The ECAC men's basketball tournaments are postseason college basketball tournaments organized by the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC).
Despite its name, the ECAC is not a traditional athletic conference, but rather a loosely organized sports federation for colleges and universities in the northeastern United States. Among other things, it organizes end-of-season college basketball tournaments for member schools which are not members of a traditional conference, or which do not otherwise have access to such a tournament. At various times, it has organized end-of-season basketball tournaments at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, Division II, and Division III levels.
From 1975 to 1981, the ECAC organized annual regional end-of-season men's basketball tournaments for independent Division I ECAC member colleges and universities in the Northeastern United States. The winner of each regional tournament was declared the ECAC regional champion for the season and received an automatic bid in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. [1]
Before 1975, the ECAC had not organized such tournaments for Division I schools; the NCAA tournament invited only one team per Division I conference and accommodated independents with a limited number of at-large bids. In 1975, however, the NCAA tournament's field expanded to 32 teams, including the champions of end-of-season conference tournaments, who received automatic bids. Although a number of at-large bids still existed, the process for selecting the field for the 1975 NCAA tournament included many second-place conference teams and threatened to exclude independent schools in the northeastern United States, which had no end-of-season conference tournament to play in and therefore no automatic bids. With no conventional athletic conferences yet in existence in the Northeast, the ECAC began to organize its Division I basketball tournaments in 1975, allowing Northeastern independents to retain their independent status while still having an opportunity to play in an end-of-season tournament offering an automatic bid. The ECAC Division I tournaments thus assured that at least some Northeastern colleges and universities would receive NCAA tournament bids. [2] [3]
In both 1975 and 1976, the ECAC organized four regional Division I tournaments: Metro (for the New York City area and New Jersey); New England; South (for Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and Washington, D.C.); and Upstate (for Upstate New York). As Eastern independent colleges and universities began to join existing conferences or form new ones and play in their own end-of-season conference tournaments, the number of ECAC regional tournaments declined due to reduced demand for them. After the formation of the Eastern Collegiate Basketball League (which later became the Atlantic 10 Conference), the ECAC combined its Southern and Upstate Regions into a single "Southern" (later "Upstate-Southern" and "South-Upstate") Region and held only three regional tournaments in 1977, 1978, and 1979. After the teams that played in the New England region all joined the Big East Conference, the Atlantic 10 Conference, or the new ECAC North Conference (which later became the America East Conference), the ECAC also did away with its New England tournament, and in 1980 and 1981 it held only two tournaments, Metro and Southern. [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
After the conclusion of play in 1981, some of the teams in the Metro Region formed the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) and others formed the ECAC Metro Conference (which later became the Northeast Conference), while the ECAC South Region teams formed the ECAC South Conference (which later became the Colonial Athletic Association and later still the Coastal Athletic Association). With all the former independents in the northeastern United States having joined a traditional conference holding its own end-of-season tournament, and with the National Invitation Tournament providing a means of postseason tournament play for Division I teams not invited to the NCAA tournament, the ECAC had no reason to continue its Division I basketball tournament series, and it ceased to organize such tournaments after 1981. [6] [7]
National rankings indicated.
Sources [3]
Champions |
---|
Metro: #20 Rutgers New England: Boston College Southern: Georgetown Upstate: Syracuse |
Semifinals, March 6, 1975 Madison Square Garden, New York, NY | Finals, March 8, 1975 Madison Square Garden, New York, NY | ||||||||
St. John's | 76 | ||||||||
Seton Hall | 64 | ||||||||
St. John's | 77 | ||||||||
#20 Rutgers | 79 | ||||||||
Saint Peter's | 63 | ||||||||
#20 Rutgers | 80 | Third place | |||||||
Seton Hall | 75 | ||||||||
Saint Peter's | 79 |
New England
Semifinals, March 6, 1975 Springfield Civic Center, Springfield, MA | Finals, March 8, 1975 Springfield Civic Center, Springfield, MA | ||||||||
Connecticut | 58 | ||||||||
Boston College | 68 | ||||||||
Boston College | 69 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 55 | ||||||||
Providence | 55 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 62 | Third place | |||||||
Connecticut | 83 | ||||||||
Providence | 108 |
Southern
Semifinals, March 7, 1975 WVU Coliseum, Morgantown, WV | Finals, March 8, 1975 WVU Coliseum, Morgantown, WV | ||||||||
George Washington | 59 | ||||||||
Georgetown | 66 | ||||||||
Georgetown | 62 | ||||||||
West Virginia | 61 | ||||||||
West Virginia | 75 | ||||||||
Pittsburgh | 73 | Third place | |||||||
George Washington | 64 | ||||||||
Pittsburgh | 89 |
Upstate
Semifinals, March 7, 1975 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY | Finals, March 8, 1975 Buffalo Memorial Auditorium, Buffalo, NY | ||||||||
St. Bonaventure | 78 | ||||||||
Fairfield | 73 | ||||||||
Saint Bonaventure | 81 | ||||||||
Syracuse | 100 | ||||||||
Niagara | 72 | ||||||||
Syracuse | 90 | Third place | |||||||
Fairfield | 67 | ||||||||
Niagara | 72 |
National rankings indicated.
