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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Schedule and venues  





2 Qualifying teams  



2.1  Automatic bids  





2.2  Listed by region and seeding  





2.3  Bids by conference  







3 Final Four  



3.1  National semifinals  





3.2  Championship game  







4 Bracket  



4.1  Opening Round game  





4.2  East Regional  Syracuse, New York  



4.2.1  Regional Final Summary  







4.3  Midwest Regional  Madison, Wisconsin  



4.3.1  Regional Final Summary  







4.4  South Regional  Lexington, Kentucky  



4.4.1  Regional Final Summary  







4.5  West Regional  San Jose, California  



4.5.1  Regional Final Summary  







4.6  Final Four  Atlanta, Georgia  







5 Broadcast information  



5.1  CBS Sports announcers  





5.2  Westwood One announcers  







6 References  














2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from 2002 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament)

2002 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season2001–02
Teams65
Finals siteGeorgia Dome
Atlanta, Georgia
ChampionsMaryland Terrapins (1st title, 1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Runner-upIndiana Hoosiers (6th title game,
8th Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • Oklahoma Sooners (4th Final Four)
  • Winning coachGary Williams (1st title)
    MOPJuan Dixon (Maryland)
    Attendance720,433
    Top scorersJuan Dixon (Maryland)
    Jared Jeffries (Indiana)
    (155 points)
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «2001 2003»

    The 2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 65 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 12, 2002, and ended with the championship game on April 1 in Atlanta at the Georgia Dome. A total of 64 games were played.

    This was the first year that the tournament used the so-called "pod" system, in which the eight first- and second-round sites are distributed around the four regionals. Teams were assigned to first round spots in order to minimize travel for as many teams as possible. The top seeds at each site were:

    The Final Four consisted of Maryland, making their second consecutive appearance, Kansas, making their first appearance since 1993, Indiana, making their first appearance since 1992, and Oklahoma, making their first appearance since their national runner-up finish in 1988.

    Maryland defeated Indiana 64–52 in the championship game to win their first-ever national championship. Juan Dixon of Maryland was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

    For the second straight tournament, the Elite Eight featured at least one double-digit seed. South Region tenth-seed Kent State and West Region twelfth-seed Missouri played in their respective regional finals, with Kent State losing to Indiana and Missouri losing to Oklahoma. This also marked the first time since 1987 that no team from the states of North Carolina nor Kentucky reached the Final Four.

    This tournament was the first since 1974 (the last tournament which only allowed one team per conference) in which the North Carolina Tar Heels were not a participant. The 27-year streak was, at the time, the longest appearance streak in NCAA history, having beat UCLA's 15-year streak in 1990. It has since been topped by Kansas, whose 35-year streak dates back to 1990 and is still active. (Two other active teams, Michigan State and Gonzaga, also have active 20 year streaks and could beat UNC's streak in 2026 and 2027, respectively.)

    Schedule and venues[edit]

    2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Dayton

    Dayton

    Washington, D.C.

    Washington, D.C.

    Pittsburgh

    Pittsburgh

    Greenville

    Greenville

    Chicago

    Chicago

    St. Louis

    St. Louis

    Dallas

    Dallas

    Albuquerque

    Albuquerque

    Sacramento

    Sacramento

    2002 play-in game (orange) and first and second rounds (green)
    2002 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    San Jose

    San Jose

    Madison

    Madison

    Lexington

    Lexington

    Syracuse

    Syracuse

    Atlanta

    Atlanta

    2002 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

    The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2002 tournament:

    Opening Round

    First and Second Rounds

    Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

    National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

    Qualifying teams[edit]

    Automatic bids[edit]

    The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2002 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).

