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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 The March 14 upsets  





2 Schedule and venues  





3 Teams  





4 Bracket  



4.1  East region  





4.2  West region  





4.3  Mideast region  





4.4  Midwest region  





4.5  Final Four  







5 Notes  





6 Announcers (NBC and NCAA Productions)  





7 See also  





8 References  





9 External links  














1981 NCAA Division I basketball tournament






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from 1981 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament)

1981 NCAA Division I
basketball tournament
Season1980–81
Teams48
Finals siteThe Spectrum
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
ChampionsIndiana Hoosiers (4th title, 4th title game,
5th Final Four)
Runner-upNorth Carolina Tar Heels (5th title game,
8th Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • LSU Tigers (2nd Final Four)
  • Winning coachBob Knight (2nd title)
    MOPIsiah Thomas (Indiana)
    Attendance347,414
    Top scorerAl Wood (North Carolina)
    (109 points)
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «1980 1982»

    The 1981 NCAA Division I basketball tournament involved 48 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 12, 1981, and ended with the championship game on March 30 in Philadelphia. A total of 48 games were played, including a national third-place game (the last in the NCAA tournament). It was also the last tournament to be televised on NBC, before CBS took over the following year. Additionally, it was the last season in which the NCAA sponsored championships only in men's sports; the first Division I women's tournament would be played the following year.

    Indiana, coached by Bob Knight, won the national title with a 63–50 victory over North Carolina, coached by Dean Smith. Isiah Thomas of Indiana was named the Tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

    The March 14 upsets[edit]

    The date of Saturday, March 14, 1981, resulted in three major second round tournament upsets which were decided by last-second baskets.

    Bob Kearney and Tony Costner of Saint Joseph's celebrate after their upset win over DePaul

    St. Joseph's trailed No. 1 seed DePaul by seven at about the midway point of the second half, in an early afternoon Mideast Region game from Dayton, Ohio. However, with under a minute left, the Hawks had rallied to within one point, 48–47. Blue Demons guard Skip Dillard was fouled with 13 seconds left. Dillard was known as 'Money' for his superb free throw shooting, but he missed the front end of a one-and-one opportunity, and St. Joseph's got the rebound, then quickly passed the ball to the front court without calling a timeout. Guard Bryan Warrick got the ball to freshman Lonnie McFarlan who was wide open in the right corner. McFarlan began to shoot until forward John Smith yelled "Please!" to him. McFarlan passed to Smith, who was open underneath the basket. Smith's layup with two seconds left enabled the Hawks of coach Jim Lynam to stun the Blue Demons of Ray Meyer, 49–48.

    Later in the afternoon in Austin, Texas, Arkansas coach Eddie Sutton called timeout with 5 seconds left after falling behind Louisville in the Midwest Region, 73–72 on a jumper by guard Derek Smith. Sutton told his team to get the ball to U.S. Reed. The Razorbacks' guard dribbled to near half court, then launched a 49-foot shot that beat the buzzer and swished through the net, as Arkansas dethroned the defending national champion Cardinals of Denny Crum, 74–73. Sutton told the media, "Champions die hard."

    Only moments after the Razorbacks' upset, the season ended for another #1 seed in the West Region in Los Angeles. Oregon State led Kansas State by as much as 11 points in the second half. Coach Ralph Miller and center Steve Johnson had led the Beavers to a two-year record of 52–4. Then Rolando Blackman led the Wildcats back with a 16–6 run to tie the game, 48–48 with 3:23 left. Johnson then fouled out, and both teams stalled with the ball until Oregon State missed the front end of a one-and-one from the foul line. K-State then held for the last shot. With two seconds left, Blackman, double-teamed, drilled a fall-away 17 footer from the right baseline for a 50–48 upset by the Wildcats of Jack Hartman.

    In another second round Mideast Region upset, UAB defeated Kentucky 69–62. A semifinal in the East Region saw Danny Ainge dribble the length of the court and drive all the way in for a layup and another buzzer-beating winner, lifting BYU over Notre Dame 51–50.