Sources [4] [9]
Champions |
---|
Metro:: #3 Rutgers New England: Connecticut Southern: Georgetown Upstate: Syracuse |
Metro
Semifinals, March 4, 1976 Jadwin Gymnasium, Princeton, NJ | Finals, March 6, 1976 Jadwin Gymnasium, Princeton, NJ | ||||||||
#14 St. John's | 75 | ||||||||
St. Peter's | 67 | ||||||||
#14 St. John's | 67 | ||||||||
#3 Rutgers | 70 | ||||||||
#3 Rutgers | 104 | ||||||||
Long Island-Brooklyn | 76 | Third place | |||||||
Saint Peter's | 76 | ||||||||
Long Island-Brooklyn | 65 |
New England
Semifinals, March 4, 1976 Springfield Civic Center, Springfield, MA | Finals, March 6, 1976 Springfield Civic Center, Springfield, MA | ||||||||
Connecticut | 73 | ||||||||
Massachusetts | 69 | ||||||||
Connecticut | 87 | ||||||||
Providence | 73 | ||||||||
Providence | 64 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 61 | Third place | |||||||
Massachusetts | 75 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 88 |
Southern
Semifinals, March 5, 1976 WVU Coliseum, Morgantown, WV | Finals, March 7, 1976 WVU Coliseum, Morgantown, WV | ||||||||
Georgetown | 72 | ||||||||
Villanova | 59 | ||||||||
Georgetown | 68 | ||||||||
George Washington | 63 | ||||||||
George Washington | 99 | ||||||||
West Virginia | 97 | Third place | |||||||
Villanova | 64 | ||||||||
West Virginia | 87 |
Upstate
Semifinals, March 4, 1976 Manley Field House, Syracuse, NY | Finals, March 6, 1976 Manley Field House, Syracuse, NY | ||||||||
St. Bonaventure | 66 | ||||||||
Niagara | 67 | ||||||||
Niagara | 68 | ||||||||
Syracuse | 77 | ||||||||
Manhattan | 57 | ||||||||
Syracuse | 83 | Third place | |||||||
St. Bonaventure | 84 | ||||||||
Manhattan | 74 |
National rankings indicated.
