1996 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

Last updated

1996 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
1996FinalFour.png
Season 199596
Teams64
Finals site Continental Airlines Arena
East Rutherford, New Jersey
Champions Kentucky Wildcats (6th title, 8th title game,
11th Final Four)
Runner-up Syracuse Orangemen (2nd title game,
3rd Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coach Rick Pitino (1st title)
MOP Tony Delk (Kentucky)
Attendance631,834
Top scorer John Wallace (Syracuse)
(29 points)
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
« 1995 1997 »

The 1996 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 64 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 14, 1996, and ended with the championship game on April 1 at Continental Airlines Arena (now known as Meadowlands Arena) in the Meadowlands Sports Complex in East Rutherford, New Jersey. A total of 63 games were played. [1]

Contents

The Final Four venue was notable for several reasons:

The Final Four consisted of Kentucky, making its first appearance in the Final Four since 1993 and eleventh overall, Massachusetts, making its first ever appearance in the Final Four, Syracuse, making its third appearance in the Final Four and first since 1987, and Mississippi State, also making its first appearance.

Kentucky, coached by Rick Pitino, won its sixth national championship by defeating Syracuse in the final game 76–67. It was the Orangemen's second championship game loss under coach Jim Boeheim, joining a 74-73 defeat vs. Indiana in 1987 (Boeheim and Syracuse finally won the championship in 2003).

The championship game the second Final Four meeting between Pitino and Boeheim. Boeheim's Orangemen defeated Pitino's Providence Friars in the 1987 semifinals.

Tony Delk of Kentucky was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Kentucky's run to the championship was one of the most dominant in NCAA tournament history, as the Wildcats won each of their first four games by at least 20 points and won every game by at least 7 points.

Massachusetts, coached by John Calipari, was later stripped of its wins, including the UMass Minutemen's Final Four appearance, by the NCAA because UMass star Marcus Camby had accepted illegal gifts from agents. Connecticut, coached by Jim Calhoun, was additionally punished monetarily due to players accepting illegal gifts from agents. [2]

The 1996 tournament was the last to feature teams from the Big Eight and Southwest Conferences; later that year the two would form the Big 12 Conference. As of 2022, they were the last Division I conferences to disband and/or merge after sending teams to the NCAA tournament.

As of 2024, this is the earliest tournament from which all four Final Four coaches (Pitino, Boeheim, Calipari and Missisisppi State's Richard Williams) are still living.

This was the last NCAA tournament in which officials wore collared shirts. A v-neck shirt, already worn in several conferences during the regular season, was adopted association-wide during the 1996-97 season.

Schedule and venues

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Providence
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Richmond
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Indianapolis
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Orlando
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Milwaukee
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Dallas
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Albuquerque
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Tempe
1996 first and second rounds
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Denver
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Minneapolis
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Lexington
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Atlanta
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E. Rutherford
1996 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1996 tournament:

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Teams

There were 30 automatic bids awarded to the tournament - of these, 27 were given to the winners of their conference's tournament, while three were awarded to the team with the best regular-season record in their conference (Big Ten, Ivy League and Pac-10).

Two conferences, the American West Conference and Conference USA, did not receive automatic bids to the tournament. [3]

Four conference champions made their first NCAA tournament appearances: Monmouth (NEC), UNC Greensboro (Big South), Valparaiso (Mid-Continent), and Western Carolina (Southern).

Automatic qualifiers

Automatic qualifiers
ConferenceTeamAppearanceLast bid
ACC Wake Forest 14th1995
Atlantic 10 UMass (vacated)1995
Big East Connecticut (vacated)1995
Big Eight Iowa State 9th1995
Big Sky Montana State 3rd1986
Big South UNC Greensboro 1stNever
Big Ten Purdue (vacated)1995
Big West San Jose State 3rd1980
CAA VCU 6th1985
Ivy League Princeton 19th1992
MAAC Canisius 4th1957
MAC Eastern Michigan 3rd1991
MCC Northern Illinois 3rd1991
MEAC South Carolina State 2nd1989
Mid-Continent Valparaiso 1stNever
Missouri Valley Tulsa 9th1995
NAC Drexel 4th1995
NEC Monmouth 1stNever
Ohio Valley Austin Peay 4th1987
Pac-10 UCLA 31st1995
Patriot Colgate 2nd1995
SEC Mississippi State 4th1995
Southern Western Carolina 1stNever
Southland Northeast Louisiana 7th1993
Sun Belt New Orleans 4th1993
SWAC Mississippi Valley State 3rd1992
SWC Texas Tech (vacated)1993
TAAC UCF 2nd1994
WAC New Mexico 7th1994
West Coast Portland 2nd1959

