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1 Roster  





2 Schedule and Results  





3 Achievements  





4 References  














197778 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


1977–78 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball

NCAA Tournament Third-Place Game winner
NCAA Tournament West Region champions
Southwest Conference champions

NCAA tournament, Final Four

ConferenceSouthwest Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 6
APNo. 5
Record32–4 (14–2 SWC)
Head coach
Home arenaBarnhill Arena
Seasons
← 1976–77
1978–79 →
1977–78 Southwest Conference men's basketball standings
  • t
  • e
  • Conf Overall
    Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
    No.3Arkansas 14 2   .875 32 4   .889
    No.17Texas 14 2   .875 26 5   .839
    Houston 11 5   .688 25 8   .758
    Texas Tech 10 6   .625 19 10   .655
    Baylor 8 8   .500 14 13   .519
    SMU 6 10   .375 10 18   .357
    Texas A&M 5 11   .313 12 15   .444
    Rice 2 14   .125 4 22   .154
    TCU 2 14   .125 4 22   .154
    1978 SWC tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll


    The 1977–78 Arkansas Razorbacks men's basketball team represented the University of Arkansas. The head coach was Eddie Sutton. He coached the Razorbacks from the 1974-1975 season until the 1984-1985 season.[1] During his tenure as head coach, the Razorbacks ended the season either first or tied for first in the Southwest Conference five times. Under Sutton, the Razorbacks were invited to the NCAA tournament nine times. Sutton's most successful season was 1977-78 when the team reached the Final Four. The Razorbacks lost in the semifinals to the Kentucky Wildcats 64-59 at the Checkerdome arena in St. Louis, Missouri. Arkansas defeated Notre Dame 71-69 in the Third-Place game, which was the last time the Third-Place game was played.

    Roster[edit]

    Junior Sidney Moncrief and seniors Ron Brewer and Marvin Delph were the “triplets” who led the Razorbacks to the Final Four.
    1977-78 Razorbacks' Roster
    POS Height Weight # Name Class Previous School Hometown
    G 6-4 180 10 Ron Brewer Sr Northside Fort Smith, AR
    G 6-4 190 32 Sidney Moncrief Jr Hall Little Rock, AR
    G 6-4 180 44 Marvin Delph Sr Conway Conway, AR
    C 6-10 220 30 Steve Schall Jr South Raytown, MO
    F 6-7 196 42 Jim Counce Sr White Station Memphis, TN
    G 6-2 175 24 U.S Reed Fr Pine Bluff Pine Bluff, AR
    C 6-9 220 50 James Crocket Fr West Helena West Helena, AR
    G 6-4 180 11 Michael Watley Fr Dunbar Fort Worth, TX
    C 6-10 Steve Bates Fr Wayne Fort Wayne, IN
    G 6-5 190 14 Chris Bennett So Little Rock Catholic Little Rock, AR
    F 6-7 200 20 Alan Zahn So Manzano Albuquerque, NM
    G 6-4 185 34 Mike Young Fr Central Noble Wolflake, IN

    Schedule and Results[edit]

