | Louisiana State | 1989 | AP1, UPI1, USBWA1, NABC2 |
| Kenny Anderson | G | Georgia Tech | 1990 | NABC1, AP3 |
| Kevin Durant | F | Texas | 2007 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Greg Oden | C | Ohio State | 2007 | AP1, NABC2, USBWA2 |
| Michael Beasley | F | Kansas State | 2008 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Kevin Love | C | UCLA | 2008 | AP1, USBWA1, NABC2 |
| DeMarcus Cousins | C | Kentucky | 2010 | AP1, NABC2, USBWA2 |
| John Wall | G | Kentucky | 2010 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Jared Sullinger | F-C | Ohio State | 2011 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Anthony Davis | C | Kentucky | 2012 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Jabari Parker | F | Duke | 2014 | USBWA1 |
| Jahlil Okafor | C | Duke | 2015 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| D'Angelo Russell | G | Ohio State | 2015 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Ben Simmons | F-G | Louisiana State | 2016 | NABC1, USBWA1, AP2 |
| Lonzo Ball | G | UCLA | 2017 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Deandre Ayton | C | Arizona | 2018 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Marvin Bagley III | F-C | Duke | 2018 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Trae Young | G | Oklahoma | 2018 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| R.J. Barrett | G | Duke | 2019 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Zion Williamson | F | Duke | 2019 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Cade Cunningham | G | Oklahoma State | 2021 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
| Cooper Flagg | F | Duke | 2025 | AP1, NABC1, USBWA1 |
College Exam: Day #6 Featuring One-and-Only NCAA Tourney Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper and elaborate masks or cowering in fetal position from "bloodbath" allegations, it's your opportunity to start taking online tests for 23 quarantined days symbolic of normal time frame from Selection Sunday to Monday evening championship contest.
We need something to occupy our minds during quarantine from much of the invective-infected #MessMedia. Emphasizing a "one-and-only" theme for a "one-and-only" event, here is Day 6 of a treasure-trove of tantalizing NCAA Tournament trivia questions from CollegeHoopedia.com tracking the only coach, conference, player or school to be linked to a distinguished or dubious achievement (click here for answers or conduct research digesting historical morsels in CollegeHoopedia's year-by-year highlights):
1. Who was the only player to lead nation in scoring average in same season he played for a team reaching NCAA Tournament championship game? Hint: He was the first player to score more than 30 points in a Final Four game and the only individual to crack the 30-point plateau in national semifinals and final in same season. He was also the only Big Eight Conference player to lead nation in scoring.
2. Of the 60 or so different players to score at least 2,500 points and/or rank among the top 25 in career scoring average, who was the only one to have a winning NCAA playoff record in his career plus post higher scoring, rebounding and field-goal shooting playoff averages than he compiled in regular season? Hint: The player scored at least 17 points in all 10 of his NCAA playoff games.
3. Who was the only football Heisman Trophy winner to play in the basketball Final Four? Hint: He won the Most Outstanding Player Award in a Liberty Bowl after setting a school record for longest run from scrimmage.
4. What was the only Final Four match-up to have both coaches opposing his alma mater? Hint: It's happened twice. The protege was an assistant at his alma mater for 10 years.
5. Who is the only coach to oppose his alma mater more than twice at the Final Four? Hint: He is also the only coach in the 20th Century to twice win conference and NCAA tournaments in same year.
6. Who is the only unbeaten coach in NCAA playoff history? Hint: He is the only NCAA basketball championship coach to also be baseball coach at the same school when it won a College World Series game.
7. Who was the only coach with more than 30 NCAA Tournament victories to earn those wins at more than one school until Lute Olson (Iowa and Arizona) joined him in 1998? Hint: Three schools for the first coach were slapped with an NCAA probation during his stints there.
8. Who is the only coach in back-to-back years to win at least one NCAA playoff game in his first season with two different schools? He coached Butler the previous campaign. Hint: He was an assistant under three coaches who directed two different schools to the NCAA Tournament (Charlie Coles, Tates Locke and Herb Sendek).
9. Name the only school to gain an at-large invitation despite losing all of its conference road games. Hint: Three years earlier, the school received an at-large bid despite losing four league road games by at least 25 points.
10. Of the individuals to both play and coach in the NCAA Tournament, who leads that group in both scoring and rebounding totals? Hint: He was the leading scorer in biggest blowout in regional final history.
Answers (Day 6)
Day 5 Questions and Answers
Day 4 Questions and Answers
Day 3 Questions and Answers
Day 2 Questions and Answers
Day 1 Questions and Answers
David vs. Goliath: Fans Fond of Mid-Major Victories of Biblical Proportions
Clemson bowing to McNeese and Missouri succumbing to Drake exhibited why "The Greatest Show on Earth" is a stage for annual slew of tourney upsets. If upper-crust elite schools smugly look down their noses, they might find their opponents boast the upper hand by looking down the barrel of a gun or in the eye of a blinking Owl (recall Florida Atlantic two years ago). Just ask #1 seed Purdue after the Boilermakers were upset by bottom-of-the-bracket mid-majors three consecutive campaigns earlier this decade.
In 2013, two mid-major at-large entrants reached a regional final (La Salle and Wichita State) after also failing to capture a regular-season league title like UR. Generous doses of humility frequently occur. Nine years ago, #3 seeds Duke and Syracuse were embarrassed by Mercer and Dayton, respectively. They joined Marquette among 20 former national champions losing multiple times in the tourney against members of lower-profile conferences seeded five or more places worse than the major university currently a member of one of the consensus power-six leagues.
Kansas has a high of seven such setbacks as a total of 12 former NCAA titlists have lost three or more such contests. Wisconsin has six after the Badgers' reversal against JMU. Four years ago, Baylor joined KU and four other power-league members (Florida, Georgetown, Indiana and Vanderbilt) in losing playoff games in back-to-back seasons thus far in the 21st Century against mid-major foes with double-digit seeds. In the wake of ACC's mediocre campaign again, has part-time ACC commish/publicist Jay Bilas mentioned on ESPN about 14 ACC members collectively having been victimized by such illegal mid-major aliens crossing over power-league border as much as any power alliance? Would Bilas, also seemingly serving as NCAA executive director in absentia, and other self-anointed national experts have advocated for FAU, FDU, Furman, McNeese, New Mexico State, Oakland, Princeton, Richmond and Saint Peter's as at-large entrants if they didn't win their postseason conference tournaments?
