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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Schedule and venues  





2 Teams  





3 Bracket  



3.1  East Regional  Providence, Rhode Island  



3.1.1  Regional Final Summary  







3.2  West Regional  Denver, Colorado  



3.2.1  First round Summary  





3.2.2  Second Round Summary  





3.2.3  Regional semifinal Summary  





3.2.4  Regional Final Summary  







3.3  Southeast Regional  Birmingham, Alabama  



3.3.1  Regional Final Summary  







3.4  Midwest Regional  Dallas, Texas  



3.4.1  Regional Final Summary  







3.5  Final Four  Lexington, Kentucky  





3.6  Game summaries  





3.7  National Championship  







4 Announcers  



4.1  Television  





4.2  Radio  



4.2.1  Regionals  





4.2.2  Final four  









5 Further reading  





6 See also  





7 References  














1985 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament






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(Redirected from 1985 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament)

1985 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season1984–85
Teams64
Finals siteRupp Arena
Lexington, Kentucky
ChampionsVillanova Wildcats (1st title, 1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Runner-upGeorgetown Hoyas (4th title game,
5th Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • St. John's Redmen (2nd Final Four)
  • Winning coachRollie Massimino (1st title)
    MOPEd Pinckney (Villanova)
    Attendance422,519
    Top scorerChris Mullin (St. John's)
    (110 points)
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «1984 1986»

    The 1985 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 64 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. This was the first year the field was expanded to 64 teams, from 53 in the previous year's tournament. It began on March 14, 1985, and ended with the championship game on April 1 in Lexington, Kentucky. A total of 63 games were played.

    Eighth-seed Villanova, coached by Rollie Massimino, won their first national title with a 66–64 victory in the final game over Georgetown, coached by John Thompson. Ed Pinckney of Villanova was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. The game, often cited as "The Perfect Game", is widely considered among the greatest upsets in college basketball history, and is the second biggest point-spread upset in Championship Game history.[1][2] This Villanova team remains the lowest-seeded team to win the tournament. The Wildcats are also notable as the last Division I men's national champion to date to represent a school that did not sponsor varsity football at the time of its title (Villanova had dropped football after the 1980 season and did not reinstate the sport until the 1985 season, the first after the championship game). The game is also notable as the last played without a shot clock.

    This year's Final Four saw an unprecedented and unmatched three teams from the same conference, with Big East members Villanova and Georgetown joined by St. John's. The only "interloper" in the Big East party was Memphis State, then of the Metro Conference (Memphis State's 1985 Final Four appearance was vacated due to using ineligible players, as were all of its tournament appearances from 1982 to 1986). Lehigh, champion of the East Coast Conference Tournament, became the first team in NCAA Tournament history to compete with a record below .500, as they were 12–18 at the time they played in the First Round.[3]

    This was also the first year that one of the regionals was named "Southeast", replacing "Mideast". This name was used until 1998, when the regional was renamed "South". This was also the last tournament until 2010 to feature two private schools in the title game. This tournament was also the last until 2012 to feature no teams in the Sweet 16 from the Mountain or Pacific Time Zones.

    This tournament's East Region is the only one in NCAA Tournament history in which the higher-seeded team won every game.

    Schedule and venues[edit]

    1985 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Atlanta

    Atlanta

    Dayton

    Dayton

    Albuquerque

    Albuquerque

    Hartford

    Hartford

    Houston

    Houston

    South Bend

    South Bend

    Tulsa

    Tulsa

    Salt Lake City

    Salt Lake City

    1985 first and second rounds
    1985 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Dallas