    Date
    time, TV
    Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site (attendance)
    city, state
    Regular season
    November 26, 1977*
    No. 7 Missouri State W 65-47  1-0
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    November 28, 1977*
    No. 7 Mississippi State W 94-61  2-0
    Barton Coliseum 
    Little Rock, Arkansas
    December 1, 1977*
    No. 7 at Hawaii W 79-60  3-0
    Neal S. Blaisdell Center 
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    December 2, 1977*
    No. 7 at Hawaii W 78-53  4-0
    Neal S. Blaisdell Center 
    Honolulu, Hawaii
    December 8, 1977*
    No. 6 Rockhurst W 99-63  5-0
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    December 10, 1977*
    No. 6 at Oklahoma W 64-53  6-0
    Lloyd Noble Center 
    Norman, Oklahoma
    December 19, 1977*
    No. 4 Hardin-Simmons W 86-55  7-0
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    December 22, 1977*
    No. 4 No. 16 Kansas W 78-72  8-0
    Barton Coliseum (7,284)
    Little Rock, Arkansas
    December 29, 1977*
    No. 3 at LSU W 67-62  9-0
    Maravich Assembly Center 
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana
    December 31, 1977*
    , KFSM
    No. 3 at Memphis W 95-70  10-0
    Mid-South Coliseum 
    Memphis, Tennessee
    January 4, 1978*
    No. 3 Hostra W 95-70  11-0
    Convention Center 
    Pine Bluff, Arkansas
    January 8, 1978
    No. 3 Houston W 84-65  12-0
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    January 9, 1978*
    No. 3 Missouri-St. Louis W 87-65  13-0
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    January 12, 1978
    No. 3 at Rice W 69-60  14-0
    Tudor Fieldhouse 
    Houston, Texas
    January 14, 1978
    No. 3 at Texas L 69-75  14-1
    Frank Erwin Center 
    Austin, Texas
    January 17, 1978
    No. 6 Texas A&M W 84-68  15-1
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    January 21, 1978
    No. 6 TCU W 43-35  16-1
    Barton Coliseum 
    Little Rock, Arkansas
    January 23, 1978
    No. 6 at Baylor W 56-55  17-1
    Heart O' Texas Coliseum 
    Waco, Texas
    January 25, 1978
    No. 4 SMU W 72-65  18-1
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    January 28, 1978
    No. 4 at Texas Tech W 54-49  19-1
    Lubbock Municipal Coliseum 
    Lubbock, Texas
    February 1, 1978
    No. 2 No. 12 Texas W 75-71  20-1
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    February 4, 1978
    No. 2 Rice W 69-48  21-1
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    February 7, 1978
    No. 2 at Texas A&M W 80-79  22-1
    G. Rollie White Coliseum 
    College Station, Texas
    February 11, 1978
    No. 2 at TCU W 77-57  23-1
    Daniel–Meyer Coliseum 
    Fort Worth, Texas
    February 13, 1978
    No. 1 Baylor W 82-56  24-1
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    February 16, 1978
    No. 1 at SMU W 86-75  25-1
    Moody Coliseum 
    University Park, Texas
    February 18, 1978
    No. 1 at Houston L 75-84  25-2
    Hofheinz Pavilion 
    Houston, Texas
    February 21, 1978
    No. 4 Texas Tech W 58-49  26-2
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    SWC tournament
    February 25, 1978*
    No. 4 TCU W 84-42  27-2
    Barnhill Arena 
    Fayetteville, Arkansas
    March 2, 1978*
    No. 4 vs. SMU W 94-73  28-2
    The Summit 
    Houston, Texas
    March 4, 1978*
    No. 4 vs. Houston L 69-70  28-3
    The Summit 
    Houston, Texas
    NCAA tournament
    March 11, 1978*
    (2L) vs. Weber St. (4Q) W 73-52  29-3
    McArthur Court 
    Eugene, Oregon
    March 16, 1978*
    (2L) vs. No. 2 UCLA (1Q) W 74-70  30-3
    University Arena 
    Albuquerque, New Mexico
    March 18, 1978*
    (2L) vs. Cal St. Fullerton (4L) W 61-58  31-3
    University Arena 
    Albuquerque, New Mexico
    March 25, 1978*
    (2L) vs. No. 1 Kentucky (ME2Q) L 59-64  31-4
    Checkerdome 
    St. Louis, Missouri
    March 27, 1978*
    (2L) vs. No. 6 Notre Dame (MW2L) W 71-69  32-4
    Checkerdome 
    St. Louis Missouri

    *Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
    MW=Midwest.

    [2][3]

    Achievements[edit]

    Sutton left as head coach after the 1984-85 season with a Conference record of 139-35 (79.9%). He would go on to coach three more schools (Kentucky, Oklahoma State, and San Francisco) and retire in 2008.[4] He was inducted into the College Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011.[5]

    Ron Brewer was the Southwest Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year. He became the 7th overall pick by the Portland Trail Blazers in the 1978 NBA draft.[6]

    Sidney Moncrief was drafted the following year by the Milwaukee Bucks 5th overall in the 1979 NBA draft, and became a five time NBA All-Star and was awarded a spot on the All-NBA First Team in 1983.[7] His jersey was retired by the Bucks.[8]

    Marvin Delph was drafted the same year as Brewer but in the 3rd round (65th overall) by the Buffalo Braves and then drafted again the next year by the Boston Celtics in the 6th round of the 1979 NBA draft along with Moncrief but never played in the NBA.

    U. S. Reed was drafted in the 5th round (104th overall pick) in the 1981 NBA draft by the Kansas City Kings, but never played in the NBA.

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "HogStats.com :: Arkansas Basketball Coaches". www.hogstats.com. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  • ^ "1977-78 Arkansas Razorbacks Schedule and Results | College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  • ^ "HogStats.com :: 1977-78 Arkansas Basketball Schedule". www.hogstats.com. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  • ^ "Longtime Oklahoma State coach Sutton retires". ESPN.com. May 19, 2006. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  • ^ McGalliard, Grant. "Legendary Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton is Hall of Fame candidate". daytondailynews. Archived from the original on January 19, 2019. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  • ^ "NBA.com: 1978 NBA Draft, First Round". www.nba.com. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  • ^ "NBA History: Sidney Moncrief". www.nba.com. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  • ^ "The Milwaukee Bucks retired Sidney Moncrief's jersey Tuesday night..." UPI. Retrieved November 15, 2018.

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