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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Tournament procedure  





2 Schedule and venues  





3 Qualified teams  



3.1  Automatic qualifiers  





3.2  Tournament seeds  







4 Bracket  



4.1  First Four  Dayton, Ohio  





4.2  South Regional  Memphis, Tennessee  



4.2.1  Regional Final summary  





4.2.2  South Regional all-tournament team  







4.3  East Regional  New York City, New York  



4.3.1  Regional Final summary  





4.3.2  East Regional all-tournament team  







4.4  West Regional  Anaheim, California  



4.4.1  Regional Final summary  





4.4.2  West Regional all-tournament team  







4.5  Midwest Regional  Indianapolis, Indiana  



4.5.1  Regional Final summary  





4.5.2  Midwest Regional all-tournament team  









5 Final Four  



5.1  Final Four  AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas  





5.2  Game summaries  



5.2.1  Final four  





5.2.2  National Championship  





5.2.3  Final Four all-tournament team  









6 Tournament notes  



6.1  Upsets  







7 Record by conference  





8 Media coverage  



8.1  Television  



8.1.1  Studio hosts  





8.1.2  Studio analysts  





8.1.3  Commentary teams  



8.1.3.1  Team casts  









8.2  International  





8.3  Radio  



8.3.1  First Four  





8.3.2  Second and Third rounds  





8.3.3  Regionals  





8.3.4  Final four  









9 See also  





10 Notes  





11 References  














2014 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from 2014 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament)

2014 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Teams68
Finals siteAT&T Stadium
Arlington, Texas
ChampionsUConn Huskies (4th title, 4th title game,
5th Final Four)
Runner-upKentucky Wildcats (12th title game,
16th Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • Wisconsin Badgers (3rd Final Four)
  • Winning coachKevin Ollie (1st title)
    MOPShabazz Napier (UConn)
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «2013 2015»

    The 2014 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 68 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament that determined the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's basketball national champion for the 2013-14 season. The 76th annual edition of the tournament began on March 18, 2014, and concluded with the championship game on April 7, at AT&T StadiuminArlington, Texas.

    The East Regional semifinals and final were held in Madison Square Garden, the first time that arena has been used as an NCAA Tournament venue and the first time in 63 years that tournament games have been held in New York City.

    The Final Four consisted of Florida (the #1 overall seed of the tournament), making their first appearance since winning their second consecutive championship in 2007, UConn, returning after winning their 2011 national championship, Wisconsin, making their first appearance since 2000, and Kentucky, back in the Final Four after winning their 2012 national championship.

    With No. 7 seed UConn and No. 8 seed Kentucky reaching the championship game, this tournament's final was the first ever not to include at least one team seeded 1–3. It is also only the third final not to feature a 1 or 2 seed (1989 – #3 Michigan vs. #3 Seton Hall and 2011 – #3 UConn vs. #8 Butler). UConn defeated Kentucky in the championship game 60–54, to claim their 4th national championship as in many attempts. UConn was also the first 7 seed ever to reach and win the championship game. The two teams combined for the highest seed total in championship game history with 15. The previous record (11) was held by UConn and Butler in 2011.

    The next day, the UConn Huskies women's team won the women's NCAA basketball tournament, only the second time that a school has won both the men's and women's Division I national basketball championships in the same year; UConn first accomplished this in 2004.[1]

    Tournament procedure[edit]

    For 2014 the selection committee picked a total of 68 teams that would enter the 2014 tournament, of which 32 were "automatic bids" (teams winning their conference tournaments, with the exception of the Ivy League, which does not host a post-season conference tournament; thus, its regular-season conference champion is awarded the automatic bid) while the remaining 36 were "at large" bids which were extended by the NCAA Selection Committee on the Sunday preceding the First Four play-in tournament and dubbed Selection Sunday by the media and fans. The Selection Committee also seeded the entire field from 1 to 68.[2]

    Eight teams – the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams – played in the First Four (the successor to what had been popularly known as "play-in games" through the 2010 tournament). The winners of those games advanced to the main draw of the tournament.

    Schedule and venues[edit]

    2014 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Dayton

    Dayton

    Buffalo

    Buffalo

    Milwaukee

    Milwaukee

    Orlando

    Orlando

    Spokane

    Spokane

    Raleigh

    Raleigh

    San Antonio

    San Antonio

    San Diego

    San Diego

    St. Louis

    St. Louis

    2014 First Four (orange) and first and second rounds (green)
    2014 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Anaheim

    Anaheim

    Memphis

    Memphis

    Indianapolis

    Indianapolis

    New York City

    New York City

    Arlington

    Arlington

    2014 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

    The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2014 tournament:[3]

    First Four

    First and Second rounds

    Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

    National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

    Qualified teams[edit]

    Automatic qualifiers[edit]

    The following teams are automatic qualifiers for the 2014 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion receives the automatic bid).

