Pac-12 Conference men's basketball

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Men's college basketball in the Pac-12 Conference began in 1915 with the formation of the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC). Principal members of the PCC founded the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU) in 1959, and subsequently went by the names Big Five, Big Six, Pacific-8, and Pacific-10, becoming the Pac-12 in 2011. The Pac-12 includes the PCC as part of its history despite the two leagues being formed under separate charters. [1] Competing in the Pac-12 are the Arizona Wildcats, Arizona State Sun Devils, California Golden Bears, Colorado Buffaloes, Oregon Ducks, Oregon State Beavers, Stanford Cardinal, UCLA Bruins, USC Trojans, Utah Utes, Washington Huskies, and Washington State Cougars.

Contents

All members of the Pac-12 joined other conferences after the 2023–24 season. Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington left for the Big Ten Conference; [2] Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado, and Utah joined the Big 12 Conference; [3] [4] California and Stanford joined the Atlantic Coast Conference, [5] and Oregon State and Washington State joined the West Coast Conference. [6]

The conference is slated to re-emerge with new basketball members for the 2026-27 season. [7]

As of 2023, Pac-12 schools have won 15 Division I national titles. This was tied with the Atlantic Coast Conference for the most of any conference. [8] [9] [10] Oregon won the first NCAA tournament in 1939. [11] UCLA has won 11 national titles, the most of any Division I team. [12] Arizona has won the most recent national title, winning in 1997. Stanford in 1942, Utah in 1944 and California in 1959 are the other NCAA champions. [13]

List of seasons

Season
Regular season(#)Conference tournament (#)
1915–16 California (1)
Oregon State (1)
1916–17 Washington State [i]
1917–18No official conference competition
1918–19 Oregon (1)
1919–20 Stanford (1)
1920–21 California (2)
Stanford (2)
1921–22 Idaho (1)
1922–23 Idaho (2)
1923–24 California (3)
1924–25 California (4)
1925–26 California (5)
1926–27 California (6)
1927–28 USC (1)
1928–29 California (7)
1929–30 USC (2)
1930–31 Washington (1)
1931–32 California (8)
1932–33 Oregon State (2)
1933–34 Washington (2)
1934–35 USC (3)
1935–36 Stanford (3)
1936–37 Stanford (4)
1937–38 Stanford (5)
1938–39 Oregon (2)
1939–40 USC (4)
1940–41 Washington State (2)
1941–42 Stanford (6)
1942–43 Washington (3)
1943–44 California (9) [ii]
Washington (4)
1944–45 Oregon (3)
UCLA (1)
1945–46 California (10)
1946–47 Oregon State (3)
1947–48 Washington (5)
1948–49 Oregon State (4)
1949–50 UCLA (2)
1950–51 Washington (6)
1951–52 UCLA (3)
1952–53 Washington (7)
1953–54 USC (5)
1954–55 Oregon State (5)
1955–56 UCLA (4)
1956–57 California (11)
1957–58 California (12)
Oregon State (6)
1958–59 California (13)
1959–60 California (14)
1960–61 USC (6)
1961–62 UCLA (5)
1962–63 Stanford (7)
UCLA (6)
1963–64 UCLA (7)
1964–65 UCLA (8)
1965–66 Oregon State (7)
1966–67 UCLA (9)
1967–68 UCLA (10)
1968–69 UCLA (11)
1969–70 UCLA (12)
1970–71 UCLA (13)
1971–72 UCLA (14)
1972–73 UCLA (15)
1973–74 UCLA (16)
1974–75 UCLA (17)
1975–76 UCLA (18)
1976–77 UCLA (19)
1977–78 UCLA (20)
1978–79 UCLA (21)
1979–80 Oregon State (8)
1980–81 Oregon State (9)
1981–82 Oregon State (10)
1982–83 UCLA (22)
1983–84 Oregon State (11)
Washington (8)
1984–85 USC (7)
Washington (9)
1985–86 Arizona (1)
1986–87 UCLA (23)UCLA (1)
1987–88 Arizona (2)Arizona (1)
1988–89 Arizona (3)Arizona (2)
1989–90 Arizona (4)Arizona (3)
Oregon State (12)
1990–91 Arizona (5)
1991–92 UCLA (24)
1992–93 Arizona (6)
1993–94 Arizona (7)
1994–95 UCLA (25)
1995–96 UCLA (26)
1996–97 UCLA (27) [iii]
1997–98 Arizona (8)
1998–99 Stanford (8)
1999–00 Arizona (9)
Stanford (9)
2000–01 Stanford (10)
2001–02 Oregon (4)Arizona (4)
2002–03 Arizona (10)Oregon (1)
2003–04 Stanford (11)Stanford (1)
2004–05 Arizona (11)Washington (1)
2005–06 UCLA (28)UCLA (2)
2006–07 UCLA (29)Oregon (2)
2007–08 UCLA (30)UCLA (3)
2008–09 Washington (10)USC (1)
2009–10 California (15)Washington (2)
2010–11 Arizona (12)Washington (3)
2011–12 Washington (11)Colorado (1)
2012–13 UCLA (31)Oregon (3)
2013–14 Arizona (13)UCLA (4)
2014–15 Arizona (14)Arizona (5)
2015–16 Oregon (5)Oregon (4)
2016–17 Arizona (15)Arizona (6)
Oregon (6)
2017–18 Arizona (16)Arizona (7)
2018–19 Washington (12)Oregon (5)
2019–20 Oregon (7)Cancelled—COVID-19 pandemic
2020–21 Oregon (8)Oregon State (1)
2021–22 Arizona (17)Arizona (8)
2022–23 UCLA (32)Arizona (9)
2023–24 Arizona (18)Oregon (6)
Bold text denotes National Champion.
  1. Though the first national championship tournament was not held until 1939, the Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively selected national champions for prior years, including Washington State for 1917. [14]
  2. Utah was national champion in 1944, prior to its joining the Pac-12 in 2011. [15]
  3. Arizona was national champion in 1997, though it did not win the conference.