    Greg Johnson of NCAA.com, in a March 9, 2011 article, indicated that March 14, 1981 was a date which defined March Madness.[1]

    Schedule and venues[edit]

    1981 NCAA Division I basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Charlotte

    Charlotte

    Austin

    Austin

    El Paso

    El Paso

    Dayton

    Dayton

    Los Angeles

    Los Angeles

    Providence

    Providence

    Tuscaloosa

    Tuscaloosa

    Wichita

    Wichita

    1981 sites for first and second round games
    1981 NCAA Division I basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Atlanta

    Atlanta

    New Orleans

    New Orleans

    Bloomington

    Bloomington

    Salt Lake City

    Salt Lake City

    Philadelphia

    Philadelphia

    1981 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

    The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1981 tournament:

    First and Second rounds

    Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

    National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

    Teams[edit]

    Region Seed Team Coach Conference Finished Final Opponent Score
    East
    East 1 Virginia Terry Holland ACC Third Place 1LSU W 78–74
    East 2 Notre Dame Digger Phelps Independent Sweet Sixteen 6BYU L 51–50
    East 3 UCLA Larry Brown Pacific-10 Round of 32 6BYU L 78–55
    East 4 Tennessee Don DeVoe SEC Sweet Sixteen 1Virginia L 62–48
    East 5 VCU J. D. Barnett Sun Belt Round of 32 4Tennessee L 58–56
    East 6 BYU Frank Arnold WAC Regional Runner-up 1Virginia L 74–60
    East 7 Georgetown John Thompson Big East Round of 48 10James Madison L 61–55
    East 8 Houston Guy Lewis Southwest Round of 48 9Villanova L 90–72
    East 9 Villanova Rollie Massimino Big East Round of 32 1Virginia L 54–50
    East 10 James Madison Lou Campanelli ECAC South Round of 32 2Notre Dame L 54–45
    East 11 Princeton Pete Carril Ivy League Round of 48 6BYU L 60–51
    East 12 Long Island Paul Lizzo ECAC Metro Round of 48 5VCU L 85–69
    Mideast
    Mideast 1 DePaul Ray Meyer Independent Round of 32 9Saint Joseph's L 49–48
    Mideast 2 Kentucky Joe B. Hall SEC Round of 32 7UAB L 69–62
    Mideast 3 Indiana Bob Knight Big Ten Champion 2North Carolina W 63–50
    Mideast 4 Wake Forest Carl Tacy ACC Round of 32 5Boston College L 67–64
    Mideast 5 Boston College Tom Davis Big East Sweet Sixteen 9Saint Joseph's L 42–41
    Mideast 6 Maryland Lefty Driesell ACC Round of 32 3Indiana L 99–64
    Mideast 7 UAB Gene Bartow Sun Belt Sweet Sixteen 3Indiana L 87–72
    Mideast 8 Creighton Tom Apke Missouri Valley Round of 48 9Saint Joseph's L 59–57
    Mideast 9 Saint Joseph's Jim Lynam East Coast Regional Runner-up 3Indiana L 78–46
    Mideast 10 Western Kentucky Clem Haskins Ohio Valley Round of 48 7UAB L 93–68
    Mideast 11 Chattanooga Murray Arnold Southern Round of 48 6Maryland L 81–69
    Mideast 12 Ball State Steve Yoder MAC Round of 48 5Boston College L 93–90
    Midwest
    Midwest 1 LSU Dale Brown SEC Fourth Place 1Virginia L 78–74
    Midwest 2 Arizona State Ned Wulk Pacific-10 Round of 32 7Kansas L 88–71
    Midwest 3 Iowa Lute Olson Big Ten Round of 32 6Wichita State L 60–56
    Midwest 4 Louisville Denny Crum Metro Round of 32 5Arkansas L 74–73
    Midwest 5 Arkansas Eddie Sutton Southwest Sweet Sixteen 1LSU L 72–56
    Midwest 6 Wichita State Gene Smithson Missouri Valley Regional Runner-up 1LSU L 96–85
    Midwest 7 Kansas Ted Owens Big Eight Sweet Sixteen 6Wichita State L 66–65
    Midwest 8 Lamar Pat Foster Southland Round of 32 1LSU L 100–78
    Midwest 9 Missouri Norm Stewart Big Eight Round of 48 8Lamar L 71–67
    Midwest 10 Ole Miss Bob Weltlich SEC Round of 48 7Kansas L 69–66
    Midwest 11 Southern Carl Stewart SWAC Round of 48 6Wichita State L 95–70
    Midwest 12 Mercer Bill Bibb Trans America Round of 48 5Arkansas L 73–67
    West
    West 1 Oregon State Ralph Miller Pacific-10 Round of 32 8Kansas State L 50–48
    West 2 North Carolina Dean Smith ACC Runner Up 3Indiana L 63–50
    West 3 Utah Jerry Pimm WAC Sweet Sixteen 2North Carolina L 61–56
    West 4 Illinois Lou Henson Big Ten Sweet Sixteen 8Kansas State L 57–52
    West 5 Wyoming Jim Brandenburg WAC Round of 32 4Illinois L 67–65
    West 6 Fresno State Boyd Grant Pacific Coast Round of 48 11Northeastern L 55–53
    West 7 Idaho Don Monson Big Sky Round of 48 10Pittsburgh L 70–69
    West 8 Kansas State Jack Hartman Big Eight Regional Runner-up 2North Carolina L 82–68
    West 9 San Francisco Peter Barry West Coast Round of 48 8Kansas State L 64–60
    West 10 Pittsburgh Roy Chipman Eastern Round of 32 2North Carolina L 74–57
    West 11 Northeastern Jim Calhoun ECAC North Round of 32 3Utah L 94–69
    West 12 Howard A.B. Williamson MEAC Round of 48 5Wyoming L 78–43