    Conference Team Appearance Last bid
    ACC Virginia 18th 2012
    America East Albany 4th 2013
    American Louisville 40th 2013
    Atlantic 10 Saint Joseph's 20th 2008
    Atlantic Sun Mercer 3rd 1985
    Big 12 Iowa State 16th 2013
    Big East Providence 16th 2004
    Big Sky Weber State 15th 2007
    Big South Coastal Carolina 3rd 1993
    Big Ten Michigan State 28th 2013
    Big West Cal Poly 1st Never
    Colonial Delaware 5th 1999
    C-USA Tulsa 15th 2003
    Horizon Milwaukee 4th 2006
    Ivy League Harvard 4th 2013
    MAAC Manhattan 7th 2004
    MAC Western Michigan 4th 2004
    MEAC North Carolina Central 1st Never
    Missouri Valley Wichita State 11th 2013
    Mountain West New Mexico 15th 2013
    Northeast Mount St. Mary's 4th 2008
    Ohio Valley Eastern Kentucky 8th 2007
    Pac-12 UCLA 46th 2013
    Patriot American 3rd 2009
    SEC Florida 19th 2013
    Southern Wofford 3rd 2011
    Southland Stephen F. Austin 2nd 2009
    SWAC Texas Southern 5th 2003
    Summit North Dakota State 2nd 2009
    Sun Belt Louisiana–Lafayette 6th 2000 [n 1]
    West Coast Gonzaga 17th 2013
    WAC New Mexico State 21st 2013

    Tournament seeds[edit]

    South Region – Memphis, Tennessee
    Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank[4]
    1 Florida SEC 32–2 Billy Donovan Automatic 1
    2 Kansas Big 12 24–9 Bill Self At–large 7
    3 Syracuse ACC 27–5 Jim Boeheim At–large 10
    4 UCLA Pac-12 26–8 Steve Alford Automatic 15
    5 VCU Atlantic 10 26–8 Shaka Smart At–large 19
    6 Ohio State Big Ten 25–9 Thad Matta At–large 22
    7 New Mexico Mountain West 27–6 Craig Neal Automatic 28
    8 Colorado Pac-12 23–11 Tad Boyle At–large 32
    9 Pittsburgh ACC 25–9 Jamie Dixon At–large 36
    10 Stanford Pac-12 21–12 Johnny Dawkins At–large 37
    11 Dayton Atlantic 10 23–10 Archie Miller At–large 41
    12 Stephen F. Austin Southland 31–2 Brad Underwood Automatic 50
    13 Tulsa C-USA 21–12 Danny Manning Automatic 52
    14 Western Michigan MAC 23–9 Steve Hawkins Automatic 55
    15 Eastern Kentucky Ohio Valley 24–9 Jeff Neubauer Automatic 59
    16* Albany America East 18–14 Will Brown Automatic 66
    Mount St. Mary's Northeast 16–16 Jamion Christian Automatic 65
    East Region – New York City, New York
    Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
    1 Virginia ACC 28–6 Tony Bennett Automatic 4
    2 Villanova Big East 28–4 Jay Wright At-Large 5
    3 Iowa State Big 12 26–7 Fred Hoiberg Automatic 12
    4 Michigan State Big Ten 26–8 Tom Izzo Automatic 14
    5 Cincinnati American 27–6 Mick Cronin At–large 17
    6 North Carolina ACC 23–9 Roy Williams At–large 21
    7 UConn American 26–8 Kevin Ollie At–large 26
    8 Memphis American 23–9 Josh Pastner At–large 31
    9 George Washington Atlantic 10 24–8 Mike Lonergan At–large 34
    10 Saint Joseph's Atlantic 10 24–9 Phil Martelli Automatic 38
    11 Providence Big East 23–11 Ed Cooley Automatic 43
    12 Harvard Ivy 26–4 Tommy Amaker Automatic 49
    13 Delaware Colonial 25–9 Monte Ross Automatic 54
    14 North Carolina Central MEAC 28–5 LeVelle Moton Automatic 58
    15 Milwaukee Horizon 21–13 Rob Jeter Automatic 60
    16 Coastal Carolina Big South 21–12 Cliff Ellis Automatic 63
    West Region – Anaheim, California
    Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
    1 Arizona Pac-12 30–4 Sean Miller At–large 2
    2 Wisconsin Big Ten 26–7 Bo Ryan At–large 8
    3 Creighton Big East 26–7 Greg McDermott At–large 11
    4 San Diego State Mountain West 29–4 Steve Fisher At–large 16
    5 Oklahoma Big 12 23–9 Lon Krueger At–large 20
    6 Baylor Big 12 24–11 Scott Drew At–large 24
    7 Oregon Pac-12 23–9 Dana Altman At–large 27
    8 Gonzaga West Coast 28–6 Mark Few Automatic 30
    9 Oklahoma State Big 12 21–12 Travis Ford At–large 35
    10 BYU West Coast 23–11 Dave Rose At–large 39
    11 Nebraska Big Ten 19–12 Tim Miles At–large 42
    12 North Dakota State Summit 25–6 Saul Phillips Automatic 48
    13 New Mexico State WAC 26–9 Marvin Menzies Automatic 53
    14 Louisiana-Lafayette Sun Belt 23–11 Bob Marlin Automatic 57
    15 American Patriot 20–12 Mike Brennan Automatic 62
    16 Weber State Big Sky 19–11 Randy Rahe Automatic 64
    Midwest Region – Indianapolis, Indiana
    Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
    1 Wichita State MVC 34–0 Gregg Marshall Automatic 3
    2 Michigan Big Ten 25–8 John Beilein At-large 6
    3 Duke ACC 26–8 Mike Krzyzewski At–large 9
    4 Louisville American 29–5 Rick Pitino Automatic 13
    5 Saint Louis Atlantic 10 26–6 Jim Crews At–large 18
    6 Massachusetts Atlantic 10 24–8 Derek Kellogg At–large 23
    7 Texas Big 12 23–10 Rick Barnes At–large 25
    8 Kentucky SEC 24–10 John Calipari At–large 29
    9 Kansas State Big 12 20–12 Bruce Weber At–large 33
    10 Arizona State Pac-12 21–11 Herb Sendek At–large 40
    11* Iowa Big Ten 20–12 Fran McCaffery At–large 45
    Tennessee SEC 21–12 Cuonzo Martin At–large 44
    12* NC State ACC 21–13 Mark Gottfried At–large 47
    Xavier Big East 21–12 Chris Mack At–large 46
    13 Manhattan MAAC 25–7 Steve Massiello Automatic 51
    14 Mercer Atlantic Sun 26–8 Bob Hoffman Automatic 56
    15 Wofford Southern 20–12 Mike Young Automatic 61
    16* Cal Poly Big West 13–19 Joe Calero Automatic 68
    Texas Southern SWAC 19–14 Mike Davis Automatic 67