    Dallas

    Providence

    Providence

    Birmingham

    Birmingham

    Denver

    Denver

    Lexington

    Lexington

    1985 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

    The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1985 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 Georgetown John Thompson Big East Runner-up 8Villanova L 66–64
    East 2 Georgia Tech Bobby Cremins Atlantic Coast Regional Runner-up 1Georgetown L 60–54
    East 3 Illinois Lou Henson Big Ten Sweet Sixteen 2Georgia Tech L 61–53
    East 4 Loyola Chicago Gene Sullivan Midwestern City Sweet Sixteen 1Georgetown L 65–53
    East 5 SMU Dave Bliss Southwest Round of 32 4Loyola–Chicago L 70–57
    East 6 Georgia Hugh Durham Southeastern Round of 32 3Illinois L 74–58
    East 7 Syracuse Jim Boeheim Big East Round of 32 2Georgia Tech L 70–53
    East 8 Temple John Chaney Atlantic 10 Round of 32 1Georgetown L 63–46
    East 9 Virginia Tech Charles Moir Metro Round of 64 8Temple L 60–57
    East 10 DePaul Joey Meyer Independent Round of 64 7Syracuse L 70–65
    East 11 Wichita State Gene Smithson Missouri Valley Round of 64 6Georgia L 67–59
    East 12 Old Dominion Paul Webb Sun Belt Round of 64 5SMU L 85–68
    East 13 Iona Pat Kennedy Metro Atlantic Round of 64 4Loyola–Chicago L 59–58
    East 14 Northeastern Jim Calhoun ECAC North Round of 64 3Illinois L 76–57
    East 15 Mercer Bill Bibb Trans America Round of 64 2Georgia Tech L 65–58
    East 16 Lehigh Tom Schneider East Coast Round of 64 1Georgetown L 68–43
    Midwest
    Midwest 1 Oklahoma Billy Tubbs Big Eight Regional Runner-up 2Memphis State L 63–61
    Midwest 2 Memphis State Dana Kirk Metro National semifinals 8Villanova L 52–45
    Midwest 3 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Atlantic Coast Round of 32 11Boston College L 74–73
    Midwest 4 Ohio State Eldon Miller Big Ten Round of 32 5Louisiana Tech L 79–67
    Midwest 5 Louisiana Tech Andy Russo Southland Sweet Sixteen 1Oklahoma L 86–84
    Midwest 6 Texas Tech Gerald Myers Southwest Round of 64 11Boston College L 55–53
    Midwest 7 UAB Gene Bartow Sun Belt Round of 32 2Memphis State L 67–66
    Midwest 8 USC Stan Morrison Pacific-10 Round of 64 9Illinois State L 58–55
    Midwest 9 Illinois State Bob Donewald Missouri Valley Round of 32 1Oklahoma L 75–69
    Midwest 10 Michigan State Jud Heathcote Big Ten Round of 64 7UAB L 70–68
    Midwest 11 Boston College Gary Williams Big East Sweet Sixteen 2Memphis State L 59–57
    Midwest 12 Pittsburgh Roy Chipman Big East Round of 64 5Louisiana Tech L 78–54
    Midwest 13 Iowa State Johnny Orr Big Eight Round of 64 4Ohio State L 75–64
    Midwest 14 Pepperdine Jim Harrick West Coast Round of 64 3Duke L 75–62
