College Exam: Day #17 For One-and-Only NCAA Tournament Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper for George Soros butt boy/New York AG Alvin Bragg, seeking translator to interpret bumbling Plagiarist Biledumb or cowering in fetal position from climate change War of the Worlds, it's your opportunity to take 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 17 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.com's year-by-year highlights):
1. Which school had the only trio to each score at least 20 points in two Final Four games? Hint: All three players finished their college careers with more than 2,000 points and were on roster the next year when school lost its playoff opener. The school is only national runner-up to score more than 85 points in an NCAA final.
2. Name the only school to have three players score more than 20 points in a Final Four game. Hint: The school lost championship game that year by more than 20 points although score was tied at halftime.
3. Who is the only player to score 40 or more points in a Final Four game and not eventually play in the NBA? Hint: He was held under 10 points in his other Final Four game that year.
4. Who is the only coach to go more than 40 years from his first to his last appearance in the playoffs? Hint: He and his son, who succeeded him, both compiled a losing tourney record.
5. Who is the only player to compile an NBA playoff scoring average more than 15 points per game higher than his NCAA Tournament average? Hint: He scored just six points in his NCAA playoff debut against a school participating in the tourney for just second time.
6. Who is the only player to lead an NCAA tournament in scoring with more than 120 points and not eventually play in the NBA? Hint: He averaged 32.3 points per game in his three-year college career.
7. Who is the only player from 1957 through 1996 to lead a tournament in rebounding and not eventually play in the NBA? Hint: His school was making just its second tourney appearance the year he led in rebounding.
8. Who is the only non-guard to be the undisputed leading scorer of an NCAA Tournament and not participate in the Final Four? Hint: He never played in the NBA.
9. Who is the first coach to make more than a dozen NCAA playoff appearances before reaching the Final Four? Hint: He was coach of the first team to win national championship in its first Final Four appearance since Texas Western in 1966.
10. Who is the only player to take more than 40 field-goal attempts in a playoff game his team lost? Hint: The guard was the nation's leading scorer with more than 36 points per game for only school to reach national semifinals of a small-college tournament one year and participate in NCAA Tournament the next season.
Answers (Day 17)
Day 16 Questions and Answers
Day 15 Questions and Answers
Day 14 Questions and Answers
Day 13 Questions and Answers
Day 12 Questions and Answers
Day 11 Questions and Answers
Day 10 Questions and Answers
Day 9 Questions and Answers
Day 8 Questions and Answers
Day 7 Questions and Answers
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
Melting Pot: Top Rebounders For Two Final Four Newcomers Are Foreigners
At least they're not illegal aliens taking American positions/jobs. At any rate, the top rebounders for two Final Four teams in 2023 are foreigners - Florida Atlantic's Vladislav Goldin (Russia) and Miami's Norchad Omier (Nicaragua).
College basketball has taken on an increasingly international flavor with an average of more than 400 foreign athletes annually competing for NCAA Division I men's teams over the last 19 seasons. An all-time high of eight different foreign nations outside North America were represented at the 2017 Final Four as the search for talent knows no borders.
You've heard of a trade deficit. How about the trade surplus at the national semifinals? All but three Final Four since 1993 had an international flavor with at least one player from outside North America in the regular rotation of a team reaching the national semifinals. All four 2021 Final Four squads were in this category, including multiple regulars for Baylor and Gonzaga. But 2022 emerged barren.
"If communism hadn't fallen, I would have had to make the most difficult decision in my life," said center George Zidek, the starting center for UCLA's 1995 national champion who once was yelped at by dogs and arrested during a riot in Prague. "I would have had to leave to play basketball and never come back to my country or my family. I don't know if I could have done that."
An old adage claimed that fans couldn't tell the players without a roster. Now, it's at the point where fans can't pronounce the names on rosters without taking a couple of Berlitz language courses. Following is a chronological look at Final Four regulars in the last 30 tourneys coming from 40 different foreign nations (in reverse order):
2023 - Florida Atlantic C Vladislav Goldin (Russia) and Miami C Norchad Omier (Nicaragua).
2022 - None
2021 - Gonzaga G Joel Ayayi (France), Gonzaga C Oumar Ballo (Mali), UCLA F-C Kenneth Nwuba (Nigeria), Houston F J'wan Roberts (Virgin Islands), Baylor F Jonathan Tchamwa Tchatchoua (Cameroon) and Baylor F Flo Thamba (Congo)
2019 - Virginia F-C Mamadi Diakite (Guinea, Africa), Texas Tech G-F Brandone Francis (Dominican Republic), Texas Tech G Davide Moretti (Italy) and Virginia C Jack Salt (New Zealand)
2018 - Kansas C Udoka Azubuike (Nigeria), Kansas F-C Silvio DeSousa (Angola), Kansas G Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk (Ukraine), Loyola of Chicago G Bruno Skokna (Croatia) and Michigan C Moritz Wagner (Germany)
2017 - Oregon F-C Kavell Bigby-Williams (England), South Carolina F-C Khadim Gueye (Senegal), Gonzaga F Rui Hachimura (Japan), Gonzaga C Przemek Karnowski (Poland), South Carolina F-C Mak Kotsar (Estonia), South Carolina F Chris Silva (Gabon), Oregon F Roman Sorkin (Israel) and Gonzaga F-C Killian Tillie (France)
2016 - Oklahoma G Buddy Hield (Bahamas)
2015 - None
2014 - Connecticut C Amida Brimah (Ghana), F Kentan Facey (Jamaica) and G-F Niels Giffey (Germany) and Florida F Will Yeguete (Ivory Coast)
2013 - Louisville C Gorgui Dieng (Senegal), Syracuse C Baye Moussa Keita (Senegal) and Wichita State C Ehimen Orukpe (Nigeria)
2012 - Kentucky C Eloy Vargas (Dominican Republic) and Louisville C Gorgui Dieng (Senegal)
2011 - Connecticut G-F Niels Giffey (Germany) and C Charles Okwandu (Nigeria) and Kentucky C Eloy Vargas (Dominican Republic)
2010 - West Virginia F Deniz Kilicli (Turkey)
2009 - Connecticut C Hasheem Thabeet (Tanzania) and Michigan State C Idong Ibok (Nigeria)
2008 - UCLA F-C Alfred Aboya (Cameroon), F Nikola Dragovic (Serbia) and F Luc Richard Mbah a Moute (Cameroon) and Kansas C Alexander "Sasha" Kaun (Russia)
2007 - UCLA F-C Alfred Aboya (Cameroon) and F Luc Richard Mbah a Moute (Cameroon)
2006 - Florida G Walter Hodge (Puerto Rico), F-C Al Horford (Dominican Republic) and G David Huertas (Puerto Rico), Louisiana State F Magnum Rolle (Bahamas) and UCLA F-C Alfred Aboya (Cameroon) and F Luc Richard Mbah a Moute (Cameroon)
2005 - Louisville F-G Francisco Garcia (Dominican Republic), F-C Otis George (Dominica) and Juan Palacios (Columbia)
2004 - Duke F Luol Deng (Sudan) and Georgia Tech C Luke Schenscher (Australia)
2003 - Texas G Sydmill Harris (The Netherlands)
2002 - Oklahoma C Jabahri Brown (Virgin Islands) and C Jozsef Szendrei (Hungary)
2001 - None
2000 - Wisconsin G Kirk Penney (New Zealand)
1999 - Connecticut C Souleymane Wane (Senegal) and Ohio State G Boban Savovic (Yugoslavia)
1998 - Utah F Hanno Mottola (Finland) and North Carolina C Makhtar Ndiaye (Nigeria)
1997 - North Carolina F Ademola Okulaja (Germany) and C Serge Zwikker (Netherlands)
1996 - Syracuse G Marius Janulis (Lithuania) and Massachusetts G Edgar Padilla (Puerto Rico) and G Carmelo Travieso (Puerto Rico)
1995 - UCLA C George Zidek (Czechoslovakia), Arkansas G Davor Rimac (Yugoslavia) and North Carolina C Serge Zwikker (Netherlands)
1994 - Arkansas G Davor Rimac (Yugoslavia) and Florida F Martti Kuisma (Finland)
1993 - North Carolina G Henrik Rodl (Germany)
Change of Address: Dozen 2023 Final 4 Regulars Are 4-Year School Transfers
Although there frequently is a disenchantment stigma attached to transfers, it shouldn't be considered a crime. In wake of transfer portal, there has never been more impact on a Final Four from players commencing their college playing careers at other four-year NCAA Division I institutions than the past several years. In 2023, four Connecticut regulars, Florida Atlantic's leading rebounder, three of Miami's top four scorers and four of San Diego State's top five scorers are transfers from other four-year universities. Including injured Kentucky star Derek Anderson in 1997, 35 of the last 39 Final Fours featured teams with at least one starter or key reserve beginning his college career attending another four-year DI school.
Vanderbilt guard Billy McCaffrey, a transfer from Duke, is the only All-Tournament selection to finish his college playing career attending another major university. There was no All-Tournament team in 1942 when Stanford guard Howie Dallmar was named Final Four Most Outstanding Player before completing his undergraduate work at Penn toward the end of World War II. McCaffrey earned a spot on the 1991 All-Tournament team by scoring 16 points to help Duke defeat Kansas (72-65) in the championship game.
"What I really wanted was consistency; not playing a key factor in some games, very minimal in others," McCaffrey said. "My role probably would have been the same if I had stayed. I felt I could do more. I needed to enjoy the game more. I think a player likes to know that he can be counted on for certain things every night. That's how I get pleasure from the games. Your college career is too short to spend somewhere you're not happy.
"I don't regret leaving. I cherish those memories. I was happy for them (when the Blue Devils repeated in 1992). I knew when I left that they had a good chance to win (again). I took that into consideration when I made my decision to leave. I'd already been a part of a national championship. Maybe that made it easier."
There are more regular-rotation transfers appearing at the last six Final Fours than there was in a 28-year span from 1984 through 2011. In the last 12 years (11 tourneys), a total of 29 DI schools (including 21 mid-majors) never participating at the F4 had former players advance to the national semifinals after transferring. Following is a chronological look at how transfers have impacted the Final Four in the last 39 years (in reverse order):
2023 - Connecticut's Nahiem Alleyne (transfer from Virginia Tech), Joey Calcaterra (San Diego), Hassan Diarra (Texas A&M) and Tristen Newton (East Carolina); Florida Atlantic's Vladislav Goldin (Texas Tech); Miami's Jordan Miller (George Mason), Norchad Ornier (Arkansas State) and Nigel Pack (Kansas State), plus San Diego State's Matt Bradley (California), Jaedon LeDee (Texas Christian), Micah Parrish (Oakland) and Darrin Trammell (Seattle).