Championships by school

SchoolRegular seasonConference tournament
No.LastNo.Last
UCLA 32202342014
Arizona 18202492023
California 1520100
Oregon State 12199012021
Washington 12201932011
Stanford 11200412004
Oregon 8202162024
USC 7198512009
Washington State 219410
Idaho 219230
Arizona State 00
Colorado 012012
Utah 00

Performance by team

Through 2024 tournament [16]

Teams (# of titles) 1987 1988 1989 1990 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020* 2021 2022 2023 2024
Pac-12 (27)(10)(10)(10)(10)(8)(8)(8)(8)(10)(10)(10)(10)(9)(10)(12)(12)(12)(12)(12)(12)(12)(12)(12)(11)(12)(12)(12)
1 Arizona (9)QFCCCCQFSFFSFQFQFQFQFFFSFFCSFCC1RQFCCSF
2 Oregon (6)SFQF1RQFSFCSFSFCQF1RQFSFQFCQFFCFSFCQFSFQFSFC
3 UCLA (4)CQFSFFQFSFQFQFCQFCSFSFQFQFFCSF1RSFSFQFQFQFFFQF
4 Washington (3)FQFQF1RQFFCQFQF1RSFCCQFQF1R1RQF1R1RF1R1RQF1R1R
5 Colorado (1)CQFSFQFQFQFQFSF1RFSFQFF
6 Oregon State (1)QFFSFQFQFSFQF1R1R1RQFQFSF1R1R1RQF1RQFQFQFC1R1R1R
7 Stanford (1)QFSFFSFQFQFCSFQFQFFQFSF1RQF1RSFQF1R1RQF1R1R1RQFQFQF
8 USC (1)1R1RQFQFFFQFQFFSFCSF1R1R1RQFQFQFFQFQFSFSFQFQF
9 Arizona State (0)QF1R1RSFQFQFQF1R1RQFFQF1R1RQFQF1R1RQF1RSFQFQF1RSF1R
10 California (0)SFQFQFQFSFSFQFQFFSFQFQFFQFSFQFQFQFSFSF1R1RQFQF1R1R1R
11 Utah (0)1RSFQFSFFQFQFQF1RQF1R1RQF
12 Washington State (0)1RSFQF1RQFQF1RSFSFQF1RQF1R1R1R1R1R1R1R1RQF1RQFQFSF

Key

CChampion
FRunner-up
SFSemifinals
QFQuarterfinals
RRRound Number
Did not participate

*The 2020 tournament was canceled after the first-round games due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

All-time school records (ranked according to all time wins)

Through end of the 2023–24 regular season. Records reflect official NCAA results, including any forfeits or win vacating. [17]

#Pac–12RecordWin %Pac–12 Regular Season ChampionshipsPac–12 Conference Tournament ChampionshipsNational championships
1 UCLA 2002–904.68932411
2 Arizona 1937–985–1.6631891
3 Utah 1894–1080.637001
4 Washington 1862–1268.5951230
5 Oregon State 1810–1444.5561210
6 Oregon 1776–1418.556861
7 USC 1713–1261.576710
8 Washington State 1680–1594.513200
9 California 1639–1296.5581501
10 Stanford 1610–1238.5651111
11 Arizona State 1468–1303.530000
12 Colorado 1423–1271.528010

Pac-12 Team vs. Team Results

This table summarizes the all-time head-to-head results between teams. Results are through the 2021–22 season. [18]

 ArizonaASUCaliforniaColoradoOregonOSUStanfordUCLAUSCUtahWashingtonWSU
vs. Arizona86–15931–7216–2437–5322–7232–7163–4846–7732–3631–6017–71
vs. Arizona State159–8642–4915–1448–4747–4953–4374–2461–4535–2546–4542–45
vs. California72–3149–4221–1868–8568–91129–155145–103133–13622–1787–8759–83
vs. Colorado24–1611–1518–2112–1611–2110–2019–710–1626–3321–157–17
vs. Oregon53–3747–4885–6816–12191–17158–96103–4069–5810–30192–121128–175
vs. Oregon State70–2249–4791–6821–11171–19176–76102–4080–6722–18166–144129–175
vs. Stanford71–3143–53155–12920–1096–5876–76151–97130–12925–1775–8364–84
vs. UCLA48–6324–74103–1457–1940–9340–10397–151116–14610–1743–10719–114
vs. USC77–4645–61136–13316–1059–6967–80129–130146–11626–2675–8249–82
vs. Utah36–3225–3517–2233–2630–1018–2217–2517–1026–2615–196–29
vs. Washington60–3145–4687–8715–21121–192144–16683–75107–4382–7519–15108–185
vs. Washington State71–1745–4283–5917–7175–128175–12984–64114–1982–4929–6185–108
Total711–412469–622848–853197–172857–942859–980768–9061032–568835–824256–240936–771628–1060