    Midwest 15 Penn Craig Littlepage Ivy League Round of 64 2Memphis State L 67–55
    Midwest 16 North Carolina A&T Don Corbett Mid-Eastern Round of 64 1Oklahoma L 96–83
    Southeast
    Southeast 1 Michigan Bill Frieder Big Ten Round of 32 8Villanova L 59–55
    Southeast 2 North Carolina Dean Smith Atlantic Coast Regional Runner-up 8Villanova L 56–44
    Southeast 3 Kansas Larry Brown Big Eight Round of 32 11Auburn L 66–64
    Southeast 4 LSU Dale Brown Southeastern Round of 64 13Navy L 78–55
    Southeast 5 Maryland Lefty Driesell Atlantic Coast Sweet Sixteen 8Villanova L 46–43
    Southeast 6 Purdue Gene Keady Big Ten Round of 64 11Auburn L 59–58
    Southeast 7 Notre Dame Digger Phelps Independent Round of 32 2North Carolina L 60–58
    Southeast 8 Villanova Rollie Massimino Big East Champion 1Georgetown W 66–64
    Southeast 9 Dayton Don Donoher Independent Round of 64 8Villanova L 51–49
    Southeast 10 Oregon State Ralph Miller Pacific-10 Round of 64 7Notre Dame L 79–70
    Southeast 11 Auburn Sonny Smith Southeastern Sweet Sixteen 2North Carolina L 62–56
    Southeast 12 Miami (OH) Jerry Peirson Mid-American Round of 64 5Maryland L 69–68
    Southeast 13 Navy Paul Evans ECAC South Round of 32 5Maryland L 64–59
    Southeast 14 Ohio Danny Nee Mid-American Round of 64 3Kansas L 49–38
    Southeast 15 Middle Tennessee State Bruce Stewart Ohio Valley Round of 64 2North Carolina L 76–57
    Southeast 16 Fairleigh Dickinson Tom Green ECAC Metro Round of 64 1Michigan L 59–55
    West
    West 1 St. John's Lou Carnesecca Big East National semifinals 1Georgetown L 77–59
    West 2 VCU J. D. Barnett Sun Belt Round of 32 7Alabama L 63–59
    West 3 NC State Jim Valvano Atlantic Coast Regional Runner-up 1St. John's L 69–60
    West 4 UNLV Jerry Tarkanian Pacific Coast Round of 32 12Kentucky L 64–61
    West 5 Washington Marv Harshman Pacific-10 Round of 64 12Kentucky L 66–58
    West 6 Tulsa Nolan Richardson Missouri Valley Round of 64 11UTEP L 79–75
    West 7 Alabama Wimp Sanderson Southeastern Sweet Sixteen 3NC State L 61–55
    West 8 Iowa George Raveling Big Ten Round of 64 9Arkansas L 63–54
    West 9 Arkansas Eddie Sutton Southwest Round of 32 1St. John's L 68–65
    West 10 Arizona Lute Olson Pacific-10 Round of 64 7Alabama L 50–41
    West 11 UTEP Don Haskins Western Athletic Round of 32 3NC State L 86–73
    West 12 Kentucky Joe B. Hall Southeastern Sweet Sixteen 1St. John's L 86–70
    West 13 San Diego State Smokey Gaines Western Athletic Round of 64 4UNLV L 85–80
    West 14 Nevada Sonny Allen Big Sky Round of 64 3NC State L 65–56
    West 15 Marshall Rick Huckabay Southern Round of 64 2VCU L 81–65
    West 16 Southern Robert Hopkins Southwestern Athletic Round of 64 1St. John's L 83–59