2022 - Kansas G Jalen Coleman-Landis (Illinois/DePaul/Iowa State), Villanova G Caleb Daniels (Tulane), Duke F-C Theo John (Marquette), Duke F Bates Jones (Davidson), North Carolina F Brady Manek (Oklahoma), Kansas G Remy Martin (Arizona State) and Kansas G Joseph Yesufu (Drake).
2021 - Houston F Reggie Chaney (Arkansas), Gonzaga G Aaron Cook (Southern Illinois), Baylor G Adam Flagler (Presbyterian), Houston F Justin Gorham (Towson), Houston F-C Brison Gresham (Massachusetts), Houston G Quentin Grimes (Kansas), Houston G Dejon Jarreau (Massachusetts), UCLA G Johnny Juzang (Kentucky), Baylor G Davion Mitchell (Auburn), Gonzaga G Andrew Nembhard (Florida), Baylor F Jonathan Tchamwa Tchatchoua (UNLV), Baylor G MaCio Teague (UNC Asheville) and Houston G Cameron Tyson (Idaho).
2019 - Auburn G Samir Doughty (Virginia Commonwealth), Texas Tech G Brandone Francis (Florida), Virginia F Braxton Key (Alabama), Texas Tech G Matt Mooney (Air Force/South Dakota) and Texas Tech F-C Tariq Owens (Tennessee/St. John's)
2018 - Loyola of Chicago G Clayton Custer (Iowa State), Michigan G Charles Matthews (Kentucky), Kansas G-F Malik Newman (Mississippi State), Villanova F Eric Paschall (Fordham), Michigan G-F Duncan Robinson (Williams MA) and Loyola of Chicago G Marques Townes (Fairleigh Dickinson)
2017 - Oregon G Dylan Ennis (Rice/Villanova), Gonzaga G Jordan Mathews (California), Oregon C Paul White (Georgetown), Gonzaga F Johnathan Williams (Missouri) and Gonzaga G Nigel Williams-Goss (Washington)
2016 - Syracuse G Michael Gbinije (Duke) and Oklahoma F Ryan Spangler (Gonzaga)
2015 - Michigan State G Bryn Forbes (Cleveland State)
2014 - Wisconsin F Zach Bohannon (Air Force), Florida F Dorian Finney-Smith (Virginia Tech) and Connecticut G-F Lasan Kromah (George Washington)
2013 - Wichita State G Malcolm Armstead* (Oregon) and Louisville G-F Luke Hancock (George Mason)
2012 - Ohio State F Evan Ravenel (Boston College), Louisville G Chris Smith (Manhattan), Kentucky C Eloy Vargas* (Florida), Kansas F Justin Wesley (Lamar), Kansas C Jeff Withey (Arizona) and Kansas F Kevin Young (Loyola Marymount)
2011 - Kentucky C Eloy Vargas* (Florida), Virginia Commonwealth F Jamie Skeen (Wake Forest), Virginia Commonwealth F Toby Veal* (Colorado)
2010 - None
2009 - None
2008 - Kansas G Rodrick Stewart** (Southern California) and Memphis F Shawn Taggart (Iowa State)
2007 - Georgetown F Patrick Ewing Jr. (Indiana) and Ohio State G Ron Lewis (Bowling Green)
2006 - None
2005 - Illinois F-C Jack Ingram (Tulsa)
2004 - Oklahoma State G Daniel Bobik (Brigham Young), Georgia Tech G Will Bynum (Arizona), Oklahoma State G-F Joey Graham (Central Florida), Oklahoma State F Stephen Graham (Central Florida), Oklahoma State G John Lucas III (Baylor) and Oklahoma State F Jason Miller (North Texas)
2003 - Texas F Deginald Erskin (North Texas) and Marquette F-C Robert Jackson (Mississippi State)
2002 - Oklahoma C Jabahri Brown (Florida International) and F-C Aaron McGhee* (Cincinnati) and Maryland G-F Byron Mouton (Tulane)
2001 - Michigan State F Mike Chappell (Duke), Maryland G-F Byron Mouton (Tulane) and Arizona C Loren Woods (Wake Forest)
2000 - Michigan State F Mike Chappell (Duke)
1999 - Ohio State G Scoonie Penn (Boston College)
1998 - Kentucky F Heshimu Evans (Manhattan) and North Carolina C Makhtar Ndiaye (Michigan)
1997 - Kentucky G-F Derek Anderson (Ohio State)
1996 - Kentucky G-F Derek Anderson (Ohio State) and C Mark Pope (Washington)
1995 - Oklahoma State F Scott Pierce (Illinois)
1994 - None
1993 - Kentucky G Travis Ford (Missouri) and Kansas G Rex Walters (Northwestern)
1992 - Cincinnati G Anthony Buford (Akron) and F Erik Martin* (Texas Christian)
1991 - UNLV G Greg Anthony (Portland) and C Elmore Spencer* (Georgia)
1990 - UNLV G Greg Anthony (Portland)
1989 - Illinois F Kenny Battle (Northern Illinois)
1988 - Kansas G Clint Normore (Wichita State), Oklahoma F Harvey Grant (Clemson) and Arizona F Tom Tolbert* (UC Irvine)
1987 - Providence G Delray Brooks (Indiana) and UNLV G Mark Wade* (Oklahoma)
1986 - Kansas C Greg Dreiling (Wichita State)
1985 - St. John's G Mike Moses (Florida)
1984 - Virginia G Rick Carlisle (Maine)
*Played for a junior college between four-year schools.
**Injured.
College Exam: Day #16 For One-and-Only NCAA Tournament Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper to wipe butt of George Soros butt kisser/flunky New York AG Alvin Bragg, seeking translator to try to understand incoherent Plagiarist Biledumb or cowering in fetal position from college basketball version of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds, 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 16 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.com's year-by-year highlights):
1. Name the only school to have four players score more than 14,000 points in the pros after never participating in national postseason competition (NCAA playoffs and NIT). Hint: One member of the foursome left college early after just one season of eligibility when he averaged 30 points per game and another is the highest scorer in NBA history to never participate in NBA playoffs.
2. Name the only father-son combination to be on the rosters of two teams from the same school to win NCAA Tournament championships. Hint: Both of them were underclassmen when their teams captured NCAA titles.
3. Who is the only player never to appear in the NBA or ABA after averaging more than 20 points per game for a team reaching an NCAA Tournament final? Hint: A college teammate was member of the NBA championship team drafting him.
4. Who is the only undergraduate non-center to average more than 23 points per game for a national champion? Hint: He is the last player to score the most points in a single game of an NCAA Tournament and play for championship team.
5. Who is the only player to appear at a minimum of two Final Fours and be game-high scorer in every Final Four contest he played? Hint: His brother is an NFL Hall of Famer.
6. Who is the only coach to win an NBA championship after directing a college to the Final Four? Hint: His college squad was implicated in a game-fixing scandal.
7. Who is the only player to grab more than 41 rebounds at a single Final Four? Hint: He is the only player to retrieve more than 21 missed shots in a championship game and only player to score more than 20 points and grab more than 20 rebounds in back-to-back NCAA finals.
8. Who is the only Final Four Most Outstanding Player to later coach a school other than his alma mater to the playoffs? Hint: He coached for more than 20 years in the same conference against UCLA legend John Wooden. He is also the only Final Four Most Outstanding Player to complete his college playing career attending another university.
9. Who is the only junior college player to later be selected Final Four Most Outstanding Player? Hint: He won the award when Final Four was held in his home state and eventually became an NBA head coach.
10. Name the only school with a losing league record to defeat a conference rival by more than 20 points in a season the opponent wound up winning the national championship. Hint: The school with a losing league mark participated in NCAA playoffs the next season for first time since reaching Final Four more than 20 years earlier when a consensus first-team All-American became only player in school history to average more than 25 points in a season.
Answers (Day 16)
Day 15 Questions and Answers
Day 14 Questions and Answers
Day 13 Questions and Answers
Day 12 Questions and Answers
Day 11 Questions and Answers
Day 10 Questions and Answers
Day 9 Questions and Answers
Day 8 Questions and Answers
Day 7 Questions and Answers
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
We Shall Return: Kansas State Squanders Chance For First F4 in 59 Years
Try, try again! History repeats itself but can take longer than anyone wants or expects. Kansas State, making its 25th NCAA playoff appearance since its last Final Four in 1964, was well positioned to return to the national semifinals before the Wildcats were upset by Florida Atlantic in a regional final this year.
Two seasons ago, Baylor participated in the Final Four for the first time since 1950. The Bears' 71-year absence between national semifinal appearances is exceeded only by Oregon (78). K-State squandered an opportunity to join the following 13 institutions going more than 35 years before returning to the Promised Land:
Final Four School | Famine Years | Coaches Between Final Fours | NCAA Tournament Appearances During Lapse |
---|---|---|---|
Oregon | 78 | Howard Hobson (1939) to Dana Altman (2017) | 13: 1945-60-61-95-00-02-03-07-08-13-14-15-16 |
Baylor | 71 | Bill Henderson (1950) to Scott Drew (2021) | nine: 1988-08-10-12-14-15-16-17-19 |
Wisconsin | 59 | Bud Foster (1941) to Dick Bennett (2000) | four: 1947-94-97-99 |
Stanford | 56 | Everett Dean (1942) to Mike Montgomery (1998) | five: 1989-92-95-96-97 |
Texas | 56 | Jack Gray (1947) to Rick Barnes (2003) | 17: 1960-63-72-74-79-89-90-91-92-94-95-96-97-99-00-01-02 |
Loyola of Chicago | 54 | George Ireland (1963-64) to Porter Moser (2016-17) | four: 1964-66-68-85 |
Wichita State | 48 | Gary Thompson (1965) to Gregg Marshall (2013) | seven: 1976-81-85-87-88-06-12 |
Oklahoma State | 44 | Hank Iba (1951) to Eddie Sutton (1995) | nine: 1953-54-58-65-83-91-92-93-94 |
Oklahoma | 41 | Bruce Drake (1947) to Billy Tubbs (1988) | six: 1979-83-84-85-86-87 |
Georgetown | 39 | Elmer Ripley (1943) to John Thompson Jr. (1982) | five: 1975-76-79-80-81 |
Houston | 37 | Guy Lewis (1984) to Kelvin Sampson (2021) | six: 1987-90-92-10-18-19 |
Illinois | 37 | Harry Combes (1952) to Lou Henson (1989) | eight: 1963-81-83-84-85-86-87-88 |
DePaul | 36 | Ray Meyer (1943) to Ray Meyer (1979) | seven: 1953-56-59-60-65-76-78 |
Juco Jewels: Will Junior College Recruits Gaines & Weatherspoon Help FAU?