Champions |
---|
Metro:: St. John's New England: Holy Cross Southern: #13 Syracuse |
Semifinals, March 3, 1977 Campus sites (see note) | Finals, March 5, 1977 Madison Square Garden, New York, NY | ||||||||
Manhattan | 64 | ||||||||
St. John's | 73 | ||||||||
St. John's | 83 | ||||||||
Seton Hall | 73 | ||||||||
Army | 71 | ||||||||
Seton Hall | 77 | Third place | |||||||
Manhattan | 62 | ||||||||
Army | 64 |
Note: The Manhattan-St. John's semifinal game was held at Rose Hill Gymnasium, Bronx, NY. The Army-Seton Hall semifinal game took place at Yanitelli Center, Jersey City, NJ. [13]
New England
Semifinals, March 3, 1977 Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT | Finals, March 5, 1977 Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, CT | ||||||||
Connecticut | 77 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 89 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 68 | ||||||||
#8 Providence | 67 | ||||||||
Fairfield | 31 | ||||||||
#8 Providence | 44 | Third place | |||||||
Connecticut | 72 | ||||||||
Fairfield | 66 |
The 1977 New England Tournament's semifinal games contrasted with one another greatly: Holy Cross, led by freshman guard Ronnie Perry, played a hard, physical game – with 45 free throws in the second half, 24 by Holy Cross and 21 by Connecticut – to defeat Connecticut 89-77, while Providence, led by senior guard Joe Hassett, found its offense lacking and used tough defensive play to overcome Fairfield 44-31. The much-anticipated championship game that followed – a rematch of the December 1976 Colonial Classic final played at the Boston Garden, in which Holy Cross had handed Providence one of only three losses the Friars suffered all season on a game-winning last-second shot by the Crusaders' Chris Potter – was played before a sold-out crowd at the Hartford Civic Center and was one of the greatest games in the eight-season history of the ECAC Division I tournaments. With less than a minute to play and his team behind, Holy Cross's Michael Vicens stole the ball along his own end line and raced down the court to score on a reverse dunk. This energized both the crowd and the Holy Cross players and swung the game's momentum in favor of Holy Cross. The Crusaders got the ball with less than 10 seconds to go, and Potter scored on an 18-foot (5.5-meter) jumper with five seconds remaining to again give Holy Cross a win, 68-67. Holy Cross thus won an automatic bid to the 1977 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and made its first appearance in that tournament since 1956. Providence also reached the NCAA tournament via an at-large bid. [14]
Southern
Semifinals, February 28, 1977 Campus sites (see note) | Finals, March 3, 1977 Old Dominion University Fieldhouse, Norfolk, VA | ||||||||
St. Bonaventure | 72 | ||||||||
#13 Syracuse | 85 | ||||||||
#13 Syracuse | 67 | ||||||||
Old Dominion | 64 | ||||||||
Old Dominion | 80 | ||||||||
Georgetown | 58 |
Note: The St. Bonaventure-Syracuse semifinal game was held at Manley Field House, Syracuse, NY. The Old Dominion-Georgetown semifinal game took place at McDonough Gymnasium, Washington, DC.
National rankings indicated.
Champions |
---|
Metro:: St. John's New England: Rhode Island Upstate-Southern: St. Bonaventure |
[15] Metro
Semifinals, March 3, 1978 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | Finals, March 5, 1978 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | ||||||||
St. John's | 83 | ||||||||
Iona | 80 | ||||||||
St. John's | 65 | ||||||||
Army | 63 | ||||||||
Army | 81 | ||||||||
Seton Hall | 79 |
New England
Semifinals, March 3, 1978 Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI | Finals, March 5, 1978 Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI | ||||||||
#18 Providence | 71 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 67 | ||||||||
#18 Providence | 62 | ||||||||
Rhode Island | 65 | ||||||||
Rhode Island | 71 | ||||||||
Fairfield | 69 |
Upstate-Southern
Semifinals, March 2, 1978 See note for locations | Finals, March 5, 1978 Rochester Community War Memorial, Rochester, NY | ||||||||
St. Bonaventure | 70 | ||||||||
#14 Syracuse | 69 | ||||||||
St. Bonaventure | 63 | ||||||||
Virginia Commonwealth | 61 | ||||||||
Virginia Commonwealth | 88 | ||||||||
#17 Georgetown | 75 |
Note: The St. Bonaventure-Syracuse semifinal game was held at the Rochester Community War Memorial, Rochester, NY. The Virginia Commonwealth-Georgetown game took place at McDonough Gymnasium, Washington, DC.
National rankings indicated.