    Bracket[edit]

    * – Denotes overtime period

    East Regional – Providence, Rhode Island[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Georgetown 68
    16Lehigh 43
    1Georgetown 63
    Hartford
    8Temple 46
    8Temple 60
    9Virginia Tech 57
    1Georgetown 65
    4Loyola Chicago 53
    5SMU 85
    12Old Dominion 68
    5SMU 57
    Hartford
    4Loyola Chicago 70
    4Loyola–Chicago 59
    13Iona 58
    1Georgetown 60
    2Georgia Tech 54
    6Georgia 67
    11Wichita State 59
    6Georgia 58
    Atlanta
    3Illinois 74
    3Illinois 76
    14Northeastern 57
    3Illinois 53
    2Georgia Tech 61
    7Syracuse 70
    10DePaul 65
    7Syracuse 53
    Atlanta
    2Georgia Tech 70
    2Georgia Tech 65
    15Mercer 58

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, March 23

    box score

    #1 Georgetown Hoyas 60, #2 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets 54
    Pts: P. Ewing – 14
    Rebs: R. Dalton – 6
    Asts: M. Jackson – 5
    Pts: J. Salley – 15
    Rebs: J. Salley – 5
    Asts: S. Petway – 4
    Halftime Score: 29–29

    Providence Civic Center – Providence, Rhode Island

    West Regional – Denver, Colorado[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1St John's 83
    16Southern 59
    1St John's 68
    Salt Lake City
    9Arkansas 65
    8Iowa 54
    9Arkansas 63
    1St John's 86
    12Kentucky 70
    5Washington 58
    12Kentucky 66
    12Kentucky 64
    Salt Lake City
    4UNLV 61
    4UNLV 85
    13San Diego State 80
    1St John's 69
    3NC State 60
    6Tulsa 75
    11UTEP 79
    11UTEP 73
    Albuquerque
    3NC State 86
    3NC State 65
    14Nevada 56
    3NC State 61
    7Alabama 55
    7Alabama 50
    10Arizona 41
    7Alabama 63
    Albuquerque
    2VCU 59
    2VCU 81
    15Marshall 65

    First round Summary[edit]

    NCAA Productions
    ESPN

    Thursday, March 14
    12:07 PM MST/2:07 PM EST

    box score

    #1 St. John's Redmen 83, #16 Southern Jaguars 59
    Pts: W. Berry – 24
    Rebs: W. Berry – 13
    Asts: C. Mullin – 6

    Halftime Score: St. John's, 34–18

    Special Events Center – Salt Lake City, Utah
    Attendance: 6,928

    Second Round Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, March 16
    2:30 PM MST/4:30 PM EST

    box score

    #1 St. John's Redmen 68, #9 Arkansas Razorbacks 65

    Special Events Center – Salt Lake City, Utah
    Attendance: 9,226

    Regional semifinal Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Friday, March 22
    8:09 PM MST/10:09 PM EST

    box score

    #1 St. John's Redmen 86, #12 Kentucky Wildcats 70
    Pts: C. Mullin – 30
    Rebs: W. Berry – 7
    Asts: C. Mullin – 7
    Pts: K. Walker – 23
    Rebs: K. Walker – 8
    Asts: R. Harden – 7
    Halftime Score: St. John's, 39–38

    McNichols Sports Arena – Denver, Colorado
    Attendance: 17,022
    Referees: John Clougherty, Bobby Dibler, Willis McJunkin

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 24
    2:03 PM MST/4:03 PM EST

    box score

    #1 St. John's Redmen 69, #3 NC State Wolfpack 60
    Pts: C. Mullin – 25
    Rebs: B. Wennington – 10
    Asts: M. Moses, M. Jackson – 5
    Pts: L. Charles – 15
    Rebs: L. Charles, C. McQueen – 11
    Asts: S. Webb – 9
    Halftime Score: St. John's, 30–29

    McNichols Sports Arena – Denver, Colorado
    Attendance: 17,022
    Referees: John Clougherty, Bobby Dibler, Willis McJunkin

    Southeast Regional – Birmingham, Alabama[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Michigan 59
    16Fairleigh Dickinson 55
    1Michigan 55
    Dayton
    8Villanova 59
    8Villanova 51
    9Dayton 49
    8Villanova 46
    5Maryland 43
    5Maryland 69*
    12Miami (OH) 68
    5Maryland 64
    Dayton
    13Navy 59
    4LSU 55
    13Navy 78
    8Villanova 56
    2North Carolina 44
    6Purdue 58
    11Auburn 59
    11Auburn 66
    South Bend
    3Kansas 64
    3Kansas 49
    14Ohio 38
    11Auburn 56
    2North Carolina 62
    7Notre Dame 79
    10Oregon State 70
    7Notre Dame 58
    South Bend
    2North Carolina 60
    2North Carolina 76
    15Middle Tennessee State 57

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 24

    box score

    #8 Villanova Wildcats 56, #2 North Carolina Tar Heels 44
    Pts: H. Pressley – 15
    Rebs: E. Pinckney – 7
    Asts: E. Pinckney, H. Jensen – 3
    Pts: B. Daugherty – 17
    Rebs: B. Daugherty – 12
    Asts: J. Wolf, K. Smith – 5
    Halftime Score: North Carolina, 22–17