    Conference School Appearance Last bid
    ACC Duke 26th 2001
    America East Boston University 6th 1997
    Atlantic 10 Xavier 14th 2001
    Atlantic Sun Florida Atlantic 1st Never
    Big 12 Oklahoma 21st 2001
    Big East Connecticut 23rd 2000
    Big Sky Montana 5th 1997
    Big South Winthrop 4th 2001
    Big Ten Ohio State 22nd 2001
    Big West UC Santa Barbara 3rd 1990
    Colonial UNC Wilmington 2nd 2000
    C-USA Cincinnati 21st 2001
    Horizon Illinois–Chicago 2nd 1998
    Ivy League Penn 19th 2000
    MAAC Siena 3rd 1999
    MAC Kent State 3rd 2001
    MEAC Hampton 2nd 2001
    Mid-Con Valparaiso 6th 2000
    Missouri Valley Creighton 13th 2001
    Mountain West San Diego State 4th 1985
    Northeast Central Connecticut State 2nd 2000
    Ohio Valley Murray State 11th 1999
    Pac-10 Arizona 21st 2001
    Patriot Holy Cross 10th 2001
    SEC Mississippi State 5th 1996
    Southern Davidson 7th 1998
    Southland McNeese State 2nd 1989
    Sun Belt Western Kentucky 18th 2001
    SWAC Alcorn State 6th 1999
    WAC Hawaii 4th 2001
    West Coast Gonzaga 5th 2001

    Listed by region and seeding[edit]

    East Regional – Syracuse
    Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
    #1 Maryland ACC 26–4 At-large
    #2 Connecticut Big East 24–6 Automatic
    #3 Georgia SEC 21–9 At-large
    #4 Kentucky SEC 20–9 At-large
    #5 Marquette C-USA 26–6 At-large
    #6 Texas Tech Big 12 23–8 At-large
    #7 NC State ACC 22–10 At-large
    #8 Wisconsin Big Ten 18–12 At-large
    #9 St. John's Big East 20–11 At-large
    #10 Michigan State Big Ten 19–11 At-large
    #11 Southern Illinois Missouri Valley 26–7 At-large
    #12 Tulsa WAC 26–6 At-large
    #13 Valparaiso Mid-Continent 25–7 Automatic
    #14 Murray State OVC 19–12 Automatic
    #15 Hampton MEAC 26–6 Automatic
    #16 Siena MAAC 16–18 Automatic
    Alcorn State SWAC 21–9 Automatic
    Midwest Regional – Madison
    Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
    #1 Kansas Big 12 29–3 At-large
    #2 Oregon Pac-10 23–8 At-large
    #3 Mississippi State SEC 26–7 Automatic
    #4 Illinois Big Ten 24–8 At-large
    #5 Florida SEC 22–8 At-large
    #6 Texas Big 12 20–11 At-large
    #7 Wake Forest ACC 20–12 At-large
    #8 Stanford Pac-10 19–9 At-large
    #9 Western Kentucky Sun Belt 28–3 Automatic
    #10 Pepperdine WCC 22–8 At-large
    #11 Boston College Big East 20–11 At-large
    #12 Creighton Missouri Valley 22–8 Automatic
    #13 San Diego State Mountain West 21–11 Automatic
    #14 McNeese State Southland 21–8 Automatic
    #15 Montana Big Sky 16–14 Automatic
    #16 Holy Cross Patriot 18–14 Automatic
    South Regional – Lexington
    Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
    #1 Duke ACC 29–3 Automatic
    #2 Alabama SEC 26–7 At-large
    #3 Pittsburgh Big East 27–5 At-large
    #4 USC Pac-10 22–9 At-large
    #5 Indiana Big Ten 20–11 At-large
    #6 California Pac-10 21–8 At-large
    #7 Oklahoma State Big 12 23–8 At-large
    #8 Notre Dame Big East 21–10 At-large
    #9 Charlotte C-USA 18–11 At-large
    #10 Kent State MAC 27–5 Automatic
    #11 Penn Ivy League 25–6 Automatic
    #12 Utah Mountain West 21–8 At-large
    #13 UNC Wilmington CAA 22–9 Automatic
    #14 Central Connecticut State NEC 27–4 Automatic
    #15 Florida Atlantic Atlantic Sun 19–11 Automatic
    #16 Winthrop Big South 19–11 Automatic
    West Regional – San Jose
    Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
    #1 Cincinnati C-USA 30–3 Automatic
    #2 Oklahoma Big 12 27–4 Automatic
    #3 Arizona Pac-10 22–9 Automatic
    #4 Ohio State Big Ten 23–7 Automatic
    #5 Miami (FL) Big East 24–7 At-large
    #6 Gonzaga WCC 29–3 Automatic
    #7 Xavier Atlantic 10 25–5 Automatic
    #8 UCLA Pac-10 19–11 At-Large
    #9 Ole Miss SEC 20–10 At-large
    #10 Hawaii WAC 27–5 Automatic
    #11 Wyoming Mountain West 21–8 At-large
    #12 Missouri Big 12 21–11 At-large
    #13 Davidson Southern 21–9 Automatic
    #14 UC Santa Barbara Big West 20–10 Automatic
    #15 Illinois–Chicago Horizon 20–13 Automatic
    #16 Boston University America East 22–9 Automatic