Junior college products have made a significant difference for NCAA Tournament titlists. Keith Erickson (El Camino CA), Jack Hirsch (Los Angeles Valley CA), Larry Hollyfield (Compton CA), Terry Schofield (Santa Monica CA), John Vallely (Orange Coast CA) and Sidney Wicks (Santa Monica CA) were instrumental in helping UCLA win seven of its NCAA championships (1964-65-69-70-71-72-73) and mighty mite Bobby Joe Hill (Burlington IA) was the spark-plug for Texas Western when the Miners captured the 1966 title. Wicks is the only individual to become a member of three NCAA champions after playing in junior college.
As DI academic exemptions become pervasive, no juco recruit made an impact last year and it is unlikely a couple of FAU J.C. products will emerge among the best of the following alphabetical list of key Final Four team regulars previously playing for a junior college:
J.C. Recruit | Pos. | Final Four Team(s) | Junior College(s) |
---|---|---|---|
George Ackles | C | UNLV '91 | Garden City (Kan.) |
Tony Allen | G | Oklahoma State '04 | Wabash Valley (Ill.) |
Malcolm Armstead | G | Wichita State '13 | Chipola (Fla.) |
Rex Bailey | G | Western Kentucky '71 | Vincennes (Ind.) |
Jarvis Basnight | F | UNLV '87 | Mount San Antonio (Calif.) |
Warren Baxter | G | San Francisco '55 & '56 | San Francisco City |
Corey Beck | G | Arkansas '94 & '95 | South Plains (Tex.) |
Walter Berry | F | St. John's '85 | San Jacinto (Tex.) |
Kavell Bigby-Williams | F-C | Oregon '17 | Gillette (Wyo.) |
Daron "Mookie" Blaylock | G | Oklahoma '88 | Midland (Tex.) |
Corie Blount | C | Cincinnati '92 | Rancho Santiago (Calif.) |
Carl Boldt | F | San Francisco '56 | Glendale (Calif.) |
Kenny Booker | F-G | UCLA '70 & '71 | Long Beach (Calif.) |
Roy Boone | G | Wisconsin '00 | Coffeyville (Kan.) |
Ron Brewer | G | Arkansas '78 | Westark (Ark.) |
Karl Brown | G | Georgia Tech '90 | Chipola (Fla.) |
Terry Brown | G | Kansas '91 | Erie (Pa.) & Northeastern Oklahoma A&M |
Pembrook Burrows III | F | Jacksonville '70 | Brevard (Fla.) |
David Butler | C | UNLV '90 | San Jacinto (Tex.) |
Chet Carr | F | Southern California '54 | Vallejo (Calif.) |
Jerry Chambers | F-C | Utah '66 | Trinidad (Colo.) |
Jason Cipolla | G | Syracuse '96 | Tallahassee (Fla.) |
DeShawn Corprew | F | Texas Tech '19 | South Plains (Tex.) |
William "Bo" Crain | F | Utah '61 | Weber State (Utah) |
Charlie Criss | G | New Mexico State '70 | New Mexico J.C. |
Eric Curry | C-F | Indiana State '79 | Wabash Valley (Ill.) |
Howie Dallmar | G | Stanford '42 | Menlo (Calif.) |
Bennett Davison | F | Arizona '97 | West Valley (Calif.) |
Art Day | C | San Francisco '57 | Hannibal-LaGrange (Mo.) |
Jason Detrick | G | Oklahoma '02 | Southwest Missouri State-West Plains |
Alex Dillard | G | Arkansas '94 & '95 | Southern Union (Ala.) |
Don Draper | G | Drake '69 | Coffeyville (Kan.) |
Al Dunbar | G | San Francisco '57 | Hannibal-LaGrange (Mo.) |
Malik Dunbar | G-F | Auburn '19 | College of Central Florida |
Jerry Dunn | F | Western Kentucky '71 | Vincennes (Ind.) |
Cleanthony Early | F | Wichita State '13 | Sullivan County (N.Y.) |
Ebi Ere | G | Oklahoma '02 | Barton County (Kan.) |
Denny Fitzpatrick | G | California '59 | Orange Coast (Calif.) |
Jerry Frizzell | F | Seattle '58 | Grays Harbor (Wash.) |
Isaiah Gaines | F | Florida Atlantic '23 | Northwest Mississippi |
Dean Garrett | C | Indiana '87 | City College of San Francisco |
Alex Gilbert | C | Indiana State '79 | Coffeyville (Kan.) |
Armon Gilliam | F-C | UNLV '87 | Independence (Kan.) |
Artis Gilmore | C | Jacksonville '70 | Gardner-Webb (N.C.) |
Ricky Grace | G | Oklahoma '88 | Midland (Tex.) |
Harvey Grant | F | Oklahoma '88 | Independence (Kan.) |
Jeff Graves | F-C | Kansas '03 | Iowa Western |
Hassani Gravett | G | South Carolina '17 | Pensacola State (Fla.) |
Evric Gray | F | UNLV '91 | Riverside (Calif.) |
Rickey Green | G | Michigan '76 | Vincennes (Ind.) |
Carl Hall | F | Wichita State '13 | Middle Georgia & Northwest Florida State |
Arnette Hallman | F | Purdue '80 | Joliet (Ill.) |
Dick Hammer | G | Southern California '54 | Fullerton (Calif.) |
Darrin Hancock | F | Kansas '93 | Garden City (Kan.) |
Josh Harrellson | C | Kentucky '11 | Southwestern Illinois |
Bobby Joe Hill | G | Texas Western '66 | Burlington (Iowa) |
Larry Hollyfield | G-F | UCLA '72 & '73 | Compton (Calif.) |
Lenzie Howell | F | Arkansas '90 | San Jacinto (Tex.) |
Othello Hunter | F | Ohio State '07 | Hillsborough (Fla.) |
Roy Irvin | C | Southern California '54 | Fullerton (Calif.) |
Aundre Jackson | F | Loyola of Chicago '18 | McLennan (Tex.) |
Bobby Jackson | G | Minnesota '97 | Western Nebraska |
Alonzo Jamison | F | Kansas '91 | Rancho Santiago (Calif.) |
David Johanning | C | Kansas '91 | Hutchinson (Kan.) |
Larry Johnson | F | UNLV '90 & '91 | Odessa (Tex.) |
Dontae' Jones | F | Mississippi State '96 | Northeast Mississippi |
Herb Jones | F | Cincinnati '92 | Butler County (Kan.) |
John Keller | F-G | Kansas '52 | Garden City (Kan.) |
Larry Kenon | F | Memphis State '73 | Amarillo (Tex.) |
Weldon Kern | F | Oklahoma A&M '45 & '46 | Cameron (Okla.) |
Charlie Koon | G | Washington '53 | Olympic (Wash.) |
Don Kruse | C | Houston '67 | Kilgore (Tex.) |
Vern Lewis | G | Houston '67 & '68 | Tyler (Tex.) |
Chadrack Lufile | F | Wichita State '13 | Chipola (Fla.), Vincennes (Ind.) & Coffeyville (Kan.) |
Akolda Manyang | C | Oklahoma '16 | Indian Hills (Iowa) |
Archie Marshall | F | Kansas '86 | Seminole (Okla.) |
Erik Martin | F | Cincinnati '92 | Rancho Santiago (Calif.) |
Bob McAdoo | C | North Carolina '72 | Vincennes (Ind.) |
Bill McClintock | F | California '59 & '60 | Monterey Peninsula (Calif.) |
J'Von McCormick | G | Auburn '19 | Lee (Tex.) |
Aaron McGhee | F-C | Oklahoma '02 | Vincennes (Ind.) |
Johnny McNeil | C | Georgia Tech '90 | Chowan (N.C.) |
Lincoln Minor | G | Kansas '88 | Midland (Tex.) |
Wat Misaka | G | Utah '44 | Weber (Utah) |
Casey Mitchell | G | West Virginia '10 | Chipola (Fla.) |
Larry Moffett | C | UNLV '77 | Compton (Calif.) |
Rex Morgan | G | Jacksonville '70 | Lake Land (Ill.) |
Roger Morningstar | F | Kansas '74 | Olney (Ill.) Central |
Willie Murrell | F | Kansas State '64 | Eastern Oklahoma A&M |
Swen Nater | C | UCLA '72 & '73 | Cypress (Calif.) |
Carl Nicks | G | Indiana State '79 | Gulf Coast (Fla.) |
Jim Nielsen | F | UCLA '67 & '68 | Pierce (Calif.) |
Charles Okwandu | C | Connecticut '11 | Harcum (Pa.) |
Ehimen Orukpe | C | Wichita State '13 | Three Rivers (Mo.) |
V.C. "Buck" Overall | F | Texas '43 | Tyler (Tex.) |
Andre Owens | G | Oklahoma State '95 | Midland (Tex.) |
Gerald Paddio | F | UNLV '87 | Kilgore (Tex.) & Seminole (Okla.) |
Hal Patterson | F | Kansas '53 | Garden City (Kan.) |
Mike Preaseau | F | San Francisco '56 & '57 | Menlo (Calif.) |
Ryan Randle | F-C | Maryland '02 | Allegany (Md.) |
George Reese | F | Ohio State '99 | Independence (Kan.) |
George Reynolds | G | Houston '68 | Imperial Valley (Calif.) |
Morris "Moe" Rivers | G | North Carolina State '74 | Gulf Coast (Fla.) |
Dave Rose | G | Houston '83 | Dixie State (Utah) |
Lynden Rose | G | Houston '82 | North Harris County (Tex.) |
Terrell Ross | G | Texas '03 | Allegany (Md.) |
Randy Rutherford | G | Oklahoma State '95 | Bacone (Okla.) |
Greg Samuel | G | Florida State '72 | Broward (Fla.) |
Terry Schofield | G | UCLA '69, '70 & '71 | Santa Monica (Calif.) |
Moses Scurry | F | UNLV '90 | San Jacinto (Tex.) |
Daryan Selvy | F | Oklahoma '02 | Carl Albert (Okla.) |
Tony Skinn | G | George Mason '06 | Blinn (Tex.) |
Keith Smart | G | Indiana '87 | Garden City (Kan.) |
Odie Smith | G | Kentucky '58 | Northeast Mississippi |
Robert Smith | G | UNLV '77 | Arizona Western |
Sam Smith | F | UNLV '77 | Seminole (Okla.) |
Phil Spence | F | North Carolina State '74 | Vincennes (Ind.) |
Elmore Spencer | C | UNLV '91 | Connors (Okla.) State |
Leroy Staley | F | Indiana State '79 | Florida J.C. |
Dwight Stewart | C | Arkansas '94 & '95 | South Plains (Tex.) |
Jozsef Szendrei | C | Oklahoma '02 | Northeastern (Colo.) |
Rich Tate | G | Utah '66 | Trinidad (Colo.) |
Ron Thomas | F | Louisville '72 | Henderson County (Tex.) |
Tom Tolbert | F | Arizona '88 | Cerritos (Calif.) |
Nick Van Exel | G | Cincinnati '92 | Trinity Valley (Tex.) |
Eloy Vargas | C | Kentucky '11 & '12 | Miami-Dade (Fla.) |
Toby Veal | F | Virginia Commonwealth '11 | Northwest Florida State |
Mark Wade | G | UNLV '87 | El Camino (Calif.) |
Dinjiyl Walker | G | Oklahoma '16 | Iowa Western |
Russell Walters | F | Mississippi State '96 | Jones County (Miss.) |
Lloyd Walton | G | Marquette '74 | Moberly (Mo.) |
Brandon Weatherspoon | G | Florida Atlantic | Holmes (Miss.) |
Janavor Weatherspoon | G | Oklahoma State '04 | Odessa (Tex.) |
Wes Westfall | F | Memphis State '73 | Trinidad (Colo.) |
Quannas White | G | Oklahoma '02 | Midland (Tex.) |
Jerome Whitehead | C | Marquette '77 | Riverside (Calif.) City |
Nick Wiggins | G | Wichita State '13 | Vincennes (Ind.) & Wabash Valley (Ill.) |
Andre Wiley | F | Oklahoma '88 | Compton (Calif.) |
David Willard | C | UNLV '87 | Laredo (Tex.) |
Willie Wise | F | Drake '69 | San Francisco City |
Gary Zeller | G | Drake '69 | Long Beach (Calif.) |
Sizzling Scorers: Sanogo Top Point Producer Among 2023 Final Four Entrants
Connecticut's Adama Sanogo (17.1 ppg) ended a streak of seven consecutive top scorers among Final Four participants failing to become highest point producer at F4. Odds are in Sanogo's favor to become leading point producer insofar as Florida Atlantic (Johnell Davis/13.9) and San Diego State (Matt Bradley/12.5) are the first two national semifinalists in any given year with leading scorers averaging fewer than 14 ppg since 1952 featured Illinois (John "Red" Kerr/13.7) and Santa Clara (Jim Young/11.8).