Champions |
---|
Metro:: Iona New England: Connecticut South-Upstate: #16 Georgetown |
Semifinals, March 1, 1979 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | Final, March 3, 1979 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | ||||||||
Iona | 80 | ||||||||
Seton Hall | 73 | ||||||||
Iona | 83 | ||||||||
St. John's | 57 | ||||||||
St. John's | 86 | ||||||||
Wagner | 82 |
New England
Semifinals, March 1, 1979 Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI | Finals, March 3, 1979 Providence Civic Center, Providence, RI | ||||||||
Connecticut | 91 | ||||||||
Boston College | 74 | ||||||||
Connecticut | 58 | ||||||||
Rhode Island | 50 | ||||||||
Rhode Island | 75 | ||||||||
Holy Cross | 71 |
South-Upstate
Semifinals, February 28, 1979 | Finals, March 3, 1979 Cole Field House, College Park, MD | ||||||||
#6 Syracuse | 87 | ||||||||
St. Bonaventure | 71 | ||||||||
#6 Syracuse | 58 | ||||||||
#16 Georgetown | 66 | ||||||||
#16 Georgetown | 73 | ||||||||
Old Dominion | 52 |
Note: Syracuse-St. Bonaventure semifinal game was played at Rochester War Memorial, Rochester, NY. Georgetown-Old Dominion semifinal game was played in Cole Field House, College Park, MD.
Source [18]
Champions |
---|
Metro:: Iona South: Old Dominion |
Quarterfinals February 28 | Semifinals February 29 | Championship March 1 | ||||||||||||
Iona | 69 | |||||||||||||
Fairleigh Dickinson | 53 | |||||||||||||
Iona | 76 | |||||||||||||
Siena | 70 | |||||||||||||
Siena | 80 | |||||||||||||
Long Island University | 78 | |||||||||||||
Iona | 64 | |||||||||||||
Saint Peter's | 46 | |||||||||||||
Fordham | 73 | |||||||||||||
Wagner | 67 | |||||||||||||
Fordham | 47 | |||||||||||||
Saint Peter's | 65 | |||||||||||||
Saint Peter's | 54 | |||||||||||||
Fairfield | 42 |
Conference did not play a formal schedule
South
Quarterfinals Thursday, February 28 | Semifinals Friday, February 29 | Championship Saturday, March 1 | ||||||||||||
1 | Old Dominion | 112 | ||||||||||||
8 | Catholic | 59 | ||||||||||||
1 | Old Dominion | 75 | ||||||||||||
5 | William & Mary | 59 | ||||||||||||
5 | William & Mary | 78 | ||||||||||||
4 | Richmond | 77 | ||||||||||||
1 | Old Dominion | 62 | ||||||||||||
3 | Navy | 51 | ||||||||||||
3 | Navy | 51 | ||||||||||||
6 | Baltimore | 50 | ||||||||||||
3 | Navy | 75 | ||||||||||||
7 | St. Francis (PA) | 62 | ||||||||||||
7 | St. Francis (PA) | 58 | ||||||||||||
2 | James Madison | 54 |
Source [6]
Champions |
---|
Metro:: Long Island-Brooklyn South: James Madison |
Quarterfinals, March 2, 1981 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | Semifinals, March 5, 1981 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | Finals, March 7, 1981 Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY | ||||||||||||
6 | Iona | 41 | ||||||||||||
6 | Iona | 64 | 2 | Saint Peter's | 38 | |||||||||
3 | Siena | 48 | 6 | Iona | 72 | |||||||||
5 | Long Island-Brooklyn | 77 | ||||||||||||
5 | Long Island-Brooklyn | 85 | ||||||||||||
5 | Long Island-Brooklyn | 89 | 1 | Fordham | 78 | |||||||||
4 | Wagner | 78 |
South
Quarterfinals, March 3, 1981 Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA | Semifinals, March 5, 1981 Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA | Finals, March 7, 1981 Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA | ||||||||||||
3 | William & Mary | 42 | ||||||||||||
6 | Robert Morris | 50 | 2 | James Madison | 44 | |||||||||
3 | William & Mary | 73 | 2 | James Madison | 69 | |||||||||
5 | Richmond | 60 | ||||||||||||
5 | Richmond | 79 | ||||||||||||
5 | Richmond | 98 | 1 | Old Dominion | 77 | |||||||||
4 | Saint Francis | 78 |
The ECAC organized combined Division II/Division III men's basketball tournaments annually from 1973 to 1980 as invitational events for ECAC teams not invited to the NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament or – after it began in 1975 – the NCAA Division III men's basketball tournament. From 1973 through 1975 and from 1977 through 1980, it held four regional tournaments – Metro (for the New York City area and New Jersey), New England, Southern (for schools south of New York and New Jersey), and Upstate (for Upstate New York) – each year, while in 1976 it held only three tournaments (Metro, New England, and Upstate). [1]
