Transfer Talk: Bet Bo Would Still be Coaching if Jarrod Uthoff Didn't Leave

Since they frequently can't trust their counterparts, forbidding intra-conference player transfers is usually on the agenda for coaches and ADs. On the other hand, there is little mention of the double standard whereby coaches aren't denied a right to do the same thing. We don't recall coach Bo Ryan raising a stink about intra-conference transfers when Sharif Chambliss led Wisconsin in assists and three-pointers in nearly guiding the Badgers to the 2005 Final Four in his lone season with them after leaving Penn State. But Ryan, clearly perturbed when emerging star Jarrod Uthoff left UW and wound up at Iowa, likely would still be on the sideline gunning for another top four finish in the Big Ten Conference if Uthoff had remained in Madison. Uthoff could join John Lucas III (Baylor to Oklahoma State in Big 12) as the only players in NCAA history to become an All-American after transferring within a league.

In regard to priorities, there is virtually no word on coaches and conferences wanting the NCAA to introduce guidelines to determine a penalty to enforce if a player is caught doing drugs or committing domestic violence. Transfer power forward Charles Mitchell found it easy to remain in the ACC with Georgia Tech because Maryland chose to switch membership to the Big Ten. Elsewhere, Syracuse was still in the Big East Conference during Michael Gbinije's redshirt season in 2012-13 after departing Duke. At any rate, CollegeHoopedia.com is unaware of the following players, including Xavier coach Chris Mack, causing extensive trouble because they transferred within a league:

Transfer Player Pos. Conference Two League Members Played For
Al Akins ? Pacific Coast Washington State 42-43/Washington 44
Carvell Ammons F Big Ten Northwestern 97/Illinois 99
DeMario Anderson G Northeast Central Connecticut State 04-05/Quinnipiac 07-08
Luke Axtell F-G Big 12 Texas 98/Kansas 00-01
Twany Beckham G SEC Mississippi State 09-10/Kentucky 12-13
Jason Carter F Southeastern Alabama 11/Mississippi 13
Sharif Chambliss G Big Ten Penn State 01-03/Wisconsin 05
Richard Congo F East Coast Lafayette 80/Drexel 82-84
Thomas Dodd C-F SWAC Texas Southern 95-96/Grambling 98-99
Charles Dorsey G Midwestern Collegiate Loyola of Chicago 81-82/Oral Roberts 84-85
Gary Ervin G Southeastern Mississippi State 04-05/Arkansas 07
Cedric Foster G SWAC Alcorn State 94-95/Mississippi Valley State 97-98
Lawrence Funderburke F Big Ten Indiana 90/Ohio State 92-94
Antonio Gates F Mid-American Eastern Michigan 00/Kent State 02-03
Michael Gbinije G-F Atlantic Coast Duke 12/Syracuse 14-16
John Gordon G America East Maine 96-97/Delaware 99-00
Derick Grubb C West Coast Pepperdine 03-06/Loyola Marymount 07
Jason Grunkemeyer G Mid-American Ohio University 97/Miami (OH) 99-01
Damontre Harris C Southeastern South Carolina 11-12/Florida 14
Jason Hernandez G America East New Hampshire 97/Hofstra 99-01
Derek Holcomb C Big Ten Indiana 77/Illinois 79-81
Randy Holcomb F WAC/Mountain West Fresno State 99/San Diego State 01-02
David Huertas G Southeastern Florida 05-06/Mississippi 08
Lindsey Hunter G SWAC Alcorn State 89/Jackson State 91-93
Ben Johnson G Big Ten Northwestern 00-01/Minnesota 03
Napoleon Johnson C SWAC Texas Southern 80-81/Grambling 83-84
Trey Johnson G SWAC Alcorn State 04/Jackson State 06-07
Oggie Kapetanovic C Ivy League Brown 97-98/Penn 00-01
John Lucas III G Big 12 Baylor 02-03/Oklahoma State 04
Chris Mack G Midwestern Collegiate Evansville 89-90/Xavier 93
Horace "Bones" McKinney C Southern North Carolina State 41-42/North Carolina 46
Jamar Miles F SWAC Alabama A&M 99/Prairie View 01-03
Charles Mitchell F ACC Maryland 13-14/Georgia Tech 15-16
Ross Neltner F-C Southeastern Louisiana State 04-05/Vanderbilt 07-08
Sam Okey F Big Ten Wisconsin 96-97/Iowa 99
Marvin Owens G-F Midwestern Collegiate Oklahoma City 84-85/Detroit 87-88
Jason Parker F Southeastern Kentucky 01/South Carolina 03
Charles Price F SWAC Grambling 86-87/Texas Southern 89-90
Luke Recker G-F Big Ten Indiana 98-99/Iowa 01
Earnest Ross F SEC Auburn 10-11/Missouri 13-14
Brian Schmall G Big South Augusta 89-90/Radford 92-93
Glen Selbo G Big Ten Wisconsin 44 & 47/Michigan 46
Brad Sellers F Big Ten Wisconsin 82-83/Ohio State 85-86
Marcus Stewart F Big South Coastal Carolina 98-99/Winthrop 01
Curtis Stuckey G Missouri Valley Drake 88/Bradley 90-91
Kenny Taylor G Big 12 Baylor 02-03/Texas 04
Charles Terrell G Big West San Jose State 90-91/Pacific 93-94
Jarrod Uthoff F Big Ten Wisconsin 12 (RS)/Iowa 14-16
Eloy Vargas C Southeastern Florida 09/Kentucky 11-12
Damion Walker C-F WAC Texas Christian 96-97/New Mexico 99-00
Marcus Watkins G Big 12 Texas A&M 03-04/Missouri 05-06
Malcolm White F Southeastern Mississippi 08-09/Louisiana State 11-12
Trent Whiting G Mountain West Utah 00/Brigham Young 01
LeRon Williams F Southeastern Florida 95-96/South Carolina 98-99

Super Men: College Basketball's Significant 50-Year Impact on Super Bowl

College basketball fans shouldn't be assessed an unsportsmanlike-conduct penalty if the NFL isn't their favorite sport, but they should rush to hold on because following is more super stuff to digest while blitzed by enough notes, quotes and anecdotes to have one seeking a sedative when assessing Super Bowl 50 in Santa Clara between the Denver Broncos and Carolina Panthers.

A "Super" hoop-related nugget is Panthers offensive lineman Michael Oher, the subject of the move "The Blind Side" (starring Sandra Bullock and Tim McGraw. The film focused on fast-food millionaire Sean Tuohy Sr., who paced the SEC in assists all four basketball seasons with Mississippi from 1978-79 through 1981-82, as the white adoptive father of African-American Oher, who attended Ole Miss before earning a championship ring with the Super Bowl XLVII-winning Baltimore Ravens. Sean Jr. (known as "SJ") has been on the basketball roster of Loyola (Md.) the past three seasons.

For what it's worth hoop-wise, did you know former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue was a 6-5 forward who averaged 11.4 points and nine rebounds per game for Georgetown in three varsity seasons from 1959-60 through 1961-62? He led the Hoyas in rebounding as a sophomore (8.9 rpg) and junior (8.2 rpg) and was their second-leading rebounder as a senior captain. Well-rounded trivia buffs should also know that Tagliabue's predecessor, Pete Rozelle, was the basketball publicist for 1949 NIT champion San Francisco before orchestrating events leading to the Super Bowl becoming a national phenomenon.

The Super Bowl's link to college basketball is much more extensive than these commissioners and has had more impact than unveiling of new commercials plus halftime entertainers. Actually, there are a striking number of ex-college hoopsters who participated in the Super Bowl as players. In fact, the inaugural Super Bowl in 1967 featured several former four-year college varsity basketball players for schools currently classified at the NCAA Division I level: Bobby Bell, Reg Carolan, Len Dawson, Otis Taylor and Fuzzy Thurston.

In deference to the 50th anniversary of the Super Bowl, following are 50 questions tackling versatile players such as Bell, Carolan, Dawson, Peppers, Taylor and Thurston in this distinctive two-way athlete category that should surprise you with some of the marquee names. If you get them all correct before peeking at answers at the end of this gridiron quiz, then you boast inflated brainpower sufficiently omnipotent to know what happened to Ray Lewis' ditched cream suit in Atlanta.

1. Name the three-time Pro Bowl quarterback with the Cincinnati Bengals who appeared in Super Bowl XVI following the 1981 season after finishing his career as the fifth-leading scorer in his college's history. The high school teammate of Kentucky All-American and All-Pro Dan Issel led Augustana (Ill.) in field-goal accuracy and free-throw shooting as a freshman and sophomore.

2. Name the linebacker who was one of only two first-year players on the Miami Dolphins' undefeated team in 1972 and was still with the franchise the next season when the Dolphins repeated as Super Bowl champions for a 32-2 two-year mark, the best ever in the NFL. He played briefly for Louisville's varsity basketball squad before Cardinals football coach Lee Corso persuaded him to concentrate on the gridiron.

3. Name the nine-time All-Pro linebacker who was with the Kansas City Chiefs for their Super Bowl IV winner after becoming the first African American to play basketball for Minnesota when he appeared in three games in the 1960-61 season.

4. Name the two-time Pro Bowl defensive end who appeared in Super Bowl III with the Baltimore Colts vs. the New York Jets after becoming a first-team selection as a basketball center for South Dakota in the All-North Central Conference when he averaged 7.8 points per game in 1952-53 and 11 points in 1953-54.

5. Name the first black starting quarterback in the NFL who was later converted to wide receiver and caught two passes to help the undefeated Miami Dolphins beat Minnesota in Super Bowl VIII after averaging 9.5 ppg and 3.6 rpg in 14 basketball games for Nebraska-Omaha in 1964-65.

6. Name the four-time Pro Bowl wide receiver who caught five passes for 83 yards in Super Bowl XV for the Philadelphia Eagles after he was the top rebounder for two seasons with Southern (La.). He established an NFL record for most consecutive games with a pass reception (127).

7. Name the 1963 Pro Bowl selection who participated in Super Bowl I as a defensive end with the Kansas City Chiefs after the 6-6, 235-pounder played three varsity seasons with Idaho's basketball team, averaging four points and 4.7 rebounds per game.

8. Name the 1994 first-round draft choice who was a defensive end on the Dallas Cowboys' last Super Bowl team after playing nine games during the 1992-93 season for Arizona State's hoop squad that was decimated with injuries.

9. Name the Pro Bowl selection who appeared in Super Bowl XXXI with the New England Patriots after the 6-5, 245-pounder played basketball one season for Livingstone (N.C.). He held the NFL single-season record for most receptions by a tight end with 96 in 1994.

10. Name the four-year starter who set school career records for total offense, passing yards and rushing yards by a quarterback plus rushing touchdowns by a QB. Most Outstanding Player in the 2002 Peach Bowl as a quarterback was activated for Super Bowl XXXVII as a rookie with the Oakland Raiders before succeeding all-time great Tim Brown as a starting wide receiver. He was North Carolina's leader in assists during 2000-01 when he directed the Tar Heels to a basketball No. 1 ranking and an 18-game winning streak.

11. Name the Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs who was MVP in Super Bowl IV after playing in two basketball games as a 6-0, 180-pound guard for Purdue in the 1956-57 campaign.

12. Name the defensive left end on Miami's undefeated team in 1972 who played in four Super Bowls with the Dolphins after the 6-6, 220-pound basketball center finished his four-season career at Central College as the Pella, Iowa-based school's all-time leading scorer (15.5 ppg) and rebounder (12.4 rpg). He grabbed a school-record 29 rebounds in a game his senior season (1970-71).

13. Name the Hall of Fame tight end who played in two Super Bowls with the Dallas Cowboys, catching a TD pass to cap the scoring in Super Bowl VI, before coaching the Super Bowl-winning Chicago Bears following the 1985 season after the 6-2, 205-pound forward averaged 2.8 points and 2.6 rebounds per game in two seasons with the Pittsburgh Panthers.

14. Name the defensive back for the Baltimore Colts' Super Bowl V champion who led the NFL in kickoff return average (35.4) in 1970 after playing basketball for Maryland-Eastern Shore.

15. Name the prominent ex-NFL coach who was a defensive back for the Pittsburgh Steelers' Super Bowl XIII champion after averaging 2.6 ppg in 16 basketball contests with the Minnesota Gophers in 1973-74 under coach Bill Musselman.

16. Name the starting middle linebacker for a team in two of three Super Bowls in one stretch who started two games at point guard for St. Francis (Pa.) as a freshman in 1993-94 when he averaged three points per game. After transferring back home to Cleveland, the 5-10 dynamo collected 109 points and 52 rebounds in 27 games for John Carroll before quitting basketball midway through the 1995-96 campaign to concentrate on football.

17. Name the five-time Pro Bowl defensive back with the Dallas Cowboys who played in two Super Bowls after finishing his three-year varsity career as Utah State's all-time leading scorer and rebounder. The 6-4 forward scored 46 points in a game against New Mexico en route to leading the Aggies in scoring with 21.2 points per game in 1959-60 (34th in the nation), 20.3 in 1960-61 (57th) and 25.6 in 1961-62 (13th).

18. Name the Hall of Fame quarterback who played in three Super Bowls with the Miami Dolphins after he was a 6-1, 185-pound sophomore guard in 1964-65 when scoring 22 points in 16 games in his only varsity basketball season for Purdue.

19. Name the 12-year veteran safety who played in Super Bowl IV with the Minnesota Vikings after averaging four points and 3.5 rebounds per game in 10 contests for Wisconsin's basketball team in 1958-59.

20. Name the wide receiver who caught a 34-yard touchdown pass from Roger Staubach for the Dallas Cowboys' final touchdown in a 21-17 loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl X after he averaged 12.4 points and 7.3 rebounds per game in three varsity seasons (1972-73 through 1974-75) for Austin Peay. It was the only pass reception in his NFL career. The 6-4, 215-pound forward averaged seven points and seven rebounds per game in four NCAA Tournament contests in 1973 and 1974 as a teammate of folk hero James "Fly" Williams.

21. Name the third-round draft choice of the Miami Dolphins in 1998 who backed up MVP Ray Lewis as a linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens in Super Bowl XXXV after being a member of Cincinnati's basketball team for the first month of 1997-98 campaign.

22. Name the three-time Pro Bowl defensive lineman who appeared in three Super Bowls with the Dallas Cowboys after the 6-8, 230-pound backup post player averaged 1.7 points and 2.6 rebounds for Tennessee State in his freshman and sophomore seasons (1969-70 and 1970-71).

23. Name the Baltimore Ravens wide receiver who caught a 56-yard touchdown pass from Joe Flacco and opened the second half with a 108-yard kickoff return for a TD in a 34-31 win against the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII after the Southeastern Louisiana track transfer was a part-time hoop starter for Lane (Tenn.), averaging 3.4 ppg and 3.7 rpg in 2004-05 and 2005-06.

24. Name the 16-year quarterback who started Super Bowl VII for the Washington Redskins after scoring eight points in six games for coach John Wooden's 1959-60 UCLA basketball team.

25. Name the two-time Pro Bowl cornerback who participated in Super Bowl XVII with the Washington Redskins after the 6-4, 190-pound forward averaged 13.4 points and 6.6 rebounds per game for San Diego State in 1969-70 and 1970-71. He was the Aztecs' second-leading scorer (15.2 ppg) and rebounder (7.6 rpg) as a junior.

26. Name the 10-time Pro Bowl defensive back who competed in four Super Bowls after collecting nine assists, four points and three rebounds in six games for Southern California's basketball squad as a junior in 1979-80.

27. Name the 11-year defensive lineman who played in Super Bowl XIII for the Minnesota Vikings after averaging 12.3 ppg with Michigan Tech in 1962-63.

28. Name the Minnesota Vikings defensive back who let former Prairie View basketball player Otis Taylor (Kansas City Chiefs) elude him for a long touchdown in Super Bowl IV after being a basketball teammate of Utah State legend Wayne Estes in 1964-65.

29. Name the NFL Hall of Fame tight end who caught a 75-yard touchdown pass from Hall of Famer Johnny Unitas in Super Bowl V after collecting 28 points and 28 rebounds in six basketball games with Syracuse in 1960-61.

30. Name the defensive end who scored six touchdowns in his 14-year NFL career and tackled John Elway of the Denver Broncos for a safety in the New York Giants' Super Bowl XXI victory following the 1986 season after the 6-5, 225-pound forward-center averaged just over 10 points and 10 rebounds per game for Oregon's freshman squad in 1971-72. He played briefly for the Ducks' varsity basketball team the next season.

31. Name the tight end who played in four Super Bowls with the Buffalo Bills after he was the starting center for Jacksonville State's 1985 NCAA Division II championship team. He led the Gulf South Conference in rebounding each of his first three seasons and finished runner-up in that category as a senior.

32. Name the defensive lineman in Super Bowl XI for the Oakland Raiders who played basketball in the 1975 NAIA Tournament for Morningside (Iowa).

33. Name the quarterback who set an NFL record with 24 consecutive completions over a two-game span in 2004 before guiding the Philadelphia Eagles to Super Bowl XXXIX the next year. He collected a career-high 10 points and six rebounds and made two clinching free throws with 2.7 seconds remaining in a 77-74 victory over Georgetown in 1997 before Syracuse appeared in the NIT. He scored two points in two 1996 NCAA Tournament games for the Orangemen's national runner-up.

34. Name the tight end who played in four Super Bowls with the Buffalo Bills, catching a TD pass in Super Bowl XXVI, after the 6-8, 235-pound center for the basketball squad at Wabash (Ind.) averaged 19.2 ppg and 11.4 rpg in four varsity seasons. He set NCAA Division III field-goal shooting records for a single season (75.3% in 1981-82 as a senior) and career (72.4). He collected 45 points and 13 rebounds in the 1982 championship game, scoring a Division III Tournament record 129 points in five games and earning tourney outstanding player honors.

35. Name the Pro Bowl offensive tackle who appeared in three consecutive Super Bowls with the Miami Dolphins after leading Lamar in rebounding as a senior with 12.6 per game in 1968-69.

36. Name the valuable addition to Super Bowl XXXIX-bound Philadelphia Eagles in 2004 who had nine pass receptions for 122 yards against the New England Patriots after setting an NFL single-game record with 20 receptions for the San Francisco 49ers against the Chicago Bears in 2000. He collected 57 points and 49 rebounds in 38 games (four starts) for UT-Chattanooga's basketball squad in three seasons from 1993-94 through 1995-96.

37. Name the 14-year running back who played in five Super Bowls, catching more passes (five) than anyone in Super Bowls X and XII, after the guard-forward averaged 8.7 points and 6 rebounds per game as a senior in 1966-67 to finish his three-year Illinois varsity career with 5.2 ppg and 3.6 rpg.

38. Name the 2002 NFL defensive rookie of the year for the Carolina Panthers who appeared in Super Bowl XXXVIII the next season after being a member of North Carolina's 2000 Final Four squad. He started both NCAA Tournament games for the Tar Heels in 2001, including his first double-double (10 rebounds and career-high 21 points against Penn State).

39. Name the wide receiver who made a two-point conversion on a run for the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XIV and threw a flea flicker touchdown pass in Super Bowl XX after collecting 16 points and 11 assists in 11 games for Indiana's 1999 NCAA Tournament team, including two points in each of the Hoosiers' playoff contests (against George Washington and St. John's).

40. Name the four-time Pro Bowl wide receiver who scored the first touchdown at Super Bowl XXXI for the Green Bay Packers after he was a 6-1, 185-pound backup guard in basketball for Michigan State in two seasons (1985-86 and 1987-88).

41. Name the Hall of Fame offensive tackle who participated in two Super Bowls (XI and XV) with the Oakland Raiders after he was a two-year basketball letterman as a 6-5, 265-pound center for Maryland State College (now called Maryland-Eastern Shore).

42. Name an offensive tackle for the Super Bowl XVII champion Washington Redskins after the strike-shortened 1982 campaign who averaged 2.9 ppg and 3.7 rpg while shooting 50.5% from the floor with Columbia in 1968-69 and 1969-70.

43. Name the Hall of Fame quarterback who guided the Dallas Cowboys to four Super Bowls after averaging 9.3 points per game for the 1961-62 Navy plebe (freshman) basketball team. The 6-2, 190-pound forward scored five points in four games for the Midshipmen varsity squad the next season. He was MVP in Super Bowl VI.

44. Name the defensive back for the Baltimore Colts who appeared in two Super Bowls (III and V) after playing basketball for Maryland-Eastern Shore.

45. Name the wide receiver who played in two Super Bowls with the Kansas City Chiefs, catching 10 passes for 128 yards and a touchdown, after he was a backup small forward in the Prairie View A&M era following the school's glory years with pro basketball standout Zelmo Beaty.

46. Name the tight end with the Denver Broncos who caught four passes from Peyton Manning in Super Bowl XLVIII after being Portland State's second-leading rebounder in 2008-09 and 2009-10.

47. Name the offensive guard with the Green Bay Packers who participated in the first two Super Bowls after originally enrolling at Valparaiso on a basketball scholarship. He averaged 1.5 points per game in eight contests as a freshman with Valpo in 1951-52 before concentrating on football.

48. Name the Pro Bowl punter who appeared in two Super Bowls with the Dallas Cowboys after averaging 14.5 points and 8.3 rebounds as a sophomore, 17.3 points and eight rebounds as a junior and 22.1 points and 8.7 rebounds as a senior for Tennessee. The 6-4, 210-pound forward scored 50 points against LSU as a senior on his way to becoming SEC player of the year in 1967.

49. Name the defensive end for the Denver Broncos' back-to-back Super Bowl champions (XXXII and XXXIII) who registered one steal while playing in one minute of one Big Eight Conference basketball game for Colorado in 1989-90.

50. Name the offensive tackle who was an NFL All-Pro six straight seasons in the 1970s and played in the Super Bowl five times that decade with the Dallas Cowboys after earning All-SIAC basketball recognition for Fort Valley State (Ga.).

ANSWERS TO 50 COLLEGE BASKETBALL IMPACTING SUPER BOWL TRIVIA QUESTIONS
1. Ken Anderson; 2. Larry Ball; 3. Bobby Bell; 4. Ordell Braase; 5. Marlin Briscoe; 6. Harold Carmichael; 7. Reg Carolan; 8. Shante Carver; 9. Ben Coates; 10. Ronald Curry; 11. Len Dawson; 12. Vern Den Herder; 13. Mike Ditka; 14. Jim Duncan; 15. Tony Dungy; 16. London Fletcher; 17. Cornell Green; 18. Bob Griese; 19. Dale Hackbart; 20. Percy Howard; 21. Brad Jackson; 22. Ed "Too Tall" Jones; 23. Jacoby Jones; 24. Billy Kilmer; 25. Joe Lavender; 26. Ronnie Lott; 27. Bob Lurtsema; 28. Earsell Mackbee; 29. John Mackey; 30. George Martin; 31. Keith McKeller; 32. Herb McMath; 33. Donovan McNabb; 34. Pete Metzelaars; 35. Wayne Moore; 36. Terrell Owens; 37. Preston Pearson; 38. Julius Peppers; 39. Antwaan Randle El; 40. Andre Rison; 41. Art Shell; 42. George Starke; 43. Roger Staubach; 44. Charlie Stukes; 45. Otis Taylor; 46. Julius Thomas; 47. Fuzzy Thurston; 48. Ron Widby; 49. Alfred Williams; 50. Rayfield Wright.

Picture Perfect: Indiana's 50-Year Undefeated Anniversary Remains Unscathed

"We will either find a way or make one." - Hannibal, Carthaginian military commander

UCLA, in a stellar 10-year stretch from 1963-64 through 1972-73 ruling the scene much like Hannibal, accounted for four of only 12 squads to go undefeated since the start of national tournament postseason competition in the late 1930s. Kentucky came close to becoming #13 last year before bowing against Wisconsin in the national semifinals.

UK was soundly whipped by undefeated LIU in 1938-39 prior to the Wildcats going unbeaten themselves 15 years later. The average number of defeats the previous year for the first 12 unbeaten teams was five. The only time in major-college history two undefeated major colleges met in a national postseason tournament was the 1939 NIT final between Loyola of Chicago and Long Island University. LIU (23-0) defeated Loyola (21-1), 44-32.

In a seven-year span, all-time greats Lew Alcindor (UCLA in 1966-67), Bill Walton (UCLA in 1971-72) and David Thompson (North Carolina State in 1972-73) weren't freshmen but they were in their first season of varsity eligibility when leading their unbeaten teams in scoring. Alcindor (29 ppg), Lennie Rosenbluth (28 ppg with North Carolina in 1956-57) and Thompson (24.7 ppg) tallied the three highest-scoring averages among these undefeated squads.

