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Edition of USA college basketball tournament From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1973 NCAA University Division basketball tournament involved 25 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA University Division (now Division I, created later in 1973) college basketball. It began on Saturday, March 10, and ended with the championship game on Monday, March 26, in St. Louis, Missouri. A total of 29 games were played, including a third-place game in each region and a national third-place game.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2022) |
Teams | 25 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Finals site | St. Louis Arena St. Louis, Missouri | ||||
Champions | UCLA Bruins (9th title, 9th title game, 10th Final Four) | ||||
Runner-up | Memphis State Tigers (1st title game, 1st Final Four) | ||||
Semifinalists |
| ||||
Winning coach | John Wooden (9th title) | ||||
MOP | Bill Walton (UCLA) | ||||
Attendance | 163,160 | ||||
Top scorer | Ernie DiGregorio (Providence) (128 points) | ||||
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Led by longtime head coach John Wooden, the UCLA Bruins won their seventh consecutive national title with an 87–66 victory in the final game over Memphis State, coached by Gene Bartow, a future head coach at UCLA. Junior center Bill Walton of UCLA was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
This was the first year that the championship game was held on a Monday night, with Saturday semifinals. Previously, the championship game was on Saturday, with the semifinals on either Thursday or Friday. Also, this was the first year matchups in the semifinals rotated; previously, it was East vs. Mideast and West vs. Midwest every year.
The UCLA–Memphis State championship game made USA Today′s 2002 list of the greatest NCAA tournament games of all time at #18.[1] Bill Walton set a championship game record, hitting 21 of 22 shots and scoring 44 points.
This tournament marked the first appearance of Bob Knight as coach of Indiana University.
The participation for this tournament, as well as the previous tournament, for Southwestern Louisiana (now the University of Louisiana at Lafayette) was vacated on August 5, 1973, when the NCAA Committee on Infractions ruled the university guilty of over 100 violations, including impermissible benefits and doctoring high school transcripts of players. USL's program was shut down for the 1973–74 and 1974–75 seasons, all other Ragin Cajun' athletic programs were placed on three years' probation and banned from postseason participation, and the university was stripped of voting rights at the NCAA convention until 1977 (the NCAA originally planned to expel USL from the organization, but that sanction was downgraded in January 1974).
The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1973 tournament:
First round
Regional semifinals, 3rd-place games, and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)
National semifinals, 3rd-place game, and championship (Final Four and championship)
Region | Team | Coach | Conference | Finished | Final Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
East | ||||||
East | Furman | Joe Williams | Southern | First round | Syracuse | L 83–82 |
East | Maryland | Lefty Driesell | Atlantic Coast | Regional Runner-up | Providence | L 103–89 |
East | Penn | Chuck Daly | Ivy League | Regional Fourth Place | Syracuse | L 69–68 |
East | Providence | Dave Gavitt | Independent | Fourth Place | Indiana | L 97–79 |
East | St. John's | Frank Mulzoff | Independent | First round | Penn | L 62–61 |
East | Saint Joseph's | Jack McKinney | Middle Atlantic | First round | Providence | L 89–76 |
East | Syracuse | Roy Danforth | Independent | Regional third place | Penn | W 69–68 |
Mideast | ||||||
Mideast | Austin Peay | Lake Kelly | Ohio Valley | Regional Fourth Place | Marquette | L 88–73 |
Mideast | Indiana | Bob Knight | Big Ten | Third Place | Providence | W 97–79 |
Mideast | Jacksonville | Tom Wasdin | Independent | First round | Austin Peay | L 77–75 |
Mideast | Kentucky | Joe B. Hall | Southeastern | Regional Runner-up | Indiana | L 72–65 |
Mideast | Marquette | Al McGuire | Independent | Regional third place | Austin Peay | W 88–73 |
Mideast | Miami (OH) | Darrell Hedric | Mid-American | First round | Marquette | L 77–62 |