Who did they play (mid-majors in NCAA playoff competition) and who did they beat (power-league members seeded five or more slots better)? Well, a total of 100 different lower-profile schools and current members of 24 different mid-major conferences (all but Northeast) have won 177 such games since seeding was introduced in 1979. The nation's fans simply don't bow down at the power-league altar worshiping mediocrity. The mid-major schools with the most "David vs. Goliath" playoff victories cited in the following list are Richmond and Gonzaga with seven apiece:
ACC (35 defeats against mid-major opponents seeded five or more places worse) - Boston College (lost against #12 seed Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2005); Clemson (#13 Southwest Missouri State in 1987, #11 Western Michigan in 1998 and #12 McNeese in 2025); Duke (#11 Virginia Commonwealth in 2007, #15 Lehigh in 2012 and #14 Mercer in 2014); Florida State (#13 Middle Tennessee State in 1989); Georgia Tech (#13 Richmond in 1988 and #13 Southern in 1993); Louisville (#12 Ball State in 1990, #12 Butler in 2003 and #13 Morehead State in 2011); Miami (#11 Loyola of Chicago in 2018); North Carolina (#9 Penn in 1979, #14 Weber State in 1999 and #11 George Mason in 2006); North Carolina State (#14 Murray State in 1988); Notre Dame (#14 UALR in 1986, #11 Winthrop in 2007 and #11 Old Dominion in 2010); Pittsburgh (#10 Kent State in 2002, #13 Bradley in 2006 and #8 Butler in 2011); Syracuse (#7 Navy in 1986, #11 Rhode Island in 1988, #15 Richmond in 1991, #13 Vermont in 2005 and #11 Dayton in 2014); Virginia (#12 Wyoming in 1987, #12 Gonzaga in 2001, #16 UMBC in 2018, #13 Ohio University in 2021 and #13 Furman in 2023); Wake Forest (#13 Cleveland State in 2009)
BIG EAST (19) - Connecticut (lost to #11 George Mason in 2006, #13 San Diego in 2008 and #12 New Mexico State in 2022); Creighton (#11 Rhode Island in 2017); DePaul (#12 New Mexico State in 1992); Georgetown (#10 Davidson in 2008, #14 Ohio University in 2010, #11 Virginia Commonwealth in 2011 and #15 Florida Gulf Coast in 2013); Marquette (#12 Tulsa in 2002 and #12 Murray State in 2019); Providence (#12 Pacific in 2004 and #11 Dayton in 2015); St. John's (#10 Gonzaga in 2000 and #11 Gonzaga in 2011); Seton Hall (#7 Western Kentucky in 1993 and #11 Gonzaga in 2016); Villanova (#14 Old Dominion in 1995 and #10 Saint Mary's in 2010)
BIG TEN (35) - Illinois (lost to #14 Austin Peay State in 1987, #12 Dayton in 1990, #14 Chattanooga in 1997, #12 Western Kentucky in 2009 and #8 Loyola of Chicago in 2021); Indiana (#14 Cleveland State in 1986, #13 Richmond in 1988, #11 Pepperdine in 2000 and #13 Kent State in 2001); Iowa (#14 Northwestern State in 2006 and #12 Richmond in 2022); Maryland (#12 College of Charleston in 1997); Michigan (#11 Loyola Marymount in 1990 and #13 Ohio University in 2012); Michigan State (#14 Weber State in 1995, #11 George Mason in 2006 and #15 Middle Tennessee State in 2016); Minnesota (#12 Middle Tennessee State in 2017); Nebraska (#14 Xavier in 1991 and #11 Penn in 1994); Ohio State (#12 Utah State in 2001, #9 Wichita State in 2013, #11 Dayton in 2014 and #15 Oral Roberts in 2021); Purdue (#11 Virginia Commonwealth in 2011, #12 UALR in 2016, #13 North Texas in 2021, #15 Saint Peter's in 2022 and #16 Fairleigh Dickinson in 2023); Wisconsin (#12 Southwest Missouri State in 1999, #11 Georgia State in 2001, #7 UNLV in 2007, #10 Davidson in 2008, #12 Cornell in 2010 and #12 James Madison in 2024)
BIG 12 (30) - Baylor (lost to #14 Georgia State in 2015 and #12 Yale in 2016); Brigham Young (#11 Duquesne in 2024); Cincinnati (#12 Harvard in 2014 and #7 Nevada in 2018); Iowa State (#15 Hampton in 2001 and #14 UAB in 2015); Kansas (#9 Texas-El Paso in 1992, #8 Rhode Island in 1998, #14 Bucknell in 2005, #13 Bradley in 2006, #9 Northern Iowa in 2010, #11 Virginia Commonwealth in 2011 and #7 Wichita State in 2015); Kansas State (#11 Tulane in 1993, #13 La Salle in 2013, #13 UC Irvine in 2019 and #9 Florida Atlantic in 2023); Oklahoma (#13 Southwestern Louisiana in 1992, #13 Manhattan in 1995, #13 Indiana State in 2001, #11 Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2006 and #12 North Dakota State in 2014); Oklahoma State (#12 Princeton in 1983, #10 Temple in 1991 and #12 Tulsa in 1994); Texas (#11 Northern Iowa in 2016 and #14 Abilene Christian in 2021); Texas Tech (#11 Southern Illinois in 2002); West Virginia (#14 Stephen F. Austin in 2016)
PACIFIC-12 (22 through 2023-24) - Arizona (lost to #14 East Tennessee State in 1992, #15 Santa Clara in 1993, #12 Miami of Ohio in 1995, #11 Wichita State in 2016, #13 Buffalo in 2018 and #15 Princeton in 2023 before joining Big 12); California (#12 Wisconsin-Green Bay in 1994 and #13 Hawaii in 2016 before joining ACC); Oregon State (#10 Lamar in 1980, #11 Evansville in 1989 and #12 Ball State in 1990 before joining WCC); Southern California (#13 UNC Wilmington in 2002 before joining Big Ten); Stanford (#14 Siena in 1989 and #10 Gonzaga in 1999 before joining ACC); UCLA (#12 Wyoming in 1987, #13 Penn State in 1991, #12 Tulsa in 1994, #13 Princeton in 1996 and #12 Detroit in 1999 before joining Big Ten); Utah (#10 Miami of Ohio in 1999 and #11 Gonzaga in 2016 before joining Big 12); Washington State (#12 Penn in 1980 before joining WCC)
SEC (39) - Alabama (lost to #11 Lamar in 1983, #11 South Alabama in 1989, #10 Kent State in 2002 and #12 Wisconsin-Milwaukee in 2005); Auburn (#12 Richmond in 1984 and #13 Yale in 2024); Florida (#12 Creighton in 2002, #12 Manhattan in 2003, #8 Butler in 2011 and #15 Oral Roberts in 2021); Georgia (#14 Chattanooga in 1997 and #11 Southern Illinois in 2002); Kentucky (#7 UAB in 1981, #11 Middle Tennessee State in 1982, #9 UAB in 2004, #15 Saint Peter's in 2022 and #14 Oakland in 2024); Louisiana State (#13 Navy in 1985 and #11 UAB in 2005); Mississippi (#13 Valparaiso in 1998); Mississippi State (#12 Eastern Michigan in 1991, #12 Butler in 2003, #7 Xavier in 2004 and #12 Liberty in 2019); Missouri (#13 Xavier in 1987, #11 Rhode Island in 1988, #14 Northern Iowa in 1990, #15 Norfolk State in 2012, #15 Princeton in 2023 and #11 Drake in 2025); South Carolina (#15 Coppin State in 1997 and #14 Richmond in 1998); Tennessee (#12 Southwest Missouri State in 1999, #7 Wichita State in 2006, #11 Loyola of Chicago in 2018 and #9 Florida Atlantic in 2023); Vanderbilt (#13 Siena in 2008, #13 Murray State in 2010 and #12 Richmond in 2011)
NOTES: Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State were members of the Big Eight until 1997. Mizzou left the Big 12 for SEC in 2013. . . . Notre Dame was an independent in 1986. . . . Florida State, Louisville and Tulane were members of the Metro Conference in 1989, 1990 and 1993, respectively. . . . Butler was a member of the Horizon League in 2003 and 2011. . . . Dayton was a member of the Midwestern Collegiate in 1990. . . . DePaul was a member of the Great Midwest in 1992. . . . Penn State was a member of the Atlantic 10 in 1991. . . . Texas-El Paso and Utah were members of the WAC in 1992 and 1999, respectively. . . . Marquette and Louisville were members of Conference USA in 2002 and 2004, respectively. . . . Tulsa was a member of Missouri Valley in 1994 and 2002. . . . Xavier was a member of Midwestern Collegiate in 1987 and 1991 and Atlantic 10 in 2004. . . . Boston College was a member of the Big East in 2005. . . . Defeats for Cincinnati (Big East), Maryland (ACC), Louisville (Big East), Pittsburgh (Big East) and Syracuse (Big East) came when they were members of another power league.