Each of the dozen unbeaten major universities had at least one outing decided by fewer than eight points. Following are the schedules and team statistics for the 12 squads, including the last one to achieve the feat in 1975-76 (Indiana won five regular-season games by fewer than five points or in overtime), to go undefeated since the start of national tournament postseason competition:

Long Island (23-0 in 1938-39)
Coach: Clair Bee (eighth of 18 seasons with Blackbirds)

1938-39 LIU Opponents Score LIU's High Scorer
Newark University (N.J.) 64-14 George Newman 14
Panzer College 41-35 Daniel Kaplowitz 15
Princeton/Seminary 82-37 John Bromberg/Irv Torgoff 10
McGill University (Quebec) 77-39 Irv Torgoff 12
Montclair Teachers College (N.J.) 63-40 Irv Torgoff 10
East Stroudsburg Teachers (Pa.) 63-33 John Bromberg 14
Southern California 33-18 Daniel Kaplowitz 12
Kentucky 52-34 John Bromberg 12
Marquette 41-34 Arthur Hillhouse 14
New York Athletic Club 64-43 Arthur Hillhouse 15
Toledo 46-39 Irv Torgoff 18
Geneva College (Pa.) 48-39 Irv Torgoff 15
Duquesne 48-31 John Bromberg 13
Scranton (Pa.) 65-53 Daniel Kaplowitz 16
Canisius 62-50 Myron Sewitch 15
St. Francis (N.Y.) 61-20 Ossie Schechtman 13
St. Bonaventure 70-31 Irv Torgoff 12
University of Baltimore 52-34 Daniel Kaplowitz 9
John Marshall College 65-25 Irv Torgoff 11
at La Salle 28-21 Daniel Kaplowitz 7
New Mexico State (NIT) 52-45 Irv Torgoff 14
Bradley (NIT) 36-32 John Bromberg 12
Loyola of Chicago (NIT) 44-32 Irv Torgoff 12

NOTES: La Salle game technically played on a neutral court (Philadelphia Convention Hall). . . . NIT games played at Madison Square Garden.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR LIU REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. PPG
Irv Torgoff F Sr. 23 9.5
Daniel Kaplowitz F Sr. 23 8.1
*Arthur Hillhouse C Sr. 12 7.1
John Bromberg G Sr. 23 6.6
Oscar "Ossie" Schechtman G Soph. 22 4.8
Seymour "Cy" Lobello C Soph. 22 4.4
**Dolly King C Soph. 10 4.0
Myron Sewitch C Sr. 21 3.9
Solomon Schwartz G Soph. 22 3.8
George Newman G Sr. 23 3.5
Joseph Shelly G Soph. 20 3.5
Irving Zeitlin G Soph. 18 1.7
Maxwell Sharf G-F Soph. 16 1.4

*Hillhouse completed eligibility at the end of the first semester.
**King became eligible at the start of the second semester.

Seton Hall (19-0 in 1939-40)
Coach: John "Honey" Russell (fourth of 18 seasons with Pirates)

1939-40 Seton Hall Opponents Date Score Pirates High Scorer
Alumni D8 45-29 Nick Parpan 12
Mount St. Mary's D18 58-32 Ed Sadowski 13
Tulane D20 53-25 Bob Davies 9
Florida D28 43-41 Bob Davies/Ed Sadowski 13
William & Mary J6 51-35 Ed Sadowski 17
at Scranton J12 48-32 Ed Sadowski 17
Becker J17 69-29 Ed Sadowski 14
at Kutztown (Pa.) J24 42-34 Ed Sadowski 15
Loyola (Md.) F2 50-40 Ed Sadowski 13
at St. Peter's F3 55-27 Bernie Coyle 13
at Brooklyn F5 51-34 Bob Fischer 13
Rider F9 44-32 Bob Davies/John Ruthenberg 8
St. Francis (Pa.) F14 48-36 Bob Davies 17
St. Bonaventure F17 46-41 Bob Davies 19
Kutztown (Pa.) F21 53-33 Bob Davies 15
Canisius F23 52-46 Bob Davies 17
Catholic (D.C.) F26 53-27 Edward Ryan 13
Brooklyn F28 43-41 Frank Delany 16
Scranton (Pa.) M1 68-39 Bob Davies 16

NOTE: Seton Hall played its home games at five different arenas - East Orange High School, Elizabeth Armory, Orange Armory, Orange High School and Dickinson High School (Jersey City).

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR SETON HALL REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. PPG
Ed Sadowski* C Sr. 9 12.2
Bob Davies F Soph. 18 11.8
Bob Fischer F Soph. 18 4.9
John Ruthenberg G-C Soph. 19 4.7
Bob Holm G Soph. 17 4.2
Frank Delany G-F Sr. 19 3.8
Bernie Coyle G-F Sr. 18 3.7
Nick Parpan G-F Jr. 14 3.4
Ken Pine C Soph. 16 3.2
Ray Studwell F-G Soph. 18 1.2

*Sadowski missed the second half of the season because of a broken kneecap.

Army/U.S. Military Academy (15-0 in winter of 1944)
Coach: Ed Kelleher (first of two seasons with Cadets)

1943-44 Army Opponents Score Army's High Scorer
Swarthmore (Pa.) 80-29 Bob Faas 20
Colgate 69-44 Dale Hall 18
St. John's 49-36 Dale Hall 21
at Columbia 55-37 Dale Hall 17
Penn State 49-38 Dale Hall 14
Coast Guard 55-37 Doug Kenna 11
West Virginia 58-31 Dale Hall 18
at Rochester (N.Y.) 57-43 Dale Hall 23
Pittsburgh 66-32 Ed Christl 16
Hobart (N.Y.) 69-36 Dale Hall/Doug Kenna 20
Pennsylvania 55-38 Dale Hall 18
Villanova 34-22 Dale Hall 23
New York University 46-36 Dale Hall 18
Maryland 85-22 Dale Hall 32
Navy 47-40 Doug Kenna 17

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR ARMY REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. PPG
Dale Hall F Jr. 15 18.2
Doug Kenna G Jr. 15 10.1
Ed Christl C Sr. 12 8.3
Bob Faas F Sr. 15 7.1
Bill Ekberg C Jr. 15 4.7
Jack Hennessey G Sr. 15 1.7

Kentucky (25-0 in 1953-54)
Coach: Adolph Rupp (24th of 41 seasons with Wildcats)

1953-54 UK Opponents Date Score UK's High Scorer
Temple D5 86-59 Cliff Hagan 51
at Xavier D12 81-66 Frank Ramsey 27
Wake Forest D14 101-69 Cliff Hagan 18
at St. Louis D18 71-59 Frank Ramsey 21
Duke D21 85-69 Cliff Hagan 27
La Salle D22 73-60 Cliff Hagan 28
Minnesota D28 74-59 Frank Ramsey 23
Xavier J4 77-71 Cliff Hagan 20
Georgia Tech J9 105-53 Cliff Hagan 34
DePaul J11 81-63 Cliff Hagan/Frank Ramsey 22
Tulane J16 94-43 Frank Ramsey 26
at Tennessee J23 97-71 Frank Ramsey 37
at Vanderbilt J30 85-63 Frank Ramsey 24
Georgia Tech* F2 99-48 Cliff Hagan 23
Georgia F4 106-55 Frank Ramsey 29
Georgia* F6 100-68 Cliff Hagan 29
at Florida F8 97-55 Cliff Hagan 22
Mississippi F13 88-62 Cliff Hagan 38
Mississippi State F15 81-49 Cliff Hagan 26
Tennessee F18 90-63 Cliff Hagan 24
at DePaul F20 76-61 Cliff Hagan 29
Vanderbilt F22 100-64 Cliff Hagan 22
Auburn* F27 109-79 Frank Ramsey 28
at Alabama M1 68-43 Cliff Hagan 24
Louisiana State* (SEC Playoff) M9 63-56 Frank Ramsey 30

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR KENTUCKY REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Cliff Hagan F-C Sr. 25 .455 .691 24.0 13.5
Frank Ramsey G Sr. 25 .416 .729 19.6 8.8
Lou Tsioropoulos F Sr. 25 .351 .690 14.5 9.6
Billy Evans F-G Jr. 25 .372 .778 8.4 7.2
Gayle Rose G Jr. 23 .346 .646 6.7 1.3
Phil Grawemeyer F-C Soph. 25 .372 .543 5.9 6.1
Linville Puckett G Soph. 24 .295 .673 5.1 2.2
Bill Bibb F Soph. 16 .313 .583 1.7 1.6
TEAM TOTALS 25 .383 .678 87.5 52.7

San Francisco (29-0 in 1955-56)
Coach: Phil Woolpert (fifth of nine seasons with Dons)

1955-56 USF Opponents Date Score USF's High Scorer
Chico State (Calif.) D2 70-39 Bill Russell 15
Southern California D3 58-42 Bill Russell 24
San Francisco State D6 72-47 Bill Russell 20
Marquette* D16 65-58 Bill Russell 16
at DePaul D17 82-59 K.C. Jones 23
at Wichita D20 75-65 Bill Russell 17
at Loyola of New Orleans D23 61-43 Bill Russell 20
La Salle* D26 79-62 Bill Russell 26
Holy Cross* D27 67-51 Bill Russell 24
UCLA* D28 70-53 Bill Russell 17
Pepperdine J6 62-51 Bill Russell 20
Santa Clara J10 74-56 Mike Farmer 18
at Fresno State J13 69-50 Bill Russell 22
at California J28 33-24 K.C. Jones 15
San Jose State J31 67-40 Bill Russell 21
Loyola of Los Angeles F3 68-46 Carl Boldt 20
at Pacific F7 77-60 Bill Russell 24
Fresno State F10 79-46 Bill Russell 23
at San Jose State F14 76-52 Bill Russell 21
at St. Mary's F17 76-63 Bill Russell 28
at Santa Clara F24 80-44 Bill Russell 29
Pacific F28 87-49 Bill Russell 28
at Pepperdine M2 68-40 Carl Boldt 14
at Loyola of Los Angeles M3 65-48 Bill Russell 24
St. Mary's M6 82-49 Bill Russell 22
UCLA* (NCAA Tournament) M16 72-61 Gene Brown 23
Utah* (NCAA Tournament) M17 92-77 Bill Russell 27
Southern Methodist* (NCAA Tournament) M22 86-68 Mike Farmer 26
Iowa* (NCAA Tournament) M23 83-71 Bill Russell 26

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR USF REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Bill Russell C Sr. 29 .513 .495 20.6 21.0
K.C. Jones* G Sr. 25 .365 .655 9.8 5.2
Hal Perry G Sr. 29 .365 .729 9.1 2.0
Carl Boldt F Jr. 28 .326 .783 8.6 5.0
Mike Farmer F Soph. 28 .371 .548 8.4 7.8
Gene Brown G Soph. 29 .377 .641 7.1 4.4
Mike Preaseau F Soph. 29 .366 .609 4.1 3.1
Warren Baxter G Sr. 26 .301 .667 2.2 0.7
Bill Bush G Sr. 22 .208 .625 0.9 0.8
Jack King F Jr. 22 .162 .462 0.8 1.0
TEAM TOTALS 29 .388 .604 72.2 54.2

*Ineligible for NCAA Tournament as a fifth-year player.

North Carolina (32-0 in 1956-57)
Coach: Frank McGuire (fifth of nine seasons with Tar Heels)

1956-57 UNC Opponents Date Score Carolina's High Scorer
Furman D4 94-66 Lennie Rosenbluth 47
Clemson* D8 94-75 Pete Brennan 28
George Washington D12 82-55 Lennie Rosenbluth 27
at South Carolina D15 90-86 Tommy Kearns 29
Maryland D17 70-61 Lennie Rosenbluth 26
at New York University D20 64-59 Bob Cunningham 16
Dartmouth* D21 89-61 Lennie Rosenbluth 30
Holy Cross* D22 83-70 Lennie Rosenbluth 23
Utah* D27 97-76 Lennie Rosenbluth 36
Duke* D28 87-71 Lennie Rosenbluth 32
Wake Forest* D29 63-55 Lennie Rosenbluth 18
at William & Mary J8 71-61 Pete Brennan 20
Clemson J11 86-54 Lennie Rosenbluth 34
Virginia J12 102-90 Lennie Rosenbluth 30
at North Carolina State J15 83-57 Lennie Rosenbluth 29
at Western Carolina J30 77-59 Lennie Rosenbluth 26
at Maryland F5 65-61 (2OT) Lennie Rosenbluth 25
Duke F9 75-73 Lennie Rosenbluth 35
at Virginia F11 68-59 Lennie Rosenbluth 23
Wake Forest F13 72-69 Lennie Rosenbluth 24
North Carolina State F19 86-57 Lennie Rosenbluth 28
South Carolina F22 75-62 Pete Brennan 26
at Wake Forest F26 69-64 Lennie Rosenbluth 30
at Duke M1 86-72 Lennie Rosenbluth 40
Clemson* (ACC Tournament) M7 81-61 Lennie Rosenbluth 45
Wake Forest* (ACC Tournament) M8 61-59 Lennie Rosenbluth 23
South Carolina* (ACC Tournament) M9 95-75 Lennie Rosenbluth 38
Yale* (NCAA Tournament) M12 90-74 Lennie Rosenbluth 29
Canisius* (NCAA Tournament) M15 87-75 Lennie Rosenbluth 39
Syracuse* (NCAA Tournament) M16 67-58 Lennie Rosenbluth 23
Michigan State* (NCAA Tournament) M22 74-70 (3OT) Lennie Rosenbluth 31
Kansas* (NCAA Tournament) M23 54-53 (3OT) Lennie Rosenbluth 20

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR NORTH CAROLINA REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Lennie Rosenbluth F Sr. 32 .483 .758 28.0 8.8
Pete Brennan F Jr. 32 .394 .706 14.7 10.4
Tommy Kearns G Jr. 32 .434 .711 12.8 3.1
Joe Quigg C Jr. 31 .434 .719 10.3 8.6
Bob Cunningham G Jr. 32 .393 .598 7.2 6.7
Tony Radovich G Sr. 16 .525 .769 3.9 1.8
Bill Hathaway C Soph. 15 .333 .417 2.8 5.0
Stan Groll G Soph. 12 .370 .556 2.1 1.5
Bob Young C Sr. 15 .256 .538 1.9 2.1
Ken Rosemond G Jr. 15 .400 .556 1.1 0.6
Danny Lotz F Soph. 24 .350 .391 1.0 1.6
TEAM TOTALS 32 .431 .701 79.3 46.7

UCLA (30-0 in 1963-64)
Coach: John Wooden (16th of 27 seasons with Bruins)

1963-64 UCLA Opponents Date Score Bruins High Scorer
Brigham Young D6 113-71 Walt Hazzard 20
Butler D7 80-65 Walt Hazzard 21
Kansas State* D13 78-75 Gail Goodrich 21
Kansas* D14 74-54 Gail Goodrich 23
Baylor* D20 112-61 Walt Hazzard 23
Creighton* D21 95-79 Walt Hazzard 26
Yale D26 95-65 Gail Goodrich 25
Michigan D27 98-80 Gail Goodrich 30
Illinois D28 83-79 Gail Goodrich 21
at Washington State J3 88-83 Gail Goodrich 28
at Washington State J4 121-77 Gail Goodrich 21
Southern California J10 79-59 Walt Hazzard 21
Southern California J11 78-71 Gail Goodrich 23
Stanford J17 84-71 Gail Goodrich 23
Stanford* J18 80-61 Walt Hazzard 31
UC Santa Barbara J31 107-76 Gail Goodrich/Walt Hazzard 21
UC Santa Barbara* F1 87-59 Gail Goodrich 31
at California F7 87-67 Gail Goodrich 26
at California F8 58-56 Walt Hazzard 17
Washington F14 73-58 Walt Hazzard 17
Washington F15 88-60 Gail Goodrich 22
at Stanford F22 100-88 Walt Hazzard 27
at Washington F24 78-64 Keith Erickson/Walt Hazzard 21
Washington State F29 93-56 Walt Hazzard 19
California M2 87-57 Gail Goodrich 23
Southern California M6 91-81 Gail Goodrich 23
Seattle* (NCAA Tournament) M13 95-90 Walt Hazzard 26
San Francisco* (NCAA Tournament) M14 76-72 Walt Hazzard 23
Kansas State* (NCAA Tournament) M20 90-84 Keith Erickson 28
Duke* (NCAA Tournament) M21 98-83 Gail Goodrich 27

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR UCLA REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Gail Goodrich G Jr. 30 .458 .711 21.5 5.2
Walt Hazzard G Sr. 30 .445 .718 18.6 4.7
Jack Hirsch F Sr. 30 .528 .664 14.0 7.6
Keith Erickson F Jr. 30 .403 .623 10.7 9.1
Fred Slaughter C Sr. 30 .466 .484 7.9 8.1
Kenny Washington F-G Soph. 30 .458 .627 6.1 4.2
Doug McIntosh C Soph. 30 .519 .500 3.6 4.4
Kim Stewart F Sr. 23 .393 .467 2.2 2.0
Rich Levin F Jr. 19 .372 .500 2.0 0.6
Mike Huggins G Sr. 23 .382 .478 1.6 1.0
Chuck Darrow G Soph. 23 .379 .583 1.6 1.2
Vaughn Hoffman C Soph. 21 .476 .500 1.2 1.3
TEAM TOTALS 30 .455 .644 88.9 55.7

UCLA (30-0 in 1966-67)
Coach: John Wooden (19th of 27 seasons with Bruins)

1966-67 UCLA Opponents Date Score Bruins High Scorer
Southern California D3 105-90 Lew Alcindor 56
Duke D9 88-54 Lew Alcindor/Lucius Allen 19
Duke D10 107-87 Lew Alcindor 38
Colorado State D22 84-74 Lew Alcindor 34
Notre Dame D23 96-67 Lew Alcindor 25
Wisconsin D28 100-56 Lew Alcindor 24
Georgia Tech D29 91-72 Lew Alcindor 18
Southern California D30 107-83 Lew Alcindor 25
at Washington State J7 76-67 Lew Alcindor 28
at Washington J9 83-68 Lew Alcindor 28
California J13 96-78 Lew Alcindor 26
Stanford J14 116-78 Lew Alcindor 37
Portland J20 122-57 Lew Alcindor 27
UC Santa Barbara J21 119-75 Lew Alcindor 37
at Loyola of Chicago J28 82-67 Lew Alcindor 35
Illinois* J29 120-82 Lew Alcindor 45
at Southern California F4 40-35 (OT) Lew Alcindor 13
Oregon State F10 76-44 Lew Alcindor/Lucius Allen 22
Oregon F11 100-66 Lucius Allen 20
at Oregon F17 34-25 Lew Alcindor 12
at Oregon State F18 72-50 Lew Alcindor 28
Washington F24 71-43 Lew Alcindor 37
Washington State F25 100-78 Lew Alcindor 61
at Stanford M3 75-47 Lew Alcindor 20
at California M4 103-66 Lew Alcindor 30
Southern California M11 83-55 Lew Alcindor 26
Wyoming* (NCAA Tournament) M17 109-60 Lew Alcindor 29
Pacific* (NCAA Tournament) M18 80-64 Lew Alcindor 38
Houston* (NCAA Tournament) M24 73-58 Lynn Shackelford 22
Dayton* (NCAA Tournament) M25 79-64 Lew Alcindor 20

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR UCLA REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Lew Alcindor C Soph. 30 .667 .650 29.0 15.5
Lucius Allen G Soph. 30 .479 .713 15.5 5.8
Mike Warren G Jr. 30 .465 .758 12.7 4.5
Lynn Shackelford F Soph. 30 .480 .821 11.4 5.9
Ken Heitz F-G Soph. 30 .506 .600 6.1 3.2
Bill Sweek G Soph. 30 .479 .565 4.7 2.8
Jim Nielsen F-C Soph. 27 .519 .455 4.6 3.4
Don Saffer G Jr. 27 .451 .542 2.9 0.8
Gene Sutherland G Jr. 20 .455 .583 1.9 0.8
Neville Saner F-C Jr. 24 .308 .667 1.4 1.9
Joe Chrisman F Jr. 19 .320 .364 1.1 1.5
TEAM TOTALS 30 .520 .653 89.6 49.8

UCLA (30-0 in 1971-72)
Coach: John Wooden (24th of 27 seasons with Bruins)

1971-72 UCLA Opponents Date Score Bruins High Scorer
The Citadel D3 105-49 Henry Bibby 26
Iowa D4 106-72 Henry Bibby 32
Iowa State D10 110-81 Bill Walton 24
Texas A&M D11 117-53 Bill Walton 23
Notre Dame D22 114-56 Henry Bibby 28
Texas Christian D23 119-81 Bill Walton 31
Texas D29 115-65 Bill Walton 28
Ohio State D30 79-53 Bill Walton 14
at Oregon State J7 78-72 Henry Bibby 17
at Oregon J8 93-68 Bill Walton 30
Stanford J14 118-79 Bill Walton 32
California J15 82-43 Bill Walton 20
Santa Clara J21 92-57 Keith Wilkes 16
Denver J22 108-61 Henry Bibby/Larry Farmer 19
at Loyola of Chicago J28 92-64 Henry Bibby/Bill Walton 18
at Notre Dame J29 57-32 Henry Bibby 15
Southern California F5 81-56 Bill Walton 22
Washington State F11 89-58 Bill Walton 25
Washington F12 109-70 Bill Walton 27
at Washington F19 100-83 Bill Walton 31
at Washington State F21 85-55 Larry Hollyfield/Keith Wilkes 16
Oregon F25 92-70 Bill Walton 37
Oregon State F26 92-72 Bill Walton 26
at California M3 91-71 Bill Walton 24
at Stanford M4 102-73 Greg Lee 16
at Southern California M10 79-66 Bill Walton 20
Weber State* (NCAA Tournament) M16 90-58 Henry Bibby 16
Long Beach State* (NCAA Tournament) M18 73-57 Henry Bibby 23
Louisville* (NCAA Tournament) M23 96-77 Bill Walton 23
Florida State* (NCAA Tournament) M25 81-76 Bill Walton 24

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR UCLA REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Bill Walton C Soph. 30 .640 .704 21.1 15.5
Henry Bibby G Sr. 30 .450 .806 15.7 3.5
Keith Wilkes F Soph. 30 .531 .696 13.5 8.2
Larry Farmer F Jr. 30 .456 .549 10.7 5.5
Greg Lee G Soph. 29 .492 .824 8.7 2.0
Larry Hollyfield F Jr. 30 .514 .651 7.3 3.3
Swen Nater C Jr. 29 .535 .609 6.7 4.8
Tommy Curtis G Soph. 30 .437 .636 4.1 2.1
Andy Hill G Sr. 26 .356 .709 2.7 0.8
Vince Carson F Soph. 28 .400 .667 2.4 2.6
Jon Chapman F Sr. 28 .465 .500 1.6 1.6
Gary Franklin F Soph. 26 .412 .438 1.3 1.0
TEAM TOTALS 30 .504 .695 94.6 54.9

UCLA (30-0 in 1972-73)
Coach: John Wooden (25th of 27 seasons with Bruins)

1972-73 UCLA Opponents Date Score Bruins High Scorer
Wisconsin N25 94-53 Bill Walton 26
Bradley D1 73-38 Bill Walton 16
Pacific D2 81-48 Keith Wilkes 18
UC Santa Barbara D16 98-67 Bill Walton 30
Pittsburgh D22 89-73 Keith Wilkes 20
Notre Dame D23 82-56 Keith Wilkes 18
Drake* D29 85-72 Bill Walton 29
Illinois* D30 71-64 Bill Walton 22
Oregon J5 64-38 Larry Farmer/Keith Wilkes 14
Oregon State J6 87-61 Keith Wilkes 19
at Stanford J12 82-67 Larry Farmer/Larry Hollyfield/Bill Walton 18
at California J13 69-50 Larry Farmer/Keith Wilkes 18
San Francisco J19 92-64 Bill Walton 22
Providence J20 101-77 Larry Farmer 21
at Loyola of Chicago J25 87-73 Bill Walton 32
at Notre Dame J27 82-63 Keith Wilkes 20
at Southern California F3 79-56 Bill Walton 20
at Washington State F10 88-50 Bill Walton 17
at Washington F12 76-67 Bill Walton 29
Washington F16 93-62 Bill Walton 26
Washington State F17 96-64 Bill Walton 29
at Oregon F22 72-61 Keith Wilkes 18
at Oregon State F24 73-67 Bill Walton 21
California M2 90-65 Bill Walton/Keith Wilkes 15
Stanford M3 51-45 Bill Walton 23
Southern California M10 76-56 Bill Walton/Keith Wilkes 17
Arizona State (NCAA Tournament) M15 98-81 Bill Walton 28
San Francisco (NCAA Tournament) M17 54-39 Larry Farmer 13
Indiana* (NCAA Tournament) M24 70-59 Tommy Curtis 22
Memphis State* (NCAA Tournament) M26 87-66 Bill Walton 44

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR UCLA REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Bill Walton C Jr. 30 .650 .569 20.4 16.9
Keith Wilkes F Jr. 30 .525 .652 14.8 7.3
Larry Farmer F Sr. 30 .511 .701 12.2 5.0
Larry Hollyfield G Sr. 30 .466 .492 10.7 2.9
Tommy Curtis G Jr. 24 .512 .667 6.4 1.7
Dave Meyers F Soph. 28 .477 .756 4.9 2.9
Greg Lee G Jr. 30 .473 .790 4.6 1.3
Swen Nater C Sr. 29 .459 .652 3.2 3.3
Pete Trgovich G-F Soph. 25 .382 .400 3.1 1.7
Vince Carson F Jr. 26 .514 .471 1.7 2.2
Gary Franklin F Jr. 24 .485 .500 1.6 1.3
Bob Webb G Jr. 21 .148 .833 0.6 0.2
TEAM TOTALS 30 .519 .632 81.3 49.0

Assists leader: Walton 168.