    Bids by conference[edit]

    Bids Conference Schools
    6 Big 12 Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas Tech
    Big East Boston College, Connecticut, Miami (FL), Notre Dame, Pittsburgh, St. John's
    Pac-10 Arizona, California, Oregon, Stanford, UCLA, USC
    SEC Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi State, Ole Miss
    5 Big Ten Illinois, Indiana, Michigan State, Ohio State, Wisconsin
    4 ACC Duke, Maryland, NC State, Wake Forest
    3 C-USA Charlotte, Cincinnati, Marquette
    Mountain West San Diego State, Utah, Wyoming
    2 Missouri Valley Creighton, Southern Illinois
    WAC Hawaii, Tulsa
    West Coast Gonzaga, Pepperdine
    1 20 other conferences

    Final Four[edit]

    AtGeorgia Dome, Atlanta

    National semifinals[edit]

    Championship game[edit]

    Bracket[edit]

    Opening Round game[edit]

    Winner advances to 16th seed in East Regional vs. (1) Maryland.

    Opening Round game
    March 12
       
    16a Siena 81
    16b Alcorn State 77

    East Regional — Syracuse, New York[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Maryland 85
    16Siena 70
    1Maryland 87
    Washington, D.C. - Fri/Sun
    8Wisconsin 57
    8Wisconsin 80
    9St. John's 70
    1Maryland 78
    4Kentucky 68
    5Marquette 69
    12Tulsa 71
    12Tulsa 82
    St. Louis - Thu/Sat
    4Kentucky 87
    4Kentucky 83
    13Valparaiso 68
    1Maryland 90
    2Connecticut 82
    6Texas Tech 68
    11Southern Illinois 76
    11Southern Illinois 77
    Chicago - Fri/Sun
    3Georgia 75
    3Georgia 85
    14Murray State 68
    11Southern Illinois 59
    2Connecticut 71
    7NC State 69
    10Michigan State 58
    7NC State 74
    Washington, D.C. - Fri/Sun
    2Connecticut 77
    2Connecticut 78
    15Hampton 67

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 24

    box score

    #1 Maryland Terrapins 90, #2 Connecticut Huskies 82
    Scoring by half: 44–37, 46–45
    Pts: L. Baxter – 29
    Rebs: L. Baxter – 9
    Asts: S. Blake – 6
    Pts: C. Butler – 33
    Rebs: C. Butler – 7
    Asts: C. Butler – 4

    Carrier Dome – Syracuse, NY
    Attendance: 29,252
    Referees: Tom Rucker, Zelton Steed, Dick Cartmell

    Midwest Regional — Madison, Wisconsin[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Kansas 70
    16Holy Cross 59
    1Kansas 86
    St. Louis - Thu/Sat
    8Stanford 63
    8Stanford 84
    9Western Kentucky 68
    1Kansas 73
    4Illinois 69
    5Florida 82
    12Creighton 832OT
    12Creighton 60
    Chicago - Fri/Sun
    4Illinois 72
    4Illinois 93
    13San Diego State 64
    1Kansas 104
    2Oregon 86
    6Texas 70
    11Boston College 57
    6Texas 68
    Dallas - Fri/Sun
    3Mississippi State 64
    3Mississippi State 70
    14McNeese State 58
    6Texas 70
    2Oregon 72
    7Wake Forest 83
    10Pepperdine 74
    7Wake Forest 87
    Sacramento - Thu/Sat
    2Oregon 92
    2Oregon 81
    15Montana 62

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 24

    box score

    #1 Kansas Jayhawks 104, #2 Oregon Ducks 86
    Scoring by half: 48–42, 56–44
    Pts: N. Collison – 25
    Rebs: D. Gooden – 20
    Asts: A. Miles – 8
    Pts: F. Jones – 32
    Rebs: R. Johnson – 10
    Asts: L. Ridnour – 7

    Kohl Center – Madison, WI
    Attendance: 16,310
    Referees: Jim Burr, Leslie Jones, Tom Lopes