Tournament seeds

East Regional – Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1 UMass (vacated) Atlantic 10 31–1Automatic
2 Georgetown Big East 26–7At-Large
3 Texas Tech (vacated) SWC 28–1Automatic
4 Marquette Conference USA 22–7At-Large
5 Penn State Big Ten 21–6At-Large
6 North Carolina ACC 20–10At-Large
7 New Mexico WAC 28–5Automatic
8 Bradley Missouri Valley 22–7At-Large
9 Stanford Pac-10 19–8At-Large
10 Kansas State Big Eight 17–11At-Large
11 New Orleans Sun Belt 21–8Automatic
12 Arkansas SEC 18–12At-Large
13 Monmouth NEC 20–9Automatic
14 Northern Illinois MCC 20–9Automatic
15 Mississippi Valley State SWAC 22–6Automatic
16 UCF TAAC 11–18Automatic
Southeast Regional – Rupp Arena, Lexington, Kentucky
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1 Connecticut (vacated) Big East 30–2Automatic
2 Cincinnati Conference USA 25–4At-Large
3 Georgia Tech ACC 22–11At-Large
4 UCLA Pac-10 23–7Automatic
5 Mississippi State SEC 22–7Automatic
6 Indiana Big Ten 19–11At-Large
7 Temple Atlantic 10 19–12At-Large
8 Duke ACC 18–12At-Large
9 Eastern Michigan MAC 24–5Automatic
10 Oklahoma Big Eight 17–12At-Large
11 Boston College Big East 18–10At-Large
12 VCU CAA 17–10Automatic
13 Princeton Ivy League 21–6Automatic
14 Austin Peay Ohio Valley 19–10Automatic
15 UNC Greensboro Big South 20–9Automatic
16 Colgate Patriot League 15–14Automatic
Midwest Regional – Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1 Kentucky SEC 28–2At-Large
2 Wake Forest ACC 26–6Automatic
3 Villanova Big East 25–6At-Large
4 Utah WAC 25–6At-Large
5 Iowa State Big Eight 23–8Automatic
6 Louisville Conference USA 20–11At-Large
7 Michigan (vacated) Big Ten 20–11At-Large
8 Green Bay MCC 25–3At-Large
9 Virginia Tech Atlantic 10 22–5At-Large
10 Texas SWC 20–9At-Large
11 Tulsa Missouri Valley 22–7Automatic
12 California (vacated) Pac-10 17–10At-Large
13 Canisius MAAC 19–10Automatic
14 Portland West Coast 19–10Automatic
15 Northeast Louisiana Southland 16–13Automatic
16 San Jose State Big West 13–16Automatic
West Regional – McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, Colorado
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1 Purdue (vacated) Big Ten 26–4Automatic
2 Kansas Big Eight 25–5At-Large
3 Arizona Pac-10 24–6At-Large
4 Syracuse Big East 24–8At-Large
5 Memphis Conference USA 22–7At-Large
6 Iowa Big Ten 22–8At-Large
7 Maryland ACC 17–12At-Large
8 Georgia SEC 19–9At-Large
9 Clemson ACC 18–10At-Large
10 Santa Clara West Coast 19–8At-Large
11 George Washington Atlantic 10 21–7At-Large
12 Drexel NAC 26–3Automatic
13 Montana State Big Sky 21–8Automatic
14 Valparaiso Mid-Continent 23–7Automatic
15 South Carolina State MEAC 22–7Automatic
16 Western Carolina Southern 17–12Automatic

Bracket

East Regional – Atlanta

First round
March 14–15
Second round
March 16–17
Regional semifinals
March 21
Regional Finals
March 23
            