North Carolina State (27-0 in 1972-73)
Coach: Norman Sloan (seventh of 14 seasons with Wolfpack)

1972-73 N.C. State Opponents Date Score Wolfpack High Scorer
Appalachian State N27 130-53 David Thompson 33
Atlantic Christian D1 110-40 David Thompson 32
Georgia Southern D4 144-100 David Thompson 40
South Florida D8 125-88 David Thompson 30
Wake Forest* D15 88-83 David Thompson 29
North Carolina* D16 68-61 David Thompson 19
Davidson* D19 103-90 Joe Cafferky 25
at Georgia D23 97-83 David Thompson 26
at Virginia J6 68-61 Monte Towe 17
Duke J10 94-87 Monte Towe/Tom Burleson 20
Lehigh J12 115-53 Tom Burleson 30
at Maryland J14 87-85 David Thompson 37
at Clemson J20 86-76 David Thompson 24
at Furman J27 98-73 David Thompson 27
Maryland J31 89-78 David Thompson 24
Virginia F3 64-59 David Thompson 18
North Carolina F5 76-73 David Thompson 22
Clemson* F9 68-61 David Thompson 30
Georgia Tech* F10 118-94 David Thompson 36
East Carolina F13 105-70 David Thompson 33
at Wake Forest F17 81-59 David Thompson 21
at Duke F21 74-50 David Thompson 31
UNC Charlotte F24 100-64 Tom Burleson 26
at North Carolina F27 82-78 David Thompson 18
Wake Forest M3 100-77 Tom Burleson 27
Virginia* (ACC Tournament) M9 63-51 Tom Burleson/David Thompson 14
Maryland* (ACC Tournament) M10 76-74 Tom Burleson 14

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR N.C. STATE REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
David Thompson F Soph. 27 .569 .825 24.7 8.1
Tom Burleson C Jr. 27 .512 .730 17.9 12.0
Monte Towe G Soph. 27 .468 .729 10.0 1.7
Rick Holdt F Sr. 27 .531 .660 8.3 3.7
Tim Stoddard F Soph. 27 .482 .569 7.9 5.3
Joe Cafferky G Sr. 25 .569 .767 7.2 2.1
Greg Hawkins F Jr. 25 .448 .706 5.6 3.3
Mark Moeller G Soph. 27 .579 .516 4.7 1.6
Steve Nuce F Jr. 26 .474 .571 4.4 2.1
Craig Kuszmaul G Soph. 19 .667 .400 2.4 0.9
TEAM TOTALS 27 .520 .715 92.9 46.5

INDIANA (32-0 in 1975-76)
Coach: Bob Knight (fifth of 29 seasons with Hoosiers)

1975-76 IU Opponents Date Score IU's High Scorer
UCLA* N29 84-64 Scott May 33
Florida State* D8 83-59 Scott May 24
Notre Dame D11 63-60 Scott May 25
Kentucky* D15 77-68 (OT) Kent Benson/Scott May 27
Georgia D19 93-56 Scott May 18
Virginia Tech D20 101-74 Scott May 27
Columbia* D26 106-63 Kent Benson 15
Manhattan* D27 97-61 Scott May 32
at St. John's D28 76-69 Scott May 29
at Ohio State J3 66-64 Scott May 24
Northwestern J5 78-61 Kent Benson 22
at Michigan J10 80-74 Kent Benson 33
at Michigan State J12 69-57 Kent Benson 23
at Illinois J17 83-55 Scott May 27
Purdue J19 71-67 Scott May 32
at Minnesota J24 85-76 Tom Abernethy 22
at Iowa J26 88-73 Scott May 32
Wisconsin J31 114-61 Scott May 30
Michigan F7 72-67 (OT) Scott May 27
Michigan State F9 85-70 Kent Benson 38
Illinois F14 58-48 Kent Benson 17
at Purdue F16 74-71 Scott May 26
Minnesota F21 76-64 Tom Abernethy 22
Iowa F23 101-81 Quinn Buckner 24
at Wisconsin F26 96-67 Scott May 41
at Northwestern M1 76-63 Scott May 24
Ohio State M6 96-67 Kent Benson/Scott May 21
St. John's* (NCAA Tournament) M13 90-70 Scott May 33
Alabama* (NCAA Tournament) M18 74-69 Scott May 25
Marquette* (NCAA Tournament) M20 65-56 Kent Benson 18
UCLA* (NCAA Tournament) M27 65-51 Kent Benson 16
Michigan* (NCAA Tournament) M29 86-68 Scott May 26

*Neutral court games.

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS FOR INDIANA REGULARS

Player Pos. Class G. FG% FT% PPG RPG
Scott May F Sr. 32 .527 .782 23.5 7.7
Kent Benson C Jr. 32 .578 .684 17.3 8.8
Tom Abernethy F Sr. 32 .561 .743 10.0 5.3
Quinn Buckner G Sr. 32 .441 .488 8.9 2.8
Bobby Wilkerson G-F Sr. 32 .493 .630 7.8 4.9
Wayne Radford G Soph. 30 .563 .712 4.7 2.1
Jim Crews G Sr. 31 .468 .857 3.3 0.7
Jim Wisman G Soph. 26 .367 .724 2.5 0.8
Rich Valavicius F Fr. 28 .483 .625 2.4 1.8
TEAM TOTALS 32 .517 .698 82.1 41.4

Assists leader: Wilkerson 171.
Blocked shots leader: Benson 39.
Steals leader: Buckner 65.

Last of Unbeatens: Odds Against Winning Title Even If SMU Could Compete

No NCAA Division I men's team has compiled an undefeated record since Indiana in 1975-76. SMU was the last remaining unbeaten team this season until the Mustangs bowed at Temple, 89-80, in their 19th contest of the campaign.

SMU, spearheaded by Illinois State transfer Nic Moore, is on NCAA probation and thus ineligible to compete in postseason play. But the historical odds were against the Mustangs winning the NCAA title, anyway, because only three final undefeated teams in the previous 36 years - (Duke '92, UConn '99 and Florida '06) - went on to capture the national crown.

Prior to shackled SMU, Clemson (winner of its first 17 outings in 2006-07), was the only school in this last-of-the-unbeaten category to fail to participate in the NCAA playoffs. The Tigers finished runner-up in the NIT.

Four years ago, Murray State became the 10th of these 38 last-remaining-standing teams to suffer their first defeat at home. Following in reverse order are vital facts on final unbeaten teams since the Hoosiers a half-century ago:

Season Last Unbeaten (Wins) First Defeat Date Score Final Record/Postseason
2015-16 Southern Methodist (18) at Temple 1-24-16 89-80 To be determined/Probation
2014-15 Kentucky (38)* vs. Wisconsin 4-4-15 71-64 38-1/NCAA Final Four
2013-14 Wichita State (35)* vs. Kentucky 3-23-14 78-76 35-1/Second Round
2012-13 Michigan (16) at Ohio State 1-13-13 56-53 31-8/NCAA Runner-up
2011-12 Murray State (23)* Tennessee State 2-9-12 72-68 31-2/Second Round
2010-11 Ohio State (24) at Wisconsin 2-12-11 71-67 34-3/Regional Semifinal
2009-10 Kentucky (19) at South Carolina 1-26-10 68-62 35-3/Regional Final
2008-09 Wake Forest (16) Virginia Tech 1-21-09 78-71 24-7/First Round
2007-08 Memphis (26) Tennessee 2-23-08 66-62 38-2/National Runner-up
2006-07 Clemson (17)* at Maryland 1-13-07 92-87 25-11/NIT Runner-up
2005-06 Florida (17)* at Tennessee 1-21-06 80-76 33-6/NCAA Champion
2004-05 Illinois (29)* at Ohio State 3-6-05 65-64 37-2/NCAA Runner-up
2003-04 Saint Joseph's (27)* vs. Xavier 3-11-04 87-67 30-2/Regional Final
2002-03 Duke (12) at Maryland 1-18-03 87-72 26-7/Regional Semifinal
2001-02 Duke (12) at Florida State 1-6-02 77-76 31-4/Regional Semifinal
2000-01 Stanford (20) UCLA 2-3-01 79-73 31-3/Regional Final
1999-00 Syracuse (19) Seton Hall 2-7-00 69-67 26-6/Regional Semifinal
1998-99 Connecticut (19) Syracuse 2-1-99 59-42 34-2/NCAA Champion
1997-98 Utah (18) at New Mexico 2-1-98 77-74 30-4/NCAA Runner-up
1996-97 Kansas (22) at Missouri (2OT) 2-4-97 96-94 34-2/Regional Semifinal
1995-96 Massachusetts (26)* George Washington 2-24-96 86-76 35-2/NCAA Final Four
1994-95 Connecticut (15) at Kansas 1-28-95 88-59 28-5/Regional Final
1993-94 UCLA (14) at California 1-30-94 85-70 21-7/First Round
1992-93 Virginia (11) at North Carolina 1-20-93 80-58 21-10/Regional Semifinal
1991-92 Duke (17) at North Carolina 2-5-92 75-73 34-2/NCAA Champion
1991-92 Oklahoma State (20) at Nebraska 2-5-92 85-69 28-8/Regional Semifinal
1990-91 UNLV (34) vs. Duke 3-30-91 79-77 34-1/NCAA Final Four
1989-90 Georgetown (14) at Connecticut 1-20-90 70-65 24-7/Second Round
1988-89 Illinois (17) at Minnesota 1-26-89 69-62 31-5/NCAA Final Four
1987-88 Brigham Young (17)* at UAB 2-6-88 102-83 26-6/Sweet 16
1986-87 DePaul (16) at Georgetown 1-25-87 74-71 28-3/Regional Semifinal
1985-86 Memphis State (20) at Virginia Tech 2-1-86 76-72 28-6/Second Round
1984-85 Georgetown (18) St. John's 1-26-85 66-65 35-3/NCAA Runner-up
1983-84 North Carolina (21) vs. Arkansas 2-12-84 65-64 28-3/Regional Semifinal
1982-83 UNLV (24) at Cal State Fullerton 2-24-83 86-78 28-3/Second Round
1981-82 Missouri (19) Nebraska 2-6-82 67-51 27-4/Regional Semifinal
1980-81 Oregon State (26)* Arizona State 3-7-81 87-67 26-2/Second Round
1979-80 DePaul (26)* at Notre Dame (2OT) 2-27-80 76-74 26-2/Second Round
1978-79 Indiana State (33)* vs. Michigan State 3-26-79 75-64 33-1/NCAA Runner-up
1977-78 Kentucky (14) at Alabama 1-23-78 78-62 30-2/NCAA Champion
1976-77 San Francisco (29) at Notre Dame 3-5-77 93-82 29-2/First Round

*All-time top winning streaks.
NOTES: North Carolina lost in Pine Bluff, Ark. . . . Saint Joseph's lost in Atlantic 10 Conference Tournament quarterfinals at Dayton.

Deans of Coaches: Coach K is Only King of Conference More Than 25 Years

"Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

Extensive coaching turnover and league realigning has left Duke's Mike Krzyzewski as the only active coach to be in the same alliance more than the last 25 years. Coach K moved atop the dean-of-coaches list two seasons ago after Syracuse and Jim Boeheim switched to join Krzyzewski in the Atlantic Coast Conference after 34 years in the Big East.

As league play shifts into high gear, following are the longest-tenured active coaches in their present Division I conference (including 2015-16 campaign):

Longest-Tenured Coach School Years NCAA Division I Conference
Mike Krzyzewski Duke 36 Atlantic Coast
Dave Loos Austin Peay 24 Ohio Valley
Phil Martelli Saint Joseph's 21 Atlantic 10
Mike McConathy Northwestern State 21 Southland
Cy Alexander North Carolina A&T 20 Mid-Eastern Athletic
Tom Izzo Michigan State 20 Big Ten
Fran O'Hanlon Lafayette 20 Patriot League
Howie Dickenman Central Connecticut State 19 Northeast
Lorenzo Romar Washington 18 Pac-12
Bob Williams UC Santa Barbara 18 Big West
James Jones Yale 17 Ivy League
Kevin Stallings Vanderbilt 17 SEC
Mark Few Gonzaga 16 West Coast
Steve Fisher San Diego State 16 Mountain West
Will Brown Albany 15 America East
James "Bruiser" Flint Drexel 15 CAA
Jay Wright Villanova 15 Big East
Keith Dambrot Akron 14 Mid-American
Kermit Davis Middle Tennessee 14 Sun Belt
Mike Young Wofford 14 Southern
Bill Self Kansas 13 Big 12
Barry Hinson Southern Illinois 12 Missouri Valley
Lewis Jackson Alabama State 11 SWAC
Rob Jeter Milwaukee 11 Horizon League
Barclay Radebaugh Charleston Southern 11 Big South
John Dunne Saint Peter's 10 Metro Atlantic Athletic
Randy Rahe Weber State 10 Big Sky
Marvin Menzies New Mexico State 9 Western Athletic
Scott Nagy South Dakota State 9 Summit League
Eddie Payne USC Upstate 9 Atlantic Sun
Tim Floyd Texas-El Paso 6 Conference USA

NOTE: Alexander's first 16 seasons in MEAC were with South Carolina State, Dambrot's first two seasons in MAC were with Central Michigan and Hinson's first nine seasons in MVC were with Missouri State.

Honors Court: Stony Brook's Jameel Warney Joins List of 3-Time League MVPs

Stony Brook's Jameel Warney joining an exclusive list of individuals earning league player of the year acclaim three times in an NCAA Division I conference. But Warney, who averaged 16.9 points and 10.2 rebounds per game while dominating the America East Conference the last three seasons, replaced a legend for dubious distinction among this gifted group.

Virginia center Ralph Sampson had posted the lowest scoring average (17.6 ppg from 1980-81 through 1982-83) among the 29 players during spans in the previous 50-plus years when they captured three or four MVP awards in a DI conference. Sampson's average was 26.6 ppg lower than LSU guard Pete Maravich's NCAA-record mark (44.2 from 1967-68 through 1969-70).

No player from a power conference has achieved the feat since Kansas' Danny Manning in the Big Eight from 1985-86 through 1987-88. Next season, Lehigh's Tim Kempton from the Patriot League could join the following chronological list of standouts who became player of the year in a DI league three or four seasons since the early 1960s:

Player Pos. School Conference (MVP Seasons) League MVP Summary
Jerry Lucas C Ohio State Big Ten (1960 through 1962) Averaged 24.3 ppg and 17.2 rpg while shooting 62.4% from the floor over three-year span.
Fred Hetzel F-C Davidson Southern (1963 through 1965) Averaged 25.7 ppg and 13.8 rpg while shooting 55.4% from the floor over three-year span.
Clem Haskins G-F Western Kentucky Ohio Valley (1965 through 1967) Averaged 22.1 ppg and 10.6 rpg over three-year span.
Pete Maravich G Louisiana State Southeastern (1968 through 1970) Averaged 44.2 ppg, 6.4 rpg and 5.1 apg over three-year span.
Gene Phillips F Southern Methodist Southwest (1969 through 1971) Averaged 26.1 ppg and 7.5 rpg while shooting 81.7% from the free-throw line over three-year span.
David Thompson F North Carolina State Atlantic Coast (1973 through 1975) Averaged 26.8 ppg and 8.1 rpg while shooting 55.3% from the floor over three-year span.
Bernard King F Tennessee Southeastern (1975 through 1977) Averaged 25.8 ppg and 13.2 rpg while shooting 59% from the floor over three-year span.
Bill Cartwright C San Francisco West Coast (1977 through 1979) Averaged 21.5 ppg and 11.5 rpg while shooting 60.4% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Michael Brooks F La Salle East Coast (1978 through 1980) Averaged 24.1 ppg and 12.5 rpg while shooting 55.4% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Harry Kelly F Texas Southern Southwestern Athletic (1980 through 1983) Averaged 27.9 ppg and 9.9 rpg over four-year span.
Ralph Sampson C Virginia Atlantic Coast (1981 through 1983) Averaged 17.6 ppg, 11.5 rpg and 3.1 bpg while shooting 57.5% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Joe Binion F North Carolina A&T Mid-Eastern Athletic (1982 through 1984) Averaged 19.8 ppg and 10.8 rpg while shooting 50.9% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Willie Jackson F Centenary Trans America Athletic (1982 through 1984) Averaged 23.9 ppg and 9.2 rpg over three-year MVP span.
Alfredrick Hughes F Loyola (Ill.) Midwestern Collegiate (1983 through 1985) Averaged 26.5 ppg and 8.8 rpg over three-year MVP span.
Chris Mullin G-F St. John's Big East (1983 through 1985) Averaged 20.4 ppg and 4.3 rpg while shooting 55.4% from the floor and 86.5% from the free-throw line over three-year MVP span.
Wayman Tisdale C Oklahoma Big Eight (1983 through 1985) Averaged 25.6 ppg and 10.1 rpg while shooting 57.8% from the floor over three-year span.
Larry Krystkowiak F Montana Big Sky (1984 through 1986) Averaged 20.4 ppg and 10.7 rpg while shooting 57.1% from the floor and 80.1% from the free-throw line over three-year MVP span.
Reggie Lewis F Northeastern ECAC North Atlantic (1985 through 1987) Averaged 23.7 ppg and 8.5 rpg over three-year MVP span.
David Robinson C Navy Colonial Athletic (1985 through 1987) Averaged 24.8 ppg, 12.2 rpg and 4.8 bpg while shooting 61.2% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Danny Manning F Kansas Big Eight (1986 through 1988) Averaged 21.7 ppg and 8.2 rpg while shooting 59.9% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Lionel Simmons F La Salle Metro Atlantic Athletic (1988 through 1990) Averaged 26 ppg and 11.3 rpg over three-year MVP span.
Clarence Weatherspoon F Southern Mississippi Metro (1990 through 1992) Averaged 19.3 ppg and 10.3 rpg while shooting 58.4% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Tony Dunkin F Coastal Carolina Big South (1990 through 1993) Averaged 20.7 ppg and 7 rpg while shooting 52.2% from the floor and 41.2% from beyond the three-point arc over four-year span.
Gary Trent F Ohio University Mid-American (1993 through 1995) Averaged 22.7 ppg and 11.3 rpg while shooting 57.3% from the floor over three-year span.
Keith Van Horn F Utah Western Athletic (1995 through 1997) Averaged 21.5 ppg and 8.9 rpg while shooting 52.4% from the floor and 87% from the free-throw line over three-year MVP span.
George Evans F George Mason Colonial Athletic (1999 through 2001) Averaged 17.9 ppg and 8.3 rpg while shooting 58.4% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
David West F-C Xavier Atlantic 10 (2001 through 2003) Averaged 18.8 ppg and 10.8 rpg while shooting 53.1% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Taylor Coppenrath F Vermont America East (2003 through 2005) Averaged 23.1 ppg and 7.5 rpg over three-year MVP span.
Nick Fazekas F Nevada Western Athletic (2005 through 2007) Averaged 21 ppg and 10.3 rpg while shooting 53.2% from the floor and 82.3% from the free-throw line over three-year MVP span.
Caleb Green F Oral Roberts Mid-Continent (2005 through 2007) Averaged 20.2 ppg and 9.1 rpg while shooting 52.6% from the floor over three-year MVP span.
Jameel Warney F-C Stony Brook America East (2014 through 2016) Averaged 16.9 ppg and 10.2 rpg over three-year MVP span.

Winning Harry: Statham Power Reaches Summit as Career Winningest Coach

It didn't seem right to honor Coach K about this time last season without at least acknowledging Winning Harry. We're talking about Harry Statham of Lebanon, Ill.-based McKendree College. On February 6, he passed Tennessee's Pat Summitt (1,098 triumphs) as the all-time winningest coach in college history (men's or women's) at the four-year college level. Statham, who passed North Carolina's Dean Smith during the 2004-05 season, has coached more college basketball games than anyone from planet Earth since supplanting Jim Phelan (Mount St. Mary's). Going beyond 1,000 NAIA victories in 2009-10, Statham (pronounced Stay-them) compiled only one losing campaign (18-19 in 1983-84) in his first 46 seasons as a head coach until incurring sub-.500 marks each of the previous three years following McKendree moving up to the NCAA DII level. It also didn't seem right he had a five-game losing streak when Duke's Mike Krzyzewski registered career win No. 1,000.

"No, I never dreamed about (so many triumphs). I never dreamed about 100 wins," said Statham, boasting an average annual record of 22-9. "It's a good job and a good opportunity and I love what I do. I just try to do things right and everything will take care of itself."

It was not as if there was instant success for Statham, who didn't reach the NAIA Tournament until his 22nd campaign. After his first three seasons with McKendree, Statham conducted a tryout including the author of this missive for a spot on his roster. Statham never would have reached 100 victories three years later if he didn't look elsewhere and attract better players over the decades en route to assembling the following record-breaking resume:

Season Record NAIA Tourney
1966-67 13-10 DNP
1967-68 20-7 DNP
1968-69 21-6 DNP
1969-70 19-6 DNP
1970-71 15-12 DNP
1971-72 21-7 DNP
1972-73 23-6 DNP
1973-74 24-8 DNP
1974-75 17-9 DNP
1975-76 17-9 DNP
1976-77 21-5 DNP
1977-78 15-11 DNP
1978-79 20-11 DNP
1979-80 22-9 DNP
1980-81 27-7 DNP
1981-82 18-12 DNP
1982-83 20-9 DNP
1983-84 18-19 DNP
1984-85 22-11 DNP
1985-86 22-14 DNP
1986-87 30-5 DNP
1987-88 35-1 1-1 record
1988-89 17-15 DNP
1989-90 20-14 DNP
1990-91 23-9 DNP
1991-92 31-6 0-1 record
1992-93 27-9 0-1 record
1993-94 26-8 DNP
1994-95 27-6 DNP
1995-96 25-9 1-1 record
1996-97 28-9 2-1 record
1997-98 26-8 DNP
1998-99 21-11 DNP
1999-00 25-8 0-1 record
2000-01 27-9 0-1 record
2001-02 30-5 1-1 record
2002-03 34-4 3-1 record
2003-04 24-10 0-1 record
2004-05 25-8 DNP
2005-06 19-14 DNP
2006-07 22-12 1-1 record
2007-08 27-7 1-1 record
2008-09 30-6 2-1 record
2009-10 27-7 0-1 record
2010-11 21-13 1-1 record
2011-12 18-12 DNP
2012-13 7-21 moved up to NCAA DII
2013-14 9-17 moved up to NCAA DII
2014-15 11-15 moved up to NCAA DII
2015-16 11-10* moved up to NCAA DII
50 years 1,099-476 13-15 record

*Record when passing Pat Summitt.

All-League Famine: Rutgers in Knightmare Covering 3 Different Conferences

Rutgers, loser in 32 consecutive contests against Big Ten Conference opponents until defeating Minnesota in regular-season finale, might need to visit school archives and bring ulcer-causing Dick Vitale back as a recruiter. The Scarlet Knights, losing by a staggering 50 points at home against Purdue, couldn't do any worse upon falling on hard times as the nation's only NCAA Division I school failing to have an all-conference choice in the previous nine seasons. Vitale helped lure coach Eddie Jordan to Piscataway before the Scarlet Knights reached the 1976 Final Four. Jordan was an All-Atlantic 10 Conference second-team choice as a senior in 1976-77 before leaving college without a diploma.

Rutgers, failing to secure an all-league choice since Quincy Douby in 2005-06, has been blanked in three different alliances during the dry spell. The Knights' arrival gave the Big Ten Conference additional Nebraska/Northwestern/Penn State mediocrity - a famine-relief trio combining for three NCAA playoff victories in the previous 60 years (all by Nittany Lions), making their hoop fans believe in the power of positive drinkin'.