In 2016, Oklahoma's Buddy Hield, the nation's runner-up in scoring with 25.4 points per game, came close to duplicating one of the most overlooked achievements in NCAA Tournament history. In 1951-52, Clyde Lovellette of champion Kansas became the only player to lead the nation in scoring average (28.4 ppg) while competing for a squad reaching the NCAA tourney title game. Final Four luminaries averaging more than 30 ppg include Elvin Hayes (36.8/Houston '68), Oscar Robertson (33.7/Cincinnati '60 and 32.6/Cincinnati '59), Rick Mount (33.3/Purdue '69), Elgin Baylor (32.5/Seattle '58), Bill Bradley (30.5/Princeton '65) and Len Chappell (30.1/Wake Forest '62).
Lovellette, an 11-year NBA center who passed away three years ago, served as sheriff of Vigo County in his native Indiana (noted for raid on Terre Haute brothels). Ochai Agbaji has been scoring under his season average during the tourney, but aspires to "raid" the Final Four by joining Lovellette as the only other player cracking the 30-point plateau in the national semifinals and championship contest in the same season (33 against both Santa Clara and St. John's).
Hield was the first Final Four player since Georgia Tech's Dennis Scott to average in excess of 25 ppg. Only two other Final Four players notched higher scoring averages than Hield since the playoff field expanded to at least 32 teams in 1975 - Larry Bird (28.6 ppg for Indiana State '79 and Glen Rice (25.6 for Michigan '89). Rice scored 59 points in two Final Four games. The highest F4 total since him was accrued by Arizona guard Miles Simon with 54 in 1997. Sanogo joins the following list of individuals in the last 32 tourneys amassing the highest scoring average from a Final Four club since Scott's mark of 27.7 ppg in 1989-90:
Season Top Scorer Among Final Four Participants School Average Final Four's Two-Game Top Scorer 1989-90 Dennis Scott Georgia Tech 27.7 ppg Duke's Phil Henderson/UNLV's Anderson Hunt (49 points) 1990-91 Larry Johnson UNLV 22.7 ppg Duke's Christian Laettner (46 points) 1991-92 Christian Laettner Duke 21.5 ppg Duke's Bobby Hurley (35 points) 1992-93 Jamal Mashburn Kentucky 21.0 ppg Michigan's Chris Webber/ UNC's Donald Williams (50 points) 1993-94 Khalid Reeves Arizona 24.2 ppg Arkansas' Corliss Williamson (52 points) 1994-95 Bryant Reeves Oklahoma State 21.5 ppg UCLA's Ed O'Bannon (45 points) 1995-96 John Wallace Syracuse 22.2 ppg Wallace (50 points) 1996-97 Antawn Jamison North Carolina 19.1 ppg Arizona's Miles Simon (54 points) 1997-98 Antawn Jamison North Carolina 22.2 ppg Kentucky's Jeff Sheppard (43 points) 1998-99 Richard Hamilton Connecticut 21.5 ppg Hamilton (51 points) 1999-00 Morris Peterson Michigan State 16.8 ppg Peterson (41 points) 2000-01 Jay Williams Duke 21.6 ppg Duke's Shane Battier (43 points) 2001-02 Juan Dixon Maryland 20.4 ppg Dixon (51 points) 2002-03 Carmelo Anthony Syracuse 22.2 ppg Anthony (53 points) 2003-04 Ben Gordon Connecticut 18.5 ppg UConn's Emeka Okafor (42 points) 2004-05 Sean May North Carolina 17.5 ppg May (48 points) 2005-06 Glen Davis Louisiana State 18.6 ppg Florida's Lee Humphrey (34 points) 2006-07 Arron Affalo UCLA 16.9 ppg Ohio State's Greg Oden (38 points) 2007-08 Tyler Hansbrough North Carolina 22.6 ppg Memphis' Chris Douglas-Roberts (50 points) 2008-09 Tyler Hansbrough North Carolina 20.7 ppg UNC's Ty Lawson (43 points) 2009-10 Jon Scheyer Duke 18.2 ppg Duke's Kyle Singler (40 points) 2010-11 Kemba Walker Connecticut 23.5 ppg Butler's Shelvin Mack (37 points) 2011-12 Thomas Robinson Kansas 17.7 ppg Robinson (37 points) 2012-13 Russ Smith Louisville 18.7 ppg Louisville's Luke Hancock (42 points) 2013-14 Shabazz Napier Connecticut 18.0 ppg Kentucky's James Young (37 points) 2014-15 Frank Kaminsky Wisconsin 18.8 ppg Kaminsky (41 points) 2015-16 Buddy Hield Oklahoma 25.4 ppg Villanova's Josh Hart (35 points) 2016-17 Sindarius Thornwell South Carolina 21.6 ppg UNC's Justin Jackson/Gonzaga's Nigel Williams-Goss (38 points) 2017-18 Jalen Brunson Villanova 19.2 ppg Villanova's Donte DiVincenzo (46 points) 2018-19 Jarrett Culver Texas Tech 18.9 ppg Virginia's De'Andre Hunter (41 points) 2018-19 Cassius Winston Michigan State 18.9 ppg Virginia's De'Andre Hunter (41 points) 2020-21 Drew Timme Gonzaga 19 ppg Baylor's Jared Butler (39 points) 2021-22 Ochai Agbaji Kansas 18.9 ppg Kansas' David McCormack (40 points) 2022-23 Adama Sanogo Connecticut 17.1 ppg Sanogo (38 points)
Breaking New Ground: Three Final Four Newcomers For 1st Time in 53 Years
Florida Atlantic, Miami (Fla.) and San Diego State became the first trio to participate in their first Final Four since Jacksonville, New Mexico State and St. Bonaventure each made their only national semifinal appearance in 1970.
When Gonzaga and South Carolina met at the 2017 Final Four, they were the first set of newcomers to oppose each other at the F4 in 40 years since UNLV defeated UNC Charlotte in the 1977 national third-place game. Newbies Memphis State and Providence clashed in the 1973 semis.
Prior to Connecticut in 1999, the last team to win a championship in its initial national semifinal appearance was Texas Western (now Texas-El Paso) in 1966. Following in reverse order are the "first-timer" schools - two of them coached by Hugh Durham setting standard for Jim Larranaga to duplicate - making their first impression on the Final Four since 1970:
Year | Final Four Newcomer | NCAA Tourney Appearance | Head Coach | Final Four Outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | Florida Atlantic | 2nd | Dusty May | Lost in semifinal. |
2023 | Miami (Fla.) | 12th | Jim Larranaga | Lost in semifinal. |
2023 | San Diego State | 15th | Brian Dutcher | Lost in final. |
2019 | Auburn | 10th | Bruce Pearl | Lost in semifinal. |
2019 | Texas Tech | 17th | Chris Beard | Lost in final. |
2017 | Gonzaga* | 20th | Mark Few | Lost in final. |
2017 | South Carolina | 9th | Frank Martin | Lost in semifinal. |
2011 | Virginia Commonwealth | 10th | Shaka Smart | Lost in semifinal. |
2010 | Butler* | 10th | Brad Stevens | Lost in final. |
2006 | George Mason | 4th | Jim Larranaga | Lost in semifinal. |
2001 | Maryland* | 18th | Gary Williams | Lost in semifinal. |
1999 | Connecticut* | 21st | Jim Calhoun | Won NCAA championship. |
1997 | Minnesota | 7th | Clem Haskins | Lost in semifinal. |
1996 | Massachusetts | 6th | John Calipari | Lost in semifinal. |
1996 | Mississippi State | 4th | Richard Williams | Lost in semifinal. |
1994 | Florida* | 4th | Lon Kruger | Lost in semifinal. |
1990 | Georgia Tech* | 7th | Bobby Cremins | Lost in semifinal. |
1989 | Seton Hall | 2nd | P.J. Carlesimo | Lost in final. |
1988 | Arizona* | 7th | Lute Olson | Lost in semifinal. |
1983 | Georgia | 1st | Hugh Durham | Lost in semifinal. |
1981 | Virginia* | 2nd | Terry Holland | Won third-place game. |
1979 | Indiana State | 1st | Bill Hodges | Lost in final. |
1979 | Penn | 9th | Bob Weinhauer | Lost consolation game. |
1978 | Notre Dame | 15th | Digger Phelps | Lost consolation game. |
1977 | UNC Charlotte | 1st | Lee Rose | Lost consolation game. |
1977 | UNLV* | 3rd | Jerry Tarkanian | Won third-place game. |
1976 | Rutgers | 2nd | Tom Young | Lost consolation game. |
1975 | Syracuse* | 5th | Roy Danforth | Lost consolation game. |
1974 | Marquette* | 9th | Al McGuire | Lost in final. |
1973 | Memphis State* | 4th | Gene Bartow | Lost in final. |
1973 | Providence* | 5th | Dave Gavitt | Lost consolation game. |
1972 | Florida State | 2nd | Hugh Durham | Lost in final. |
1971 | Western Kentucky | 7th | John Oldham | Won third-place game. |
*School subsequently returned to Final Four.