Memphis' PJ Haggerty is Lone Non-Power League All-American This Season
NBA success in several years may reveal voter shortcomings as Memphis' PJ Haggerty, a transfer from Tulsa, was the only non-power conference member to supply an NCAA consensus All-American this campaign. However, in excessive transfer era it should be noted that A-As Johni Broome (Tennessee/from Morehead State), Walter Clayton Jr. (Florida/Iona), Chaz Lanier (Tennessee/North Florida), RJ Luis Jr. (St. John's/Massachusetts), Mark Sears (Alabama/Ohio University), John Tonje (Wisconsin/Colorado State before Missouri) and JT Toppin (Texas Tech/New Mexico) previously attended mid-majors.
Gonzaga has a striking number of 11 different players accorded such consensus A-A status thus far this century. Four years ago, the Zags joined Illinois (2004-05) as the only two schools in a 73-season span to feature three consensus All-Americans in same season since Kentucky in 1948-49. Following is a chronological list of mid-level NCAA consensus first- and second-team All-Americans since the ACC was introduced in 1953-54:
NOTE: BYU, Creighton and Houston subsequently joined a power conference.
Playing Race Card: 3 Years in Row With Multiple First-Team A-A Caucasians
The hoop lowdown might not rise to the level of aggressive African-American commentary on Donald Trump or previous POTUS #AudacityofHype lecturing Christians rather than unprincipled marauders. Nonetheless, it could be time to proclaim white players matter. Many white-privilege provocateurs, who should seek reparations of their own for being exposed to race hustlers such as MSDNC's Joyless Reid and "Not So" Sharpton clamoring for "R-E-S-P-I-C-T," seem to care as much about the basketball topic, however, as far-left zealots are outraged about Muslim terrorists murdering saints and believers.
Is this DEI in reverse? A milestone won't trigger White History Month, but this season marked the first time since 1967-68 through 1969-70 (Pete Maravich era) for multiple NCAA consensus first-team All-American white players in three consecutive campaigns. From 1980 through 2012, less than one-fifth of the NCAA consensus first- and second-team All-Americans were Caucasian. Struggling as much as Marxist BLM founder purchasing luxury homes in white neighborhoods, Plagiarist Biledumb ascending Stair Farce One, #MSLSD's "Resist We Much" RevAl and #JoylessReid plus confused Congresswoman #(Mad)Maxine Waters may consider this repulsive racist research. However, they probably should be more concerned about paying fair share of taxes on filing deadline day, candor about hacked computer and concocting conspiratorial claptrap more worthy of April Fool's Day about CIA planting drugs in the hood.
All of America needs more critical thinking than critical race theory. Unless there are some closet Rachel Dolezals in the identity mix or Jussie Smollett's air-head attorney is accurate about an outbreak of white-face escapades, Gonzaga (Dan Dickau, Blake Stepp, Adam Morrison, Kelly Olynyk, Kyle Wiltjer, Corey Kispert, Drew Timme and Chet Holmgren) was alone boasting the most white consensus All-Americans thus far in 21st Century with eight. Duke is runner-up with seven after Cooper Flagg. It might be accurate-but-unacceptable information to cancel-culture leftists indoctrinating students in public schools with critical race theory, but the Zags in 2020-21 and 2021-22 became the first school to feature a set of white consensus All-Americans in same season since Missouri's Steve Stipanovich and Jon Sundvold in 1982-83.
It might not reign purple important as a photograph of Prince in a junior high basketball uniform to African-American Studies majors but we could be in the midst of a modest resurgence for the white player represented each year thus far this century. After all, Duke was the nation's only school to supply a white first-team All-American in a nine-year span from 1987-88 through 1995-96 (Danny Ferry in 1989, Christian Laettner in 1992 and Bobby Hurley in 1993). For those monitoring such identity demographics or who might be a dues-paying member of an alternative version of NAACP (National Association for Advancement of Caucasian Players), following is a list of white NCAA consensus first- and second-team All-Americans since Indiana State's Larry Bird was unanimous national player of the year in 1979:
Mighty Mites: Shortest of Subjects Became Big-Time NCAA Playoff Performers
Mississippi's Cam Brent (5-4) is the shortest player in this year's NCAA Tournament but he rarely gets off the bench. When diminutive dandy Tyrone Bogues isn't on the list (scoreless in three playoff games as a Wake Forest freshman in 1983-84), you know the small packages are something big. A couple of North Carolina State playmakers - Monte Towe and Spud Webb - spearhead the following ranking of the 25 most impactful pint-sized players in playoff history even shorter than 5-8:
| Rank | Mighty Mite (Height) | School/Tourney Year(s) | Summary of NCAA Playoff Performance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Shawnta Rogers (5-4) | George Washington 96-98-99 | averaged 20.3 ppg, 3.7 rpg, 5 apg and 2.7 spg in three defeats vs. power-league opponents |
| 2. | Monte Towe (5-7) | North Carolina State 74 | averaged 15.5 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 3.3 apg and 2 spg in four contests with national titlist |
| 3. | Anthony "Spud" Webb (5-7) | North Carolina State 85 | juco transfer averaged 17 ppg and 6.3 apg in four contests for regional finalist |
| 4. | Earl Boykins (5-6) | Eastern Michigan 96-98 | averaged 17 points, 3 rebounds, 2.7 assists and 2.3 spg in three contests vs. schools winning national title at some point |
| 5. | Keith "Mister" Jennings (5-7) | East Tennessee State 89-90-91 | averaged 12 ppg and 8.3 apg in three defeats |
| 6. | Drew Lavender (5-6) | Oklahoma 05/Xavier 07-08 | averaged 10.9 ppg, 3 rpg and 5 apg in eight contests (four outings with > 5 assists) |
| 7. | Willie Worsley (5-6) | Texas Western 66-67 | averaged 10.8 ppg and 2.6 rpg in eight contests (scored game-high 24 points vs. Seattle in opener for defending NCAA titlist) |
| 8. | Demontrae Jefferson (5-7) | Texas Southern 17-18 | averaged 19.3 ppg, 3.3 rpg, 4 apg and 2.7 spg in three contests |
| 9. | Tajuan Porter (5-6) | Oregon 07-08 | averaged 16.6 ppg, 3.4 rpg and 2 apg in five contests (including 33 points vs. UNLV) |
| 10. | Jackie Crawford (5-7) | SW Missouri State 92 | juco transfer collected team highs of 16 points and 7 assists in defeat vs. Michigan State |
| 11. | Chico Fletcher (5-6) | Arkansas State 99 | scored team-high 21 points in defeat vs. Utah |
| 12. | Greg Brown (5-7) | New Mexico 93-94 | juco transfer averaged 11 ppg, 4.5 rpg and 2.5 apg in two losses |
| 13. | Jeremiah Dominguez (5-6) | Portland State 08-09 | Portland transfer averaged 12 ppg, 3 rpg and 3 apg in two defeats |
| 14. | Dick Hickox (5-6) | Miami (Fla.) 60 | scored team-high 17 points vs. Western Kentucky |