    Florida was the overall 1 seed for the second time, the other being 2007 when they repeated as national champions. Arizona was a 1 seed for the 6th time in school history. They lost in the West regional final for the 3rd straight time as a 1 seed, all games being played in Anaheim (also in 1998 and 2003). Virginia was a 1 seed for the 4th time in school history, their first since three straight 1 seeds in 1981, 1982, and 1983.

    Bracket[edit]

    Unless otherwise noted, all times listed are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-04)

    First Four – Dayton, Ohio[edit]

    The First Four games involved eight teams: the four overall lowest-ranked teams, and the four lowest-ranked at-large teams.

    March 18 – Midwest Region
       
    12NC State 74
    12Xavier 59
    March 18 – South Region
       
    16Albany 71
    16Mount St. Mary's 64
    March 19 – Midwest Region
       
    11Iowa 65
    11Tennessee 78OT
    March 19 – Midwest Region
       
    16Cal Poly 81
    16Texas Southern 69

    South Regional – Memphis, Tennessee[edit]

    First round
    Round of 64
    March 20–21
    Second round
    Round of 32
    March 22–23
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 27
    Regional finals
    Elite 8
    March 29
                
    1Florida 67
    16Albany 55
    1Florida 61
    Orlando – Thu/Sat
    9Pittsburgh 45
    8Colorado 48
    9Pittsburgh 77
    1Florida 79
    4UCLA 68
    5VCU 75
    12Stephen F. Austin 77OT
    12Stephen F. Austin 60
    San Diego – Fri/Sun
    4UCLA 77
    4UCLA 76
    13Tulsa 59
    1Florida 62
    11Dayton 52
    6Ohio State 59
    11Dayton 60
    11Dayton 55
    Buffalo – Thu/Sat
    3Syracuse 53
    3Syracuse 77
    14Western Michigan 53
    11Dayton 82
    10Stanford 72
    7New Mexico 53
    10Stanford 58
    10Stanford 60
    St. Louis – Fri/Sun
    2Kansas 57
    2Kansas 80
    15Eastern Kentucky 69

    Regional Final summary[edit]