Fresh Faces: NCAA Final Four is Virgin Territory For Dutcher, Hurley and May
All four coaches this year could have been Final Four newcomers if Rodney Terry's Texas squad didn't fritter away a 10-point lead midway through the second half in regional final against Miami (Fla.). The last time all four coaches were F4 newbies was in 1959 (California's Pete Newell/West Virginia's Fred Schaus/Cincinnati's George Smith/Louisville's Peck Hickman). This year marks the first time since 1979 for multiple coaches to make their F4 debuts with fewer than seven seasons of experience as a Division I head coach.
Hubert Davis realized coaching nirvana as rookie head coach by reaching last year's national semifinals in inaugural campaign similar to fellow North Carolina mentor Bill Guthridge in 1998. In the previous 60 years, the F4 college rookie class also includes Steve Fisher (Michigan interim in 1989), Larry Brown (UCLA in 1980), Bill Hodges (Indiana State in 1979) and Gary Thompson (Wichita in 1965). Kansas State's Jerome Tang could have joined group but the Wildcats were upset in regional final by Florida Atlantic.
Final Four debuts were a long time coming the previous decade for Dana Altman (Oregon), Mark Few (Gonzaga) and Big Ten Conference coaches John Beilein (Michigan) and Bo Ryan (Wisconsin). Since the start of the NCAA Tournament in 1939, no coach ever took longer in his four-year college career to reach the DI Final Four than Beilein (31 seasons; 21 at major-college level). Ryan (30) and Altman (28) joined five other coaches to take more than 20 years to achieve the milestone - Jim Calhoun (27), Dick Bennett (24), Gary Williams (23), Jim Larranaga (22 with George Mason) and Norm Sloan (22).
There was at least one fresh face among bench bosses at the national semifinals all but once (1993) in a 27-year span from 1985 through 2011. Connecticut's Kevin Ollie joined Indiana's Mike Davis and VCU's Shaka Smart as coaches only in their second campaign to steer squads to the Final Four in the 21st Century. Brian Dutcher (San Diego State), Danny Hurley (Connecticut) and Dusty May (FAU) joined the following list of coaches advancing to the Final Four for first time since legendary John Wooden's first F4 in 1962 (in reverse order):
- 2023 - Brian Dutcher (San Diego State/6th season as head coach), Danny Hurley (Connecticut/13th) and Dusty May (Florida Atlantic/4th).
- 2022 - Hubert Davis (North Carolina/1st).
- 2021 - Mick Cronin (UCLA/18th) and Scott Drew (Baylor/19th).
- 2019 - Chris Beard (Texas Tech/7th season overall and fourth with DI school at four-year college level), Tony Bennett (Virginia/13th) and Bruce Pearl (Auburn/24th overall and 15th at DI).
- 2018 - Porter Moser (Loyola of Chicago/15th).
- 2017 - Dana Altman (Oregon/28th), Mark Few* (Gonzaga/18th) and Frank Martin (South Carolina/10th).
- 2016 - All returnees.
- 2015 - All returnees.
- 2014 - Kevin Ollie (Connecticut/2nd) and Bo Ryan* (Wisconsin/30th).
- 2013 - John Beilein* (Michigan/21st at major-college level and 31st overall) and Gregg Marshall (Wichita State/15th).
- 2012 - All returnees.
- 2011 - Shaka Smart (Virginia Commonwealth/2nd).
- 2010 - Brad Stevens* (Butler/3rd).
- 2009 - Jay Wright* (Villanova/15th).
- 2008 - Bill Self* (Kansas/15th).
- 2007 - Thad Matta* (Ohio State/7th) and John Thompson III (Georgetown/7th).
- 2006 - John Brady (Louisiana State/15th), Ben Howland* (UCLA/12th) and Jim Larranaga* (George Mason/22nd).
- 2005 - Bruce Weber (Illinois/6th).
- 2004 - Paul Hewitt (Georgia Tech/7th).
- 2003 - Rick Barnes (Texas/16th) and Tom Crean (Marquette/4th).
- 2002 - Mike Davis (Indiana/2nd) and Kelvin Sampson* (Oklahoma/20th).
- 2001 - Gary Williams* (Maryland/23rd).
- 2000 - Dick Bennett (Wisconsin/24th) and Billy Donovan* (Florida/6th).
- 1999 - Jim Calhoun* (Connecticut/27th), Tom Izzo* (Michigan State/4th) and Jim O'Brien (Ohio State/17th).
- 1998 - Bill Guthridge* (North Carolina/1st), Rick Majerus (Utah/14th) and Tubby Smith (Kentucky/7th).
- 1997 - Clem Haskins (Minnesota/17th).
- 1996 - John Calipari* (Massachusetts/8th) and Richard Williams (Mississippi State/10th).
- 1995 - Jim Harrick (UCLA/16th).
- 1994 - Lon Kruger* (Florida/12th).
- 1993 - All returnees.
- 1992 - Bob Huggins* (Cincinnati/8th at major-college level and 11th overall).
- 1991 - Roy Williams* (Kansas/3rd).
- 1990 - Bobby Cremins (Georgia Tech/15th) and Nolan Richardson* (Arkansas/10th).
- 1989 - P.J. Carlesimo (Seton Hall/14th) and Steve Fisher* (Michigan/1st).
- 1988 - Billy Tubbs (Oklahoma/12th at major-college level and 14th overall).
- 1987 - Jim Boeheim* (Syracuse/11th) and Rick Pitino* (Providence/7th).
- 1986 - Mike Krzyzewski* (Duke/11th).
- 1985 - Lou Carnesecca (St. John's/17th), Dana Kirk (Memphis State/9th season at major-college level and 14th overall) and Rollie Massimino (Villanova/12th season at major-college level and 14th overall).
- 1984 - All returnees.
- 1983 - Jim Valvano (North Carolina State/11th at major-college level and 12th overall).
- 1982 - John Thompson Jr.* (Georgetown/9th).
- 1981 - Dale Brown* (Louisiana State/9th) and Terry Holland* (Virginia/12th).
- 1980 - Larry Brown* (UCLA/1st) and Robert "Lute" Olson* (Iowa/7th).
- 1979 - George "Jud" Heathcote (Michigan State/8th), Bill Hodges (Indiana State/1st) and Bob Weinhauer (Penn/2nd).
- 1978 - Bill E. Foster (Duke/18th), Richard "Digger" Phelps (Notre Dame/8th) and Eddie Sutton* (Arkansas/9th).
- 1977 - Lee Rose* (UNC Charlotte/2nd at major-college level and 10th overall) and Jerry Tarkanian* (UNLV/9th).
- 1976 - Johnny Orr (Michigan/11th) and Tom Young (Rutgers/16th).
- 1975 - Joe B. Hall* (Kentucky/6th at major-college level and 9th overall) and Roy Danforth (Syracuse/7th).
- 1974 - Al McGuire* (Marquette/10th at major-college level and 17th overall) and Norm Sloan (North Carolina State/18th at major-college level and 22nd overall).
- 1973 - Bobby "Gene" Bartow* (Memphis State/3rd at major-college level and 12th overall), Dave Gavitt (Providence/6th) and Bob Knight* (Indiana/8th).
- 1972 - Denny Crum* (Louisville/1st) and Hugh Durham* (Florida State/6th).
- 1971 - Jack Kraft (Villanova/10th), John Oldham (Western Kentucky/16th) and Ted Owens* (Kansas/7th).
- 1970 - Lou Henson* (New Mexico State/8th), Larry Weise (St. Bonaventure/9th) and Joe Williams (Jacksonville/4th at major-college level and 6th overall).
- 1969 - Maury John (Drake/11th) and George King (Purdue/9th at major-college level and 10th overall).
- 1968 - All returnees.
- 1967 - Don Donoher (Dayton/3rd), Guy Lewis* (Houston/11th) and Dean Smith* (North Carolina/6th).
- 1966 - Don Haskins (Texas Western/5th).
- 1965 - Gary Thompson (Wichita/1st) and Willem "Butch" van Breda Kolff (Princeton/7th at major-college level and 14th overall).
- 1964 - Dave Strack* (Michigan/5th).
- 1963 - Vic Bubas* (Duke/4th) and George Ireland (Loyola of Chicago/12th).
- 1962 - Horace "Bones" McKinney (Wake Forest/5th) and John Wooden* (UCLA/14th at major-college level and 16th overall).
*Subsequently returned to the Final Four.
Star Light: Bouknight Spends More Time Out of NBA Than at F4 With UConn
For the 13th straight tourney, at least one team reached the Final Four after losing a vital player who could have still been eligible if not defecting to make himself available for the NBA draft or turn pro overseas. UConn guard James Bouknight was a lottery pick by the Charlotte Hornets in 2021 but wound up mainly in the NBA G League most of the past two seasons rather than the Final Four.
Among schools losing a prominent undergraduate early, Kentucky was the only school to capture a crown (1998 without Ron Mercer) until Duke achieved the feat (2010 without Gerald Henderson) and UK secured another title two years later sans Brandon Knight. In a once-in-a-lifetime achievement, UK returned to the national semifinals in 2011 after losing five undergraduates who became NBA first-round draft choices.