Five struggling schools - Louisiana-Monroe (Sun Belt), Pepperdine (WCC), Sacramento State (Big Sky), Southern Illinois (Missouri Valley) and Texas Tech (Big 12) - left this dubious category in 2013-14. Rutgers, eliminated by Louisville by 61 points in the AAC Tournament two seasons ago, is joined by DePaul and Samford on the following list of schools enduring honor droughts having no all-league picks at least the previous seven seasons:

School Conference(s) Last All-League Selection
DePaul Big East Sr. G Draelon Burns in 2007-08 (2nd team)
Rutgers Big East/American Athletic/Big Ten Jr. G Quincy Douby in 2005-06 (1st team)
Samford Ohio Valley Sr. C Travis Peterson in 2007-08 (2nd team)

Nostalgia 78: 1-78 Ranking of Greatest Games in NCAA Tournament History

"It is not enough that we do our best; sometimes we must do what is required." - Winston Churchill

The NCAA Tournament speaks to your sports soul, leaving you yearning for more. This year marks the 78th NCAA championship spectacle. Perhaps the most amazing stretch in NCAA playoff history was an eight-year span from 1982 through 1989 when seven finals were decided by an average of two points. All of those close title contests, surely measuring up to Churchill's "best" quote, must be included in any celebratory ranking of the most stimulating games in tourney history.

Since some of the most entertaining games are somewhat overshadowed because they came in earlier rounds, it's difficult to decide what were the premier outings in playoff history. There is inspiration everywhere one turns - so many entertaining contests to choose from with so many divergent opinions on a seemingly endless list of stellar candidates.

Nothing provokes disagreements among ardent hoop fans more than healthy what's-the-best-in-history dialogue. In deference to the 78th playoff, following is a ranking of the top 78 games one remembers the most. You wouldn't wonder what all the fuss is about if you had the good fortune to witness firsthand or learn from ardent fans about much of the following drama:

1. 1992 East Regional Final (Duke 104, Kentucky 103 in OT)
Duke's Christian Laettner hit a decisive last-second shot near the head of the key against UK in overtime after receiving a long in-bounds pass from Grant Hill in the East Regional final. The game is acknowledged as one of the most suspenseful in NCAA history.
2. 1985 Championship Game (Villanova 66, Georgetown 64)
Villanova became the worst seed (#8 in the Southeast Regional) to win a national championship by shooting a championship game-record 78.6% from the floor against the nation's top-ranked team. The Hoyas, powered by national player of the year Patrick Ewing, had defeated the Wildcats twice by a total of nine points in Big East Conference competition.
3. 1983 Championship Game (North Carolina State 54, Houston 52)
Sophomore forward Lorenzo Charles scored only four points, but two of them came when he converted guard Dereck Whittenburg's off-line desperation shot from well beyond the top of the free-throw circle into a decisive dunk as North Carolina State upset heavily-favored Houston. The Cougars, featuring Clyde Drexler and Akeem Olajuwon, entered the final with a 26-game winning streak.
4. 1982 Championship Game (North Carolina 63, Georgetown 62)
North Carolina freshman guard Michael Jordan swished a 16-foot jumper from the left side with 16 seconds remaining to provide the title contest's final points before Georgetown guard Fred Brown's errant pass directly to Tar Heels forward James Worthy prevented the Hoyas from attempting a potential game-winning shot in the closing seconds. Also memorable was was a stream of intimidating goal-tending calls early in the contest against Hoyas freshman center Patrick Ewing.
5. 1987 Championship Game (Indiana 74, Syracuse 73)
Junior college recruit Keith Smart, a guard who was Indiana's fifth-leading scorer for the season, tallied 12 of the Hoosiers' last 15 points, including a 15-foot jumper from the left baseline with five seconds remaining.
6. 1957 Championship Game (North Carolina 54, Kansas 53 in 3OT)
Carolina center Joe Quigg sank two free throws with six seconds remaining in third overtime to tie score and provide decisive point against the Wilt Chamberlain-led Jayhawks. Although Lennie Rosenbluth was the unbeaten Tar Heels' leading scorer in 27 of their 32 contests, they won the NCAA final despite him fouling out with 1:45 remaining in regulation.
7. 1966 Championship Game (Texas Western 72, Kentucky 65)
Texas Western (28-1), featuring an all-black starting lineup with three players 6-1 or shorter in the NCAA final, stunned top-ranked and all-white Kentucky (27-2), putting the finishing touches on dismantling the prejudiced myth that black athletes couldn't play disciplined basketball. Junior college transfer Bobby Joe Hill, one of the tiny trio, converted steals into layups on consecutive trips down the floor by flustered UK guards to give the Miners a lead they never relinquished.
8. 1975 Mideast Regional Final (Kentucky 92, Indiana 90)
Indiana, undefeated entering the tourney (29-0), lost against Kentucky despite center Kent Benson's 33 points and tourney-high 23 rebounds. The Wildcats (26-5) prevailed despite 6-of-19 field-goal shooting by leading scorer Kevin Grevey. UK guards Jimmy Dan Conner and Mike Flynn combined to outscore IU counterparts Quinn Buckner and Bobby Wilkerson, 39-22.
9. 1991 National Semifinals (Duke 79, UNLV 77)
Duke's shocking win over defending champion UNLV (34-1) was the Rebels' lone defeat. Christian Laettner scored 28 points for the Blue Devils (32-7).
10. 1989 Championship Game (Michigan 80, Seton Hall 79 in OT)
Former street urchin Rumeal Robinson sank two pressure free throws against Seton Hall (31-7) with three seconds remaining in overtime to give the win to Michigan (30-7), which was guided by interim coach Steve Fisher.
11. 1957 National Semifinals (North Carolina 74, Michigan State 70 in 3OT)
The lead changed hands 31 times and the score was tied on 21 occasions. The Spartans' Jack Quiggle made a last-second, half-court shot at the end of regulation but it was disallowed. The end-of-game rule at the time was that the ball had to reach the apex of its arc before the buzzer. The officials ruled that the ball was still ascending. Teammate Johnny Green missed a free throw with 11 seconds remaining in the first overtime that would have sealed the verdict. Carolina's Pete Brennan grabbed Green's miss. Rather than tossing the ball out to a guard as Brennan normally would do, he dribbled down-court and hit a game-tying jumper just to the right of the foul line at the buzzer.
12. 1994 Championship Game (Arkansas 76, Duke 72)
The pressure was intense on Arkansas' Scotty Thurman with the shot clock winding down and score tied with 40 seconds remaining when he lofted a three-point attempt over Duke defender Antonio Lang that hit nothing but net.
13. 1974 National Semifinals (North Carolina State 80, UCLA 77 in 2OT)
The final in N.C. State's home state at Greensboro was anti-climatic after the Wolfpack avenged an 18-point loss against UCLA earlier in the season on a neutral court by ending the Bruins' 38-game playoff winning streak. N.C. State erased an 11-point deficit midway through the second half and a seven-point deficit in the second extra session behind David Thompson's 28 points and 10 rebounds to halt UCLA's string of seven consecutive NCAA championships.
14. 1990 East Regional Final (Duke 79, Connecticut 78 in OT)
Two days after UConn escaped Clemson on a controversial last-second shot, Duke turned the tables on the Huskies when Christian Laettner inbounded the ball with 2.6 seconds remaining, received a return pass and sank a leaning jumper from the left side at the buzzer.
15. 1981 Mideast Regional Second Round (St. Joseph's 49, DePaul 48)
St. Joseph's gained its only lead in the second half when inexcusably unguarded Hawks player John Smith sank a layup with three seconds left after DePaul's most accurate foul shooter, Skip Dillard, the guy they called "Money" because when he shot 'em, they were as good as in the bank, missed the front end of a one-and-one with 12 seconds remaining. The top-ranked Blue Demons did not score a point or take a shot in the final 6 1/2 minutes. A stunned Mark Aguirre, the national player of the year, didn't even throw the ball inbounds and finished the game with one rebound, one assist, no blocked shots, no steals and the only single-digit scoring output of his DePaul career (eight points).
16. 1981 Midwest Regional Second Round (Arkansas 74, Louisville 73)
Defending champion Louisville lost when Arkansas' U.S. Reed received an in-bounds pass with five seconds remaining, criss-cross dribbled up the sideline and heaved a mid-court shot from right side that went through the net at the buzzer.
17. 1993 Championship Game (North Carolina 77, Michigan 71)
George Lynch, North Carolina's top rebounder and second-leading scorer, made four big plays in the closing moments of title game. With Michigan leading, 67-66, he and Eric Montross blocked away a driving layup by Jimmy King. That led to a fast-break basket by Derrick Phelps and put the Tar Heels ahead to stay with just over three minutes remaining. After a missed UM shot, Lynch hit a turnaround jumper from the middle of the lane with 2:28 remaining to increase Carolina's lead to 70-67. On an inbounds play after UNC regained possession, Lynch lofted a perfect pass to Montross for a dunk. The Wolverines rallied to trim the deficit to 73-71 before Lynch and Phelps trapped Chris Webber along the right sideline with only 11 seconds remaining and Michigan's consensus first-team All-American called a fateful timeout his team did not have, a "whopper" of a mistake long before his Burger King commercial.
18. 1973 Championship Game (UCLA 87, Memphis State 61)
UCLA's Bill Walton, aided by Greg Lee's 14 assists, erupted for a title game-record 44 points. Walton, the only player to have as many as 20 field goals in an NCAA final, hit all but one of 22 shots from the floor.
19. 1958 East Regional First Round (Manhattan 89, West Virginia 84)
West Virginia, ranked No. 1 in the country at the end of the regular season, was upset at New York when Jack Powers, who went on to become executive director of the NIT, collected 29 points and 15 rebounds for Manhattan (16-10). Jerry West scored just 10 points in his first NCAA Tournament game for the Mountaineers, who finished the season with the best winning percentage in school history (26-2, .929).
20. 1983 Mideast Regional final (Louisville 80, Kentucky 68 in OT)
The first meeting between in-state rivals Kentucky and Louisville in more than 24 years was memorable as the Cardinals outscored the Wildcats in overtime, 18-6, to reach the Final Four.
21. 1963 Championship Game (Loyola of Chicago 60, Cincinnati 58 in OT)
Forward Vic Rouse leaped high to redirect center Les Hunter's shot from the free-throw line into the basket to climax the Ramblers' first year in the playoffs. Loyola, using its starting lineup the entire final, overcame 27.4% field-goal shooting by committing just three turnovers. The Ramblers trailed the defending NCAA champion by 15 points in the second half before knotting the score at 54-54 when Jerry Harkness hit a 12-foot jumper with four seconds remaining in regulation.
22. 1988 Championship Game (Kansas 83, Oklahoma 79)
The two Big Eight Conference members were deadlocked, 50-50, at intermission in the highest-scoring first half in title game history. The Jayhawks' Danny Manning poured in 31 points.
23. 1979 Championship Game (Michigan State 75, Indiana State 64)
Undefeated Indiana State lost against Michigan State when the Sycamores' Larry Bird, who hit 53.2% of his field-goal attempts on the season, made just one-third of his shots from the floor (7 of 21) as a sore thumb limited his shooting effectiveness. Magic Johnson scored a game-high 24 points for the Spartans. The ballyhooed matchup between icons Bird and Magic failed to live up to billing but aroused fans and generated the largest-ever TV share for an NCAA final.
24. 1989 East Regional First Round (Georgetown 50, Princeton 49)
No. 16 seed Princeton pushed No. 1 seed Georgetown to the limit in the East Regional before the patient and precise Tigers bowed when a last-second shot was blocked by All-American center Alonzo Mourning.
25. 1996 Southeast Regional First Round (Princeton 43, UCLA 41)
Princeton coach Pete Carril bowed out in style with a decisive perfectly executed back-door layup reminiscent of how many games were played several decades ago. It was UCLA's lowest-scoring output in 99 playoff outings, and the lowest score for a Bruins team in a regulation game in more than 55 years.
26. 1977 Championship Game (Marquette 67, North Carolina 59)
Tears of joy flowed for coach Al McGuire when Marquette won the championship in his farewell. McGuire, leaving the bench before the game was even over with tears running down his cheeks, pulled away from a hug by long-time assistant Hank Raymonds and made his way to the silence of the locker room. "I want to be alone," McGuire said. "I'm not afraid to cry. All I could think about at the end was - why me? After all the jocks and socks. All the odors in the locker room. All the fights in the gyms. Just the wildness of it all. And to have it end like this ..."
27. 1971 Mideast Regional Semifinals (Western Kentucky 107, Kentucky 83)
WKU, long regarded as poor country cousins by Kentucky, whipped the Wildcats in their first-ever meeting when All-American Jim McDaniels poured in 35 points for the Hilltoppers.
28. 1975 National Semifinals (UCLA 75, Louisville 74 in OT)
Three Louisville regulars shooting better than 50% from the floor for the season (swingman Junior Bridgeman, center Ricky Gallon and guard Phillip Bond) combined to hit 25% (6 of 24) in a loss against UCLA. Adding insult to injury for the Cardinals was reserve guard Terry Howard missing the front end of a one-and-one free-throw opportunity in the closing seconds of overtime after he converted all 28 of his previous foul shots that season.
29. 1997 Championship Game (Arizona 84, Kentucky 79 in OT)
Arizona, the only team to win an NCAA crown after finishing as low as fifth place in its league, capitalized on a 34-9 edge in free throws made to upend favored Kentucky although Zona did not make a field goal in the extra session.
30. 1995 West Regional Second Round (UCLA 75, Missouri 74)
Playmaker Tyus Edney played the role of Wizard of Westwood II with a series of breathtaking drives and baskets in UCLA's first five playoff games, including a length-of-the-court game-winner against Mizzou.
31. 1990 East Regional Semifinals (Connecticut 71, Clemson 70)
It was difficult for Clemson fans to fathom how UConn's Tate George had sufficient time with one second on the clock to receive a full-court pass, come down, square up and get off a game-winning jumper from the right baseline.
32. 1990 West Regional Second Round (Loyola Marymount 149, Michigan 115)
The record for most three-point field goals in a playoff game was set by Loyola Marymount senior guard Jeff Fryer with 11. Fryer (41) and Bo Kimble (37) became the only set of teammates to score more than 35 points in the same tourney game when they combined for 78 vs. Michigan in the highest-scoring game in NCAA playoff history.
33. 1981 East Regional Semifinals (Brigham Young 51, Notre Dame 50)
BYU's Danny Ainge went coast-to-coast driving through the heart of No. 2 seed Notre Dame's defense for a layup at the buzzer to give the Cougars the victory.
34. 1983 West Regional First Round (N.C. State 69, Pepperdine 67 in 2OT)
NCAA champion-to-be North Carolina State (26-10) defeated Pepperdine (20-9) in two extra sessions after trailing by six points with 24 seconds remaining in regulation.
35. 1978 Championship Game (Kentucky 94, Duke 88)
Jack Givens sank 18 of 27 field-goal attempts against upstart Duke's zone defense and scored Kentucky's last 16 points of the first half en route to a 41-point performance.
36. 2001 National Semifinals (Duke 95, Maryland 84)
The Blue Devils (35-4) overcame a 22-point deficit against the Terrapins (25-11), the biggest comeback in Final Four history. Mike Dunleavy Jr. hit three consecutive three-pointers in a 45-second span of the second half after Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski told his squad to quit calling plays and just go out and play the game.
37. 2003 West Regional Second Round (Arizona 96, Gonzaga 95 in 2OT)
Gonzaga's Tony Skinner and Blake Stepp tied for game-high scoring honors with 25 points but each of them missed an open shot in the last four seconds of the second overtime for the Zags (24-9) against No. 1 seed Arizona (28-4). Wildcats standout guard Jason Gardner contributed a pair of three-pointers after missing 17 consecutive shots from beyond the arc in his previous three outings.
38. 1970 Mideast Regional First Round (Notre Dame 112, Ohio University 82)
Guard Austin Carr became the only player to score more than 60 points in a single playoff game. Carr tallied 35 of Notre Dame's 54 first-half points en route to a school-record 61 against OU.
39. 1952 East Regional Final (St. John's 64, Kentucky 57)
St. John's (25-6), sparked by center Bob Zawoluk's 32 points, avenged a 41-point rout at UK (29-3) earlier in the season (81-40) by ending the 23-game winning streak of the nation's No. 1 team.
40. 1969 National Semifinals (UCLA 85, Drake 82)
Guard John Vallely, averaging a modest 10.2 points per game entering the Final Four, erupted for 29 points and the Bruins (29-1) needed all of them. They had a nine-point lead with 70 seconds remaining dwindle to one before defeating Drake (26-5) after the Bulldogs missed a go-ahead basket in the waning moments. UCLA star center Lew Alcindor grabbed 21 rebounds.
41. 1945 National Semifinals (New York University 70, Ohio State 65 in OT)
NYU (14-7), featuring just one senior on its roster, erased a 10-point deficit in the final two minutes of regulation against Ohio State (15-5).
42. 1968 Midwest Regional First Round (Houston 94, Loyola of Chicago 76)
UH's Elvin Hayes became the only player in tournament history to collect more than 40 points and 25 rebounds in the same game when he garnered 49 points and 27 rebounds. Hayes led the tournament in scoring and rebounding by wide margins for the fourth-place Cougars (31-2), but he wasn't named to the all-tournament team.
43. 1998 Midwest Regional First Round (Valparaiso 70, Mississippi 69)
Valpo's Jamie Sykes, an outfield prospect late for spring training with the Arizona Diamondbacks, inbounded from the opposite baseline with 2.5 seconds remaining. He hurled a baseball pass that Bill Jenkins leaped to catch. Jenkins delivered a touch pass to guard Bryce Drew on the right wing, and the son of coach Homer Drew drilled a game-winning three-pointer for the Crusaders (23-10).
44. 1970 Mideast Regional Final (Jacksonville 106, Kentucky 100)
JU's Artis Gilmore collected 24 points and 20 rebounds to help eliminate the nation's top-ranked team. Teammate Rex Morgan contributed 28 points while outshining UK's backcourt.
45. 1951 East Regional First Round (Illinois 79, Columbia 71)
Columbia, undefeated entering the tourney (21-0), blew a seven-point, halftime lead and lost to eventual national third-place finisher Illinois (22-5). The Lions' John Azary was outscored by the Illini's Don Sunderlage (25-13) in a battle of All-American candidates.
46. 1965 National Third-Place Game (Princeton 118, Wichita 82)
Princeton's Bill Bradley set the mark for most points in a single Final Four game with a school-record 58. He scored 39 of them in the second half of the consolation contest.
47. 1971 Mideast Regional Semifinals (Ohio State 60, Marquette 59)
Marquette, undefeated entering the tourney (26-0), lost against Ohio State (20-6) after the Warriors' playmaker, unanimous first-team All-America Dean "The Dream" Meminger, fouled out with five minutes remaining. Teammate Allie McGuire, the coach's son, committed a costly turnover in the closing seconds before Buckeyes guard Allan Hornyak converted a pair of crucial free throws to end Marquette's 39-game winning streak.
48. 2005 Midwest Regional Final (Illinois 90, Arizona 89 in OT)
Illini (37-2) overcame a 14-point deficit with just over three minutes remaining in regulation and nine-point deficit in the last 1 1/2 minutes before defeating Arizona (30-7) in an extra session.
49. 1999 West Regional First Round (Weber State 76, North Carolina 74)
No. 3 seed North Carolina (24-10) lost its playoff opener for the first time in 19 years when the Tar Heels succumbed against No. 14 Weber State (25-8). Junior college transfer Harold Arceneaux contributed five three-pointers en route to 36 points for the Wildcats. His output matched the highest ever in the playoffs against Carolina.
50. 1965 Championship Game (UCLA 91, Michigan 80)
UCLA's Gail Goodrich became the only guard to score more than 35 points in an NCAA final, erupting for 42 points on 12 of 22 field-goal shooting and 18 of 20 free-throw shooting. His free throws made and attempted remain championship game records.
51. 1976 West Regional Semifinals (Arizona 114, UNLV 109 in OT)
Each team had four players score at least 18 points as UNLV (29-2), ranked third by AP and fourth by UPI entering the tourney, was eliminated by Arizona (24-9) when Jim Rappis had more assists (12) than the Rebels' entire team.
52. 1981 West Regional Second Round (Kansas State 50, Oregon State 48)
K-State (24-9) upset second-ranked Oregon State (26-2) on Rolando Blackman's 17-foot buzzer beater from the right baseline.
53. 1959 Mideast Regional Semifinals (Louisville 76, Kentucky 61)
Second-ranked Kentucky (24-3) hit less than one-third of its field-goal attempts in blowing a 15-point lead against intra-state rival Louisville (19-12).
54. 1976 Championship Game (Indiana 86, Michigan 68)
Trailing Michigan (25-7) by six points at intermission and playing without Bobby Wilkerson after the starting guard sustained a concussion early in the game, the Hoosiers shot 60% from the floor in the second half to come from behind and earn recognition as the nation's last undefeated team. Scott May, Kent Benson and Quinn Buckner collaborated for 36 of IU's first 38 second-half points.
55. 2005 West Regional Final (Louisville 93, West Virginia 85)
West Virginia set a regional final record with 18 three-pointers but still lost against Louisville.
56. 1977 West Regional Semifinals (Idaho State 76, UCLA 75)
The visiting Bruins, ranked fourth by UPI entering the tourney, finished with a 24-5 record when guards Roy Hamilton and Brad Holland combined to hit just 8 of 24 field-goal attempts. Idaho State (25-5), prevailing despite shooting a modest 40.6% from the floor, received 27 points and 12 rebounds from center Steve Hayes.
57. 1981 Midwest Regional Second Round (Kansas 88, Arizona State 71)
Third-ranked Arizona State (24-4), featuring four upperclassmen who combined for a total of more than 35 seasons in the NBA (guards Fat Lever and Byron Scott, center Alton Lister and forward Sam Williams), was clobbered by Kansas (24-8) when Tony Guy poured in 36 points for the Jayhawks. The Sun Devils fell behind by 16 points at intermission.
58. 1979 Midwest Regional Final (Indiana State 73, Arkansas 71)
Larry Bird-led Indiana State became the only school to reach the Final Four in its one and only NCAA Tournament appearance in the 20th Century when the Sycamores' Bob Heaton shifted the ball from his normal right hand to his left for a short shot that bounced twice on the rim before going down.
59. 1971 West Regional Final (UCLA 57, Long Beach State 55)
The closest result for UCLA (29-1) during the Bruins' 38-game playoff winning streak from 1967 through 1973 came when they had to erase an 11-point deficit despite 29% field-goal shooting to edge Jerry Tarkanian-coached Long Beach State (24-5).
60. 1977 National Semifinals (North Carolina 84, UNLV 83)
Mike O'Koren became the first freshman to score more than 30 points in a national semifinal or championship game when the UNC forward tallied 31. O'Koren and his teammates enjoyed a 28-5 edge over the Rebels in free-throw attempts.
61. 1978 Midwest Regional Semifinals (DePaul 90, Louisville 89)
DePaul center Dave Corzine tallied 46 points in double overtime game to become the only individual to score at least 45 in the NCAA playoffs and never be an NCAA first- or second-team consensus All-American or Final Four Most Outstanding Player.
62. 1959 Championship Game (California 71, West Virginia 70)
Two-time first-team All-American swingman Jerry West of West Virginia (29-5) was denied an NCAA championship ring when California (25-4) junior center Darrall Imhoff, West's teammate with the Los Angeles Lakers for four seasons in the mid-1960s, tipped in a basket with 17 seconds remaining.
63. 2006 East Regional Final (George Mason 86, Connecticut 84)
The #11 seed Patriots (27-8) advanced to the national semifinals with overtime win against UConn (30-4), which was their third victim featuring a coach who previously won an NCAA title.
64. 1979 East Regional Second Round (Penn 72, North Carolina 71)
No. 1 seed Carolina (23-6) lost its opener in the Tar Heels' home state (Raleigh, N.C.) when Penn's Tony Price poured in a game-high 25 points for the Quakers (25-7).
65. 1984 East Regional Semifinals (Indiana 72, North Carolina 68)
Many observers predicted Georgetown would meet the top-ranked Tar Heels in the national final, but they were upset by IU when national player of the year Michael Jordan was limited to 13 points, one rebound and one assist.
66. 1993 West Regional First Round (Santa Clara 64, Arizona 61)
In terms of point spreads, No. 2 seed Arizona's defeat against 20-point underdog Santa Clara (19-12), a No. 15 seed, was the biggest upset in NCAA playoff history. The Wildcats (24-4), ranked fifth by AP entering the tournament, lost although they scored 25 consecutive points in a 10-minute span bridging the first and second halves.
67. 2004 St. Louis Regional Second Round (UAB 76, Kentucky 75)
UAB (22-10), after outlasting Washington (102-100) in first round, used its frenetic pressure defense to frustrate No. 1 seed Kentucky (27-5).
68. 1956 East Regional Semifinals (Temple 65, Connecticut 59)
Guard Hal Lear manufactured 61.5% of Temple's offense by scoring 40 points. The most rebounds ever in a playoff game were grabbed by teammate Fred Cohen, who retrieved a school-record 34 missed shots.
69. 2005 Second Round (West Virginia 111, Wake Forest 105 in 2OT)
Mike Gansey scored 19 of his 29 points after the end of regulation when West Virginia (24-11) outlasted #2 seed Wake Forest (27-6) in double overtime.
70. 1975 Championship Game (UCLA 92, Kentucky 85)
Coach John Wooden's farewell resulted in his 10th NCAA title for the Bruins.
71. 1981 Midwest Regional Semifinals (Wichita State 66, Kansas 65)
Mike Jones hit two long-range baskets in the last 50 seconds for Wichita State (26-7) in the first duel between the intrastate rivals in 36 years.
72. 1980 Midwest Regional Second Round (Missouri 87, Notre Dame 84 in OT)
Mizzou (25-6) backup swingman Mark Dressler, entering the NCAA playoffs with an eight-point scoring average, erupted for 32 points on 13 of 16 field-goal shooting against the 22-6 Irish (ranked No. 9 by AP).
73. 1989 Southeast Regional First Round (South Alabama 86, Alabama 84)
In an exciting intrastate battle, South Alabama (23-9) erased a 16-point halftime deficit. Jeff Hodge and Gabe Estaba combined for 55 points to lead USA against 'Bama (23-8).
74. 1980 Mideast Regional First Round (Virginia Tech 89, Western Kentucky 85 in OT)
Virginia Tech, sparked by Dale Solomon's 10-of-13 field-goal shooting, became the only school to erase a halftime deficit of at least 18 points to win a playoff game in the 20th Century. The Hokies, Metro Conference runner-up to eventual NCAA champion Louisville, trailed WKU at intermission, 48-30, in a duel between two 21-8 teams.
75. 2008 Midwest Regional Second Round (Davidson 74, Georgetown 70)
Stephen Curry, a son of former NBA standout Dell Curry, poured in 25 of his 30 points in the second half as Davidson (29-7) erased a double-digit deficit to upset the Hoyas (28-6).
76. 1978 West Regional First Round (Cal State Fullerton 90, New Mexico 85)
Cal State Fullerton (23-9) had four players score from 18 to 23 points and made 62.1% of its field-goal attempts to erase a six-point, halftime deficit and upend fourth-ranked New Mexico. Future Lakers standout Michael Cooper had an off-game for the Lobos (24-4), sinking just six of 15 field-goal attempts.
77. 1986 Midwest Regional First Round (UALR 90, Notre Dame 83)
UALR, a 17 1/2-point underdog, shocked No. 3 seed Notre Dame by shooting 62.3% from the floor. Pete Meyers scored 29 points in 29 minutes for the Trojans.
78. 1984 East Regional First Round (Virginia Commonwealth 70, Northeastern 69)
Jim Calhoun-coached Northeastern hit 75% of its field-goal attempts (33 of 44), including 15-of-17 by freshman Reggie Lewis, but still bowed to VCU.