| 15. | Otto Petty (5-7) | Florida State 72 | averaged 8.2 ppg, 2 rpg and 5 apg in five contests for national runner-up (three outings with > 5 assists) |
| 16. | Junior Robinson (5-7) | Mount St. Mary's 17 | averaged 15 ppg, 3 apg and 1.5 spg in two contests |
| 17. | Jason Harrison (5-5) | Mississippi 99-01-02 | averaged 6 ppg, 4 apg and 1.3 spg in six contests (five outings vs. power-league opponents) |
| 18. | Chris Lykes (5-6) | Miami (Fla.) 18/Arkansas 22 | collected 10 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists and 2 steals with the Hurricanes in loss vs. Loyola of Chicago before averaging 3.3 ppg in four contests with the Hogs' regional finalist |
| 19. | Arnold Bernard (5-5) | SW Missouri State 90 | juco transfer contributed 7 points, 4 rebounds, 6 assists and 2 steals in reversal vs. North Carolina |
| 20. | Wat Misaka (5-7) | Utah 44 | averaged 6 ppg in three contests for NCAA titlist |
| 21. | Casey Jones (5-7) | Northeast Louisiana 90-91 | averaged 8.5 ppg and 2.5 rpg in two defeats (vs. Purdue and Duke) |
| 22. | Chuck Rolles (5-6) | Cornell 54 | averaged 5.5 ppg, 3 rpg and 1.5 apg in three contests |
| 23. | Gene Duffy (5-7) | Notre Dame 58 | averaged 5.7 ppg and 2.7 rpg in three outings |
| 24. | "Little" Johnny Campbell (5-6) | Arkansas 49 | averaged 5.5 ppg in two games for West Regional third-place team |
| T25. | Sherry Marshall (5-7) | Columbia 48 | averaged 4.5 ppg in two contests |
| T25. | Calvin Rayford (5-7) | Kansas 93-94-96 | collected total of 8 points, 11 rebounds and 15 assists in nine tourney tilts |
| T25. | Jim Reilly (5-7) | Georgetown 43 | averaged 2 ppg in three contests |
| T25. | Eric Bell (5-6) | Stephen F. Austin 09 | supplied 3 assists and two steals in setback vs. Syracuse |
Player Outcasts: All-Americans MIA From NCAA DI Tournament Competition
It doesn't take a genius to deduce All-American players are all-important to teams. Villanova's third-team All-American Eric Dixon, the nation's scoring leader, is the only one of this year's 16 A-As not participating in the 2025 NCAA playoffs. Since the national tourney expanded to at least 32 teams in 1975, only three consensus first-team All-Americans never appeared in the NCAA playoffs - Houston guard Otis Birdsong (1977), Minnesota center Mychal Thompson (1978) and LSU swingman Ben Simmons (2016) - until Dayton's Obi Toppin became standout #4 in this category due to the coronavirus outbreak.
Terry Dischinger averaged 28.3 ppg in his three-year varsity career with Purdue in the early 1960s, but he is the only two-time consensus first-team All-American since World War II never to compete in the NCAA Tournament or NIT. Dischinger also endured a star-scorned nine-year NBA career without playing on a squad winning a playoff series. He was named NBA Rookie of the Year as a member of the Chicago Zephyrs in 1962-63 despite playing in only 57 games as he skipped many of the road contests to continue his education. His dedication to the classroom paid off as he became an orthodontist.
Hall of Famer Billy Cunningham averaged 24.8 ppg in his three-year varsity career with North Carolina in the mid-1960s, but he also never appeared in the NCAA tourney or NIT. How good were the players in that era if Cunningham never was a consensus first-team All-American? Auburn's Charles Barkley (defeated by Richmond in 1984) and Florida State's Dave Cowens (East Tennessee State in 1968) were All-Americans but each lost his only NCAA playoff game against a mid-major opponent. Following is a look at Dischinger and three other multiple-year NCAA consensus first-team All-Americans since the mid-1950s never to participate in the NCAA Tournament:
| Two- or Three-Time NCAA Consensus First-Team A-A | Pos. | School | Years 1st-Team A-A | NIT Mark |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Terry Dischinger | F | Purdue | 1961 and 1962 | DNP |
| Sihugo Green | G | Duquesne | 1955 and 1956 | 6-2 |
| Pete Maravich | G | Louisiana State | 1968 through 1970 | 2-2 |
| Chet Walker | F | Bradley | 1961 and 1962 | 3-1 |
No multiple-season All-American failed to appear in national postseason competition since the NCAA tourney expanded to at least 40 entrants in the late 1970s. Notre Dame guard Kevin O'Shea is the only four-time A-A never to appear in the NCAA playoffs and National Invitation Tournament. While not an NCAA consensus first-team selection multiple times like Dischinger, following is an alphabetical list including O'Shea and six additional three-time All-Americans never participating in a "Big Dance" (NCAA playoffs and NIT):
| Three- or Four-Time All-American | Pos. | School | Seasons as A-A |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paul Ebert | C | Ohio State | 1952 through 1954 |
| Fred Hetzel | F-C | Davidson | 1963 through 1965 |
| Kevin O'Shea | G | Notre Dame | 1947 through 1950 |
| Robert Parish | C | Centenary | 1974 through 1976 |
| Frank Selvy | F | Furman | 1952 through 1954 |
| Meyer "Whitey" Skoog | F-G | Minnesota | 1949 through 1951 |
| Doug Smart | F-C | Washington | 1957 through 1959 |
NOTE: NCAA playoff field ranged from 22 to 25 entrants during 16-year span from 1955 through 1970.
College Exam: Day #5 Featuring One-and-Only NCAA Tourney Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper for next pandemic, hoping Plagiarist Biledumb makes it up steps of Air Farce One again or cowering in fetal position waiting on recommendation from deity Dr. Fraudci, it's your opportunity to start taking online tests for 23 quarantined days symbolic of normal time frame from Selection Sunday to Monday evening championship contest.
We need something to occupy our minds during quarantine from much of the invective-infected #MessMedia. Emphasizing a "one-and-only" theme for a "one-and-only" event, here is Day 5 of a treasure-trove of tantalizing NCAA Tournament trivia questions from CollegeHoopedia.com tracking the only coach, conference, player or school to be linked to a distinguished or dubious achievement (click here for answers or conduct research digesting historical morsels in CollegeHoopedia's year-by-year highlights):
1. Who is the only player to score more than 30,000 points in his pro career after never appearing in NCAA playoffs? Hint: He is the only former major-college player to become NBA Most Valuable Player after failing to participate in NCAA Tournament. He was 0-2 in the NIT, where he lost his final college game by 41 points, before leaving college for the pros with one season of eligibility remaining.
2. Who is the only person to play for an NBA championship team before coaching an NCAA titlist? Hint: He was a backup to an NBA all-time great after being the leading scorer and rebounder for a team winning an NIT crown.
3. Who became an NCAA playoff coach after being the only player in history to participate with two different schools in the NCAA championship game? Hint: One of the teams he played for was undefeated. He coached two different schools in the tourney.