    Bracket[edit]

    * – Denotes overtime period

    East region[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    8Houston 72
    9Villanova 90
    9Villanova 50
    1Virginia 54
    1Virginia 62
    4Tennessee 48
    4Tennessee 58
    5VCU 56*
    5VCU 85
    12Long Island 69
    1Virginia 74
    6BYU 60
    6BYU 60
    11Princeton 51
    6BYU 78
    3UCLA 55
    6BYU 51
    2Notre Dame 50
    2Notre Dame 54
    10James Madison 45
    7Georgetown 55
    10James Madison 61

    West region[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    8Kansas State 64
    9San Francisco 60
    8Kansas State 50
    1Oregon State 48
    8Kansas State 57
    4Illinois 52
    4Illinois 67
    5Wyoming 65
    5Wyoming 78
    12Howard 43
    8Kansas State 68
    2North Carolina 82
    6Fresno State 53
    11Northeastern 55
    11Northeastern 69
    3Utah 94
    3Utah 56
    2North Carolina 61
    2North Carolina 74
    10Pittsburgh 57
    7Idaho 69*
    10Pittsburgh 70

    Mideast region[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    8Creighton 57
    9Saint Joseph's 59
    9Saint Joseph's 49
    1DePaul 48
    9Saint Joseph's 42
    5Boston College 41
    4Wake Forest 64
    5Boston College 67
    5Boston College 93
    12Ball State 90
    9Saint Joseph's 46
    3Indiana 78
    6Maryland 81
    11Chattanooga 69
    6Maryland 64
    3Indiana 99
    3Indiana 87
    7UAB 72
    2Kentucky 62
    7UAB 69
    7UAB 93
    10Western Kentucky 68

    Midwest region[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    8Lamar 71
    9Missouri 67
    8Lamar 78
    1LSU 100
    1LSU 72
    5Arkansas 56
    4Louisville 73
    5Arkansas 74
    5Arkansas 73
    12Mercer 67
    1LSU 96
    6Wichita State 85
    6Wichita State 95
    11Southern 70
    6Wichita State 60
    3Iowa 56
    6Wichita State 66
    7Kansas 65
    2Arizona State 71
    7Kansas 88
    7Kansas 69
    10Ole Miss 66

    Final Four[edit]

    National semifinals
    Saturday, March 28
    National Final
    Monday, March 30
          
    E1 Virginia 65
    W2 North Carolina 78
    W2 North Carolina 50
    ME3 Indiana 63
    ME3 Indiana 67
    MW1 LSU 49National third-place game
    E1 Virginia 78
    MW1 LSU 74

    Notes[edit]

    Announcers (NBC and NCAA Productions)[edit]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "March Madness defining moment?". ncaa.com. March 9, 2011. Archived from the original on February 1, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.

    External links[edit]


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1981_NCAA_Division_I_basketball_tournament&oldid=1222274387"

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