Nostalgia 78: 1-78 Ranking of Premier Players in NCAA Tournament History

"It is not the critic who counts, not the one who points out how the strong man stumbled or how the doer of deeds might have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred with sweat and dust and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause; who, if he wins, knows the triumphs of high achievement; and who, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat." - Theodore Roosevelt

For those who eat, sleep and breathe the NCAA Tournament although it came after Teddy Roosevelt's presidency, the sensory overload of the playoffs is a banquet and every year is a feast. Nourishing your appetite for assessing postseason play, the following questions linger before the 78th event commences this year: Who were the most pristine postseason players in the nation's premier multiple-week sports spectacle? Who always seemed hot and who was not? Who was a stud instead of a dud?

It's a cop-out to simply accept the instant visibility of one-name icons such as Magic, Bird and Michael and cite them among the greatest players in tourney history. The prolific pro careers of Larry Bird, Magic Johnson and Michael Jordan, a trio combining to win nine consecutive NBA Most Valuable Player awards from 1983-84 through 1991-92 (three apiece), somewhat distorts their impact in college postseason play. Notwithstanding the TV appeal of the Bird/Magic championship game match-up in 1979 and Jordan's game-winning basket as a freshman in the 1982 national final against Georgetown, a closer examination of the facts than what was exhibited in 75th-anniversary polls two years ago by ESPN, Sports Illustrated and Sporting News shows that other collegians were more efficient more often in the NCAA Tournament. Consider the following tourney trauma for Johnson (ESPN 5/SN 7/SI 8), Bird (SI 5/ESPN 15/SN 24) and Jordan (SN 32/ESPN 57/SI 70) before accepting as gospel they were among the premier performers in NCAA playoff play:

  • Johnson shot a meager 27.8% from the floor (10 of 36) in three 1978 tourney games as a freshman for Michigan State before leading the Spartans to the NCAA title the next year. He had more turnovers (six) than assists (five) in the over-hyped 1979 final, a mediocre contest paling in comparison to the last eight finals of the 1980s when seven of them were decided by an average of two points. Johnson outscored and outrebounded teammate Greg Kelser in just one of eight playoff games they played together. Kelser simply contributed more than Magic to the Spartans' cause in NCAA competition.

  • Bird boosted Indiana State to the 1979 final in his lone NCAA tourney, but put the 'oops' in hoops by committing a Final Four-record 17 turnovers. He hit just 7 of 21 field-goal attempts and had three times as many turnovers (six) as assists (two) against Michigan State in the championship game, which was essentially the equivalent of a boring Super Bowl failing to live up to hype.

  • Jordan's NBA playoff scoring average with the Chicago Bulls more than doubled the NCAA Tournament scoring average he compiled for North Carolina. Jordan averaged 16.5 points per NCAA playoff game with the Tar Heels, scoring 20 or more in just two of 10 postseason games from 1982 through 1984. His Airness scored fewer than 18 points in two of the four playoff contests he led Carolina in scoring. Most people don't remember his inauspicious playoff debut when he collected six points, one rebound, no assists and no steals in 37 minutes of a 52-50 opening-round victory against James Madison in the East Regional. And Jordan's final NCAA Tournament appearance before he left school early for the NBA was nothing to write home about, either. The college player of the year was restricted to six points in the first 35 minutes of his collegiate swan song in the East Regional semifinals against Indiana, finishing with 13 points, one rebound, one assist and one steal in 26 foul-plagued minutes when the top-ranked Tar Heels were eliminated (72-68).

Generally, sizzling scorers have learned it's not a day at the beach in postseason play. For instance, former NBA sensation Clyde Drexler averaged more than 17 points per game each of his last 13 NBA seasons, but he scored more than 17 points in just one of 11 NCAA Tournament games for the University of Houston from 1981 through 1983. Premier playmaker Steve Nash managed only one field goal in three of five playoff contests in the mid-1990s, shooting a paltry 29.2% from the floor. Two-time NBA slam-dunk champion Jason Richardson (5th pick overall in 2001) was grounded by the NCAA playoffs, going scoreless in three consecutive contests as a Michigan State freshman in 2000. All-Americans Thomas Robinson (Kansas) and Tyler Zeller (North Carolina) each went scoreless in two NCAA playoff games. Eventual All-Americans Marcus Denmon (Missouri), Danny Ferry (Duke), Ben Gordon (Connecticut), Marcus Morris (Kansas) and Terrence Williams (Louisville) also went scoreless in a tourney game. Ferry scored fewer than 10 points in six straight tourney tilts before averaging 20 ppg in his last 11 playoff outings and Syracuse All-American Kris Joseph never scored more than 12 points in 11 NCAA playoff contests from 2009 through 2012.

Duke's Christian Laettner, the all-time playoff scoring leader with 407 points from 1989 through 1992, tallied fewer than 15 points in six of his first seven tournament games. Just four of the top 20 in career scoring in the NCAA playoffs accumulated more than 10 points in every tourney game they participated - UCLA's Lew Alcindor (1967-68-69), Princeton's Bill Bradley (1963-64-65), Arizona's Sean Elliott (1986-87-88-89) and Cincinnati's Oscar Robertson (1958-59-60).

Is an Amber Alert necessary for Len Chappell, Adrian Dantley, Tom Gola, Alex Groza, David "Big Daddy" Lattin, Jim McDaniels, Jeff Mullins, Cazzie Russell, Dennis Scott, Rony Seikaly, etc., etc., etc.? How could anyone forget the footprint (size-22) Bob Lanier left on postseason play? The NCAA, exhibiting all the expertise of voters claiming they can't provide identification, unveiled a stunning error-prone list several years ago of foremost NCAA Tournament players over the first 75 years. Were relatives of guards Shelvin Mack and Keith Smart on the nominating panel for such amateurish choices? Do backcourters B.J. Armstrong, Terry Dehere, Allen Iverson, Wally Jones, Brevin Knight, Bo Lamar, Mark Macon, Lawrence Moten, Anthony Peeler and Mitch Richmond mean anything to the misinformed? The NCAA, apparently incapable of discerning what comprises a "moment" rather than numerous playoff-pressure games or putting too much stock in input from self-serving media, probably needs to go back to focusing on vital task of shedding Indian nicknames from as many schools as possible.

In his State of the Union address, basketball buff POTUS probably should have focused on mental inequality in hoopdom rather than income inequality in his "I-have-a-phone-and-pen" kingdom. An NCAA probe similar to IRS targeting needs to be conducted stemming from the most glaring omission among impact players failing to be acknowledged. Incredibly, the shunned included Bob Pettit, who averaged 30.5 points in six outings with LSU in 1953 and 1954. Pettit is perhaps the most consistent big scorer in NCAA playoff annals with a single-digit differential between his high game (36 points) and low contest (27).

The Chris Webber Award for playoff competition brain lock goes to SN for fanciful assertion citing Tom Thacker, a nice versatile player for Cincinnati teams participating in three consecutive NCAA championship contests, as #15 on its all-time list. Thacker committed a toxic total of 13 turnovers (with only four assists) in two Final Four games in 1963 after scoring only two points in 1962 national semifinals and shooting a paltry 8-of-28 from the floor at 1961 Final Four. UCLA by itself has had at least 15 more influential tourney players than Thacker, who was unranked by ESPN and SI. The only logical answer for this absurdity is a Cincinnati connection of some sort among the voting delegation or the fishy selection is a byproduct for why SN's print edition went belly up.

Michigan State All-American Draymond Green posted back-to-back triple doubles in 2011 and 2012 but still doesn't rank among the all-time best 78 players in tourney history as the event enters its 78th year. If some of these historical facts aroused your curiosity, here is additional tournament insight that should fuel debates concerning who should be on college basketball's Mount Rushmore after excelling the most as NCAA playoff performers (minimum of six tourney games):

1. Lew Alcindor, C, UCLA
The only individual selected the Final Four's Most Outstanding Player three times averaged 25.7 points and 18.8 rebounds and shot 64.1% from the floor in six Final Four games from 1967 through 1969. Alcindor, who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, is the only player to couple three unanimous first-team All-American seasons with three NCAA titles. Of the 10 different individuals to average more than 23 points per game for a national champion a total of 12 times, Alcindor achieved the feat all three of his seasons with the Bruins. He is also the only player to hit better than 70% of his field-goal attempts in two NCAA title games. UCLA '67, the first varsity season for Alcindor, set the record for largest average margin of victory for a champion when the Bruins started a dazzling streak of 10 consecutive Final Four appearances. They won their 12 NCAA playoff games with Alcindor manning the middle by an average margin of 21.5 points. The three Alcindor-led UCLA teams rank among the seven NCAA champions with average margins of victory in a tournament of more than 19 points per game. He led the Bruins in scoring in 10 of 12 playoff contests. It's no wonder a perceptive scribe wrote that the acronym NCAA took on a new meaning during the Alcindor Era - "No Chance Against Alcindor."
2. Bill Walton, C, UCLA
Averaged 28.8 points and 17.8 rebounds per game at the Final Four in 1972 and 1973. His championship game-record 44 points against Memphis State in 1973 when he hit 21-of-22 field-goal attempts will probably never be duplicated. On the other hand, he had one playoff game of fewer than 10 points each of the three seasons he was national player of the year.
3. Jerry West, G-F, West Virginia
He is the only player to score at least 25 points in eight consecutive tournament games (all of which he led in scoring). West is also the only player to rank among the top five in scoring average in both the NCAA Tournament (30.6 points per game) and NBA playoffs (29.1 ppg). He was denied a championship ring with West Virginia in his only Final Four appearance in 1959 when Cal center Darral Imhoff, a player who would become an Olympic and NBA teammate, tipped in a decisive basket in the closing seconds.
4. Elvin Hayes, F, Houston
He is the only player to lead a tournament in scoring by more than 60 points. Lew Alcindor and his UCLA teammates helped hold Hayes to 10 points in 1968 national semifinals, but the Big E finished with 167 points in five games with Houston that year in finishing with the highest-ever scoring average for a Final Four player (36.8 ppg). Alcindor was runner-up with 103 points in four contests. Hayes became the only player in tournament history to collect more than 40 points and 25 rebounds in the same game when he amassed 49 points and 27 rebounds in a 94-76 decision over Loyola of Chicago in first round of 1968 Midwest Regional. He holds the records for most rebounds in a playoff series (97 in five games as a senior in 1968) and career (222 in 13 games). Hayes had five games with at least 24 rebounds, including the first three playoff games in 1968, before being held to five in a 101-69 national semifinal loss against UCLA. He also holds the record for most playoff field goals in a career with 152.
5. Gail Goodrich, G, UCLA
Despite standing at least three inches shorter than both standout opponents, the 6-1 lefthander outscored consensus second-team All-American Jeff Mullins of Duke, 27-22, in 1964 final and unanimous first-team All-American Cazzie Russell of Michigan, 42-28, in 1965 final. Goodrich, the only guard to score more than 35 points in an NCAA final, averaged 35 points per game for UCLA in 1965 tourney. He was also the Bruins' leading scorer the previous year (21.5-point average as a junior) when he became the shortest undergraduate to average more than 20 points per game for an NCAA titlist. Goodrich and Walt Hazzard (18.6 ppg) represent the only backcourt duo to be the top two scorers on the season for an NCAA championship team. Of the eight times a school successfully defended its major college championship, Goodrich is the only guard to be the team's leading scorer in back-to-back years. The Bruins won 58 of 60 games in those two championship seasons although they didn't have a regular taller than 6-7.
6. Bill Bradley, F, Princeton
The former U.S. Senator (D-N.J.) and 2000 presidential candidate holds the record for most points in a single Final Four game (58 against Wichita State in 1965 national third-place game). He scored 39 points in the second half of the consolation game. The Rhodes Scholar was the only player to have a double-digit season scoring average (30.5 points per game) for Princeton's Final Four team. Bradley also holds the career playoff record for highest free-throw percentage (minimum of 50 attempts). He was 89 of 96 from the foul line (90.6%) from 1963 through 1965. In five of his nine playoff games, Bradley made at least 10 free throws while missing no more than one attempt from the charity stripe. He made 16 of 16 free throws against St. Joseph's in first round of 1963 East Regional and 13 of 13 foul shots against Providence in 1965 East Regional final to become the only player to twice convert more than 12 free throws without a miss in playoff games. He was the game-high scorer in eight of nine tourney contests.
7. Bill Russell, C, San Francisco
Grabbed an incredible 50 rebounds for USF at 1956 Final Four (23 against SMU in semifinals and 27 against Iowa in championship game). No other player has retrieved more than 41 missed shots in two Final Four games or more than 21 in the final. Averaged 23.2 points in winning all nine NCAA tourney contests.
8. Oscar Robertson, G-F, Cincinnati
Averaged at least 29 points and 10 rebounds per game each of his three years in the tourney with the Bearcats. The Big O isn't picked higher because California restricted him to a total of 37 points in two Final Four games (1959 and 1960). He hit just nine of 32 from the floor against the Bears. Robertson, the nation's leading scorer all three of his varsity seasons with averages of more than 32 points per game, is the only team-leading scorer to twice go more than 10 points below his season scoring average when his school lost in the national semifinals or final. He is the only Final Four participant to twice register a season scoring average in excess of 30 ppg (32.6 in 1958-59 and 33.7 in 1959-60).
9. Sean Elliott, F, Arizona
Of the more than 60 different players to score at least 2,500 points and/or rank among the top 25 in career scoring average, Elliott is the only one to have a winning NCAA playoff record in his career plus post higher scoring, rebounding and field-goal shooting playoff averages than he compiled in the regular season. Elliott scored at least 17 points in all 10 of his NCAA playoff games with the Wildcats from 1986 through 1989.
10. Christian Laettner, F, Duke
Only player to start in four Final Fours became the tourney's all-time leading scorer (407 points) in helping the Blue Devils compile a 21-2 playoff mark in his career. Laettner's highest-scoring game was 31 against Kentucky in a 104-103 victory in 1992 East Regional final. Laettner capped a flawless offensive performance, hitting all 10 of his field-goal attempts and all 10 of his free throws against the Wildcats, by scoring Duke's last eight points in overtime, including a stunning 18-foot turnaround jumper at the buzzer after catching a pass from the baseline on the opposite end of the court. He also hit what probably was an even more difficult off-balance, last-second shot to give Duke a 79-78 win against Connecticut in 1990 East Regional final. Tallied fewer than 15 points in six of his first seven playoff contests.
11. Bob Pettit, F-C, Louisiana State
Of the more than 40 different players to score more than 225 points in the NCAA playoffs and/or average over 25 points per tournament game (minimum of six games), he is the only one to score more than 22 points in every postseason contest (six games with LSU in 1953 and 1954). He was perhaps the most consistent big scorer in NCAA Tournament history with a single-digit differential between his high game (36 points) and his low game (27). Pettit wasn't named to the 1953 All-Tournament team despite leading the Tigers to the Final Four and averaging 30.5 points per game in four NCAA playoff contests. He averaged the same number of points in two tourney games the next year.
12. Bobby Hurley, G, Duke
The 6-0 guard was selected Most Outstanding Player at the 1992 Final Four. He was the shortest player to earn the award since 5-11 Hal Lear helped Temple to a national third-place finish in 1956. The only Final Four Most Outstanding Player shorter than Hurley from a championship team was 5-11 Kenny Sailors of Wyoming in 1943. Hurley shot a mediocre 41% from the floor in his college career, but he was the Blue Devils' linchpin with his playmaking and intangible contributions. He holds the career record for most playoff assists (145) and three-pointers (42) although his bid to become the first player to start four consecutive NCAA finals was thwarted when California upset Duke in the second round of 1993 Midwest Regional despite Hurley's career-high 32 points. After averaging just 5.4 points per game in his first eight NCAA Tournament contests, he averaged 22.8 in his last five playoff outings.
13. Steve Alford, G, Indiana
Averaged 21.3 points in 10 NCAA Tournament games in 1984, 1986 and 1987 (8-2 record). He led the Hoosiers in scoring in seven of the contests.
14. Larry Johnson, F, UNLV
Juco jewel averaged 20.2 points and 11.5 rebounds in 11 games in 1990 and 1991 (10-1 record).
15. Miles Simon, G, Arizona
Averaged 18.6 points, 4.2 rebounds and 4.3 assists in 14 games from 1995 through 1998 (11-3 record). He was game-high scorer in his last three playoff contests.
16. Patrick Ewing, C, Georgetown
The Hoyas compiled a glittering 15-3 playoff record from 1982 through 1985 during his four-year reign of terror although he never scored as many as 25 points in a tournament game.
17. David "Big Daddy" Lattin, C, Texas Western
Averaged 19.4 ppg and 10.6 rpg in eight games in 1966 and 1967 (7-1 record). He averaged 21 points and 13 rebounds in first three games of 1966 playoffs, powering champion-to-be Miners to Final Four. Playoff scoring average was five points higher than his regular-season mark.
18. Clyde Lovellette, C, Kansas
The only individual to lead the nation in scoring average in the same season he played for a team reaching the NCAA Tournament championship game. Averaging 35.3 points per game in the 1952 tourney, he was the first player to score more than 30 points in a Final Four contest and the only player to crack the 30-point plateau in the national semifinals and final in the same season.
19. Dennis Scott, G-F, Georgia Tech
Averaged 25.9 ppg and 5.9 rpg in eight playoff games from 1988 through 1990 (5-3 record). He was game-high scorer in four of five contests in 1990 when the Yellow Jackets reached the Final Four.
20. David Thompson, F, North Carolina State
The last player to score the most points in a single game of a tournament and play for a championship team (40 against Providence in 1974 East Regional semifinals). He is the only undergraduate non-center to average more than 23 ppg for a national champion.
21. Austin Carr, G, Notre Dame
After scoring only six points in his first tournament game as a sophomore (re-injured against Miami of Ohio in 1969), Carr averaged 47.2 points in his last six playoff contests to finish with a tourney record 41.3-point mark. However, the Irish won only two of the seven games.
22. David Robinson, C, Navy
Averaged 28.6 points and 12.3 rebounds in seven games from 1985 through 1987 (4-3 record). He was game-high scorer in four playoff contests, including a school-record 50 points against Michigan in his final appearance.
23. Bob Kurland, C, Oklahoma A&M
Only player to score more than half of a championship team's points in a single NCAA Tournament (total of 72 accounted for 51.8% of the Aggies' output in three playoff games in 1946).
24. Jerry Lucas, C, Ohio State
Two-time NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player averaged 22.8 ppg and 12 rpg at the Final Four in 1960 and 1961. But he was limited to nine points in both of his tourney openers when earning national player of the year awards in 1961 and 1962.
25. Sean May, F-C, North Carolina
Final Four Most Outstanding Player for 2005 champion averaged 19.9 points and 9.9 rebounds in eight NCAA Tournament games in 2004 and 2005 (7-1 record).
26. Alex Groza, C, Kentucky
Two-time Final Four Most Outstanding Player is only individual appearing at a minimum of two Final Fours (1948 and 1949) and be the game-high scorer in every Final Four contest he participated.
27. Len Chappell, F-C, Wake Forest
Averaged 27.6 ppg and 17.1 rpg in eight games in 1961 and 1962 (6-2 record). He was the Demon Deacons' leading scorer in all eight contests.
28. Bob Lanier, C, St. Bonaventure
Averaged 25.2 points and 14.2 rebounds in six games in 1968 and 1970 (4-2 record; missed 1970 Final Four after tearing a knee ligament in East Regional final).
29. Corliss Williamson, F, Arkansas
Two-time All-NCAA Tournament selection averaged 20.2 points and 7.4 rebounds while shooting 59.4% from the floor in 15 games from 1993 through 1995 (13-2 record).
30. Al Wood, F, North Carolina
Averaged 20.1 points and 8.3 rebounds in eight games from 1978 through 1981 (4-4 record). He was the Tar Heels' leading scorer in six of those playoff contests.
31. Tim Duncan, C, Wake Forest
Averaged 17.6 points, 15 rebounds and 4.5 blocked shots in 11 games from 1994 through 1997 (7-4 record).
32. Glen Rice, F, Michigan
Averaged 23.7 points and 6.3 rebounds in 13 games from 1986 through 1989 (10-3 record). As a senior, he was the Wolverines' leading scorer in all six contests during their championship run when setting a single-tourney record with 184 points.
33. Danny Manning, F, Kansas
The only player to score more than 62% of his team's points in an NCAA Tournament game (42 in the Jayhawks' 67-63 victory against Southwest Missouri State in second round of 1987 Southeast Regional). He was the game-high scorer in all six of their contests en route to the 1988 national title as a senior. Averaged 20.5 points and 7.3 rebounds in 16 playoff games (13-3 record).
34. Bob Houbregs, F-C, Washington
Averaged 27.4 ppg in seven games in 1951 and 1953 (5-2 record). He averaged nearly nine more points per contest in postseason play than during the regular season.
35. Tom Gola, F, La Salle
The only individual to earn NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player and NIT Most Valuable Player awards in his career. He averaged 22 ppg in 10 NCAA playoff games in 1954 and 1955 (9-1 record).
36. Rumeal Robinson, G, Michigan
Averaged 17.5 points and 8.5 assists in 11 games from 1988 through 1990 (9-2 record).
37. Lawrence Moten, G, Syracuse
Averaged 23.3 points and 4.7 rebounds in seven games in 1992, 1994 and 1995 (4-3 record).
38. Ray Allen, G, Connecticut
Averaged 19.5 points and 7 rebounds in 10 playoff games from 1994 through 1996 (7-3 record).
39. Isiah Thomas, G, Indiana
Averaged 19.7 points and 7.9 assists in seven games in 1980 and 1981 (6-1 record).
40. Greg "Bo" Kimble, F-G, Loyola Marymount
Averaged 29.1 points, 8.1 rebounds and 2.3 steals in seven games from 1988 through 1990 (4-3 record). Scored at least 37 points for LMU in three of his last four playoff outings.
41. Randy Foye, G, Villanova
Averaged 22.1 points and 6.4 rebounds in seven games in 2005 and 2006 (5-2 record). He scored at least 24 points in four contests en route to posting 7.5 ppg more in tourney competition than regular-season play.
42. B.J. Armstrong, G, Iowa
Averaged 19.8 points and 4.9 assists in nine games from 1987 through 1989 (6-3 record; did not play in 1986 playoffs). He averaged seven more points per contest in postseason than during the regular season.
43. Jim McDaniels, C, Western Kentucky
Averaged 29.3 points and 12.2 rebounds in six games in 1970 and 1971 (4-2 record). He was WKU's leading scorer in five of the six playoff contests.
44. Brevin Knight, G, Stanford
Averaged 20 points, 4.6 rebounds and 6.6 assists in seven games from 1995 through 1997 (4-3 record).
45. Rony Seikaly, C, Syracuse
Averaged 18.8 ppg, 8.7 rpg and 2.8 bpg in 12 games from 1985 through 1988 (8-4 record). He averaged nearly seven more points per contest in postseason play than during the regular season.
46. Jeff Mullins, F, Duke
Averaged 25 ppg and 7.9 rpg in the playoffs for two Final Four teams in 1963 and 1964 (6-2 record). He scored more than 20 points in seven of eight tourney contests.
47. Mark Macon, G, Temple
Averaged 23.3 points and 5.1 rebounds in nine games in 1988, 1990 and 1991 (6-3 record.)
48. Mike Maloy, C, Davidson
Averaged 22.3 ppg and 12.4 rpg in seven games from 1968 through 1970 (4-3 record).
49. Adrian Dantley, F, Notre Dame
Averaged 25.4 points and 8.3 rebounds in eight games from 1974 through 1976 (4-4 record). Averaged 29.8 points in his last six playoff contests.
50. Dan Issel, C, Kentucky
Averaged 29.3 ppg and 11.3 rpg in splitting six contests from 1968 through 1970. He had at least 36 points in half of the tourney games.
51. Allen Iverson, G, Georgetown
Averaged 23.9 points and 4 rebounds in seven games in 1995 and 1996 (5-2 record). He was the Hoyas' leading scorer in all seven contests.
52. Ollie Johnson, C, San Francisco
Averaged 25.8 points and 16.2 rebounds in six games from 1963 through 1965 (3-3 record). Averaged six points per game higher in playoffs than regular season.
53. Paul Hogue, C, Cincinnati
Averaged 19 points and 16 rebounds in six Final Four games from 1960 through 1962. Posted higher averages (18.4 ppg and 13.3 rpg) in 12 NCAA Tournament contests (11-1 record) than his respective career marks.
54. Jameer Nelson, G, St. Joseph's
Averaged 22.4 points, 6 rebounds, 5.4 assists and 2.3 steals in seven games in 2001, 2003 and 2004 (4-3 record). He scored at least 24 points in four of his last five playoff contests.
55. Richard Hamilton, G-F, Connecticut
Averaged 23.4 points and 4.7 rebounds in 10 games in 1998 and 1999 (9-1 record). He led UConn in scoring in nine of the 10 contests.
56. Chuck Person, F, Auburn
Averaged 20.3 points and 9 rebounds in eight games from 1984 through 1986 (5-3 record). Scored at least 20 points in six of his last seven playoff contests.
57. Don Schlundt, C, Indiana
Averaged 27 points in six games in 1953 and 1954 (5-1 record). He was the Hoosiers' leading scorer in five of the playoff contests.
58. Cazzie Russell, G, Michigan
Averaged at least 24 ppg each of his three years in the tourney (5-3 record). Leading scorer for third-place team in 1964 NCAA playoffs and 1965 national runner-up.
59. Jamal Mashburn, F, Kentucky
Averaged 21.4 points and 8 rebounds in nine games in 1992 and 1993 (7-2 record). He was the Wildcats' leading scorer in five consecutive playoff contests.
60. Les Hunter, C, Loyola of Chicago
Averaged 18.9 points and 13.3 rebounds in eight games in 1963 and 1964 (7-1 record).
61. Henry Finkel, C, Dayton
Averaged 27.8 points and 13.8 rebounds in six games in 1965 and 1966 (3-3 record). He was game-high scorer in five of the six contests.
62. Johnny Green, F-C, Michigan State
Averaged 16.2 points and 19.7 rebounds in six games in 1957 and 1959 (3-3 record). He was the leading rebounder in all four contests as a sophomore in 1957 when the Spartans reached the Final Four.
63. Anthony Peeler, G, Missouri
Averaged 24.3 points, 3.3 rebounds and 6.3 assists in six games in 1989, 1990 and 1992 (3-3 record). His scoring average was almost eight points higher in the postseason than regular season.
64. Dwight "Bo" Lamar, G, Southwestern Louisiana
Averaged 29.2 points in six Division I Tournament games in 1972 and 1973 (3-3 record). Supplied game-high point total in all six contests, including 35 plus a tourney-high 11 assists in a 112-101 victory against Marshall as the Ragin' Cajuns scored the most points in tourney history for a school in its playoff debut.
65. Greg Kelser, F, Michigan State
Leading scorer and rebounder as a senior for 1979 NCAA titlist averaged 24 ppg and 11.3 rpg in eight playoff contests (7-1 record). His scoring average was almost seven points higher in the postseason than regular season. Celebrated teammate Magic Johnson outscored and outrebounded Kelser only once in their eight postseason outings together.
66. Barry Kramer, F, New York University
Averaged 25.2 points and 9.3 rebounds in six games in 1962 and 1963 (3-3 record).
67. Nick Collison, F, Kansas
Leading scorer and rebounder as senior for 2003 NCAA Tournament runner-up (30-8 record) and second-leading scorer and rebounder for 2002 Final Four team (33-4). Averaged 16.7 points and 11.3 rebounds in 16 games (12-4 record).
68. Juan Dixon, G, Maryland
After struggling as a redshirt freshman, Dixon averaged 21.2 points in his last 13 games from 2000 through 2002. The Terrapins won 10 of the last 11 of those playoff contests when he was the leading scorer for back-to-back Final Four teams.
69. Mitch Richmond, G-F, Kansas State
J.C. recruit averaged 23.3 points, 9.2 rebounds and 4.8 assists in six games in 1987 and 1988 (4-2 record).
70. George Thompson, F, Marquette
Averaged 23.2 points and 5.7 rebounds in six games in 1968 and 1969 (4-2 record). He was the Warriors' leading scorer in five of the six playoff contests.
71. John Wallace, F, Syracuse
Averaged 20.3 points and 8.8 rebounds in 11 games from 1994 through 1996 (8-3 record). Leading scorer and rebounder for Syracuse's national runner-up as a senior was the top point producer for the Orangemen in his last eight playoff contests.
72. Jimmy Collins, G, New Mexico State
Averaged 19.9 points and 3.8 rebounds in 11 games from 1968 through 1970 (7-4 record). He at least shared the Aggies' team-high scoring output in all 11 contests.
73. Tony Price, F, Penn
Averaged 21.9 ppg and 9 rpg in eight games in 1978 and 1979 (5-3 record). He was the Quakers' leading scorer in all six contests when they finished fourth in the nation in 1979. Price's playoff scoring average was 6.5 points higher than his regular-season mark.
74. Wally Jones, G, Villanova
Two-time All-East Regional selection averaged 22.5 ppg and 5.5 rpg in six games in 1962 and 1964 (4-2 record). He scored a game-high 25 points as a sophomore in a regional final loss against Wake Forest and a game-high 34 points as a senior in a 74-62 victory over Bill Bradley-led Princeton in a third-place contest. It was the only time in Bradley's nine playoff games that he wasn't the leading scorer. Jones outscored All-American Len Chappell in the Wake Forest contest.
75. Mel Counts, C, Oregon State
Averaged 23.2 points and 14.1 rebounds in nine games from 1962 through 1964 (5-4 record), averaging 25 points and 15 rebounds in two West Regional finals.
76. Terry Dehere, G, Seton Hall
Averaged 23.2 points in nine games from 1991 through 1993 (6-3 record). He paced the Pirates in scoring in all nine outings.
77. Kenny Anderson, G, Georgia Tech
The only freshman to score more than 20 points in four playoff games averaged 27 ppg in his first four outings. Averaged 25.7 points and 5 assists in seven NCAA tourney games in 1990 and 1991 (5-2 record).
78. Acie Earl, C, Iowa
Averaged 19.3 points, 8.5 rebounds and 3.7 blocked shots in six games from 1991 through 1993 (3-3 record). Eight of his rejections came against NCAA champion-to-be Duke in 1992. He averaged more than four ppg in the playoffs than the regular season.