The Final Four has had at least one team arrive after losing a prominent undergraduate to the NBA draft 20 times in the last 21 tourneys. Following is a list of the 42 squads unfazed by the early loss of key player(s) who left college with eligibility still remaining:
Final Four Team Prominent Undergraduate Defection in Previous Year Marquette '74 Larry McNeill, F (25th pick overall in 1973 NBA draft) Louisiana State '81 DeWayne Scales, F (36th pick in 1980 draft) Georgia '83 Dominique Wilkins, F (3rd pick in 1982 draft) Houston '83 Rob Williams, G (19th pick in 1982 draft) Houston '84 Clyde Drexler, G-F (14th pick in 1983 draft) Louisiana State '86 Jerry "Ice" Reynolds, G-F (22nd pick in 1985 draft) Syracuse '87 Pearl Washington, G (13th pick in 1986 draft) Kentucky '97 Antoine Walker, F-G (6th pick in 1996 draft) North Carolina '97 Jeff McInnis, G (37th pick in 1996 draft) Kentucky '98 Ron Mercer, G-F (6th pick in 1997 draft) Indiana '02 Kirk Haston, F (16th pick in 2001 draft) Kansas '03 Drew Gooden, F (4th pick in 2002 draft) Georgia Tech '04 Chris Bosh, F (4th pick in 2003 draft) Louisiana State '06 Brandon Bass, F (33rd pick in 2005 draft) UCLA '07 Jordan Farmar, G (26th pick in 2006 draft) North Carolina '08 Brandan Wright, F (8th pick in 2007 draft) Kansas '08 Julian Wright, F (13th pick in 2007 draft) UCLA '08 Arron Afflalo, G (27th pick in 2007 draft) Duke '10 Gerald Henderson, G (12th pick in 2009 draft) Kentucky '11 John Wall, G (1st pick in 2010 draft) Kentucky '11 DeMarcus Cousins, F (5th pick in 2010 draft) Butler '11 Gordon Hayward, F (9th pick in 2010 draft) Kentucky '11 Patrick Patterson, F (14th pick in 2010 draft) Virginia Commonwealth '11 Larry Sanders, F (15th pick in 2010 draft) Kentucky '11 Eric Bledsoe, G (18th pick in 2010 draft) Kentucky '11 Daniel Orton, C-F (29th pick in 2010 draft) Kentucky '12 Brandon Knight, G (8th pick in 2011 draft) Kansas '12 Markieff Morris, F (13th pick in 2011 draft) Kansas '12 Marcus Morris, F (14th pick in 2011 draft) Kansas '12 Josh Selby, G (49th pick in 2011 draft) Syracuse '13 Dion Waiters, G (4th pick in 2012 draft) Syracuse '13 Fab Melo, C (22nd pick in 2012 draft) Kentucky '14 Nerlens Noel, C (6th pick in 2013 draft) Kentucky '14 Archie Goodwin, G-F (29th pick in 2013 draft) Michigan State '15 Gary Harris, G (19th pick in 2014 draft) Duke '15 Rodney Hood, G-F (23rd pick in 2014 draft) Duke '15 Jabari Parker, F (2nd pick in 2014 draft) Kentucky '15 Julius Randle, F (7th pick in 2014 draft) Kentucky '15 James Young, G (17th pick in 2014 draft) North Carolina '16 J.P. Tokoto, F-G (58th pick in 2015 draft) Syracuse '16 Chris McCullough, G (29th pick in 2015 draft) Gonzaga '17 Domantas Sabonis, F-C (11th pick in 2016 draft) Kansas '18 Josh Jackson, G-F (4th pick in 2017 draft) Michigan '18 D.J. Wilson, F (17th pick in 2017 draft) Michigan State '19 Miles Bridges, F (12th pick in 2018 draft) Michigan State '19 Jaren Jackson, F (4th pick in 2018 draft) Texas Tech '19 Zhaire Smith, F (16th pick in 2018 draft) Gonzaga '21 Filip Petrusev, C (withdrew from draft and returned to native Serbia) Houston '21 Nate Hinton, G-F (played in NBA G League after going undrafted) Duke '22 Matthew Hurt, F (undrafted before playing in NBA G League until incurring season-ending injury) Duke '22 Jalen Johnson, F (20th pick in 2021 draft) Duke '22 D.J. Steward, G (undrafted before playing in G League for Sacramento Kings) North Carolina '22 Day'Ron Sharpe, F (29th pick in 2021 draft) Villanova '22 Jeremiah Robinson-Earl, F (32nd pick in 2021 draft) Connecticut '23 James Bouknight, G (11th pick in 2021 draft)
College Exam: Day #15 For One-and-Only NCAA Tournament Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper to wipe butt of George Soros flunky/New York AG Alvin Bragg, seeking translator to try to understand Plagiarist Biledumb or cowering in fetal position from college basketball version of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds, 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 15 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.com's year-by-year highlights):
1. Who is the only individual to play for two NCAA champions, play for more than two NBA champions and coach two NBA champions. Hint: He was the first of four players to be a member of an NCAA championship team one year and an NBA titlist the next season as a rookie. He won the high jump in the West Coast Relays his senior year.
2. Who is the only individual to average fewer than four points per game as a freshman and then be selected Final Four Most Outstanding Player the next season as a sophomore. Hint: He had more three-point baskets in two Final Four games than contributing his entire freshman season.
3. Who is the only player named to an All-NCAA Tournament team not to score a total of more than 10 points in two Final Four games? Hint: He had the same point total in each Final Four game for a team whose star had same last name.
4. Who is the only Final Four Most Outstanding Player to later coach his alma mater in the NCAA Tournament? Hint: The guard was named Most Outstanding Player although he was his team's fourth-leading scorer at Final Four that year.
5. Name the only school to have two of the six eligible teams ranked among the top five in the AP and/or UPI final polls to not participate in either the NCAA Tournament or the NIT in the days before teams other than the conference champion could be chosen to the NCAA playoffs as at-large entrants. Hint: The school lost three regional finals in one four-year span and hasn't reached Final Four in last 50-plus years.
6. Who is the only coach to lose more than five regional final games? Hint: His regional final defeats were by an average margin of 10 points and his biggest nemesis was the Big Ten Conference.
7. Who is the only individual to become NBA Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player to participate in the NCAA Tournament but never win an NCAA playoff game? Hint: He shared the NBA Rookie of the Year award with another player who was on the losing end in his only NCAA Tournament appearance. Two years later, he was NBA All-Star Game Most Valuable Player the same season named league MVP.
8. Of the more than 40 different players to be named NBA Most Valuable Player, score more than 20,000 points in the pros or be selected to an All-NBA team at least five times after participating in the NCAA Tournament, who is the only one to average fewer than 10 points per game in the NCAA playoffs? Hint: He is believed to be the youngest Hall of Famer to appear in an NCAA championship game at the tender age of 16 and subsequently was named to 12 consecutive All-NBA teams.
9. Who is the only guard to score more than 35 points in an NCAA final? Hint: He led his team in scoring in back-to-back Final Fours but wasn't named Final Four Most Outstanding Player either year. He is the only championship team player to have a two-game total of at least 70 points at the Final Four and is the shortest undergraduate to average more than 20 points per game for an NCAA titlist.
10. Who is the only player to have as many as 20 field goals in an NCAA championship game? Hint: He scored fewer than seven points in both his tourney debut and final playoff appearance.
NCAA Mighty Mites: Shortest of Subjects Become Big-Time Playoff Performers
Standing 5-8 in height and 8-5 in stature, Kansas State's Markquis Nowell (single-game playoff record of 19 assists) and Fairleigh Dickinson's Demetre Roberts (averaged 15.7 ppg/4 rpg/4 apg in three playoff contests) were the most entertaining players in the 2023 NCAA Tournament. They added immensely to the NCAA tourney's history of magnificent mighty mites.
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 Nowell and Roberts:
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 |
Short & Sweet: Anderson Didn't Solve Case Winning > 60% of 1-Year Games
Iona-bound Tobin Anderson moved on from Fairleigh Dickinson after his only season (21-16 record). But what a majority of media mavens fail to point out is there have been numerous "won-and-done" mentors (including Corey Gipson recently going from Northwestern State to alma mater Austin Peay) posting significantly better 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.
Kyle Neptune nearly joined loser list of one-year wonders (16-16 with Fordham before succeeding Hall of Famer Jay Wright at Villanova). 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 (Tulsa), is among the following "one-and-done" coaches who won more than 60% of their games in one-year tenures in the last 50-plus 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. |
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. |
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. |
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.
How the West Has Lost: Utah State is 19 Games Below .500 in NCAA Tourney
Amid failure of Pac-12 Conference entrants in this year's NCAA Tournament and Boise State still winless after nine playoff outings, the West remains the worst. Such a viewpoint shouldn't be a surprise unless you put stock in creepy porn lawyer #Avenaughty as a #Dimorat presidential candidate, hideous Hunter's laptop is Russian disinformation or always believe contrived comments from Muslim Brotherhood apologist/former CIA chief John "NBC News' Snoopy" Brennan. Brigham Young, New Mexico State and Utah State - more games below .500 than any institutions in NCAA playoff history - promptly bowing out of the NCAA playoffs is almost a tradition. Also weighing heavily out West, Wyoming is the only former national champion (1943) to compile an all-time NCAA playoff record more than five games below .500 (9-21).
Everett Shelton, coach of Wyoming's titlist, is the only championship team bench boss to finish with a non-winning playoff record (4-12 from 1941 through 1958) and was more games under .500 in NCAA Division I Tournament competition than any coach in history until supplanted by Fran Dunphy (3-17 with Penn and Temple from 1993 through 2019). Also, Shelton is the only coach to lose three consecutive regional final games (1947, 1948 and 1949).
Joining Dunphy and Shelton among the eight coaches more than six games under .500 in NCAA playoff play are Rick Byrd (1-8 with Belmont from 2006 through 2019), Pete Carril (4-11 with Princeton from 1969 through 1996), Don Corbett (0-7 with North Carolina A&T from 1982 through 1988), Hugh Greer (1-8 with Connecticut from 1951 through 1960), Stew Morrill (1-9 with Montana and Utah State from 1991 through 2011) and Mike Vining (0-7 with Louisiana-Monroe from 1982 through 1996).
More than half of the following 11 schools more than 10 games below .500 in NCAA tourney competition are from west of the Mississippi River:
School Playoff Record Games Below .500 Mark Summary of Tournament Tumult Utah State 6-25 minus 19 lost 19 of last 20 games with only victory in that span in OT against Ohio State in 2001 Brigham Young 15-33 minus 18 only one of victories was by fewer than six points New Mexico State 11-28 minus 17 lost 12 straight games until ending streak this year after winning seven of 11 contests from 1968 through 1970 Princeton 15-30 minus 15 lost eight of first nine games from 1952 through 1963 and five straight contests since 1998 until reaching 2023 Sweet 16 Iona 1-16 minus 15 15 straight setbacks with first four of them by fewer than four points from 1980 through 1998 Miami (Ohio) 6-19 minus 13 only victory in 10-game span from 1969 through 1992 was in OT against defending NCAA champion Marquette in 1978 Murray State 5-18 minus 13 lost 11 games in a row from 1988 through 2006 Penn 13-26 minus 13 lost last 10 games and 15 of last 16 after entering 1979 Final Four with winning playoff record (11-9) Wyoming 9-21 minus 12 1943 NCAA titlist before losing 12 of 13 games from 1947 through 1967 Montana 2-13 minus 11 won inaugural game in 1975 but lost last four contests since 2012 by an average of 26 points Weber State 6-17 minus 11 seven of last nine defeats since 1979 were by fewer than 12 points
College Exam: Day #14 For One-and-Only NCAA Tournament Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper again to wipe butt of George Soros suck-up/New York AG Alvin Bragg, seeking translator to try to understand Plagiarist Biledumb or cowering in fetal position from college basketball version of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds, 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 14 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.com's year-by-year highlights):
1. Name the only school to compile a losing record in a season it won on the road against a conference rival later capturing the NCAA championship. Hint: The school is a former national titlist itself, but had just one winning league mark in 12 years from 1977-78 through 1988-89.