After 1980, the ECAC divided the Division II and Division III competitions, placing the Division II competitions on hiatus until 1988 and beginning Division III-only tournaments in 1981. [1]
Year | ECAC Division II/III regional champions [1] |
---|---|
1973 | Metro:: Brooklyn New England: Tufts Southern: East Stroudsburg Upstate: Union |
1974 | Metro:: Trenton State New England: Brandeis Southern: Cheyney Upstate: Brockport State |
1975 | Metro:: Bridgeport New England: Quinnipiac Southern: Bloomsburg Upstate: Union |
1976 | Metro:: Upsala New England: Amherst Southern: No tournament Upstate: Hamilton |
1977 | Metro:: Kean New England: Quinnipiac Southern: Mansfield Upstate: Potsdam State |
1978 | Metro:: Trenton State New England: Quinnipiac Southern: Loyola Maryland Upstate: Albany |
1979 | Metro:: Monmouth New England: Sacred Heart Southern: East Stroudsburg Upstate: Hamilton |
1980 | Metro:: Monmouth New England: Saint Anselm Southern: Mansfield Upstate: Elmira |
After 1980, the ECAC placed Division II end-of-season tournament competition on hiatus until 1988. From 1988 through 2005 it organized a single annual Division II men's basketball tournament as an invitational event for Division II ECAC teams not invited to that year's NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament. No tournament took place in 2006, but the ECAC held it twice more, in 2007 and 2008. The Division II tournament again went on hiatus from 2009 through 2013, thanks to various factors including an expansion of the NCAA Men's Division II Tournament field and a decline in the number of Division II men's basketball programs associated with the ECAC. A Division II tournament took place in 2014, but the tournament again went on hiatus after that. [1]
Year | ECAC Division II Champions [1] |
---|---|
1988 | Dowling |
1989 | Merrimack |
1990 | Pace |
1991 | Pace |
1992 | Millersville |
1993 | Saint Rose |
1994 | Adelphi |
1995 | New York Tech |
1996 | Saint Michael's |
1997 | UMass Lowell |
1998 | Merrimack |
1999 | Merrimack |
2000 | Saint Michael's |
2001 | Saint Rose |
2002 | Southampton |
2003 | Mansfield |
2004 | Felician |
2005 | Bridgeport |
2006 | no tournament |
2007 | Goldey–Beacom |
2008 | Saint Vincent |
2009-2013 | no tournament |
2014 | Lincoln |
2015-present | no tournament |
After its last combined Division II/III regional tournaments in 1980, the ECAC split Division II and Division III tournament competition. In 1981, it held its first Division III-only postseason regional invitational men's basketball tournaments for ECAC teams not invited to the NCAA Division III men's basketball tournament, and these have occurred annually ever since. The ECAC organized these tournaments regionally, holding Metro (for the New York City area and New Jersey), New England, and Upstate (for Upstate New York) tournaments from 1981 to 1985 and adding a Southern tournament (for schools south of New York and New Jersey) in 1986. In 2013, the ECAC returned to a three-tournament structure, holding Metro, New England, and Southern regional tournaments, while in 2014 it had four tournaments (Metro, New England, Southeast, and Southwest). [1] [21] In 2015 and 2016, it again had a three-tournament structure, with New England, Metro, and South tournaments. [22] In 2017, it changed format again, becoming a single tournament which determined a single ECAC Division III champion. [23] [24] [25] [26] No tournament took place in 2021 because of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the tournament resumed in 2022. [27] [28] [29]
Year | ECAC Division III regional champions [1] [21] |
---|---|
1981 | Metro:: Jersey City State New England: Massachusetts Maritime Upstate: Hamilton |
1982 | Metro:: New Jersey Tech New England: Tufts Upstate: Hamilton |
1983 | Metro:: Jersey City State New England: Rhode Island College Upstate: Hamilton |