Double Trouble: Players Holding Both Career Scoring and Rebounding Records

If a sensation such as Stephen Curry doesn't do it, then can anyone just do it? Curry (25.3 ppg for Davidson from 2006-07 through 2008-09) fell just shy of supplanting Fred Hetzel (25.7) as the Wildcats' leader in career scoring average. Hetzel also holds the school mark in rebounding average. What players for other major colleges are atop both of these career average lists?

All-time greats Rick Barry (Miami FL), Larry Bird (Indiana State), Wilt Chamberlain (Kansas), Julius Erving (Massachusetts), Elvin Hayes (Houston), Bob Lanier (St. Bonaventure), Oscar Robertson (Cincinnati) and Bill Russell (San Francisco) aren't the only players to excel in scoring and rebounding at the collegiate level. When Neal Walk, Florida's leader in both categories, passed away last fall, CollegeHoopedia.com began assembling the following list of individuals holding both the career scoring and rebounding average standards for their schools while classified as major colleges at least 30 years (minimum of two seasons):

School Scoring/Rebounding Leader PPG RPG Career Seasons
Alabama Jerry Harper 20.1 18.2 1952-53 through 1955-56
Brigham Young John Fairchild 20.92 12.8 1963-64 and 1964-65
UC Irvine Kevin Magee 26.3 12.3 1980-81 and 1981-82
Canisius Larry Fogle 29.7 12.1 1973-74 and 1974-75
Cincinnati Oscar Robertson 33.8 15.2 1957-58 through 1959-60
The Citadel Gary Daniels 19.44 11.9 1959-60 through 1961-62
Colorado Cliff Meely 24.3 12.1 1968-69 through 1970-71
Davidson Fred Hetzel 25.7 13.8 1962-63 through 1964-65
Detroit Dave DeBusschere 24.8 19.4 1959-60 through 1961-62
Drake Lewis Lloyd 28.2 12.4 1979-80 and 1980-81
Florida Neal Walk 20.8 15.3 1966-67 through 1968-69
George Washington Joe Holup 21.4 19.5 1952-53 through 1955-56
Houston Elvin Hayes 31.0 17.2 1965-66 through 1967-68
Illinois Nick Weatherspoon 20.9 11.4 1970-71 through 1972-73
Indiana State Larry Bird 30.3 13.3 1976-77 through 1978-79
Iona Warren Isaac 21.5 18.1 1962-63 through 1964-65
Iowa State Don Smith 22.3 13.7 1965-66 through 1967-68
Kansas Wilt Chamberlain 29.9 18.3 1956-57 and 1957-58
Louisville Wes Unseld 20.6 18.9 1965-66 through 1967-68
Massachusetts Julius Erving 26.3 20.2 1969-70 and 1970-71
Miami (Fla.) Rick Barry 29.8 16.5 1962-63 through 1964-65
Mississippi State Bailey Howell 27.1 17.0 1956-57 through 1958-59
Montana State Jack Gillespie 20.6 13.5 1966-67 through 1968-69
Northern Illinois Jim Bradley 23.1 16.8 1971-72 and 1972-73
Oregon State Mel Counts 22.2 15.4 1961-62 through 1963-64
Penn Ernie Beck 22.3 19.0 1950-51 through 1952-53
Penn State Jesse Arnelle 21.0 12.1 1951-52 through 1954-55
St. Bonaventure Bob Lanier 27.5 15.7 1967-68 through 1969-70
San Francisco Bill Russell 20.7 20.3 1953-54 through 1955-56
Santa Clara Dennis Awtrey 19.9 13.5 1967-68 through 1969-70
South Alabama Terry Catledge 21.7 10.8 1982-83 through 1984-85
Tennessee Tech Jimmy Hagan 21.1 15.2 1957-58 through 1959-60
Texas A&M John Beasley 21.8 10.7 1963-64 through 1965-66
Texas-El Paso Jim Barnes 24.2 17.8 1962-63 and 1963-64
UAB Carlos Williams 19.4 8.8 1994-95 through 1996-97
Utah Billy McGill 26.9 12.8 1959-60 through 1961-62
Vanderbilt Clyde Lee 21.4 15.5 1963-64 through 1965-66
Western Kentucky Jim McDaniels 27.6 13.8 1968-69 through 1970-71
William & Mary Jeff Cohen 19.4 16.3 1957-58 through 1960-61

NOTE: Fogle, Hagan and Walk are among the 10 first-time All-Americans who posted a scoring average at least 15 ppg higher than they did the previous season.

Transfer Talent: SMU's Moore Bound for A-A Status But Not Postseason Play

"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 rainbow, 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. The majority of All-American transfers depart from universities that currently are power-league members.

How many All-Americans actually played varsity basketball for two different four-year schools? The average is about one every two years. Duke and Kansas, two of the five schools with the most All-Americans in history, had their first transfer in that category three seasons ago - Duke guard Seth Curry (Liberty) and KU center Jeff Withey (Arizona). If voters are paying attention and not buffoons-at-large, guard Nic Moore (Illinois State to Southern Methodist) is a shoo-in for A-A status this season although the Mustangs are ineligible to appear in postseason competition.

Mississippi State lost a transfer All-American several seasons ago 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 two years ago. SMU's Moore should join Iowa's Jarrod Uthoff (from Wisconsin) and Gonzaga's Kyle Wiltjer (Kentucky) on the following alphabetical list of All-Americans who began their collegiate career at another four-year school:

Transfer All-American Pos. Original School All-American School
Courtney Alexander G Virginia 96-97 Fresno State 99-00
Elgin Baylor F College of Idaho 55 Seattle 57-58
Vince Boryla F-C Notre Dame 45-46 Denver 49
Michael Bradley F-C Kentucky 98-99 Villanova 01
Charley Brown G Indiana 56 Seattle 58-59
Art Bunte C-F Utah 52-53 Colorado 55-56
Frank Burgess G Arkansas-Pine Bluff 54 Gonzaga 59-61
Reggie Carter G Hawaii 76 St. John's 78-80
Seth Curry G Liberty 09 Duke 11-13
Dan Dickau G Washington 98-99 Gonzaga 01-02
Toney Douglas G Auburn 05 Florida State 07-09
Larry Fogle F Southwestern Louisiana 73 Canisius 74-75
Ricky Frazier G-F St. Louis 78 Missouri 80-82
Eric "Hank" Gathers F-C Southern California 86 Loyola Marymount 88-90
Gerald Glass F Delta State (Miss.) 86-87 Mississippi 89-90
Joey Graham F Central Florida 01-02 Oklahoma State 04-05
*Harvey Grant F Clemson 85 Oklahoma 87-88
*Ed Gray G Tennessee 94 California 96-97
Al Green G North Carolina State 76-77 Louisiana State 79
Ben Hansbrough G Mississippi State 07-08 Notre Dame 10-11
William "Red" Holzman G Baltimore 39 City College of New York 41-42
Wesley Johnson F Iowa State 07-08 Syracuse 10
Greg "Bo" Kimble F-G Southern California 86 Loyola Marymount 88-90
Jim Krivacs G Auburn 75 Texas 77-79
John Lucas III G Baylor 02-03 Oklahoma State 04
Kyle Macy G Purdue 76 Kentucky 78-80
Billy McCaffrey G Duke 90-91 Vanderbilt 93-94
Bob McCurdy F-C Virginia 72 Richmond 74-75
Mark McNamara C Santa Clara 78-79 California 81-82
Chris Mills F Kentucky 89 Arizona 91-93
James "Scoonie" Penn G Boston College 96-97 Ohio State 99-00
Lawrence Roberts F-C Baylor 02-03 Mississippi State 04-05
Carlos Rogers C UALR 91 Tennessee State 93-94
Marshall Rogers G Kansas 73 Pan American 75-76
Clifford Rozier C-F North Carolina 91 Louisville 93-94
Kevin Stacom G Holy Cross 71 Providence 73-74
Dan Swartz C Kentucky 52 Morehead State 54-56
Brandon Joel "B.J." Tyler G DePaul 90 Texas 92-94
Bill Uhl C Ohio State 52 Dayton 54-56
Win Wilfong F Missouri 52-53 Memphis State 56-57
Kyle Wiltjer F Kentucky 13 Gonzaga 15-16
Jeff Withey C Arizona 09 Kansas 10-13
Leon Wood G Arizona 80 Cal State Fullerton 82-84
Andre Woolridge G Nebraska 93 Iowa 95-97

*Attended junior college between four-year school stints.
NOTE: Burgess was an Air Force veteran.

Diminutive Dynamo: Short Subject Johnson Flies High with Winthrop Eagles

By any measure, it's more difficult for smaller athletes to score big in the Land of the Giants. The only NCAA Division I players shorter than 6-0 to score more than 2,500 career points are 5-10 Calvin Murphy (2,548 for Niagara from 1967-68 through 1969-70) and 5-10 Keydren Clark (3,058 for Saint Peter's from 2002-03 through 2005-06).

Shortening the subject matter even more, Winthrop junior playmaker Keon Johnson (5-7) averaged just over 20 points per game in three non-league road games against power conference members (North Carolina State, Georgia and Alabama). He was averaging a comparable figure overall this year after contributing 10 three-point field goals against Charleston Southern and 32 points against Radford. If Johnson maintains his Big South Conference scoring pace, he'll join the following short list of major-college players shorter than 5-8 who averaged in excess of 20 ppg in a single season:

Diminutive Player Ht. DI School Avg. Season
David Holston 5-7 Chicago State 25.9 2008-09
Earl Boykins 5-6 Eastern Michigan 25.7 1997-98
David Holston 5-7 Chicago State 23.1 2007-08
Chuck Rolles 5-6 Cornell 23.0 1955-56
Dick Hickox 5-6 Miami (Fla.) 22.1 1959-60
Marques Green 5-7 St. Bonaventure 21.3 2002-03
Billy Pappas 5-6 New Hampshire 21.0 1953-54
Shawnta Rogers 5-4 George Washington 20.7 1998-99
Keith "Mister" Jennings 5-7 East Tennessee State 20.1 1990-91

Junior Achievement: Moody and/or Payton Could Join List of J.C. MVPs

"Some kids need those two years to prepare them to come to a four-year school. We should not look down on those kids." - Western Kentucky/Minnesota coach Clem Haskins, an All-American for WKU

It wasn't long ago when only a splinter group of maverick coaches were sufficiently bold to liberally dot their rosters with junior college players stereotyped as discipline problems, academic risks or simply unsuitable to go directly from high school to major college programs. "Jucoland" was labeled by misguided observers as little more than basketball rehabilitation where free-lance players enjoyed free rein to make Great Plains arenas their own personal H-O-R-S-E stables.

But a glance at NBA rosters over the years and the backgrounds of many of the nation's prominent Division I coaches suggests there probably never should have been a stigma attached to the J.C. ranks. Observers seldom hear college or NBA commentators credit a J.C. beginning, but many premier NBA players competed for a two-year school at some point in their college careers - Tiny Archibald, Mookie Blaylock, Ron Boone, Ron Brewer, Fred Brown, Jimmy Butler, Mack Calvin, Sam Cassell, Michael Cooper, Mel Daniels, Steve Francis, Artis Gilmore, Harvey Grant, Spencer Haywood, Lionel Hollins, Avery Johnson, Dennis Johnson, Gus Johnson, Larry Johnson, Vinnie Johnson, Freddie Lewis, Jim Loscutoff, Shawn Marion, Bob McAdoo, Nate McMillan, Ricky Pierce, Mitch Richmond, Dennis Rodman, Latrell Sprewell, John Starks, Jamaal Tinsley, Nick Van Exel, Ben Wallace and Gerald Wilkins.

Denny Crum, Lute Olson, Nolan Richardson and Jerry Tarkanian are former juco coaches who eventually guided teams to NCAA Tournament titles. More than 90 individuals have been named MVP/Player of the Year in an NCAA Division I conference. Ole Miss' Stephan Moody (Kilgore TX), scoring more than 20 points in 12 consecutive contests for the Rebels, and Oregon State's Gary Payton II (Salt Lake UT) could join the following list of such honorees from a power league:

Player of Year Pos. School Power League Season(s) Junior College(s)
Tony Allen G Oklahoma State Big 12 2003-04 Butler County (KS) & Wabash Valley (IL)
Walter Berry F-C St. John's Big East 1985-86 San Jacinto (TX)
Lester Conner G Oregon State Pacific-10 1981-82 Los Medanos (CA) & Chabot (CA)
Jae Crowder F Marquette Big East 2011-12 South Georgia Tech & Howard County (TX)
Ed Gray G California Pacific-10 1996-97 Southern Idaho
Bobby Jackson G Minnesota Big Ten 1996-97 Western Nebraska
Cliff Meely F-C Colorado Big Eight 1970-71 Northeastern (CO)
Chris Porter F Auburn Southeastern 1998-99 Chipola (FL)
Willie Smith G Missouri Big Eight 1975-76 Seminole (OK)
Marcus Thornton G Louisiana State Southeastern 2008-09 Kilgore (TX)
Jamaal Tinsley G Iowa State Big 12 2000-01 Mount San Jacinto (CA)
Sam Williams F Iowa Big Ten 1967-68 Burlington (IA)

Faith in Haith: Now We Know Why Coach Left Mizzou in Mess for Tulsa

Fool me once, shame on thee! Fool me twice, shame on me! Questions will linger if hit-and-run coach Frank Haith remains unscathed at Tulsa after Missouri, his previous outpost, announced self-imposed sanctions stemming from improprieties during his stint with the Tigers. Leaving the scene of the crimes, Haith bolted Mizzou following the 2013-14 campaign in an unusual move at the time from a power conference member to a mid-major school. Dodging bullets like Shrillary in Bosnia, it turns out Haith packed his suitcase four days after the school received a notice of inquiry from the NCAA.

But Haith fooled folks before. Stripping away the veneer, it was difficult for the average Missouri fan to invest much time exhibiting an abundance of faith in Haith when he was hired as coach to replace Arkansas-bound Mike Anderson. Mizzou followers were dismayed after coach Matt Painter didn't leave his alma mater (Purdue) to accept the job and Haith's good-guy reputation was tainted by strip-club partying with a Ponzi schemer booster at Miami (FL), where he never had a winning ACC record in seven seasons with the Hurricanes (43-69 overall league mark).

But Haith's timing seemed impeccable at the time as he quickly turned a faith-building corner by impressing brothers Flip and Matt Pressey to stay with the Tigers rather than tagging along with Anderson, the college roommate (at Tulsa) of their NBA father (All-American Paul Pressey). Haith rewarded the gifted guards with significantly more court time and the Presseys responded accordingly.

Haith, giving his seven-man rotation an average of more than 25% additional playing time than they had their last year under Anderson, laid the groundwork to win one of the national coach of the year awards. The potent Pressey pair enjoyed almost 50% more minutes between them than they did in 2010-11. But it turns out, there were other "gifts" behind the scenes at moribund Mizzou. No wonder the rudderless institution couldn't handle self-absorbed football players boycotting in support of hunger-striking eight-year professional student from wealthy family.

Upon earning national acclaim, Haith joined the following list of five coaches who did so in their debut season for a school after serving in a similar capacity the previous year with another DI institution: Eddie Hickey (Marquette '59/after leaving St. Louis), Tom Davis (Iowa '87/Stanford), Eddie Sutton (Kentucky '86/Arkansas), Kelvin Sampson (Oklahoma '95/Washington State) and Matt Doherty (North Carolina '01/Notre Dame).

Anderson was national COY three years before Haith. But what type of hangers-on do their programs attract? A supporter who flew with the Mizzou squad on multiple road trips and received complementary tickets from players was arrested by FBI agents on drug-related charges at the team's hotel in Omaha before the distracted Tigers were upset by Norfolk State in the opening round of the 2012 NCAA playoffs. Was that debacle their version of self-imposed vacating participation?

At what cost did Mizzou enjoy some brief success under a mix of Coach Cal/Tark the Shark/Jimmy V but without the accompanying sustained winning? Haith abandoned the program, leaving the tattered Tigers in their worst shape in 50 years. Show-Me State fans may need to be shown a Louisville-recruit good time by a Ponzi schemer to temporarily get their minds off the excessive debris. Stripping things down to get to the naked truth, let Haith's role-dancing around the issue begin. He should realize that, if karma intervenes, time heals all wounds and wounds all heels.

The Thrill is Gone: Beavers Breaking Free From NCAA Tourney Famine Logjam

A significant number of schools turn sheepish at the mention of recent NCAA Tournament success. Among Division I institutions making at least 10 NCAA playoff appearances, eight former Final Four participants - Holy Cross, Houston, New Mexico State, Oregon State, Princeton, San Francisco, Southern Methodist and Texas-El Paso - combined to go winless in the previous 17 years.