    South Regional — Lexington, Kentucky[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Duke 84
    16Winthrop 37
    1Duke 84
    Greenville - Thu/Sat
    8Notre Dame 77
    8Notre Dame 82
    9Charlotte 63
    1Duke 73
    5Indiana 74
    5Indiana 75
    12Utah 56
    5Indiana 76
    Sacramento - Thu/Sat
    13UNC Wilmington 67
    4USC 89
    13UNC Wilmington 93OT
    5Indiana 81
    10Kent State 69
    6California 82
    11Pennsylvania 75
    6California 50
    Pittsburgh - Fri/Sun
    3Pittsburgh 63
    3Pittsburgh 71
    14Central Connecticut State 54
    3Pittsburgh 73
    10Kent State 78OT
    7Oklahoma State 61
    10Kent State 69
    10Kent State 71
    Greenville - Thu/Sat
    2Alabama 58
    2Alabama 86
    15Florida Atlantic 78

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, March 23
    7:00 p.m. EST

    box score

    #5 Indiana Hoosiers 81, #10 Kent State Golden Flashes 69
    Scoring by half: 40–28, 41–41
    Pts: D. Fife – 17
    Rebs: J. Jeffries – 7
    Asts: T. Coverdale, K. Hornsby – 7
    Pts: A. Gates – 22
    Rebs: A. Gates, D. Shaw – 8
    Asts: T. Huffman – 4

    Rupp Arena – Lexington, KY
    Attendance: 22,435
    Referees: Mark Whitehead, Scott Thornley, Tom Nunez

    West Regional — San Jose, California[edit]

    First round Quarter-finals Regional semifinals Regional Finals
                
    1Cincinnati 90
    16Boston University 52
    1Cincinnati 101
    Pittsburgh - Fri/Sun
    8UCLA 1052OT
    8UCLA 80
    9Ole Miss 58
    8UCLA 73
    12Missouri 82
    5Miami (FL) 80
    12Missouri 93
    12Missouri 83
    Albuquerque - Thu/Sat
    4Ohio State# 67
    4Ohio State# 69
    13Davidson 64
    12Missouri 75
    2Oklahoma 81
    6Gonzaga 66
    11Wyoming 73
    11Wyoming 60
    Albuquerque - Thu/Sat
    3Arizona 68
    3Arizona 86
    14UC-Santa Barbara 81
    3Arizona 67
    2Oklahoma 88
    7Xavier 70
    10Hawaii 58
    7Xavier 65
    Dallas - Fri/Sun
    2Oklahoma 78
    2Oklahoma 71
    15Illinois-Chicago 63

    # — Ohio State vacated all 32 games including its NCAA Tournament appearance from the 2001–02 season due to the Jim O’Brien scandal.[4] Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with Ohio State removing the wins from its own record.

    Regional Final Summary[edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, March 23

    box score

    #2 Oklahoma Sooners 81, #12 Missouri Tigers 75
    Scoring by half: 41–32, 40–43
    Pts: H. Price – 18
    Rebs: Q. White, D, Selvy – 7
    Asts: Q. White – 7
    Pts: R. Paulding – 22
    Rebs: T. Bryant – 9
    Asts: W. Stokes, R. Paulding – 4

    Compaq Center – San Jose, CA
    Attendance: 18,040
    Referees: John Cahill, Terry Moore, John Hughes

    Final Four — Atlanta, Georgia[edit]

    National semifinals National Championship Game
          
    E1 Maryland 97
    M1 Kansas 88
    E1 Maryland 64
    S5 Indiana 52
    S5 Indiana 73
    W2 Oklahoma 64

    Broadcast information[edit]

    ESPN broadcast the opening-round game, then turned coverage over to CBS Sports for the remaining 63 games. They were carried on a regional basis until the "Elite Eight", at which point all games were shown nationally.

    Westwood One had exclusive radio coverage.

    CBS Sports announcers[edit]

    Westwood One announcers[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "2002 NCAA National semifinals: (E1) Maryland 97, (MW1) Kansas 88". CNN Sports Illustrated. CNNSI.com. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  • ^ "2002 NCAA National semifinals: (S5) Indiana 73, (W2) Oklahoma 64". CNN Sports Illustrated. CNNSI.com. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  • ^ "2002 NCAA national championship: (E1) Maryland 64, (S5) Indiana 52". CNN Sports Illustrated. CNNSI.com. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  • ^ "OSU gets probation". ESPN.com. March 10, 2006. Retrieved June 5, 2017.

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