Midwest | ||||||
Midwest | Houston | Guy Lewis | Independent | First round | Southwestern Louisiana | L 102–89 |
Midwest | Kansas State | Jack Hartman | Big Eight | Regional Runner-up | Memphis State | L 92–72 |
Midwest | Southwestern Louisiana (Vacated) | Beryl Shipley | Southland | Regional Fourth Place | South Carolina | L 90–85 |
Midwest | Memphis State | Gene Bartow | Missouri Valley | Runner Up | UCLA | L 87–66 |
Midwest | South Carolina | Frank McGuire | Independent | Regional third place | Southwestern Louisiana | W 90–85 |
Midwest | Texas Tech | Gerald Myers | Southwest | First round | South Carolina | L 78–70 |
West | ||||||
West | Arizona State | Ned Wulk | Western Athletic | Regional Fourth Place | Long Beach State | L 84–80 |
West | Long Beach State | Jerry Tarkanian | Pacific Coast | Regional third place | Arizona State | W 84–80 |
West | Oklahoma City | Abe Lemons | Independent | First round | Arizona State | L 103–78 |
West | San Francisco | Bob Gaillard | West Coast | Regional Runner-up | UCLA | L 54–39 |
West | UCLA | John Wooden | Pacific-8 | Champion | Memphis State | W 87–66 |
West | Weber State | Gene Visscher | Big Sky | First round | Long Beach State | L 88–75 |
* – Denotes overtime period
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | |||||||||
Maryland | 91 | ||||||||||
Syracuse | 75 | ||||||||||
Syracuse | 83 | ||||||||||
Furman | 82 | ||||||||||
Maryland | 89 | ||||||||||
Providence | 103 | ||||||||||
Penn | 62 | ||||||||||
St. John's | 61 | ||||||||||
Penn | 65 | East Regional third place | |||||||||
Providence | 87 | ||||||||||
Providence | 89 | Syracuse | 69 | ||||||||
Saint Joseph's | 76 | Penn | 68 |
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | |||||||||
Indiana | 75 | ||||||||||
Marquette | 69 | ||||||||||
Marquette | 77 | ||||||||||
Miami (OH) | 62 | ||||||||||
Indiana | 72 | ||||||||||
Kentucky | 65 | ||||||||||
Kentucky | 106 | Mideast Regional third place | |||||||||
Austin Peay | 100* | ||||||||||
Austin Peay | 77 | Marquette | 88 | ||||||||
Jacksonville | 75 | Austin Peay | 73 |
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | |||||||||
Memphis State | 90 | ||||||||||
South Carolina | 76 | ||||||||||
South Carolina | 78 | ||||||||||
Texas Tech | 70 | ||||||||||
Memphis State | 92 | ||||||||||
Kansas State | 72 | ||||||||||
Kansas State | 66 | Midwest Regional third place | |||||||||
Southwestern Louisiana | 63 | ||||||||||
Southwestern Louisiana | 102 | South Carolina | 90 | ||||||||
Houston | 89 | Southwestern Louisiana | 85 |
Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Finals | |||||||||
UCLA | 98 | ||||||||||
Arizona State | 81 | ||||||||||
Arizona State | 103 | ||||||||||
Oklahoma City | 78 | ||||||||||
UCLA | 54 | ||||||||||
San Francisco | 39 | ||||||||||
San Francisco | 77 | West Regional third place | |||||||||
Long Beach State | 67 | ||||||||||
Long Beach State | 88 | Arizona State | 80 | ||||||||
Weber State | 75 | Long Beach State | 84 |
National Semifinals Saturday, March 24 | National Championship Game Monday, March 26 | ||||||||
E | Providence | 85 | |||||||
MW | Memphis State | 98 | |||||||
MW | Memphis State | 66 | |||||||
W | UCLA | 87 | |||||||
ME | Indiana | 59 | |||||||
W | UCLA | 70 | National third-place game | ||||||
ME | Indiana | 97 | |||||||
E | Providence | 79 |
The 1973 NC State Wolfpack team averaged 93 points per game (ppg), led the nation in win margin (21.8 ppg), and posted a 27–0 record, but was ineligible for postseason play because of NCAA probation. David Thompson, a two-time national Player of the Year, and All-America Tom Burleson, led NC State to a 30–1 record the following season, losing only to seven-time defending champion UCLA. The Wolfpack avenged its only loss during the two-year period by defeating UCLA in the 1974 Final Four and winning the title.
Gene Bartow, the Memphis State coach, would be John Wooden's successor at UCLA after the 1974–1975 season.
The tournament marked the last appearance of the Oklahoma City Chiefs, whose 11 tournament appearances are the most among teams no longer in Division I. The school would transition to the NAIA in 1985.
Curt Gowdy, Tom Hawkins, and Jim Simpson (Final Four only) - East Regional Final at Charlotte, North Carolina; Final Four at St. Louis, Missouri
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