4. Who is the only coach to engineer a turnaround featuring an NCAA playoff appearance in his first full season at a new job although the school compiled a record of more than 20 games below .500 the previous year? Hint: It was his only year as coach at the school.
5. Name the only mid-major conference to have two different members reach a regional semifinal as at-large teams in the same year, beating opponents from the Big East, Big 12 and SEC in the process. Hint: Two other members of the same league achieved the feat in the previous seven years. Only two of its current members haven't won playoff games when seeded five or more places worse than a major university currently a member of one of the current consensus top six leagues since seeding started in 1979.
6. Name the only former NCAA Tournament champion not to win at least one playoff game since capturing the title. Hint: It's the first NCAA champion to have black players in its starting lineup and is the only school to win the NCAA playoffs and NIT in the same year. The school is also the only former major college to win a Division I Tournament championship.
7. Name the school with the most playoff games decided by one or two points (four) on its way to a championship. Hint: It was the first school to need six victories to claim the national crown and is the only school to have two different coaches capture a national championship after compiling a losing record in their first seasons as a major-college head coach.
8. Who is the only coach to win his first 12 tournament games decided in overtime or by fewer than six points in regulation? Hint: His first of three NCAA championship game teams had four players become NBA first-round draft choices.
9. Name the only state to have more than six different schools reach the Final Four. Hint: The state went 31 years between its two national championships.
10. Name the only person to coach two different universities in back-to-back years when each school made its initial playoff appearance. Hint: He reached the national championship game with one of the schools.
Answers (Day 5)
Day 4 Questions and Answers
Day 3 Questions and Answers
Day 2 Questions and Answers
Day 1 Questions and Answers
Family Guys: MSU's Richardsons Comprise Latest Playoff Father-Son Legacy
You can't escape the distinguished DNA. Mercurial freshman guard Jase Richardson, Michigan State's runner-up in scoring with 12 ppg, is the son of Jason Richardson, a Spartans All-American in 2000-01 before declaring early for the NBA draft after being a frosh regular for their 2000 NCAA titlist. Jason, despite going scoreless in three consecutive playoff games as a freshman, compiled a 10-1 playoff record in his two college seasons prior to 13-year NBA career. Upon MSU reaching the Sweet 16, the Richardsons supplanted Carlton and Denzel Valentine for most NCAA tourney wins by father-son tandem in school history.
Kentucky's Reed Sheppard, perhaps the nation's premier freshman a year ago, is the son of former Wildcats star Jeff Sheppard, the Final Four Most Outstanding Player in 1998. If Reed had shepherded UK to a national title, they would have become the winningest father-son combination at same school in NCAA playoff history. Alas, Reed incurred growing pains and made only one field goal in upset loss to Oakland. Jeff averaged 9.8 ppg, 2.8 rpg and 2.6 apg in 17 NCAA Tournament games from 1994 through 1998 (16-1 record; did not play in one game in 1994). If the Wildcats had reached the national semifinals last year, they would have become the third father-son tandem to crack the 20-win plateau, joining UCLA's Marques/Kris Johnson and Georgetown's Patrick Sr./Patrick Jr. Ewing.
A majority of the fathers averaged more points per game in NCAA playoff competition than their sons in this family category. Princeton is the only mid-major school with a father-son combination collecting total of more than four NCAA playoff triumphs (father Ed Hummer 6/son Ian Hummer 0). BYU also had a couple of additional duos (Craigs and Christensens) among the following father-son combos playing for same school in NCAA tourney (listed by number of family victories):
| Family (Overall Record) | School | Summary of Father's NCAA Playoff Career | Summary of Son's NCAA Playoff Career |
|---|---|---|---|
| Johnsons (21-6) | UCLA | Marques, the national player of the year as a senior, averaged 14.6 ppg and 8.6 rpg in 16 NCAA Tournament games from 1974 through 1977 (13-3 record including three Final Four teams) with high-scoring game of 35 points against Arizona State in 1975. | Kris averaged 9.5 ppg and 3.6 rpg in 11 NCAA Tournament games from 1995 through 1998 (8-3 record; DNP in three contests as freshman) with high-scoring game of 25 points against Michigan in 1998. |
| Ewings (20-5) | Georgetown | Patrick Sr., the national player of the year as a senior, averaged 14.2 ppg and 8 rpg in 18 NCAA Tournament games from 1982 through 1985 (15-3 record including three Final Four teams). | Patrick Jr. averaged 4.9 ppg and 3.3 rpg in seven NCAA Tournament games with the Hoyas in 2007 and 2008 (5-2 record including one Final Four team) after transferring from Indiana. |
| Sheppards (16-2) | Kentucky | Jeff, the Final Four Most Outstanding Player in 1998, averaged 9.8 ppg, 2.8 rpg and 2.6 apg in 17 NCAA Tournament games from 1994 through 1998 (16-1 record; did not play in one game in 1994). | If Reed, perhaps the nation's premier freshman in 2023-24, had shepherded UK to a national title, they would have become the winningest father-son combination at same school in NCAA playoff history. Alas, Reed incurred growing pains and made only one field goal in upset loss to Oakland. |
| Mills (15-5) | Kentucky | Terry averaged 7.4 ppg and 2 rpg in five NCAA Tournament games from 1969 through 1971 (1-4 record; DNP in 1969 Regional Third-Place game). | Cameron averaged 5.9 ppg and 1.6 rpg in 15 NCAA Tournament games from 1995 through 1998 including three straight Final Four teams (14-1 record; DNP in seven playoff games as freshman and sophomore). As a junior, he led the Wildcats in 3FG%. |
| Valentines (11-5) | Michigan State | Carlton, the Spartans' leading scorer and rebounder as a senior in 1987-88, averaged 3 ppg and 2 rpg in three NCAA Tournament games in 1986 (2-1 record). | Denzel, co-National Player of the Year as a senior after reaching Final Four the previous season, averaged 9.4 ppg, 6.2 rpg and 3.9 apg in 13 NCAA Tournament games from 2013 through 2016 (9-4 record). |
| Morningstars (10-6) | Kansas | Roger, runner-up in scoring for 1974 Final Four team, averaged 10.6 ppg and 4.8 rpg in five NCAA Tournament games in 1974 and 1975 after transferring from a junior college (2-3 record). | Brady averaged 5.5 ppg in 11 NCAA Tournament games from 2007 through 2011 (8-3 record; 2008 redshirt DNP in two games as freshman). Scored team-high 18 points against Richmond in 2011. |