2. Name the only school to compile a conference record of more than 10 games below .500 in a season it defeated a league rival becoming NCAA champion. Hint: The school, which finished in first or second place in league competition four consecutive seasons in early 1930s, had 44 consecutive non-winning records in conference play before securing its first tourney appearance.
3. Name the only school to trail by at least 10 points at halftime of a tournament game and end up winning the contest by more than 20. Hint: A prominent network broadcaster played for the team. The next year, the school became the only one in tourney history to win back-to-back overtime games by double-digit margins.
4. Who is the only coach to lose in back-to-back seasons to teams seeded 14th or worse? Hint: He captured an NCAA championship later that decade.
5. Name the only double-digit seeded team to reach the Final Four until Virginia Commonwealth achieved the feat last year. Hint: It's the worst-seeded school to defeat a #1 seed, a conference rival that defeated the team a total of three times that year during the regular season and postseason league tournament. The next year, the university became only school to reach back-to-back regional finals as a double-digit seed.
6. Name the only school to win a regional final game it trailed by more than 15 points at halftime. Hint: The school lost its next game at the Final Four to a team that dropped a conference game against the regional final opponent by a double-figure margin. Three years later, it became the only school to score more than 100 points in a championship game and win national final by more than 21 points.
7. Who is the only team-leading scorer to be held more than 25 points under his season average in a Final Four game? Hint: He scored 39 points against the same opponent earlier in the season to help end the third-longest winning streak in major-college history. He is the only player to lead the playoffs in scoring and rebounding in back-to-back seasons although he wasn't named to the All-Tournament team one of those years despite becoming the only player to lead a tourney in scoring by more than 60 points. In addition, he is the only player in tournament history to collect more than 40 points and 25 rebounds in same game.
8. Name the only school to lead the nation in scoring offense and win the NCAA title in the same season. Hint: The top four scorers were undergraduates for the only titlist to win all of its NCAA Tournament games by more than 15 points.
9. Name the only school to play in as many as three overtime games in a single tournament. Hint: One of the three overtime affairs was a national third-place game.
10. Who is the only Final Four Most Outstanding Player to go scoreless in two NCAA Tournament games in a previous year? Hint: His NBA scoring average decreased each of last nine seasons in the league after becoming Rookie of the Year.
Seeds of Doubt: #1-Seeded Teams Failing to Bear NCAA Tournament Fruit
All four #1 seeds in 2023 failed to advance to Elite Eight for the first time in NCAA playoff history, but at least none of them elbowed their way past UCLA to the top of list of most-lopsided losses in tourney annals for top-seeded squads. Houston, with an opportunity to participate in the Final Four in its backyard, incurred the most lopsided loss (14 points against Miami FL).
Three #1 seeds from ACC in the previous decade were eliminated prior to the NCAA Final Four by more than 16 points. Five #1 seeds have been kayoed by at least 20 points before the national semifinals since seeding was introduced in 1979. Arizona won two of the following nine games when #1 seeds in this category lost by more than 15 points:
Margin #1 Seed Regional Elimination Result Before F4 27 UCLA 1992 West Finals #2 Indiana (106-79) 25 Arizona 1998 West Finals #3 Utah (76-51) 20 Louisiana State 1980 Midwest Finals #2 Louisville (86-66) 20 Missouri 1994 West Finals #2 Arizona (92-72) 20 Virginia 2018 South First Round #16 Maryland-Baltimore County (74-54) 17 Ohio State 1991 Midwest Semifinals #4 St. John's (91-74) 17 North Carolina 2019 Midwest Semifinals #5 Auburn (97-80) 16 Duke 2011 West Semifinals #5 Arizona (93-77) 16 Oklahoma 2003 East Finals #3 Syracuse (63-47)
Unfinished Business: Bama Remains "Susan Lucci" School in NCAA Tourney
Weep On It/Think On It/Sleep On It/Drink On It. That could be the motto for 2023 top overall seed Alabama after the Crimson Tide remained viewed as a "Susan Lucci" school in NCAA Division I by failing to advance again to the Promised Land following a manhandling from San Diego State in the regional semifinals. Brigham Young, Missouri and Xavier are the only three schools participating in more than 25 NCAA Tournaments but never advancing to a Final Four (cumulative 88 playoff appearances).
Missouri has reached a regional final on four occasions but fell short in advancing to the Final Four. Four years ago, Xavier joined Mizzou (1994) as the only schools never reaching the national semifinals despite earning a #1 seed at some point during their NCAA playoff participation. Boston College is another bridesmaid multiple times comparable to Xavier, losing three regional finals (1967, 1982 and 1994) in 18 tourney appearances (22-19 record) since the field expanded beyond eight teams in 1950.
The following "Low Five" frustrated institutions remain in quagmire because they've made more than 20 appearances without reaching the Final Four:
School Tourney Appearances (Playoff Record Through 2023) Regional Final Losses Utah State 23 (6-25 mark, .194) 1970 Brigham Young 30 (15-33, .313) 1951 and 1981 Missouri 29 (23-29, .442) 1976, 1994, 2002 and 2009 Alabama 24 (25-24, .510) 2004 Xavier 29 (30-29, .508) 2004, 2008 and 2017
Looking Out For #1: Only One of Last 21 Top-Ranked Teams Won NCAA Title
Annually, there is a clear and present danger for pole sitter such as Alabama, which lost as top-ranked team in regional semifinal. Eleven years ago, Kentucky became only the fourth of past 40 schools atop the national rankings entering the NCAA playoffs since North Carolina '82 to capture the national championship.
In 2006, Duke became the ninth No. 1 team in 17 years to fail to advance to a regional final when the Blue Devils were eliminated by Louisiana State. In 1992, Duke defied a trend by becoming the first top-ranked team in 10 years entering the NCAA Tournament to win a national title. The five top-ranked teams prior to Duke failed to reach the championship game. UNLV lost twice in the national semifinals (1987 and 1991) and Temple '88, Arizona '89 and Oklahoma '90 failed to reach the Final Four.
Temple, a 63-53 loser against Duke in the 1988 East Regional final, and Kansas State, an 85-75 loser against Cincinnati in the 1959 Midwest Regional final, are the only teams ranked No. 1 by both AP and UPI entering the tourney to lose by a double-digit margin before the Final Four.
The school gaining the sweetest revenge against a top-ranked team was St. John's in 1952. Defending NCAA champion Kentucky humiliated the Redmen by 41 points (81-40) early in the season when the Catholic institution became the first to have a black player on the floor at Lexington, Ky. The African-American player, Solly Walker, played only a few minutes before he took a hit sidelining him for three weeks. But St. John's, sparked by center Bob Zawoluk's 32 points, avenged the rout by eliminating the Wildcats (64-57) in the East Regional, ending their 23-game winning streak. The Redmen, who subsequently defeated second-ranked Illinois in the national semifinals, lost against Kansas in the NCAA final.
In the 1982 championship game, North Carolina needed a basket with 16 seconds remaining from freshman Michael Jordan to nip Georgetown, 63-62, and become the only top-ranked team in 13 years from 1979 through 1991 to capture the NCAA title. It was a particularly bitter pill to swallow for seven of the 11 top-ranked teams to lose in the NCAA championship game in overtime or by two or three points in regulation.
It's win or go home! Less than one-third of the top-ranked squads captured the NCAA crown. Following is analysis sizing up how the No. 1 teams fared in the NCAA playoffs since the Associated Press introduced national rankings in 1949:
20 - Won national title (Kentucky '49; Kentucky '51; Indiana '53; San Francisco '56; North Carolina '57; UCLA '64; UCLA '67; UCLA '69; UCLA '71; UCLA '72; UCLA '73; North Carolina State '74; UCLA '75; Indiana '76; Kentucky '78; North Carolina '82; Duke '92; UCLA '95, Duke '01, and Kentucky '12).
14 - Finished national runner-up (Bradley '50/defeated by CCNY; Ohio State '61/Cincinnati; Ohio State '62/Cincinnati; Cincinnati '63/Loyola of Chicago; Michigan '65/UCLA; Kentucky '66/Texas Western; Indiana State '79/Michigan State; Houston '83/North Carolina State; Georgetown '85/Villanova; Duke '86/Louisville; Duke '99/Connecticut; Illinois '05/North Carolina; Ohio State '07/Florida), and Gonzaga '21/Baylor).
9 - Lost in national semifinals (Cincinnati '60/defeated by California; Houston '68/UCLA; UNLV '87/Indiana; UNLV '91/Duke; Massachusetts '96/Kentucky; North Carolina '98/Utah; North Carolina '08/Kansas; Florida '14/Connecticut, and Kentucky '15/Wisconsin).
10 - Lost in regional final (Kentucky '52/defeated by St. John's; Kansas State '59/Cincinnati; Kentucky '70/Jacksonville; Michigan '77/UNC Charlotte; Temple '88/Duke; Indiana '93/Kansas; Kentucky '03/Marquette; Louisville '09/Michigan State); Kansas '16/Villanova), and Duke '19/Michigan State).
9 - Lost in regional semifinals (North Carolina '84/defeated by Indiana; Arizona '89/UNLV; Kansas '97/Arizona; Duke '00/Florida; Duke '02/Indiana); Duke '06/Louisiana State; Ohio State '11/Kentucky); Gonzaga '22/Arkansas, and Alabama '23/San Diego State.
8 - Lost in second round (DePaul '80/defeated by UCLA; DePaul '81/St. Joseph's; Oklahoma '90/North Carolina; North Carolina '94/Boston College; Stanford '04/Alabama; Kansas '10/Northern Iowa), Gonzaga '13/Wichita State) and Villanova '17/Wisconsin).
2 - Lost in first round (West Virginia '58/defeated by Manhattan) and (Virginia '18/UMBC).
1 - Declined a berth (Kentucky '54).
NOTE: After United Press International started ranking teams in 1951, UPI had just three different No. 1 teams entering the national playoffs than AP - Indiana lost in 1954 East Regional semifinals against Notre Dame, California finished as 1960 national runner-up to Ohio State and Indiana lost in 1975 Mideast Regional final against Kentucky.
