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1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

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1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
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The 1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 17, 1979, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on March 24, 1980, at the Market Square Arena in Indianapolis. The Louisville Cardinals won their first NCAA national championship with a 59–54 victory over the UCLA Bruins.

Quick Facts –80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Preseason AP No. 1 ...
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Rule changes

  • Officials were ordered to more strictly enforce foul rules already on the books, including bench decorum, hand-checking and charging fouls.
  • Any mistaken attempt to call a time-out after a team runs out of time-outs results in a technical foul and two free throws for the opposing team. The rule would figure prominently in the outcome of the 1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.

Season headlines

  • ESPN launched on September 7, 1979, as the first all-sports television network and began televising college basketball in November.[2] It took advantage of college basketball's rapidly growing popularity to begin a highly profitable relationship with the NCAA which greatly expanded television coverage of college basketball in the United States.[2]
  • The basketball-centered original Big East Conference began play.[2] Working closely with ESPN, it rapidly developed a reputation as a powerhouse of college basketball and a dominating force in the sport.[2]
  • The ECAC North Conference began play, with 10 original members. It was renamed the North Atlantic Conference in 1988 and the America East Conference in 1996.
  • The ECAC South Conference was founded, consisting of schools that participated in the Eastern College Athletic Conference's Division I ECAC South tournaments for independents. The ECAC South did not play as a conference until the 1981–82 season; in the meantime, its members continued compete as independents during the regular season and seek a bid to the NCAA tournament via the ECAC's regional tournament. The conference was renamed the Colonial Athletic Association in 1985 and the Coastal Athletic Association in 2023.
  • The Midwestern City Conference began play, with six original members. It was renamed the Midwestern Collegiate Conference in 1985 and the Horizon League in 2001.
  • The National Invitation Tournament expanded from 24 to 32 teams.
  • The NCAA tournament expanded from 40 to 48 teams.[3] For the first time, more than two teams from each conference could be selected for the tournament.[4] The NCAA also instituted the "round-robin rule," requiring a conference to play either a single-round-robin regular-season format and a conference tournament or a double-round-robin regular-season format to be eligible for an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The expanded access of conference members to tournament bids combined with the "round-robin rule" made it difficult for Division I independents — most of which were located in the Northeastern United States — to get a tournament bid, greatly accelerating the decline in the number of independents, a decline which had begun in the 1974–75 season when the NCAA allowed more than one team per conference into the tournament for the first time. The Big East Conference formed as a result of the new tournament access requirements, and additional conferences would form by 1981.[5]
  • ESPN televised 23 games of the 1980 NCAA tournament, becoming the first television network to broadcast the early rounds of an NCAA Tournament.[3]
  • For the first time, none of the No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament advanced to the Final Four.[4]
  • Louisville's "doctors of dunk" brought Denny Crum his first NCAA title with a 59–54 win over surprise finalist UCLA and coach Larry Brown. Wooden Award winner Darrell Griffith was named Final Four Most Outstanding Player.
  • The first year of the Ralph Sampson era ended with a Virginia Cavaliers National Invitation Tournament championship – a 58–55 win over Minnesota. Sampson, a 7-foot-4-inch (224 cm) freshman center, was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.
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Season outlook

Pre-season polls

The top 20 from the AP Poll and UPI Coaches Poll during the pre-season.[6]

More information 'Associated Press', Ranking ...

Conference membership changes

More information School, Former conference ...
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Regular season

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Conferences

Conference winners and tournaments

More information Conference, Regular season winner ...

Note: From 1975 to 1981, the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), a loosely organized sports federation of colleges and universities in the Northeastern United States, organized Division I ECAC regional tournaments for those of its members that were independents in basketball. Each 1980 tournament winner received an automatic bid to the 1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in the same way that the tournament champions of conventional athletic conferences did. The ECAC North was a separate, conventional conference.[29]

Conference standings

More information Conf., Overall ...

Division I independents

A total of 43 college teams played as Division I independents. Among them, DePaul (26–2) had both the best winning percentage (.929) and the most wins.[40]

More information Conf., Overall ...

Informal championships

More information Conference, Regular season winner ...

Saint Joseph's finished with a 4–0 record in head-to-head competition among the Philadelphia Big 5.

Statistical leaders

More information Player, School ...
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Post-season tournaments

NCAA tournament

Final Four

Played at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, Indiana

National semifinals National finals
      
E5 Iowa 72
MW2 Louisville 80
MW2 Louisville 59
W8 UCLA 54
ME6 Purdue 62
W8 UCLA 67 Third place
E5 Iowa 58
ME6 Purdue 75

National Invitation tournament

NIT semifinals and finals

Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City

Semifinals Finals
    
UNLV 71
Virginia 90
Virginia 58
Minnesota 55
Minnesota 65
Illinois 63 Third place
UNLV 74
Illinois 84
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Awards

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Consensus All-American teams

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Major player of the year awards

Major coach of the year awards

Other major awards

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Coaching changes

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A number of teams changed coaches during the season and after the season ended.[41]

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Notes

  1. Wins vacated by PCAA but still recognized by NCAA.
  2. UC Irvine claims two losses against UC Santa Barbara that were vacated by PCAA as wins.

References

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