| Eiferts (8-5) | Purdue | Greg averaged 1.3 ppg and 2 rpg in three NCAA Tournament games in 1983 and 1984 (1-2 record). | Grady averaged 2.6 ppg in 10 NCAA Tournament games from 2017 through 2019 (7-3 record). |
| Williams (8-5) | Illinois | Frank, an All-American in 2000-01, averaged 16.4 ppg, 4.1 rpg and 4.7 apg in nine NCAA Tournament games from 2000 through 2002 (6-3 record). | Da'Monte averaged 2 ppg and 4 rpg in four NCAA tourney games in 2021 and 2022. |
| Childress (6-5) | Wake Forest | Randolph, an All-American as a senior, averaged 17.6 ppg, 3 rpg and 4.9 apg in 10 NCAA Tournament games in 1991 and from 1993 through 1995 (6-4 record) with high-scoring contest of 25 points against Iowa. | Brandon scored 7 points in one NCAA Tournament game in 2017. |
| Hummers (6-3) | Princeton | Ed, a Final Four teammate of All-American Bill Bradley in 1965 before becoming an All-Ivy League second-team selection, averaged 10.4 ppg and 9.3 rpg in eight NCAA Tournament games in 1965 and 1967 (6-2 record). His brother, John Hummer, scored 28 points in a 1969 NCAA playoff game against St. John's. | Ian, a three-time All-Ivy League selection, collected 11 points and 8 rebounds in two-point loss against Kentucky in 2011 NCAA playoffs. |
| Marbles (6-5) | Iowa | Roy, a three-time All-Big Ten Conference selection, averaged 16.3 ppg and 6 rpg in 10 NCAA Tournament games from 1986 through 1989 (6-4 record) with high-scoring contest of 28 points against UTEP in 1987. | Roy Devyn collected 7 points and 5 assists in one NCAA Tournament game in 2014. |
| Suttons (6-3) | Oklahoma State | Eddie averaged 6.7 ppg and 3.7 rpg in three NCAA Tournament games in 1958 (2-1 record). | Sean, a transfer from Kentucky, averaged 14.3 ppg, 2.5 rpg and 4.7 apg in six NCAA Tournament games in 1991 and 1992 (4-2 record). He led the Cowboys in assists and three-point shooting both seasons playing under his father/coach. |
| Coffeys (5-4) | Minnesota | Richard averaged 5 ppg and 6.5 rpg in six NCAA Tournament games in 1989 and 1990 (4-2 record; DNP in 1989 opener) including two outings with more than 10 rebounds. | Amir averaged 20.7 ppg, 3.3 rpg and 3.3 apg in three NCAA Tournament games in 2017 and 2019 (1-2 record). Scored more than half of the Gophers' points with 27 in a 70-50 setback against Michigan State in 2019. |
| Rautins (5-3) | Syracuse | Leo, who led the Orangemen in rebounds and assists as a senior when named an All-Big East Conference third-team selection, averaged 18.5 ppg, 5.5 rpg and 3 apg in two NCAA Tournament games in 1983 (1-1 record) after transferring from Minnesota. | Andy, an All-Big East Conference second-team selection as a senior, averaged 13.2 ppg, 4.8 rpg and 3.7 apg in six NCAA Tournament games in 2009 and 2010 (4-2 record). |
| Polites (5-4) | Florida State | Michael averaged 9 ppg and 6.3 rpg in three NCAA Tournament games in 1988 and 1991 (1-2 record). | Anthony averaged 8.7 ppg and 2.7 rpg in six NCAA Tournament games in 2019 and 2021 (4-2 record). He scored a career-high 22 points and contributed game-high 4 steals in second-round triumph against #5 seed Colorado in 2021. |
| Brewers (4-3) | Arkansas | Ron, an All-American as a senior for the Hogs' 1978 Final Four team, averaged 19.2 ppg and 4 rpg in six NCAA Tournament games in 1977 and 1978 (4-2 record) with high of 22 points against Cal State Fullerton. | Ronnie, a two-time All-SEC selection, collected 14 points, 5 rebounds, 5 assists and 2 steals in one NCAA Tournament game in 2006 before declaring early for the NBA draft. |
| Craigs (4-5) | Brigham Young | Robert, a member of the Cougars' 1951 NIT titlist, averaged 1.3 ppg in three NCAA Tournament games in 1950 and 1951 (1-2 record; DNP in two games in 1951). | Steve, a teammate of All-American Danny Ainge, averaged 6.3 ppg, 1.7 rpg, 2.7 apg and 1.2 spg in six NCAA Tournament games from 1979 through 1981 (3-3 record). |
| McKies (4-3) | South Carolina | BJ averaged 20 ppg and 3 rpg in two NCAA Tournament defeats in 1997 and 1998. | Justin averaged 4 ppg in five NCAA Tournament games for 2017 Final Four team (4-1 record). |
| Hardaways (4-4) | Memphis | Penny averaged 17.6 points, 5.4 rebounds and 5 assists in five NCAA Tournament games in 1992 and 1993 (3-2 record). | Jayden was scoreless in four minutes in 2022 opener before DNP in loss against Gonzaga. Scored nine points in opening-round defeat in 2023. |
| Wessons (4-4) | Ohio State | Keith averaged 0.8 ppg and 1.8 rpg in four NCAA Tournament games in 1983 and 1987 (2-2 record; redshirt in 1984-85). | Andre averaged 3 ppg and 4.3 rpg in four NCAA Tournament games in 2018 and 2019 (2-2 record). Kaleb averaged 9.8 ppg and 5.3 rpg in four NCAA Tournament games in 2018 and 2019 (2-2 record). |
| Boeheims (3-3) | Syracuse | Jim averaged 14.5 ppg and 2 rpg in two NCAA Tournament games in 1966 (1-1 record). | Buddy averaged 17.3 ppg and 3.8 rpg in four NCAA Tournament games in 2019 and 2021, exploding for total of 55 points in his first two outings in 2021. |
| Stephens (3-4) | Purdue | Everette averaged 11.7 ppg and 7 apg in six NCAA Tournament games from 1986 through 1988 (3-3 record) including four contests with at least eight assists. | Kendall, who led the Boilermakers in three-pointers as a freshman and sophomore, scored 5 points in one NCAA Tournament game in 2015 (DNP in 2016) before transferring to Nevada. |
| Christensens (2-5) | Brigham Young | Hal, a member of 1951 NIT titlist, averaged 4.3 ppg and 1.7 rpg in three NCAA Tournament games the same year (1-2 record). He was chosen by the Minneapolis Lakers in 1953 NBA draft before having three sons play for the Cougars (two of them in NCAA playoffs). | Craig was scoreless in three NCAA Tournament games in 1979 and 1981 (1-2 record; DNP in two contests). Kurt was scoreless in one NCAA Tournament game in 1993 (0-1 record; DNP in opener). |
| Haws (2-6) | Brigham Young | Marty, an All-WAC first-team selection as a senior when leading the Cougars in scoring with 18.5 ppg, averaged 9.3 ppg and 3.3 apg in four NCAA Tournament games in 1987, 1988 and 1990 (1-3 record). | Tyler, BYU's all-time scoring leader (2,720 points) who ranked among the nation's top seven scorers each of his last three seasons, averaged 18.5 ppg, 3.3 rpg and 2.3 apg in four NCAA Tournament games in 2010, 2014 and 2015 (1-3 record) with high-scoring game of 33 against Ole Miss in 2015. |
| Henrys (2-2) | Kansas | Carl, a two-time All-Big Eight Conference selection after transferring from OCU, averaged 11.5 ppg and 6.5 rpg in two NCAA Tournament games in 1984 (1-1 record). | Xavier averaged 9.5 ppg and 7 rpg in two NCAA Tournament games as a freshman in 2010 before leaving early for the NBA draft. |
| Kornets (2-4) | Vanderbilt | Frank, an All-SEC second-team selection as a senior before playing a couple of seasons in the NBA, averaged 11.3 ppg, 5.8 rpg and 2.8 apg in four NCAA Tournament games in 1988 and 1989 (2-2 record). | Luke averaged 11 ppg, 7 rpg and 2.5 bpg in two NCAA Tournament games in 2016 and 2017 (0-2 record). |