1 Massachusetts#92
16 UCF 70
1 Massachusetts#79
Providence – Thu/Sat
9 Stanford 74
8 Bradley 58
9 Stanford66
1 Massachusetts#79
12 Arkansas 63
5 Penn State 80
12 Arkansas86
12 Arkansas65
Providence – Thu/Sat
4 Marquette 56
4 Marquette68
13 Monmouth 44
1 Massachusetts#86
2 Georgetown 62
6 North Carolina83
11 New Orleans 62
6 North Carolina 73
Richmond – Fri/Sun
3 Texas Tech92
3 Texas Tech74
14 Northern Illinois 73
3 Texas Tech 90
2 Georgetown98
7 New Mexico69
10 Kansas State 48
7 New Mexico 65
Richmond – Fri/Sun
2 Georgetown75
2 Georgetown93
15 Mississippi Valley State 56

Regional Final summary

CBS
Saturday, March 23
#1 Massachusetts Minutemen86, #2 Georgetown Hoyas 62
Scoring by half: 38–34, 48–28
Pts: M.Camby   22
Rebs: D. Bright, M. Camby   7
Asts: C. Travieso  6
Pts: A. Iverson   23
Rebs: J. Williams   8
Asts: J. Touomou, J. Williams, O. Harrington   2
Georgia Dome  Atlanta, GA

East Regional all-tournament team

Midwest Regional – Minneapolis

First round
March 14–15
Second round
March 16–17
Regional semifinals
March 21
Regional Finals
March 23
            
1 Kentucky110
16 San Jose State 72
1 Kentucky84
Dallas – Thu/Sat
9 Virginia Tech 60
8 UW–Green Bay 49
9 Virginia Tech61
1 Kentucky101
4 Utah 70
5 Iowa State74
12 California 64
5 Iowa State 67
Dallas – Thu/Sat
4 Utah73
4 Utah72
13 Canisius 43
1 Kentucky83
2 Wake Forest 63
6 Louisville82OT
11 Tulsa 80
6 Louisville68
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
3 Villanova 64
3 Villanova92
14 Portland 58
6 Louisville 59
2 Wake Forest60
7 Michigan# 76
10 Texas80
10 Texas 62
Milwaukee – Fri/Sun
2 Wake Forest65
2 Wake Forest62
15 Northeast Louisiana 50

# - Michigan's appearance in the 1996 NCAA tournament along with 20 regular season wins were vacated on November 7, 2002, as part of the settlement of the University of Michigan basketball scandal. Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with the removal of any Michigan wins from all records.

Regional Final summary

CBS
Saturday, March 23
#1 Kentucky Wildcats83, #2 Wake Forest Demon Deacons 63
Scoring by half: 38–19, 45–44
Pts: T. Delk   25
Rebs: A. Walker   6
Asts: A. Epps  6
Pts: S. Goolsby, T. Duncan   14
Rebs: T. Duncan   16
Asts: T. Duncan   6
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome  Minneapolis, MN

Midwest Regional all-tournament team

Southeast Regional – Lexington, Kentucky

First round
March 14–15
Second round
March 16–17
Regional semifinals
March 22
Regional Finals
March 24
            
1 Connecticut68
16 Colgate 59
1 Connecticut95
Indianapolis – Thu/Sat
9 Eastern Michigan 81
8 Duke 60
9 Eastern Michigan75
1 Connecticut 55
5 Mississippi State60
5 Mississippi State58
12 VCU 51
5 Mississippi State63
Indianapolis – Thu/Sat
13 Princeton 41
4 UCLA 41
13 Princeton43
5 Mississippi State73
2 Cincinnati 63
6 Indiana 51
11 Boston College64
11 Boston College 89
Orlando – Fri/Sun
3 Georgia Tech103
3 Georgia Tech90
14 Austin Peay 79
3 Georgia Tech 70
2 Cincinnati87
7 Temple61
10 Oklahoma 43
7 Temple 65
Orlando – Fri/Sun
2 Cincinnati78
2 Cincinnati66
15 UNC Greensboro 61

Regional Final summary

CBS
Sunday, March 24
#5 Mississippi State Bulldogs73, #2 Cincinnati Bearcats 63
Scoring by half: 37–29, 36–34
Pts: D. Jones   23
Rebs: D. Jones   13
Asts: D. Wilson   6
Pts: D. Fortson   24
Rebs: D. Fortson   13
Asts: K. Legree  4
Rupp Arena  Lexington, KY