    BJCC Coliseum – Birmingham, Alabama

    Midwest Regional – Dallas, Texas[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Oklahoma 96
    16North Carolina A&T83
    1Oklahoma 75
    Tulsa
    9Illinois State 69
    8USC 55
    9Illinois State 58
    1Oklahoma 86*
    5Louisiana Tech 84
    5Louisiana Tech 78
    12Pittsburgh 54
    5Louisiana Tech 79
    Tulsa
    4Ohio State 67
    4Ohio State 75
    13Iowa State 64
    1Oklahoma 61
    2Memphis State# 63
    6Texas Tech 53
    11Boston College 55
    11Boston College 74
    Houston
    3Duke 73
    3Duke 75
    14Pepperdine 62
    11Boston College 57
    2Memphis State# 59
    7UAB 70
    10Michigan State 68
    7UAB 66
    Houston
    2Memphis State# 67*
    2Memphis State# 67
    15Penn 55

    * - denotes overtime

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, March 23

    box score

    #2 Memphis State Tigers 63, #1 Oklahoma Sooners 61
    Pts: D. Kennedy – 16
    Rebs: W. Tisdale – 12
    Asts: T. McCalister, A. Bowie – 5
    Pts: K. Lee – 23
    Rebs: K. Lee – 11
    Asts: A. Turner – 12
    Halftime Score: 33–33

    Reunion Arena – Dallas, Texas

    Final Four – Lexington, Kentucky[edit]

    National semifinals National Championship Game
          
    E1 Georgetown 77
    W1 St John's 59
    E1 Georgetown 64
    S8 Villanova 66
    S8 Villanova 52
    M2 Memphis State# 45

    # - Memphis State was forced to vacate its NCAA tournament appearance after a massive gambling scandal and a criminal investigation into head coach Dana Kirk. Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with Memphis removing the wins from its own record.[4][5]

    Game summaries[edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, March 30

    box score

    #8 Villanova Wildcats 52, #2 Memphis State Tigers45
    Pts: D. McClain – 19
    Rebs: E. Pinckney – 9
    Asts: M. Plansky, G. McLain, D. McClain – 2
    Pts: A. Turner – 11
    Rebs: Vincent Askew, W. Bedford, K. Lee – 7
    Asts: V. Askew – 7
    Halftime Score: 23–23

    Rupp Arena – Lexington, Kentucky

    CBS

    Saturday, March, 30

    box score

    #1 Georgetown Hoyas 77, #1 St. John's Redmen 59
    Pts: R. Williams – 20
    Rebs: D. Wingate – 6
    Asts: M. Jackson – 11
    Pts: W. Glass – 13
    Rebs: W. Berry – 6
    Asts: M. Jackson – 5
    Halftime Score: Georgetown, 32–28

    Rupp Arena – Lexington, Kentucky

    National Championship[edit]

    CBS

    Monday, April 1

    Box score

    #8 Villanova Wildcats 66, #1 Georgetown Hoyas 64
    Pts: D. McClain – 17
    Rebs: E. Pinckney – 6
    Asts: E. Pinckney – 5
    Pts: D. Wingate – 16
    Rebs: B. Martin, P. Ewing – 5
    Asts: M. Jackson – 9
    Halftime Score: Villanova, 29–28

    Rupp Arena – Lexington, Kentucky
    Referees: John Clougherty, Bobby Dibler, Don Rutledge

    Announcers[edit]

    Television[edit]

    CBS Sports

    ESPN and NCAA Productions

    Radio[edit]

    Regionals[edit]

    CBS Radio

    Final four[edit]

    Further reading[edit]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

  • ^ "Teams with the worst records to make the men's NCAA tournament | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com. Retrieved April 3, 2023.
  • ^ "TROUBLED TIMES AT MEMPHIS STATE". Sports Illustrated. June 24, 1985. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
  • ^ Mauro, Patrick (August 22, 2009). "The NCAA's Toothless Punishment Of Memphis". Bleacher Report. Retrieved May 15, 2024.

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