| Lindseys (2-3) | Baylor | Dennis scored 5 points in one NCAA Tournament game in 1988. | Jake averaged 3 ppg and 2.8 apg in four NCAA Tournament games in 2016 and 2017 (2-2 record). |
| Murrays (2-5) | Iowa | Kenyon averaged 10.3 ppg and 4.3 rpg in four NCAA playoff games in 1993 and 1996 under coach Tom Davis (2-2 record). | Twins Keegan and Kris DNP in 2021 opener against Grand Canyon. Keegan averaged 13.5 ppg and 6.5 rpg in two tourney defeats (2021 and 2022). Kris averaged 6 ppg and 5 rpg in three tourney defeats (2021 through 2023). |
| Perrys (2-2) | Holy Cross | Ronnie Sr. averaged 16.7 ppg in three NCAA Tournament games in 1953 (2-1 record). | Ronnie Jr., a three-time All-American, scored 24 points in one NCAA Tournament game in 1980 (missed 1977 playoffs because of ankle injury). |
| Hammonds (1-4) | Middle Tennessee | Kerry Sr. averaged 13.3 ppg and 9.8 rpg in four NCAA Tournament games in 1985, 1987 and 1989 (1-3 record). | Kerry II collected 10 points, 3 rebounds and 3 assists in one NCAA Tournament game in 2013. |
| Mayes (1-3) | Florida State | Tharon averaged 18.5 ppg, 2.5 rpg and 2 apg in two NCAA Tournament games in 1988 and 1989. | Xavier Rathan-Mayes averaged 13 ppg, 6 rpg and 4 apg in two NCAA Tournament games in 2017 (1-1 record). |
| Browns (0-3) | Louisiana | Dion averaged 12.5 ppg and 7.5 rpg in two playoff games in 1982 and 1983. | Jordan collected 16 points and 7 rebounds in opening-round defeat in 2023. |
| Burtts (0-2) | Iona | Steve Sr., a two-time MAAC MVP and the Gaels' all-time leading scorer (2,534 points), collected 28 points and 4 rebounds in one NCAA Tournament game in 1984. | Steve Jr., a three-time All-MAAC selection and the Gaels' runner-up in career scoring (2,034 points), tallied 23 points in one NCAA Tournament game in 2006. |
| Parkinsons (0-2) | Purdue | Bruce, an All-Big Ten Conference first-team selection as a junior, collected 10 points and 2 assists in one NCAA Tournament game in 1977. | Austin grabbed 2 rebounds in one NCAA Tournament game in 2003 (0-1 record; DNP in second round). |
| Paytons (0-4) | Oregon State | Gary Sr., an NCAA unanimous first-team All-American as a senior, averaged 18 ppg, 4 rpg and 7 apg in three NCAA Tournament games from 1988 through 1990 (0-3 record). | Gary II, a juco transfer who became a two-time All-Pac-12 Conference first-team selection/Defensive Player of the Year collected 19 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists and 4 steals in one NCAA Tournament game in 2016. |
| Springers (0-2) | Iona | Gary Sr., a three-time All-MAAC selection, collected 8 points and 8 rebounds in one NCAA Tournament game in 1984. | Gary Jr., an All-MAAC third-team selection as a senior in 2008-09, scored 4 points in one NCAA Tournament game in 2006. |
Pitcher-Hitting Futility From Legendary Babe Ruth to Revolutionary Ohtani
When it came to major league pitchers excelling as batters until rule change several seasons ago, there were only a few pitcher/hitters resembling Babe Ruth and Shohei Ohtani. Facing the cold hard facts, it was textbook futility for nearly 50 years as N.L. pitchers tried to hit MLB hurlers. The gap between pitchers' hitting and remainder of MLB players grew exponentially over the years. Several years removed from the N.L. joining the designated-hitter fold as part of MLB's latest CBA (A.L. embraced DH since 1973), it turned out that 2021 was final trip around the bases for N.L. hurlers.
Versatile former college basketball players - majority of them from small schools - were among the minority of big-league pitchers who knew how to handle a bat (only a handful of them since the 1950s). In the aftermath of adopting a universal DH, it might be a good time amid Ohtani seeking another MVP award to not only keep adjusting to a pitch clock but also remember the following alphabetical list of perhaps the 20 best-hitting MLB pitchers previously playing college basketball (including a couple from Swarthmore PA):
| Ex-College Hooper | School(s) | Summary of MLB Pitcher's Batting Prowess |
|---|---|---|
| Elden Auker | Kansas State | Collected two homers and five RBI in single game in mid-August 1937 en route to 30 extra-base hits and 72 RBI in 10-year career. He had three 3-hit games in 1936 with the Detroit Tigers. |
| Ray Benge | Sam Houston State | Seven straight seasons from 1928 through 1934 with at least a dozen hits. Went 4-for-4 with Philadelphia Phillies vs. Chicago Cubs in mid-August game in 1931. |
| Jack Coombs | Colby ME | Collected total of 15 extra-base hits in 1908 (nine doubles/five triples/one homer). Switch-hitter posted .319 batting average in 1911 en route to A.L.-leading 28 victories for Philadelphia Athletics. Went 4-for-4 with three RBI and scored three runs in mid-May 1911 game against the Detroit Tigers en route to posting A.L.-leading 28 victories. Managed 23 RBI in both 1908 and 1911. |
| Jean Dubuc | Saint Michael's VT/Notre Dame | Minimum of 20 hits in each of five straight seasons with the Detroit Tigers from 1912 through 1916 (including high of 36 in 1913 when amassing nine two-hit outings). Posted .230 batting average in nine-year career. |
| George Earnshaw | Swarthmore PA | Hit .230 in nine-year career with more than 25 hits three consecutive campaigns for Philadelphia Athletics from 1930 through 1932. Contributed four hits in each of back-to-back games in June of 1931. |
| Boo Ferriss | Mississippi State | Hit .250 in six-year career with Boston Red Sox featuring at least 24 hits in each of his first three seasons from 1945 through 1947. |
| Bob Gibson | Creighton | Contributed 24 HRs (one of them in 1967 World Series) and 144 RBI in 17-year career with the St. Louis Cardinals. While posting microscopic 1.12 ERA in 34 starts in 1968, Gibby allowed opposing hitters to reach base at precisely the same rate he got on base himself. Hammered five HRs in 1965 and 1972 (also six doubles). Provided 19 RBI in 1965 and 1970 plus 20 ribbies in 1963. Registered .303 batting average with 12 multiple-hit games in 1970. |
| Vern Kennedy | Central Missouri State | Lefthanded swinger hit .244 in 12-year career with seven different franchises. Posted batting average of .283 or higher three times in A.L. in a five-year span (1936-38-40). He had three safeties in back-to-back games in 1935 and hit safely in seven straight starts the next year with the Chicago White Sox. |
| Thornton Lee | Cal Poly | Assembled eight-game hitting streaks with Chicago White Sox in 1940 and 1941. Posted batting averages over .250 three times in four-year span with more than 90 plate appearances (1938-40-41). Collected four HRs and 16 RBI in 1938. |