DePaul, Oregon State and San Francisco each have won more than 20 NCAA tourney games but collaborated for only one win in the previous 26 years (DePaul over Dayton in double overtime in 2004). Wayne Tinkle-coached Oregon State is showing signs this season that the Beavers' playoff drought could be reaching an end unless a tripping-a-referee brain-fart by Jarmal Reid, a player recruited by previous mentor Craig Robinson, costs them an at-large invitation. With B.B. King "The Thrill is Gone" lyrics in the background, Clemson and Iowa could be joining OSU in leaving the following alphabetical list of schools with at least 10 NCAA playoff appearances for which Sweet 16 is a distant memory:

School (Playoff Appearances) Recent NCAA Tournament Travails
Boston College (18) winless previous eight years with only one appearance
Charlotte (11) no appearance previous 10 years; winless previous 14 years
Clemson (11) one victory previous 18 years
DePaul (22) appeared once previous 15 years; one victory previous 26 years
George Washington (11) one victory previous 21 years
Georgia (12) one victory previous 19 years
Holy Cross (12) winless since 1953
Houston (19) winless previous 31 years
Idaho State (11) winless previous 38 years
Iowa (24) two victories previous 16 years
Minnesota (12) one victory previous 18 years
New Mexico State (20) winless previous 22 years
Old Dominion (11) one victory previous 20 years
Oregon State (16) winless previous 33 years
Penn (23) one victory previous 35 years
Pepperdine (13) one victory previous 33 years
Princeton (24) winless previous 17 years
San Francisco (16) appeared once previous 33 years
Santa Clara (11) no appearance previous 19 years
Seattle (11) winless since 1964
Southern Methodist (11) winless previous 27 years
Texas-El Paso (17) winless previous 23 years
Utah State (20) one victory previous 45 years
Weber State (14) winless previous 16 years
Wyoming (15) one victory previous 28 years

State of the Union: How Strong is Current Condition of College Basketball?

First, they came for my Big Gulp and I did nothing. When I take my last gulp and die, I want my pallbearers to be politicians, so the state-of-denial pols can let me down one last time. You're more likely to win Powerball than hear majority of politicians tell the unvarnished truth or exhibit priorities to where they're not more concerned about where transgenders relieve themselves. To "right"-thinking freedom lovers, their long national nightmare with tone-deaf Barry as hooper-in-chief is nearly over as the divisive Audacity of Hype conducted his final state-of-the-union spiel. There is only a year remaining before the self-reliant can stop flying their flags at half-staff while tolerating the West Wing's disconnection from reality.

Stop the world from turning at this time of year because we need to get off as the nanny state wants us to stay home when it actually snows in winter (a/k/a blizzard Jonas). Cold, hard reasons for the deterioration on and off the court also are debatable, but only a "fairness" fool sucking solely on the government boob believes the present state of college basketball is superior to previous generations when men were men before POTUS donned JV mom jeans and couldn't say Islamic terrorists. Let's consider for a second the remote possibility college hoops is at its zenith and our present political leaders are competent. Okay, we're finished! Seriously, how many contemporary college players eventually will be mentioned in the same breath with All-Americans from 25 years ago (Kenny Anderson, Jim Jackson, Larry Johnson, Shaquille O'Neal and Billy Owens in 1990-91), 30 years ago (Steve Alford, Len Bias, Brad Daugherty, Johnny Dawkins, Ron Harper, Danny Manning and David Robinson in 1985-86), 40 years ago (Adrian Dantley, Phil Ford, Bernard King, John Lucas Jr. and Scott May in 1975-76), 50 years ago (Dave Bing, Cazzie Russell and Jimmy Walker in 1965-66) or 60 years ago (Tom Heinsohn, K.C. Jones and Bill Russell in 1955-56)? Let me be clear: A hunched-over Big Russ aided by a walker would be superior to the majority of ordinary pivotmen these days. Contemporary centers are the equivalent of flies to this swatter who also was the leading scorer in 22 of 29 games for San Francisco's undefeated NCAA titlist in 1956.

College basketball needs a Reformation as much as Islam. How could things change in the near future as long as shooting hasn't permanently gone into the witness-protection program? What about spending more quality time focusing on your shooting technique (or classwork for that matter) than designing tattoos? In regard to American sniping denigrated by demented Howard Dean, many "varsity" games these days replete with underclassmen resemble marksmanship in freshmen or JV contests from years gone by. No wonder about half of the projected NBA first-round draft choices playing for U.S. colleges were barely averaging 12 points per game (including freshman flops Cheick Diallo of Kansas and Skal Labissiere of Kentucky). An equally unsightly blemish on the sport is Hall of Fame coaches such as Jim Boeheim, Larry Brown, Rick Pitino and Roy Williams immersed in NCAA scrutiny stemming primarily from scholastic shenanigans linked to a league (ACC) where the "A" certainly doesn't stand for Academics.

Far too many coaches, remaining at schools too long and compromising any link to principles, are unaccountable to anyone on campus, resulting in bringing in "exemption" recruits far below the academic acumen of the average student. Over-hyped coaches, players and teams by today's lame-stream media, not under-inflated game balls, are the principal culprits why this is nothing remotely close to the golden era of college basketball. Long-time coach Jeff Jones' following assessment not all that long ago matches Collegehoopedia.com's view regarding the state of the (college hoops) union: "You've got all these fake superstars. They're superstars because of perceptions, soundbites. They aren't (superstars) because they've won championships. They aren't (superstars) because of performance. Everything is spectacular because that's what shows up in the highlights. But they don't show the sloppy plays and standing around. That's why there aren't as many all-around good players, because people can attain star status without having earned it." Preach it, Brother Basketball Jones!

Winner From Start: Bespectacled Boeheim Boasts Winning Mark Each Season

In the throes of returning from suspension stemming from off-the-court conflict, the most illuminating item about Jim Boeheim ranking among the nation's all-time winningest coaches is the bespectacled "Baron of Upstate New York" has a stunning streak of nothing but winning records in his first 39 seasons with Syracuse. Boeheim's worst worksheet was 16-13 in 1981-82 when the NIT-bound Orange dropped four of its last five outings.

Adolph Rupp never had a losing record in 41 campaigns but did post one breakeven mark with Kentucky (13-13 in 1966-67). When assessing this topic, keep in mind the following mentors among the all-time biggest winners each had multiple non-winning seasons: Phog Allen (four non-winning records), Jim Calhoun (six), Lefty Driesell (four), Lou Henson (eight), Hank Iba (eight), Bob Knight (two), Mike Krzyzewski (four), Lute Olson (three), Dean Smith (two) and Eddie Sutton (two).

Boeheim boasts the best record among active coaches in close contests, winning more than 60% of games decided by fewer than six points. He is atop the list of five major-college coaches in history with winning marks every year in college careers spanning more than 20 years.

Coach Seasons Campaign Closest to Non-Winning Record
Jim Boeheim 39 16-13 (Syracuse in sixth season in 1981-82)
*Jerry Tarkanian 31 16-12 (UNLV in eighth of 19 seasons with Rebels in 1980-81) and 19-15 (Fresno State in seventh of seven seasons with Bulldogs in 2001-02)
John Wooden 29 14-12 (UCLA in 12th of 27 seasons with Bruins in 1959-60)
Lou Carnesecca 24 17-12 (St. John's in 20th season in 1987-88)
Peck Hickman 23 13-12 (Louisville in 14th season in 1957-58)

*Tarkanian also compiled seven more winning records in as many seasons for two community colleges in California, where he won five consecutive state championships after notching a 14-13 mark in 1961-62 at Riverside City College to begin his coaching odyssey.

Paytons' Place: Oregon State Could Boast First A-A Father-Son Combination

If there's enough love for son of "The Glove," Oregon State could become the first university to have a father-son combination each earn All-American status at the same school. Pacific-12 Conference Player of the Year candidate Gary Payton II is the sparkplug striving to boost the Beavers to their first NCAA playoff appearance since 1990, when his Hall of Fame defensive-whiz father was a unanimous first-team All-American before becoming a nine-time NBA All-Pro.

Virginia Tech probably should have been the first school with an in-house A-A duo but the Hokies didn't pursue the son (Davidson sensation Stephen Curry) of their lone NCAA consensus All-American (Dell Curry) in a meaningful fashion, which is a principal reason why they never thrived during Seth Greenberg's coaching stint. The Paytons could join the following alphabetical list of the first nine father-son tandems in an elite A-A family tree:

Father School A-A Year(s) Son School A-A Years(s)
Henry Bibby UCLA 1972 Mike Bibby Arizona 1998
Dell Curry Virginia Tech 1986 Stephen Curry Davidson 2008 and 2009
Bob Ferry St. Louis 1959 Danny Ferry Duke 1988 and 1989
Harvey Grant Oklahoma 1988 Jerian Grant Notre Dame 2015
Stan Love Oregon 1971 Kevin Love UCLA 2008
John Lucas Jr. Maryland 1974 through 1976 John Lucas III Oklahoma State 2004
Scott May Indiana 1975 and 1976 Sean May North Carolina 2005
Doc Rivers Marquette 1982 and 1983 Austin Rivers Duke 2012
Jimmy Walker Providence 1965 through 1967 Jalen Rose Michigan 1994

Men For All Seasons: Which Hooper Will Become Next Great NFL Tight End?

If you need more unassailable evidence proving who are the best team-sport athletes in the world, check out some of the premier tight ends in NFL history (past and present). A striking number of the elite players at that rigorous position are former college basketball players although ESPN (Engineering Social Priorities Network) probably is more interested in positioning Michael Sam for another destination after he was "kissed" adrift by multiple professional squads. In the past, what kind of "picks" do you think imposing Mike Ditka (Pittsburgh) and John Mackey (Syracuse) set back in the day before the Big East Conference was formed? Wouldn't you love to see LeBron James maneuver down the field like Charles Atlas the same way he does when driving down the lane?

Although ex-California hoopster Tony Gonzalez failed to reach the 2013 postseason with the Atlanta Falcons in his quest to finally win a playoff game before he retired, succeeding in the NFL remains a "Battle of the Titans" at the TE position. Former hoopsters Antonio Gates (Kent State) and Jimmy Graham (Miami FL) spark the San Diego Chargers and Seattle Seahawks, respectively. Coming on strong at the same position is fellow ex-college hoopster Julius Thomas, the most sought-after free agent last year after originally being a relatively obscure player for the Denver Broncos until exploding on the scene two seasons ago as their runner-up in touchdowns with 12 and contributing a team-high eight pass receptions in an AFC title-game victory against the New England Patriots.

Thomas, an All-Big Sky Conference hoopster with Portland State, flashed potential as the next game-changing tight end when he caught nine touchdown passes in the Broncos' first five games two seasons ago en route to signing with the Jacksonville Jaguars. A 74-yard TD strike to "It's So Easy" at San Diego in mid-season two years ago illustrated how QB Peyton Manning capitalized on Thomas' athleticism the same way he did ex-hoopster Marcus Pollard (Bradley) with the Indianapolis Colts. Pollard, a J.C. transfer who was the Braves' leading rebounder in 1992-93, caught at least three touchdown passes each of Manning's first seven NFL seasons from 1998 through 2004.

Ditka has a quality successor as an ex-hoopster tight end with the Bears in Martellus Bennett (Texas A&M). A superior athlete to keep an eye on in the future is Texas Southern dual-sport player Derrick Griffin, who originally committed to A&M before aligning with Miami FL and subsequently sitting out and remaining in home state for academic reasons. Griffin, averaging almost 14 ppg and 10 rpg as a redshirt freshman under Tigers coach Mike Davis, boasts the physical credentials to become the latest SWAC multi-sport standout in the mold of Harold Carmichael (Southern), Andrew Glover (Grambling) and Otis Taylor (Prairie View A&M) if he avoids future incidents such as being ejected after punching an Alcorn State hooper. Griffin, 6-7, led TSU with 36 pass receptions, 709 receiving yards and 11 touchdowns before seamlessly swapping uniforms and collecting 19 points and 12 rebounds against Mississippi State plus 20 points and nine boards against Syracuse. Thomas, Bennett and Jordan Cameron of the Miami Dolphins plus ex-UCI hooper Darren Fells of the Arizona Cardinals should keep moving up the following list of Top 25 NFL tight ends who were former college basketball players:

Rank Former College Hoopster Alma Mater Summary of NFL Tight End Career
1. Tony Gonzalez California First tight end in NFL history with 100 touchdowns completed his 17-year career in 2013 with 1,325 receptions for 15,127 yards and 111 TDs. He was 13-time Pro Bowl selection.
2. Antonio Gates Kent State Set an NFL single-season record with 13 TD receptions in 2004 en route to becoming San Diego Chargers' all-time leader for TD catches, receptions and receiving yards.
3. Mike Ditka Pittsburgh Five-time Pro Bowl selection caught 427 passes for 5,812 yards and 43 TDs in 12 seasons.
4. John Mackey Syracuse Hall of Famer caught 331 passes for 5,236 yards and 38 TDs in 10 seasons.
5. Jimmy Graham Miami (Fla.) Led New Orleans Saints in pass receptions in 2012 and 2013. Twice has had streaks of at least four games with more than 100 yards in pass receptions. After only four years, he ranked second all-time among New Orleans Saints' tight ends in receiving.
6. Todd Heap Arizona State Caught 467 passes for 5,492 yards and 41 TDs with the Baltimore Ravens from 2001 through 2010, leading them in receptions in 2002 with 68.
7. Ben Coates Livingstone (N.C.) Established NFL single-season record for most receptions by a TE with 96 in 1994.
8. Marcus Pollard Bradley Finished his 13-year career with 349 receptions for 4,280 yards and 40 TDs (long of 86 yards in 2001 midway through stint as starter for the Indianapolis Colts).
9. Pete Metzelaars Wabash (Ind.) Played in more games at TE than any player in NFL history when he retired. Led the Buffalo Bills with 68 receptions in 1993.
10. Julius Thomas Portland State Began 2014 campaign with a bang by catching three first-half TD passes in season opener from Peyton Manning en route to nine TDs in first five games for the Denver Broncos. Thomas, Denver's runner-up with 12 TD receptions the previous year, went on to sign as a high-value free agent with the Jacksonville Jaguars.
11. Martellus Bennett Texas A&M Caught 348 passes for 3,586 yards and 23 TDs with the Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants and Chicago Bears in first eight years from 2008 through 2015.
12. Joe Senser West Chester State (Pa.) Caught 165 passes for 1,822 yards and 16 TDs in four-year career with the Minnesota Vikings in early 1980s.
13. Andrew Glover Grambling State Caught at least one TD pass each of his 10 pro seasons from 1991 through 2000, finishing with 208 receptions for 2,478 yards and 24 TDs.
14. Rich McGeorge Elon (N.C.) Caught 175 passes for 2,370 yards and 13 TDs with the Green Bay Packers in nine years from 1970 through 1978.
15. Rickey Dudley Ohio State Scored 29 TDs in five seasons with the Oakland Raiders before hooking on with two other teams.
16. Derrick Ramsey Kentucky Caught 188 passes for 2,364 yards and 21 TDs with three different teams from 1978 to 1987.
17. Jordan Cameron BYU/Southern California Blossomed in third year with Cleveland Browns in 2013, catching 80 passes for 917 yards and seven TDs (three in game at Minnesota). He had three contests with at least nine receptions.
18. Reuben Gant Oklahoma State Caught 127 passes for 1,850 yards and 15 TDs with the Buffalo Bills in seven seasons from 1974 through 1980.
19. Bob Windsor Kentucky Caught 185 passes for 2,307 yards and 14 TDs with the San Francisco 49ers and New England Patriots in nine years from 1967 through 1975.
20. Keith McKeller Jacksonville State (Ala.) Caught 124 passes for 1,464 yards and 11 TDs with the Buffalo Bills in seven years from 1987 through 1993.
21. Greg Latta Morgan State (Md.) Caught 90 passes for 1,081 yards and seven TDs with the Chicago Bears in five years from 1975 through 1979.
22. Pat Richter Wisconsin Caught 99 passes for 1,315 yards and 14 TDs in nine seasons for the Washington Redskins after being their first-round pick in 1962.
23. Jeff King Virginia Tech Registered 93 receptions for 802 yards and seven TDs with the Carolina Panthers and Arizona Cardinals in first seven years from 2006 through 2012.
24. Ulysses Norris Georgia Best season of seven-year career was in 1983 when he had seven TDs with the Detroit Lions.
T25. Dee Mackey East Texas State Caught 94 passes for 1,352 yards and eight TDs in six NFL/AFL seasons from 1960 through 1965.
T25. Al Dixon Iowa State Caught 84 passes for 1,248 yards and eight TDs with four different teams from 1977 through 1984.

History 101: Coach Cal Failed to Teach Big Blue Scholars Vital Hoop Lesson

"History is philosophy teaching by examples." - Thucydides, the History of the Peloponnesian War

John Calipari has time to mingle with Jay Z, seek a 10-year, $120-million contract to possibly return to the NBA, spitefully remind us platoon-dissenter Dick Vitale got the ziggy (albeit comparable to his first NBA foray), develop a first-round philosophy regarding "Succeed and Proceed" scholars (not "One and Done"), tersely defend predecessor Rick Pitino amid Louisville's sex scandal and create plausible denials (including settling lawsuit by disgruntled season-ticket holders). Of course, sycophants believe he bears zero responsibility for two of his previous outposts (Massachusetts and Memphis) vacating Final Four participation (unless the NCAA performs a Joe Paterno-like reinstatement). But Coach Cal doesn't seem to have time to teach his Kentucky charges a firsthand lesson about honoring history. If he isn't going to capitalize on an opportunity to significantly enhance their learning experience, just let them attend free community college.

Whether or not it was featured on MLK Day, a significant non-conference matchup failed to materialize this season. UK, exhibiting all of the diplomatic dignity of reporting-for-duty John Kerry in a French sing-along with James Taylor, reportedly backed out of a proposed game with the UTEP Miners slated for Cole Field House at the University of Maryland. This wasn't exactly the equivalent of Sean Penn hooking up with El Chapo. The rematch would have celebrated the 50th anniversary of the historic NCAA Tournament championship game between the Wildcats and the school previously known as Texas Western. In 1966, Don Haskins-coached Texas Western, starting five black players (three of them 6-1 or shorter), won the national title, 72-65, in College Park, Md., against an all-white UK lineup directed by Adolph Rupp.

In the aftermath of UTEP's defining-moment on-court performance, major Southern schools started modifying their unwritten bigoted directives by recruiting more African-American players. Center Tom Payne broke the color barrier at UK five seasons later in 1970-71 when he was an All-SEC first-team selection in his only varsity season with the Wildcats.

The '66 title tilt inspired the film Glory Road. A significant history lesson is shunned while Big Blue Nation continues to glory in overdosing on cupcakes in pre-conference competition at home. Since Calipari became UK bench boss in 2009-10, the Wildcats have picked on the following alphabetical list of 39 patsies (several of them more than once) combining to go winless in the NCAA playoffs thus far in the 21st Century: Albany, Austin Peay, Belmont, Boise State, Boston University, Buffalo, Chattanooga, Columbia, Coppin State, Drexel, East Tennessee State, Eastern Kentucky, Eastern Michigan, Grand Canyon, Hartford, Illinois State, Lafayette, Lamar, Lipscomb, Long Beach State, Long Island, Loyola (Md.), Marist, Marshall, Miami (Ohio), Mississippi Valley State, Montana State, NJIT, Northern Kentucky, Penn, Portland, Radford, Rider, Robert Morris, Sam Houston State, Samford, Texas-Arlington, UALR and Wright State. But yet there's no room for a trip down memory lane with a neutral-court contest against Texas-El Paso, which hasn't won an NCAA tourney game since 1992.

Unless several players mature in a big hurry, Kentucky also won't make a trip close to Maryland at the White House again to be honored as NCAA titlist. At least smug UK's snubbing of UTEP makes more sense than pen-and-phone POTUS exhibiting an absence of priorities repeatedly meeting behind closed doors with Al "Not So" Sharpton (hopefully tutoring him on H&R Block tax bracket rather than community organizing NCAA bracket for ESPN), fighting global warming more than Islamic terrorist warning, supporting shiftless Muslim refugees more than Bible-clinging Methodists (a/k/a Christians) plus granting a forum to YouTube goofball Glozell Green rather than Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Calipari has several books with his name as author - Refuse to Lose, Bouncing Back and Players First. Perhaps he can issue a Commonwealth executive order and provide several modified hoop history volumes - Refuse to Play, Bouncing Back (Except to 1966) and Me-Myself-and-I Always Come First.

Boys Gone Hield: Single-Game Scoring Records By Individual Opponents

Where are the profuse apologies from so-called recruiting experts for failing to include Oklahoma's Buddy Hield among the consensus top 100 high school recruits in 2012? He is the fourth consecutive national player of the year overlooked by the recruiting wizards who can't seem to comprehend upside potential or room for growth.

When Hield tallied 46 points at Kansas, the eruption triggered research regarding which individual opponent has the highest single-game scoring outburst against each major university. But Hield going wild fell two points shy of matching the individual record against KU (48 by Jackson State's Lindsey Hunter in 1992-93 before his 17-year NBA career).

Furman's Darrell Floyd and Frank Selvy collaborated for a total of nine scoring records in this category that have stood since the mid-1950s. Such scorched-earth outputs have been difficult to come by thus far in the 21st Century (unofficially seven uprisings). Many schools don't keep track of a standard perhaps reflecting a mite negatively upon them but following is what CollegeHoopedia.com unearthed on the topic:

Scorched School Single-Game Record Holder Opponent Points Date
Air Force Adrian Dantley Notre Dame 49 2-10-75
Alabama Pete Maravich Louisiana State 69 1-7-70
Appalachian State Bob McCurdy Richmond 53 2-26-75
Arizona Bob Beckel Air Force 50 2-29-59
Arizona State Casey Jacobsen Stanford 49 1-31-82
Arkansas Oscar Robertson Cincinnati 56 3-15-58
Auburn Pete Maravich Louisiana State 55 1-3-68
Austin Peay Tom Chilton East Tennessee State 52 2-5-61
Austin Peay Marvin Barnes Providence 52 12-15-73
Ball State Doug Collins Illinois State 55 1-15-72
Baylor Johnny Neumann Mississippi 60 12-29-70
Bradley Archie Tullos Detroit 49 2-22-88
Brigham Young Billy McGill Utah 60 2-24-62
Brown Jim Barton Dartmouth 48 2-7-87
Bucknell Daren Queenan Lehigh 49 3-7-87
Butler Austin Carr Notre Dame 50 2-23-70
California Eddie House Arizona State 61 1-8-00
UC Irvine Hersey Hawkins Bradley 51 12-19-87
Canisius Calvin Murphy Niagara 48 1-13-68
Chicago State Ryan Toolson Utah Valley 63 1-29-09
Cincinnati Frank Selvy Furman 50 12-31-53
The Citadel Darrell Floyd Furman 62 1-14-56
Clemson Darrell Floyd Furman 56 2-24-55
Cleveland State Ed McFarland Slippery Rock (Pa.) 52 2-15-61
Colgate Jack Foley Holy Cross 55 3-5-60
Colorado Wilt Chamberlain Kansas 45 12-29-56
Colorado State Marvin Johnson New Mexico 50 3-2-78
Connecticut Jack Foley Holy Cross 56 2-17-62
Creighton* Clarence "Bevo" Francis Rio Grande (Ohio) 49 1-23-54
Davidson Frank Selvy Furman 50 2-26-54
Dayton Scott Haffner Evansville 65 2-18-89
Delaware Phil D'Arrigo Haverford (Pa.) 52 2-18-56
Detroit Hersey Hawkins Bradley 63 2-22-88
Drake Steve Bracey Tulsa 47 1-8-72
Drexel Eddie Benton Vermont 54 1-29-94
Duke Ernie Beck Pennsylvania 47 12-30-52
Duquesne Pete Maravich Louisiana State 53 12-30-68
East Carolina Ray Simpson Furman 45 2-5-72
East Carolina Randy Culpepper Texas-El Paso 45 2-13-10
Fairfield Elvin Hayes Houston 48 1-29-68
Florida Chris Jackson Louisiana State 53 12-10-88
Florida International Kevin Bradshaw U.S. International 59 1-14-91
Fordham Kevin Houston Army 53 2-28-87
Fresno State Askia Jones Kansas State 62 3-24-94
Furman Jay Handlan Washington & Lee (Va.) 66 2-17-51
George Mason Bobby Aguirre Macalester (Minn.) 53 11-29-94
George Washington Allan Bristow Virginia Tech 52 2-21-73
Georgetown John Austin Boston College 49 2-21-64
Georgia Pete Maravich Louisiana State 58 3-8-69
Georgia Southern James "Fly" Williams Austin Peay 51 12-30-72
Georgia Tech Frank Selvy Furman 51 2-11-54
Gonzaga Orlando Lightfoot Idaho 50 12-21-93
Harvard Bill Bradley Princeton 51 2-15-65
Hawaii Marshall Rogers Pan American 47 2-27-76
Idaho Bob Houbregs Washington 49 1-10-53
Idaho State Terrell Lowery Loyola Marymount 48 12-1-90
Illinois Von McDade Wisconsin-Milwaukee 50 12-3-90
Illinois State Richie Fuqua Oral Roberts 49 2-14-73
Iowa Rick Mount Purdue 61 2-28-70
Iowa State John Douglas Kansas 46 2-16-77
Iowa State Wayman Tisdale Oklahoma 46 2-5-83
Jacksonville Rick Barry Miami (Fla.) 52 1963-64
James Madison David Robinson Navy 45 1-10-87
Kansas Lindsey Hunter Jackson State 48 12-27-92
Kansas State Doremus Bennerman Siena 51 3-30-94
Kent State* Dave Jamerson Ohio University 52 2-24-90
Kentucky Pete Maravich Louisiana State 64 2-21-70
Lamar Dwight "Bo" Lamar Southwestern Louisiana 51 2-17-72
La Salle Calvin Murphy Niagara 52 12-16-67
Long Beach State Raymond Lewis Cal State Los Angeles 53 2-23-73
Long Island Izett Buchanan Marist 51 2-12-94
Louisiana-Lafayette Jimmy Leach Northwestern State 54 2-27-59
Louisiana-Monroe Dwight "Bo" Lamar Southwestern Louisiana 62 2-25-71
Louisiana State Johnny Neumann Mississippi 63 1-30-71
Louisiana Tech Dwight "Bo" Lamar Southwestern Louisiana 51 2-14-72
Louisville Joel Curbelo American (Puerto Rico) 47 11-24-95
Loyola of Chicago Donald Smith Dayton 52 2-3-73
Loyola of Chicago Kareem Townes La Salle 52 2-4-95
Loyola Marymount Kevin Bradshaw U.S. International 72 1-5-91
Manhattan Tom Schwester St. Peter's 53 2-28-70
Marquette Elvin Hayes Houston 45 12-29-67
Massachusetts Frank McLaughlin New Hampshire 44 1-14-56
Memphis Bill Walton UCLA 44 3-26-73
Mercer Frank Selvy Furman 63 2-11-53
Miami (Fla.) Danny Ferry Duke 58 12-10-88
Michigan Dave Schellhase Purdue 57 2-19-66
Michigan State Jimmy Rayl Indiana 56 2-23-63
Middle Tennessee State Clem Haskins Western Kentucky 55 1-30-65
Milwaukee Bob Portman Creighton 51 12-16-67
Minnesota Jimmy Rayl Indiana 56 1-27-62
Mississippi Chris Jackson Louisiana State 55 3-4-89
Mississippi State Pete Maravich Louisiana State 58 12-22-67
Missouri Isaac "Bud" Stallworth Kansas 50 2-26-72
Missouri State Harold Robertson Lincoln (Mo.) 45 1-31-76
Montana Billy McGill Utah 53 2-10-62
Morehead State Darrell Floyd Furman 67 1-22-55
Navy Rob Feaster Holy Cross 46 2-19-94
Nebraska Wilt Chamberlain Kansas 46 2-8-58
Nebraska Joe Scott Missouri 46 3-6-61
Nebraska George Stone Marshall 46 3-13-67
Nevada William "Bird" Averitt Pepperdine 57 1-6-73
New Orleans Doug Collins Illinois State 57 1-3-73
Nicholls State Glynn Saulters Northeast Louisiana 51 2-1-68
North Carolina Dick Groat Duke 48 2-29-52
North Carolina A&T Anthony Roberts Oral Roberts 66 2-19-77
North Carolina State John Mengelt Auburn 45 12-5-70
North Texas Oscar Robertson Cincinnati 62 2-6-60
Northern Arizona Willie Humes Idaho State 51 1-15-71
Northern Illinois Robert "Bubbles" Hawkins Illinois State 58 2-20-74
Northwestern Wilt Chamberlain Kansas 52 12-5-56
Notre Dame Marshon Brooks Providence 52 2-23-11
Ohio University Austin Carr Notre Dame 61 3-7-70
Ohio State Don Schlundt Indiana 47 1-18-54
Ohio State Don Schlundt Indiana 47 3-5-55
Oklahoma State Dwight "Bo" Lamar Southwestern Louisiana 46 12-19-70
Oklahoma State Donnie Boyce Colorado 46 3-5-94
Old Dominion Charles McKinney Norfolk State 54 2-23-70
Oral Roberts Michael Watson Missouri-Kansas City 54 2-22-03
Oregon Anthony Roberts Oral Roberts 65 3-9-77
Oregon State Greg "Bo" Kimble Loyola Marymount 53 12-9-89
Pacific Raymond Lewis Cal State Los Angeles 43 3-2-73
Penn State Eric Riggins Rutgers 51 2-21-87
Pepperdine Carlos "Bud" Ogden Santa Clara 55 3-3-67
Pittsburgh Eric Murdock Providence 48 1-23-91
Portland Elgin Baylor Seattle 60 1-30-58
Portland State Mike Olliver Lamar 50 1-12-80
Providence Tom Stith St. Bonaventure 46 2-9-60
Purdue Bob Lanier St. Bonaventure 50 12-30-69
Rhode Island George Mikan DePaul 53 3-21-45
Rice Kurt Thomas Texas Christian 43 1-22-95
Rice Shane Lungwitz Dallas 43 12-30-03
Robert Morris Steve Stielper James Madison 51 1-27-79
Rutgers Tom Garrick Rhode Island 50 3-7-88
Saint Francis (Pa.) Ron Guziak Duquesne 50 3-6-68
St. John's Pete Maravich Louisiana State 53 12-29-69
Saint Joseph's Greg "Bo" Kimble Loyola Marymount 54 1-4-90
Saint Louis Bob Kurland Oklahoma A&M 58 2-22-46
Saint Mary's Jim McCloskey Loyola Marymount 49 1-4-80
Saint Peter's Bob Zawoluk St. John's 65 3-3-50
Sam Houston State Don Boldenbuck Houston 50 2-17-55
San Jose State Lee Nailon Texas Christian 44 2-7-98
Santa Clara Nick Galis Seton Hall 48 12-22-78
Seton Hall Oscar Robertson Cincinnati 56 1-9-58
South Carolina Frank Selvy Furman 48 1-8-54
Southern California Gary Payton Oregon State 58 2-22-90
Southern Illinois Rick Whitlow Illinois State 51 1-4-75
Southern Methodist Hal Lear Temple 48 3-23-56
Southern Mississippi Johnny Neumann Mississippi 57 12-15-70
Syracuse Calvin Murphy Niagara 68 12-7-68
Temple Aaric Murray Texas Southern 48 12-18-13
Tennessee Jodie Meeks Kentucky 54 1-13-09
Tennessee Tech Tilman Bevely Youngstown State 55 1-26-87
Texas Gene Phillips Southern Methodist 51 3-2-71
Texas Chris Jackson Louisiana State 51 1-2-90
Texas A&M Martin Terry Arkansas 46 1-22-72
Texas Christian Austin Carr Notre Dame 52 3-13-71
Texas-San Antonio Wayman Tisdale Oklahoma 61 12-28-83
Towson Derell Thompson Maryland-Baltimore County 43 2-15-92
Tulane Pete Maravich Louisiana State 66 2-10-69
Tulsa Bruce King Pan American 49 12-28-74
UAB Wesley Person Auburn 44 12-16-93
UCLA Austin Carr Notre Dame 46 1-23-71
UNLV Freeman Williams Portland State 50 2-18-78
Utah State John Coughran California 47 1-31-72
Valparaiso Elvin Hayes Houston 62 2-24-68
Vanderbilt Pete Maravich Louisiana State 61 12-11-69
Virginia Len Chappell Wake Forest 50 2-12-62
Virginia Tech Elvin Hayes Houston 51 3-2-68
Washington John Block Southern California 45 2-11-66
Washington State Lew Alcindor UCLA 61 2-25-67
Weber State Dave Wagnon Idaho State 47 2-25-66
Western Kentucky Ken Durrett La Salle 45 1-16-71
Western Michigan Howard Komives Bowling Green State 49 1-11-64
West Virginia Austin Carr Notre Dame 55 2-21-70
Wichita State Bill Bradley Princeton 58 3-30-65
Wisconsin Terry Dischinger Purdue 50 1-27-62
Wofford Frank Selvy Furman 58 2-23-54
Wright State Tommie Johnson Central Michigan 53 12-22-87
Wyoming Bennie Lennox Texas A&M 53 12-28-63
Yale Rick Barry Miami (Fla.) 45 12-28-64

*Unofficial.

Changing in Midstream: Can Gard Duplicate Soderberg's Success at Wisconsin?

What happens to a team when a coach doesn't last half a season? A total of 28 schools in the previous 19 seasons had a coach relieved of his duties, retire or pass away after the start of the season but before the second half of the campaign. Wisconsin is one of the few universities to catch lightning in a bottle after a change in midstream but the odds are against Bo Ryan's replacement (Greg Gard) compiling a winning mark. Three years ago, Western Kentucky's Ray Harper (11-8) became only the seventh "successor" coach piloting a club more than half of a campaign since the NCAA playoffs expanded to at least 64 entrants in 1985 to post a winning record the remainder of the season. He joined Jeff Dittman (10-8 with Sam Houston State in 1988-89), Dave Fehte (9-8 with Saint Mary's in 1990-91), Max Good (13-9 with UNLV in 2000-01), Mike Perry (10-9 with Georgia State in 2002-03), Brad Soderberg (16-10 with Wisconsin in 2000-01) and Derek Waugh (14-8 with Stetson in 2000-01). Harper and Soderberg guided the squads they inherited to an NCAA playoff berth.

At the power-conference level, John Brady (Louisiana State in 2007-08), Lou Campanelli (California in 1992-93), Gale Catlett (West Virginia in 2001-02), Jim Dutcher (Minnesota in 1985-86), Dennis Felton (Georgia in 2008-09), Larry Glass (Northwestern in 1968-69), Mark Gottfried (Alabama in 2008-09), Joe Harrington (Colorado in 1995-96), Bob Knight (Texas Tech in 2007-08), Ward "Piggy" Lambert (Purdue in 1945-46), Shelby Metcalf (Texas A&M in 1989-90), Kevin O'Neill (Southern California in 2012-13), Charlie Parker (Southern California in 1995-96), Steve Patterson (Arizona State in 1988-89) and Quin Snyder (Missouri in 2005-06) comprise the list of coaches who lasted more than half of a specific season before their tenures ended for one reason or another.

Following is an alphabetical list of universities in the pre-midseason coaching turnover category since the start of national postseason competition and the records of their coaches that season:

Division I School Season Successor/Interim (Record) Departing Coach (Record)
Appalachian State 1974-75 Russ Bergman (2-12) Peter "Press" Maravich (1-11)
Boise State 1972-73 Doran "Bus" Connor (6-7) Murray Satterfield (5-8)
Brigham Young 1996-97 Tony Ingle (1-25) Roger Reid (1-6)
Buffalo 1999-00 Reggie Witherspoon (3-20) Tim Cohane (2-3)
Cal Poly 2000-01 Kevin Bromley (3-12) Jeff Schneider (5-7)
Centenary 1977-78 Tommy Canterbury (6-9) Riley Wallace (4-8)
Central Connecticut State 1987-88 C.J. Jones (8-15) Bill Detrick (2-3)
Chicago State 1996-97 Phil Gary (4-17) Craig Hodges (0-6)
The Citadel 1939-40 Ben Parker (4-5) Absalon "Rock" Norman (4-4)
Colgate 1997-98 Paul Aiello (10-12) Jack Bruen (0-6)
Connecticut 1946-47 Hugh Greer (12-0) Blair Gullion (4-2)
Connecticut 1962-63 George Wigton (11-4) Hugh Greer (7-3)
Dartmouth 1966-67 Dave Gavitt (2-15) Alvin "Doggie" Julian (5-2)
Dartmouth 2009-10 Mark Graupe (2-13) Terry Dunn (3-10)
Denver 1948-49 Hoyt Brawner (11-6) Ellison Ketchum (6-9)
DePaul 2009-10 Tracy Webster (1-15) Jerry Wainwright (7-8)
Detroit 1987-88 John Mulroy (7-20) Don Sicko (0-3)
Detroit 2007-08 Kevin Mondro (3-13) Perry Watson (4-10)
Eastern Kentucky 1961-62 Jim Baechtold (6-3) Paul McBrayer (4-3)
Eastern Michigan 1985-86 Ben Braun (5-10) Jim Boyce (4-8)
Fordham 2009-10 Jared Grasso (1-22) Dereck Whittenburg (1-4)
Georgetown 1998-99 Craig Esherick (8-10) John Thompson Jr. (7-6)
Georgia State 1984-85 Mark Slonaker (1-24) Tom Pugliese (1-2)
Georgia State 2002-03 Mike Perry (10-9) Charles "Lefty" Driesell (4-6)
Howard 1999-00 Billy Coward (1-18) Kirk Saulny (0-9)
Idaho State 1967-68 Dan Miller (10-12) Claude Retherford (3-1)
Idaho State 2011-12 Deane Martin (7-13) Joe O'Brien (2-8)
Iowa 1949-50 Frank "Bucky" O'Connor (6-5) Lawrence "Pops" Harrison (9-2)
Jacksonville 1996-97 Buster Harvey (5-17) George Scholz (0-6)
Kent State 1977-78 Mike Boyd (5-11) Rex Hughes (1-10)
Long Island 2001-02 Ron Brown (5-13) Ray Martin (0-9)
Louisville 1970-71 Howard Stacey (12-8) John Dromo (8-1)
Monmouth 1986-87 Ron Krayl (7-13) Ron Kornegay (1-6)
UNC Greensboro 2011-12 Wes Miller (11-11) Mike Dement (2-8)
North Carolina State 1964-65 Peter "Press" Maravich (20-4) Everett Case (1-1)
Northern Illinois 2000-01 Andy Greer (4-16) Brian Hammel (1-6)
Oral Roberts 1982-83 Dick Acres (11-9) Ken Hayes (3-5)
Penn 2009-10 Jerome Allen (6-15) Glen Miller (0-7)
Princeton 1944-45 Leonard Hattinger (5-8) William Logan (2-4)
Princeton 1960-61 Jake McCandless (9-6) Franklin "Cappy" Cappon (9-2)
St. John's 2003-04 Kevin Clark (4-17) Mike Jarvis (2-4)
Saint Mary's 1990-91 Dave Fehte (9-8) Paul Landreaux (4-9)
Sam Houston State 1988-89 Jeff Dittman (10-8) Gary Moss (2-8)
San Francisco 1970-71 Bob Gaillard (10-12) Phil Vukicevich (0-4)
San Francisco 2007-08 Eddie Sutton (6-13) Jessie Evans (4-8)
South Alabama 1994-95 Judas Prada (8-15) Ronnie Arrow (1-3)
South Carolina 1942-43 Rex Enright (10-6) Frank Johnson (2-0)
South Florida 1979-80 Gordon Gibbons (2-13) Hunter "Chip" Conner (4-8)
Southeast Missouri State 2008-09 Zac Roman (0-18) Scott Edgar (3-9)
Southeastern Louisiana 1987-88 Leo McClure (4-12) Newton Chelette (3-9)
Southern California 2004-05 Jim Saia (11-15) Henry Bibby (2-2)
Stetson 2000-01 Derek Waugh (14-8) Murray Arnold (4-4)
Tennessee State 1984-85 Ed Meyers (6-13) Ed Martin (3-6)
Tennessee State 2002-03 Hosea Lewis/Teresa Phillips (0-20) Nolan Richardson III (2-5)
Tennessee Tech 1988-89 Frank Harrell (8-17) Tom Deaton (2-3)
Tulsa 2004-05 Alvin "Pooh" Williamson (7-15) John Phillips (2-5)
UNLV 2000-01 Max Good (13-9) Bill Bayno (3-4)
Western Kentucky 2011-12 Ray Harper (11-8) Ken McDonald (5-11)
Wisconsin 2000-01 Brad Soderberg (16-10) Dick Bennett (2-1)
Wisconsin 2015-16 Greg Gard (TBD) William "Bo" Ryan (7-5)

Father Knows Best: Will Tinkles Join List of Premier Father-Son Tandems?

Due to voter deficiencies condescendingly looking down upon mid-major standouts, Georgia State's R.J. Hunter failed to become an All-American last season; let alone national player of the year such as (Creighton's Doug McDermott) two campaigns ago. But coupled with his coach/father Ron, the Hunters buttressed their case as one of the all-time top 10 father-son, coach-player combinations in NCAA history.

The top three father-son duos in 2015-16 appear to be at Oregon State (coach Wayne Tinkle and son Tres), Southern LA (coach Roman Banks and son Tre'len) and UCLA (coach Steve Alford and son Bryce). If the Tinkles help eventually boost the Beavers back to national prominence, they stand the best chance of cracking the following all-time Top 10 of sons playing under their dad at the same school:

Rank Coach/Father School(s) Record Player/Son Pos. Son's Career Summary Under Father
1. Greg McDermott Creighton 107-38 Doug McDermott F Doug was three-time NCAA first-Team All-American from 2011-12 through 2013-14 after originally signing with old MVC rival Northern Iowa. As a sophomore and junior, he was MVC MVP before earning same award when BlueJays moved to the Big East Conference.
2. Press Maravich Louisiana State 49-35 Pete Maravich G Pete, a three-time unanimous NCAA first-team All-American, became the NCAA's career record holder for total points (3,667 in three years from 1967-68 through 1969-70) and scoring average (44.2 ppg). In his senior season, the Tigers had their highest SEC finish (2nd) and only postseason tournament appearance (NIT) in a 24-year span from 1955 through 1978.
3. Wade Houston Tennessee 60-68 Allan Houston G Allan, a four-time All-SEC first-team selection, averaged more than 20 ppg each of his four seasons en route to becoming the Volunteers' all-time leading scorer (2,801 points from 1989-90 through 1992-93). They participated in the NIT in his freshman and junior campaigns.
4. Bill Berry San Jose State 46-41 Ricky Berry G-F Ricky, after playing his freshman season with Oregon State, averaged 21 ppg, 5.6 rpg and 3.2 apg for the Spartans from 1985-86 through 1987-88 en route to becoming their all-time leading scorer (1,767 points). He was a three-time All-Big West Conference first-team selection.
5. Dick Acres Oral Roberts 47-34 Mark Acres C Dick coached his sons (including Jeff) from midway through the 1982-83 campaign through 1984-85. Mark, a three-time All-Midwestern City Conference first-team selection, averaged 18.5 ppg and 9.6 rpg and shot 56.4% from the floor. Mark was a two-time Midwestern City MVP who led the Titans in scoring and rebounding all four seasons. ORU participated in the 1984 NCAA Tournament.
6. Homer Drew Valparaiso 88-36 Bryce Drew G Bryce, who averaged 17.7 ppg, 5.2 apg and 1.5 spg from 1994-95 through 1997-98 en route to becoming the school's all-time leader in scoring and assists, was the Mid-Continent Conference MVP his last two seasons. The Crusaders won the MCC regular-season and league tournament championships all four years.
7. Dick Bennett Wisconsin-Green Bay 87-34 Tony Bennett G Tony, a three-time All-Mid-Continent Conference first-team selection, averaged 19.4 ppg and 5.1 apg from 1988-89 through 1991-92, finishing as UWGB's all-time leading scorer (2,285 points). He holds the NCAA career record for highest three-point field-goal percentage (.497/minimum of 200 made) and won the Frances Pomeroy Award his senior year as the nation's top player shorter than six feet tall. The Phoenix won the 1991 MCC Tournament and 1992 regular-season title.
8. Ron Hunter Georgia State 65-35 R.J. Hunter G R.J. became the most prolific freshman scorer in Panthers history, averaging 17 ppg in 2012-13. Finished his three-year career with averages of 18.4 ppg and 4.8 rpg before declaring early for the NBA draft.
9. Sonny Allen SMU/Nevada-Reno 64-48 Billy Allen G Billy averaged 13.1 ppg and 8.2 apg in 1981-82 and 1982-83 after transferring from SMU. The two-time All-Big Sky Conference selection set a UNR single-season record with 8.6 apg as a junior when he was a second-team choice before moving up to first-team status the next year. Billy led the SWC in assists as a freshman in 1978-79 (9 apg) and sophomore in 1979-80 (9.1 apg). He also paced the Mustangs in free-throw percentage both years. In his sophomore season, SMU tied its highest win total (16) in a 15-year span from 1967-68 through 1981-82.
T10. Jerry Tarkanian UNLV 77-19 Danny Tarkanian G Danny led the Rebels in assists and steals each of his three seasons from 1981-82 through 1983-84 after transferring from Dixie Junior College (Utah). The All-Pacific Coast Athletic Association second-team selection finished second in the nation with 8.5 apg as a senior. UNLV participated in the NIT in 1982 and NCAA Tournament in 1983 and 1984. The Rebels captured the PCAA regular-season championship in 1983 and 1984.
T10. Fred A. Enke Arizona 60-18 Fred W. Enke G Fred W., a future NFL quarterback, was a three-time All-Border Conference first-team selection from 1945-46 through 1947-48. The Wildcats participated in the 1946 NIT after their first of three consecutive league championships.

Sharing Wealth: Niang Bound to Become A-A Under Two Different Coaches

Georges Niang is Gorgeous Georges to first-year Iowa State coach Steve Prohm as Niang appears bound to become a two-time All-American after Fred Hoiberg abandoned mayoral duties in Ames for old pro stomping grounds as bench boss for the NBA's Chicago Bulls. An average of 50 schools annually have new mentors but the chances are rare for a coach such as Prohm to inherit an All-American in an era of players departing early for the NBA if they generate any success at all. Prior to Niang, only two players since Navy's David Robinson (A-A center in 1986 and 1987) were All-Americans for two different coaches - North Carolina's Antawn Jamison (Dean Smith and Bill Guthridge in 1997 and 1998) and Notre Dame's Troy Murphy (Matt Doherty and Mike Brey in 2000 and 2001).

Yale's Tony Lavelli is the only player in NCAA history to become a major-college All-American under three different head coaches (Red Rolfe in 1946, Ivy Williamson in 1947 and Howard Hobson in 1948 and 1949). Ozzie Cowles and Buster Sheary were factors on both sides of the coaching an All-American equation (developing and inheriting). John Dromo had two A-As delivered to him on a silver platter at Louisville (Wes Unseld in 1968 and Butch Beard in 1969). Following is an alphabetical list of major-college players earning All-American accolades at the same DI school under multiple mentors:

Multiple-Year A-A Player DI School Coaches and All-American Seasons
Ernie Andres Indiana Everett Dean (1938) and Branch McCracken (1939)
Gene Banks Duke Bill E. Foster (1979) and Mike Krzyzewski (1981)
Alfred "Butch" Beard Louisville Peck Hickman (1967) and John Dromo (1969)
Larry Bird Indiana State Bob King (1977 and 1978) and Bill Hodges (1979)
Charley Brown Seattle John Castellani (1958) and Vince Cazzetta (1959)
Bill Cartwright San Francisco Bob Gaillard (1977 and 1978) and Dan Belluomini (1979)
Kresimir Cosic Brigham Young Stan Watts (1972) and Glenn Potter (1973)
Bob Cousy Holy Cross Doggie Julian (1948) and Buster Sheary (1949 and 1950)
John "Hook" Dillon North Carolina Ben Carnevale (1946) and Tom Scott (1947)
Rod Foster UCLA Larry Farmer (1981) and Larry Brown (1983)
Artis Gilmore Jacksonville Joe Williams (1970) and Tom Wasdin (1971)
Jack Gray Texas Ed Olle (1934) and Marty Kanow (1935)
Tom Heinsohn Holy Cross Buster Sheary (1955) and Roy Leenig (1956)
Antawn Jamison North Carolina Dean Smith (1997) and Bill Guthridge (1998)
Ron Johnson Minnesota Ozzie Cowles (1959) and John Kundla (1960)
Leo Klier Notre Dame Moose Krause (1944) and Elmer Ripley (1946)
Tony Lavelli Yale Red Rolfe (1946), Ivy Williamson (1947) and Howard Hobson (1948 and 1949)
Alfred "Butch" Lee Marquette Al McGuire (1977) and Hank Raymonds (1978)
Mike Maloy Davidson Lefty Driesell (1968 and 1969) and Terry Holland (1970)
Dick McGuire St. John's Joe Lapchick (1947) and Frank McGuire (1949)
Jim McIntyre Minnesota Dave McMillan (1948) and Ozzie Cowles (1949)
Calvin Murphy Niagara Jim Maloney (1968) and Frank Layden (1969 and 1970)
Troy Murphy Notre Dame Matt Doherty (2000) and Mike Brey (2001)
Eddie Phillips Alabama C.M. Newton (1980) and Wimp Sanderson (1982)
David Robinson Navy Paul Evans (1986) and Pete Herrmann (1987)
Dave Schellhase Purdue Ray Eddy (1965) and George King (1966)
Dave Stallworth Wichita Ralph Miller (1963 and 1964) and Gary Thompson (1965)
Wes Unseld Louisville Peck Hickman (1966 and 1967) and John Dromo (1968)
Kenny Walker Kentucky Joe B. Hall (1985) and Eddie Sutton (1986)
Bryan Warrick St. Joseph's Jim Lynam (1981) and Jim Boyle (1982)
Richard Washington UCLA John Wooden (1975) and Gene Bartow (1976)

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