Southeast Regional all-tournament team

West Regional – Denver, Colorado

First round
March 14–15
Second round
March 16–17
Regional semifinals
March 22
Regional Finals
March 24
            
1 Purdue73
16 Western Carolina 71
1 Purdue 69
Albuquerque – Thu/Sat
8 Georgia76
8 Georgia81
9 Clemson 74
8 Georgia 81
4 Syracuse83OT
5 Memphis 63
12 Drexel75
12 Drexel 58
Albuquerque – Thu/Sat
4 Syracuse69
4 Syracuse88
13 Montana State 55
4 Syracuse60
2 Kansas 57
6 Iowa81
11 George Washington 79
6 Iowa 73
Tempe – Fri/Sun
3 Arizona87
3 Arizona90
14 Valparaiso 51
3 Arizona 80
2 Kansas83
7 Maryland 79
10 Santa Clara91
10 Santa Clara 51
Tempe – Fri/Sun
2 Kansas76
2 Kansas92
15 South Carolina State 54

Regional Final summary

CBS
Sunday, March 24
#4 Syracuse Orangemen60, #2 Kansas Jayhawks 57
Scoring by half: 35–26, 25–31
Pts: J. Wallace, O. Hill   15
Rebs: J. Wallace   9
Asts: L. Sims  4
Pts: J. Vaughn   21
Rebs: R. LaFrentz   9
Asts: J. Haase   6
McNichols Sports Arena  Denver, CO

West Regional all-tournament team

Final Four at East Rutherford, New Jersey

National semifinals
March 30
National Championship Game
April 1
      
E1 Massachusetts# 74
MW1 Kentucky81
MW1 Kentucky76
W4 Syracuse 67
SE5 Mississippi State 69
W4 Syracuse77

# - On May 8, 1997, the NCAA Executive Committee voted to negate the Minutemen's 1996 NCAA Tournament record, for Marcus Camby's acceptance of agents' improper gifts. The team's 35–2 season record was reduced to 31–1, and the UMass slot in the Final Four is officially marked as "vacated". The Final Four trophy, banner, and 45% of tournament revenue were returned to the NCAA. Camby reimbursed the school for the lost revenue. Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with UMass removing the wins from its own record.

National semifinals

CBS
Saturday, March 30
#1 Kentucky Wildcats81, #1 Massachusetts Minutemen 74
Scoring by half: 36–28, 45–46
Pts: T. Delk   20
Rebs: W. McCarty   10 [4]
Asts: A. Epps, A. Walker, D. Anderson, W. McCarty   4
Pts: M. Camby   25
Rebs: D. Bright  9
Asts: E. Padilla  12
Continental Airlines Arena East Rutherford, NJ
CBS
Saturday, March 30
#4 Syracuse Orangemen77, #5 Mississippi State Bulldogs 69
Scoring by half: 36–36, 41–33
Pts: J. Wallace   21
Rebs: T. Burgan  7
Asts: L. Siims  9
Pts: D. Wilson   20
Rebs: E. Dampier   14
Asts: M. Bullard  8
Continental Airlines Arena East Rutherford, NJ

National Championship

CBS
Monday, April 1
#1 Kentucky Wildcats76, #4 Syracuse Orangemen 67
Scoring by half: 42–33, 34–34
Pts: T. Delk   24
Rebs: A. Walker   9
Asts: A. Epps  7
Pts: J. Wallace   29
Rebs: J. Wallace, O. Hill   10
Asts: L. Sims  7
Continental Airlines Arena East Rutherford, NJ

Final Four all-tournament team

Announcers

Note: During the Midwest Regional Final in Minneapolis; sideline reporter Michele Tafoya temporarily substituted for Sean McDonough in the play-by-play booth when McDonough became ill; calling about 10 minutes of the first half before McDonough felt well enough to resume play-by-play; in the process making her the first woman to call part of an NCAA Men's Division I Tournament game.

See also

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References

  1. "1996 NCAA tournament: Bracket, scores, stats, records | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com. Retrieved December 9, 2024.
  2. Cavanaugh, Jack (May 9, 1997). "UMass and UConn Lose '96 Honors". The New York Times.
  3. "NCAA to give 30 leagues automatic bids". Greensboro News & Record . September 7, 1995. Retrieved May 20, 2023.
  4. "Kentucky vs. Massachusetts (March 30, 1996)".