Center Stage Collapse: Zach Edey Joins POY List Failing to Win Playoff Game
Despite regal effort (21 points/15 rebounds/3 blocked shots vs. #16 seed Fairleigh Dickinson), unanimous national Player of the Year Zach Edey (Purdue) joined a striking number of standouts who didn't win an NCAA Tournament game in season when they were named national POY. Edey joined Kentucky's Oscar Tshiebwe and Navy's David Robinson (1987) as the only unanimous POYs to incur an opening-round setback in NCAA playoffs. Following is list of fallen stars although majority of them provided prolific performances when their team was eliminated from postseason play:
Year | National Player of Year | School | Award(s) | NCAA Tournament Summary |
---|---|---|---|---|
1957 | Chet Forte | Columbia | UPI | DNP |
1964 | Gary Bradds | Ohio State | AP/UPI | DNP |
1970 | Pete Maravich | Louisiana State | AP/UPI/USBWA/Naismith | participated in NIT (101-79 loss vs. Marquette in semifinals) |
1975 | David Thompson | North Carolina State | AP/UPI/NABC/USBWA/Naismith | DNP because Wolfpack was on NCAA probation |
1978 | Phil Ford | North Carolina | NABC/USBWA/Wooden | 14 points/3 assists/4 steals/7-of-19 FGs in 68-64 loss vs. San Francisco in West Regional |
1978 | Alfred "Butch" Lee | Marquette | AP/UPI/Naismith | 27 points/3 rebounds/3 steals in 84-81 overtime loss vs. Miami of Ohio in Mideast Regional |
1980 | Mark Aguirre | DePaul | AP/UPI/USBWA/Naismith | 19 points/9 rebounds/4 assists in 77-71 loss vs. UCLA in West Regional |
1980 | Michael Brooks | La Salle | NABC | 29 points/12 rebounds in 90-82 loss vs. Purdue in Mideast Regional |
1987 | David Robinson | Navy | AP/UPI/NABC/USBWA/Naismith/Wooden | 50 points/13 rebounds/3 steals in 97-82 loss vs. Michigan in East Regional |
1988 | Hersey Hawkins | Bradley | AP/UPI/USBWA | 44 points/10 rebounds/6 assists/3 steals in 90-86 loss vs. Auburn in Southeast Regional) |
1991 | Shaquille O'Neal | Louisiana State | AP/UPI | 27 points/16 rebounds/5 blocks in 79-62 loss vs. Connecticut in Midwest Regional |
1995 | Shawn Respert | Michigan State | NABC | 28 points/4 rebounds/3 assists in 79-72 loss vs. Weber State in Southeast Regional |
2016 | Denzel Valentine | Michigan State | AP/NABC | 13 points/6 rebounds/12 assists in 90-81 loss vs. Middle Tennessee State in Midwest Regional |
2022 | Oscar Tshiebwe | Kentucky | AP/NABC/USBWA/Naismith/Wooden | 30 points/16 rebounds in 85-79 overtime loss vs. Saint Peter's in East Regional |
2023 | Zach Edey | Purdue | AP/NABC/USBWA/Naismith/Wooden | 21 points/15 rebounds/3 blocked shots in 63-58 loss vs. Fairleigh Dickinson in East Regional |
No NCAA Crowns for Illini, Irish & Purdue Despite At Least 24 All-Americans
Kentucky and North Carolina still rank 1-2 for most All-American honorees over the years. Duke isn't far behind UK and UNC although none of the Blue Devils' All-Americans came from the state of North Carolina.
Illinois, Notre Dame and Purdue never have won an NCAA championship despite all three schools supplying at least 24 different individuals as All-Americans a minimum of 35 times. Following is a list of the top 10 universities boasting the most All-Americans since 1928-29 (AP, Converse, NABC, UPI and USBWA):
Rank School (Different Individuals) Rank School (Total # of All-Americans) 1. Kentucky (49) T1. North Carolina (75) 2. North Carolina (46) T1. Kentucky (75) 3. Duke (45) 3. Duke (68) T4. Indiana (42) 4. Kansas (60) T4. Kansas (42) 5. Indiana (58) T6. Illinois (33) 6. UCLA (49) T6. UCLA (33) 7. Ohio State (48) 8. Ohio State (31) 8. Notre Dame (44) 9. Notre Dame (26) 9. Illinois (39) 10. Purdue (24) 10. Purdue (35) 11. Michigan (21) 12. Syracuse (20)
Tiny Dancers: Saint Mary's Fails to Secure Another Gael-Force At-Large Win
Prior to coronavirus cancellation three 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 Top 10. 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 two years ago.
After Saint Mary's dismantled Indiana last year, power-conference setback totals against mid-major at-large entrants since 1992 include: Big Eight/Big 12 (22), Big East (19), Big Ten (16), SEC (15), ACC (13) and Pac-12 (11). Although Saint Mary's failed to duplicate its success this year, the following total of 40 different mid-major at-large entrants went on to win in the NCAA playoffs against a total of 53 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.
College Exam: Day #13 For One-and-Only NCAA Tournament Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper to wipe George Soros flunky/New York AG Alvin Bragg's butt, seeking translator to try to understand Plagiarist Bidumb or cowering in fetal position from college basketball version of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds, 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 13 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.com's year-by-year highlights):
1. Who is the only team-leading scorer of a Final Four team to go scoreless when the school was eliminated from championship contention at the national semifinals? Hint: He was a center who along with four teammates averaged between 11 and 12.5 points per game.
2. Who is the only player to twice lead the nation in scoring average while playing for teams advancing to the Final Four? Hint: He is the only team-leading scorer to twice be more than 10 points below his season scoring mark when his school was eliminated at the Final Four.
3. Name the only school to lose two national championship games by at least 18 points after leading the finals at halftime. Hint: The two opponents, 17 years apart, combined to win 66 of 68 games those seasons.
4. Name the only school to make as many as eight consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances from the year it participated in the event for the first time. Hint: The school's last playoff victory wasn't during this streak, but it later handed UCLA its first West Regional defeat in 14 years.
5. Name the only school to lose as many as 15 opening-round games in the NCAA Tournament. Hint: The university also lost a first-round game in 1984 after winning a qualifying round contest when playoff field was 53 teams.
6. Who is the only athlete to collect more than 3,000 major league hits, including 465 homers, after playing the entire basketball game for a school when it appeared in the NCAA Tournament for the first time. Hint: The outfielder appeared in 12 All-Star Games and two World Series after never playing in minors.
7. Who is the only player to have a single-digit point total in a national semifinal game and then increase his output by more than 20 points in the championship game? Hint: The center for two years between two three-time consensus first-team All-Americans shot just over 40% from the floor for the season entering title game where he had a game-high and career-high point total.
8. Who is the only player to have a decrease of more than 25 points from his national semifinal game scoring total to his championship game output? Hint: He was a member of the first undefeated NCAA champion and subsequently became an NBA first-round draft choice.
9. Name the only school to defeat two eventual Final Four teams by double-digit margins in their conference tournament. Hint: The school was handily eliminated in the NCAA playoffs by one of the two Final Four teams it decisively defeated in their league tourney.
10. Name the only school to reach the NCAA championship game in back-to-back seasons it was defeated by double-digit margins in its conference tournament. Hint: The school swept its home-and-home series in regular-season conference competition against the teams defeating it in league tourney.
Bumpy Ride: Arkansas' 23-Point Tourney Loss Wasn't Most Lopsided For Hogs
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. The Hoosiers' previous most numbing tourney reversal was by 25 points against St. John's in 1999.
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. Arkansas departed in a one-sided result this year but the Razorbacks previously were eliminated by an even wider margin. 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 | 20 | #7 South Carolina | 70-50 in 2017 East Regional semifinal |
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 |
Transferring Talent: Five All-Americans Started Careers at Other DI Schools
"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. Kansas State failed to duplicate Oklahoma State's feat in 2004 of having two transfer All-Americans help school advance to the Final Four.
How many All-Americans 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 past two campaigns. 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. Tshiebwe and four additional transfers - Keyontae Johnson, Tyler Kolek, Markquis Nowell and Jalen Pickett - joined the following alphabetical list of A-As who began their collegiate career at another four-year school:
*Attended junior college between four-year school stints.
NOTES: Burgess was an Air Force veteran. . . . Kolek, Nowell and Pickett increased the total to 16 of All-Americans who began their careers attending a mid-major or non-Division I school.
College Exam: Day #12 For One-and-Only NCAA Tournament Trivia Challenge
Unless you're busy hoarding toilet paper to wipe butt of George Soros butt boy New York AG Alvin Bragg, trying to help Supreme Court Justice define a woman or cowering in fetal position from college basketball version of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds, 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 12 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.com's year-by-year highlights):
1. Who is the only championship team player to have a season scoring average of less than six points per game entering a Final Four but tally more than 30 points in the national semifinals and final? Hint: He is the only player with a single-digit season scoring average to score more than 25 points in an NCAA championship game.
2. Who is the only player to score at least 25 points in eight consecutive NCAA playoff games? Hint: He is the only player to rank among top five in scoring average in both NCAA Tournament and NBA playoffs. He was denied a championship ring in his only Final Four appearance when a player who would become an NBA teammate tipped in decisive basket in the closing seconds.
3. Name the only Final Four Most Outstanding Player who wasn't among the top five scorers on his team. Hint: The only other player to earn the award who wasn't among top four scorers on his team attended same university.
4. Who is the only individual to be named the NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player and NIT Most Valuable Player? Hint: As a freshman, he shared one of the awards with a teammate.
5. Who is the only U.S. Congressman to become chairman of the House Judiciary Committee after playing in the NCAA Tournament championship game? Hint: Starting out as a Democrat, he became a 12-term Republican Congressman from Illinois.
6. Who is the only individual to be named Final Four Most Outstanding Player and NBA Finals Most Valuable Player in back-to-back seasons? Hint: He holds the NBA Finals single-game record for most points by a rookie.
7. Name the freshman who had the highest season scoring average for a team to reach the NCAA Tournament championship game until Carmelo Anthony achieved the feat for 2003 champion Syracuse. Hint: The word "Boss" is tattooed to his chest for a good reason because he also led his team in assists as freshman.
8. Who is the only freshman to score more than 30 points in a national semifinal or championship game before failing to score more than half that total in his next four playoff outings? Hint: He didn't score more than 15 points in any of his next four NCAA playoff games, all defeats, and averaged a modest 8.2 points per game in an eight-year NBA career with an all-time pro season high of 11.4 ppg and game high of 28.
9. Who is the only freshman on a Final Four team to score more than 20 points in as many as four tournament games? Hint: He did not play in the national championship game and his school lost in the NCAA playoffs to opponents with double-digit seeds each of four seasons before he arrived.
10. Name the only season-leading scorer of a titlist to be held more than 14 points below his average in the NCAA championship game. Hint: He was named national player of the year by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. He is one of four Final Four Most Outstanding Players held scoreless in their NCAA Tournament debuts in a previous season. He is also the only individual to become a member of three NCAA titlists after playing one season in junior college.