1984 | Metro:: Moravian New England: Trinity Upstate: Hamilton |
1985 | Metro:: New Jersey Tech New England: Trinity Upstate: Fredonia State |
1986 | Metro:: Staten Island New England: Trinity Southern: Catholic Upstate: Hamilton |
1987 | Metro:: Old Westbury State New England: Williams Southern: Mary Washington Upstate: Hamilton |
1988 | Metro:: New Jersey Tech New England: Saint Anselm Southern: Frostburg State Upstate: Geneseo State |
1989 | Metro:: Kean New England: Trinity Southern: Ursinus Upstate: Albany |
1990 | Metro:: Stony Brook New England: Colby Southern: Allentown Upstate: Hamilton |
1991 | Metro:: Medgar Evers New England: Colby Southern: Lebanon Valley Upstate: Potsdam State |
1992 | Metro:: Glassboro State New England: Brandeis Southern: Dickinson Upstate: Hamilton |
1993 | Metro:: Jersey City State New England: Colby Southern: Lincoln Upstate: Rochester Tech |
1994 | Metro:: Jersey City State New England: Western Connecticut State Southern: Lincoln Upstate: Elmira |
1995 | Metro:: Kean New England: Amherst Southern: Alvernia Upstate: Fredonia State |
1996 | Metro:: Rutgers-Newark New England: Amherst Southern: Lincoln Upstate: Oneonta State |
1997 | Metro:: Drew New England: Eastern Nazarene Southern: Johns Hopkins Upstate: Nazareth |
1998 | Metro:: York (NY) New England: Colby–Sawyer Southern: Lebanon Valley Upstate: Plattsburgh State |
1999 | Metro:: Fairleigh Dickinson-Madison New England: Williams Southern: Penn State-Behrend Upstate: New Paltz State |
2000 | Metro:: Montclair State New England: Tufts Southern: King's (Pa.) Upstate: Ithaca |
2001 | Metro:: New Jersey City New England: Williams Southern: Lebanon Valley Upstate: Geneseo State |
2002 | Metro:: Ramapo New England: Massachusetts-Dartmouth Southern: Franklin & Marshall Upstate: St. Lawrence |
2003 | Metro:: Baruch New England: Babson Southern: Franklin & Marshall Upstate: Rochester Tech |
2004 | Metro:: Ramapo New England: Western Connecticut State Southern: Lebanon Valley Upstate: Geneseo State |
2005 | Metro:: Kean New England: Wheaton (MA) Southern: Franklin & Marshall Upstate: Oswego State |
2006 | Metro:: New Jersey City New England: Wheaton (MA) Southern: Albright Upstate: Ithaca |
2007 | Metro:: New York University New England: Western New England Southern: DeSales Upstate: Vassar |
2008 | Metro:: Stevens Tech New England: Newbury Southern: Carnegie Mellon Upstate: Brockport State |
2009 | Metro:: Lehman New England: Becker Southern: Washington & Jefferson Upstate: Hartwick |
2010 | Metro:: Baruch New England: Elms Southern: Penn State-Behrend Upstate: Ithaca |
2011 | Metro:: Stevens Tech New England: Brandeis Southern: Lebanon Valley Upstate: Hobart |
2012 | Metro:: Mount Saint Mary New England: Worcester Tech Southern: Alvernia Upstate: Cortland State |
2013 | Metro:: Old Westbury State New England: Eastern Connecticut State Southern: Juniata |
2014 | Metro:: Staten Island New England: Johnson & Wales Southeast: Stevenson Southwest: Juniata |
2015 | Metro:: Staten Island New England: Southern Vermont South: Stevenson |
2016 | Metro:: New Jersey City New England: Nichols South: Neumann |
2017 | Stockton |
2018 | Widener |
2019 | Brandeis |
2020 | Gwynedd Mercy |
2021 | No tournament |
2022 | Rutgers-Newark |
2023 | Alfred |
2024 | Juniata |
The NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament is an annual championship tournament for colleges and universities that are members of NCAA Division II, a grouping of schools in the United States that are generally smaller than the higher-profile institutions grouped in Division I. The tournament, originally known as the NCAA College Division Basketball Championship, was established in 1957, immediately after the NCAA subdivided its member schools into the University Division and College Division. It became the Division II championship in 1974, when the NCAA split the College Division into the limited-scholarship Division II and the non-scholarship Division III, and added the "Men's" designation in 1982 when the NCAA began sponsoring a Division II women's championship.
The Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) is a college athletic conference comprising schools that compete in 15 sports. It has 220 member institutions in NCAA Divisions I, II, and III, ranging in location from Maine to South Carolina and west to Missouri. Most or all members belong to at least one other athletic conference.
The 1982 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 48 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 11, 1982, and ended with the championship game on March 29 in the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana. A total of 47 games were played.
The ECAC Northeast was an intercollegiate athletic conference affiliated with the NCAA's Division III as a hockey-only conference. For many years it was one of the three men's hockey conferences that operated under the umbrella of the Eastern College Athletic Conference; the others were the ECAC East, and the ECAC West. Member institutions were located in the New England region of the United States, in the states of Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
The 1975 NCAA Division I basketball tournament involved 32 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 15, 1975, and ended with the championship game on March 31 at the San Diego Sports Arena, now known as Pechanga Arena San Diego, in San Diego, California. A total of 36 games were played, including a third-place game in each region and a national third-place game. This was the first 32-team tournament.
Walsh Gymnasium is a multi-purpose arena in South Orange, New Jersey on the campus of Seton Hall University. The arena opened in 1941 and can seat 1,316 people. It was home to the Seton Hall Pirates men's basketball team before they moved to the Meadowlands in 1985 and then Prudential Center in 2007. Currently, the arena hosts the women's basketball and volleyball teams, but continues to host men's basketball for preseason exhibitions, postseason invitational games such as early rounds of the NIT, and occasionally a regular season non-conference game if there is a conflict with Prudential Center's event schedule. The building is part of the Richie Regan Recreation & Athletic Center, and, like the school's main library, is named for Rev. Thomas J. Walsh, fifth bishop of Newark and former President of the Board of Trustees.
The 1978–79 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November 1978, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1979 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on March 26, 1979, at the Special Events Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. The Michigan State Spartans won their first NCAA national championship with a 75–64 victory over the Indiana State Sycamores.
The 1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 17, 1979, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on March 24, 1980, at the Market Square Arena in Indianapolis. The Louisville Cardinals won their first NCAA national championship with a 59–54 victory over the UCLA Bruins.
The 1980–81 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 28, 1980, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1981 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on March 30, 1981, at The Spectrum in Philadelphia. The Indiana Hoosiers won their fourth NCAA national championship with a 63–50 victory over the North Carolina Tar Heels.
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The 1978–79 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1978–79 NCAA Division I college basketball season. John Thompson, coached them in his seventh season as head coach. An independent, Georgetown played its home games at McDonough Gymnasium on the Georgetown campus in Washington, D.C., and finished the season with a record of 24–5. The team won the ECAC South-Upstate Region tournament championship, earning its first NCAA tournament bid since 1976. The Hoyas received a first-round bye and lost in the second round to Rutgers.
The 1977–78 Georgetown Hoyas men's basketball team represented Georgetown University during the 1977–78 NCAA Division I college basketball season. John Thompson, coached them in his sixth season as head coach. An independent, Georgetown played its home games at McDonough Gymnasium on the Georgetown campus in Washington, D.C., and finished the season with a record of 23-8. Knocked out of the ECAC South-Upstate Region tournament in the semifinals, the team missed an NCAA tournament bid for the second consecutive season. The Hoyas instead appeared in the 1978 National Invitation Tournament (NIT), their second straight NIT appearance, and finished in fourth place.
The 1977–78 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November 1977, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1978 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on March 27, 1978, at The Checkerdome in St. Louis, Missouri. The Kentucky Wildcats won their fifth NCAA national championship with a 94–88 victory over the Duke Blue Devils.
The 1976–77 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November 1976, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1977 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on March 28, 1977, at The Omni in Atlanta, Georgia. The Marquette Warriors won their first NCAA national championship with a 67–59 victory over the North Carolina Tar Heels.
The 1975–76 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November 1975, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1976 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on March 29, 1976, at the Spectrum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Indiana Hoosiers won their third NCAA national championship with a 86–68 victory over the Michigan Wolverines.
The 1974–75 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November 1974, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on March 31, 1975, at the San Diego Sports Arena in San Diego, California. The UCLA Bruins won their tenth NCAA national championship with a 92–85 victory over the Kentucky Wildcats.