| Ted Lyons | Baylor | Switch-hitter hit .233 with 63 extra-base safeties and 149 RBI in 21-year career with the Chicago White Sox. Compiled .311 batting average with 38 safeties in 1930 to cap off streak of five straight seasons with at least 20 hits. Assembled eight-game hitting streak in 1942 with five of them including multiple safeties. Supplied three three-hit games in span of a month in 1928. He had four hits in a single game in back-to-back seasons (1940 and 1941). |
| Christy Mathewson | Bucknell | Career batting average of .215 with 69 extra-base hits and 167 RBI. Posted batting average of at least .263 in three seasons with the New York Giants (1906-09-12). Provided 20 RBI in 1903 and eight extra-base hits in 1904. He had six multiple-hit games in last seven weeks of 1912. |
| Curly Ogden | Swarthmore PA | Hit .244 in five-year A.L. career. In 1924, he hit safely in nine of 12 starts for the Washington Senators from end of May to late August. |
| Claude Passeau | Millsaps MS | Pounded 15 career HRs in 13-year N.L. career. Hit .282 as Philadelphia Phillies rookie in 1936. His grand slam in mid-May 1941 was first of three homers in span of five starts. A year later, he homered in back-to-back starts for the Chicago Cubs. |
| Jim Perry | Campbell | Compiled eight-game hitting streak as rookie starter for the Cleveland Indians in 1959 through all of August until mid-September, provided eight two-hit outings in 1960 with the Tribe and posted a .556 batting average in six of his starts for the Minnesota Twins in June of 1970. |
| Gary Peters | Grove City PA | Lefthander collected 19 HRs and 102 RBI in 14-year career. Belted multiple HRs in six different seasons (1963-64-67-68-69-71). He had 19 RBI along with 11 extra-base hits (seven doubles and four HRs) in 1964. Homered in nine consecutive campaigns from 1963 through 1971. Eleven-game hitting streak as starting pitcher with the Chicago White Sox in 1966. |
| Nelson "Nels" Potter | Mount Morris IL/Manchester IN | Eight multiple-hit games with the St. Louis Browns in 1945 when posting a .304 batting average (28-of-92). |
| Hal Schumacher | St. Lawrence NY | Accumulated 15 homers and 102 RBI in 13-year career with the New York Giants. Smacked six HRs in 1934 along with six other extra-base hits. Hit safely in all but one of 12-game starting span in mid-season of 1935. Provided pair of homers and five RBI in a game early in 1934. |
| Joe "Lefty" Shaute | Mansfield PA | Eight-game hitting streak in 1924, igniting a streak of hitting over .300 for the Cleveland Indians three times in a four-year span with at least 20 safeties. Also had eight-game hitting streak in 1926. Posted .258 batting average in 13-year career. |
| Wilfred "Sonny" Siebert | Missouri | Secured six HRs and 15 RBI while posting .266 batting average in 1971 as All-Star with the Boston Red Sox. Went "batty" against the Baltimore Orioles in two games in 1971 with five RBI in late-June game before smacking pair of round-trippers just over two months later in early September. |
| Tom Zachary | Guilford NC | Hit .226 in 19-year career with annual average of 19 safeties in seven-season span from 1920 through 1926. Manufactured six-game hitting streak in 1928. Went 4-for-4 with the Washington Senators in a game in back-to-back seasons (1921 and 1922). |
Short & Sweet: Coaches Posting Higher Win % in 1-Year Stint Than DeVries
Darian DeVries won 59.4% of his games in only season (19-13 record) with West Virginia before seeking greener pastures at Indiana. But a surprising number of previous "won-and-done" mentors posted even higher winning percentages in "short-and-sweet" one-year stints since the generally recognized start of the modern era of college basketball in the early 1950s. DeVries' successor at Drake (Ben McCollum) also promptly moved on to higher ground at Iowa after earning distinction as the winningest one-year wonder in NCAA history (31-4).
Fordham improved by 14 games in Digger Phelps' only season with the Rams in 1970-71, a mark that stood for one-year wonders until Chris Beard broke it with a 15-game improvement after UALR (30-5) went 13-18 in 2014-15. Buzz Peterson, the only coach to win a national postseason championship in his only season at a school (NIT with Tulsa), is among the following "one-and-done" coaches - including 2025 NCAA playoff bench bosses Rick Barnes (George Mason), Scott Drew (Valparaiso), Grant McCasland (Texas Tech), Matt Painter (Southern Illinois) and Brad Underwood (Oklahoma State) plus McCollum - winning more than 60% of their games in one-year tenures in the last 70 years:
| Coach | School | Single Season | W-L | Pct. | Reason for One-Year Stint |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lute Olson | Long Beach State | 1973-74 | 24-2 | .923 | Became coach at Iowa. |
| Digger Phelps | Fordham | 1970-71 | 26-3 | .897 | Became coach at Notre Dame. |
| Ben McCollum | Drake | 2024-25 | 31-4 | .886 | Became coach at Iowa. |
| Chris Beard | UALR | 2015-16 | 30-5 | .857 | Became coach at UNLV. |
| Carl Tacy | Marshall | 1971-72 | 23-4 | .852 | Became coach at Wake Forest. |
| Keno Davis | Drake | 2007-08 | 28-5 | .848 | Became coach at Providence. |
| Matt Painter | Southern Illinois | 2003-04 | 25-5 | .833 | Became coach at Purdue. |
| Stan Heath | Kent State | 2001-02 | 29-6 | .829 | Became coach at Arkansas. |
| Paul Weir | New Mexico State | 2016-17 | 28-6 | .824 | Became coach at New Mexico. |
| Danny Sprinkle | Utah State | 2023-24 | 28-7 | .800 | Became coach at Washington. |
| Thad Matta | Butler | 2000-01 | 24-8 | .750 | Became coach at Xavier. |
| Bill Fitch | Bowling Green | 1967-68 | 18-7 | .720 | Became coach at Minnesota. |
| Jim Harding* | La Salle | 1967-68 | 20-8 | .714 | Forced out by administration. |
| Buzz Peterson | Tulsa | 2000-01 | 26-11 | .703 | Became coach at Tennessee. |
| Bob Vanatta | Army | 1953-54 | 15-7 | .682 | Became coach at Bradley. |
| Larry Shyatt | Wyoming | 1997-98 | 19-9 | .679 | Became coach at Clemson. |
| Rick Barnes | George Mason | 1987-88 | 20-10 | .667 | Became coach at Providence. |
| Corey Gipson | Northwestern State | 2022-23 | 22-11 | .667 | Became coach at Austin Peay. |
| Ron Greene | Mississippi State | 1977-78 | 18-9 | .667 | Became coach at Murray State. |
| Art Tolis | New Orleans | 1987-88 | 21-11 | .656 | Forced out by administration. |
| Steve Lutz | Western Kentucky | 2023-24 | 22-12 | .647 | Became coach at Oklahoma State. |
| Scott Drew | Valparaiso | 2002-03 | 20-11 | .645 | Became coach at Baylor. |
| Louis Orr | Siena | 2000-01 | 20-11 | .645 | Became coach at Seton Hall. |
| Bob Huggins | Kansas State | 2006-07 | 22-13 | .629 | Became coach at West Virginia. |
| Grant McCasland | Arkansas State | 2016-17 | 20-12 | .625 | Became coach at North Texas. |
| Brad Underwood | Oklahoma State | 2016-17 | 20-13 | .606 | Became coach at Illinois. |
*Harding became coach for Minnesota (ABA) for portion of 1968-69 season.