Head coaches

Coaches

Note: Stats shown are before the beginning of the season. Overall includes records from other schools. [19]


TeamHead coachCompensationSeasons at schoolOverall recordPac-12 recordPac-12 Regular Season TitlesPac-12 Conference Tournament TitlesNCAA TournamentsNCAA Final FoursNCAA Championships
Arizona Tommy Lloyd $3,650,0003rd61–11 (.847)32–8 (.800)12200
Arizona State Bobby Hurley $2,700,0008th141–113 (.555)71–76 (.483)00300
California Mark Madsen 1st0–0 ()0–0 ()00000
Colorado Tad Boyle $1,800,00014th272–172 (.613)126–1112 (.529)01500
Oregon Dana Altman $3,325,00014th321–139 (.698)155–83 (.651)44710
Oregon State Wayne Tinkle $2,500,00010th127–158 (.446)58–110 (.345)01200
Stanford Jerod Haase N/A8th112–109 (.507)59–72 (.450)00000
UCLA Mick Cronin $4,100,0005th97–35 (.735)57–19 (.750)10310
USC Andy Enfield N/A11th205–128 (.616)98–88 (.527)00400
Utah Craig Smith $1,850,0003rd28–35 (.444)14–26 (.350)00000
Washington Mike Hopkins $2,800,0047th101–91 (.526)51–61 (.455)00100
Washington State Kyle Smith $1,400,0005th69–61 (.531)35–42 (.455)00000

Notes:

Conference honors

The following honors are presented annually by the conference:

Former players and coaches who have made a significant impact to the tradition and heritage of the conference are recognized in the Pac-12 Hall of Honor. It was exclusively for men's basketball until 2018, when it was opened to all sports.

All-time statistical leaders

Source: [20]

Career

Single Season

Notes

    References

    1. "Pac-12 Conference 2011–12 Men's Basketball Media Guide". Pac-12 Conference. 2011. p. 5. Retrieved February 9, 2012.
    2. McCollough, J. Brady; Plaschke, Bill; Kartje, Ryan; Bolch, Ben (June 30, 2022). "USC and UCLA rock college sports by leaving the Pac-12 for the Big Ten". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
    3. "Colorado To Join Big 12 Conference In 2024-25" (Press release). Colorado Buffaloes. July 27, 2023. Retrieved July 27, 2023.
    4. "Big 12 Conference Adds Arizona, Arizona State and Utah" (Press release). Big 12 Conference. August 4, 2023. Retrieved August 4, 2023.
    5. "The Atlantic Coast Conference Welcomes the University of California, Berkeley, Southern Methodist University and Stanford University as New Members" (Press release). Atlantic Coast Conference. September 1, 2023. Retrieved September 1, 2023.
    6. "Oregon State, Washington State invited to join Gonzaga-led WCC in basketball for next two seasons". CBSSports.com. 2023-12-22. Retrieved 2024-02-05.
    7. "Pac-12 Conference and Utah State University Unite to Advance the New Era of the 100-Year-Old Legacy". pac-12.com. Retrieved 2024-09-25.
    8. "2013–14 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Media Guide". Pac-12 Conference. 2013. p. 14. Retrieved October 16, 2014.
    9. Schreiner, Michael (July 1, 2013). "Is next year's ACC the greatest basketball conference ever?". The Chronicle. Archived from the original on October 18, 2014.
    10. Kensler, Tom (May 24, 2012). "Counting Colorado and Utah, Pac-12 reaches 450 in NCAA titles". The Denver Post. Archived from the original on October 22, 2014.
    11. Titus, Mark (October 29, 2013). "2013–14 NCAA Basketball Preview: The Pac-12". Grantland.com. Archived from the original on October 25, 2014.
    12. Harrow, Jeremy (2008). Basketball in the Pac-10 Conference. The Rosen Publishing Group. p. 9. ISBN   9781404213852 . Retrieved October 15, 2014.
    13. "Men's National Titles". Archived from the original on March 18, 2015.
    14. "National Champions; National Heroes". Washington State Cougars. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016.
    15. "2013–14 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Media Guide". Pac-12 Conference. 2013. p. 14. Retrieved October 16, 2014.
    16. "2022-23 Men's Basketball media Guide" (PDF).
    17. "ALL-TIME WINNINGEST SCHOOLS" (PDF). NCAA. 2023. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
    18. "All time Results, Page 15" (PDF).
    19. "2022-23 Men's Basketball media Guide" (PDF).
    20. "PAC-12 RECORDS - CAREER LEADERS, Page 60" (PDF).