    TBS

    Saturday, March 29
    5:09 pm CT

    box score

    #11 Dayton Flyers 52, #1 Florida Gators 62
    Scoring by half: 24–38, 28–24
    Pts: D. Pierre – 18
    Rebs: M. Kavanaugh – 8
    Asts: D. Pierre – 5
    Pts: S. Wilbekin – 23
    Rebs: D. Finney-Smith – 9
    Asts: K. Hill, S. Wilbekin – 3

    FedEx Forum – Memphis, TN
    Attendance: 15,443
    Referees: Mike Stuart, Pat Driscoll, Doug Shows

    South Regional all-tournament team[edit]

    Regional all-tournament team: Michael Frazier II, Florida; Devin Oliver, Dayton; Dyshawn Pierre, Dayton; Dwight Powell, Stanford[5]

    Regional most outstanding player: Scottie Wilbekin, Florida[6]

    East Regional – New York City, New York[edit]

    First round
    Round of 64
    March 20–21
    Second round
    Round of 32
    March 22–23
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 28
    Regional finals
    Elite 8
    March 30
                
    1Virginia 70
    16Coastal Carolina 59
    1Virginia 78
    Raleigh – Fri/Sun
    8Memphis 60
    8Memphis 71
    9George Washington 66
    1Virginia 59
    4Michigan State 61
    5Cincinnati 57
    12Harvard 61
    12Harvard 73
    Spokane – Thu/Sat
    4Michigan State 80
    4Michigan State 93
    13Delaware 78
    4Michigan State 54
    7UConn 60
    6North Carolina 79
    11Providence 77
    6North Carolina 83
    San Antonio – Fri/Sun
    3Iowa State 85
    3Iowa State 93
    14NC Central 75
    3Iowa State 76
    7UConn 81
    7UConn 89OT
    10Saint Joseph's 81
    7UConn 77
    Buffalo – Thu/Sat
    2Villanova 65
    2Villanova 73
    15Milwaukee 53

    Regional Final summary[edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 30
    2:20 pm ET

    box score

    #7 UConn Huskies 60, #4 Michigan State Spartans 54
    Scoring by half: 21–25, 39–29
    Pts: S. Napier – 25
    Rebs: D. Daniels – 8
    Asts: S. Napier – 4
    Pts: G. Harris – 22
    Rebs: A. Payne – 9
    Asts: A. Payne – 3

    Madison Square Garden – New York City, NY
    Attendance: 19,499
    Referees: Tom Eades, John Higgins, Michael Roberts

    East Regional all-tournament team[edit]

    Regional all-tournament team: DeAndre Daniels, UConn; Gary Harris, Michigan State; Dustin Hogue, Iowa State; Adreian Payne, Michigan State[7]

    Regional most outstanding player: Shabazz Napier, UConn[8]

    West Regional – Anaheim, California[edit]

    First round
    Round of 64
    March 20–21
    Second round
    Round of 32
    March 22–23
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 27
    Regional finals
    Elite 8
    March 29
                
    1Arizona 68
    16Weber State 59
    1Arizona 84
    San Diego – Fri/Sun
    8Gonzaga 61
    8Gonzaga 85
    9Oklahoma State 77
    1Arizona 70
    4San Diego State 64
    5Oklahoma 75
    12North Dakota State 80OT
    12North Dakota State 44
    Spokane – Thu/Sat
    4San Diego State 63
    4San Diego State 73OT
    13New Mexico State 69
    1Arizona 63
    2Wisconsin 64OT
    6Baylor 74
    11Nebraska 60
    6Baylor 85
    San Antonio – Fri/Sun
    3Creighton 55
    3Creighton 76
    14Louisiana–Lafayette 66
    6Baylor 52
    2Wisconsin 69
    7Oregon 87
    10BYU 68
    7Oregon 77
    Milwaukee – Thu/Sat
    2Wisconsin 85
    2Wisconsin 75
    15American 35

    Regional Final summary[edit]

    TBS

    Saturday, March 29
    5:49 pm PT

    box score

    #2 Wisconsin Badgers 64, #1 Arizona Wildcats 63 (OT)
    Scoring by half: 25–28, 29–26 Overtime: 10–9
    Pts: F. Kaminsky III – 28
    Rebs: F. Kaminsky III – 11
    Asts: T. Jackson – 5
    Pts: N. Johnson – 16
    Rebs: A. Gordon – 18
    Asts: N. Johnson – 3

    Honda Center – Anaheim, CA
    Attendance: 17,814
    Referees: Bryan Kersey, Tony Greene, Mike Eades

    West Regional all-tournament team[edit]

    Regional all-tournament team: Aaron Gordon, Arizona; Traevon Jackson, Wisconsin; Nick Johnson, Arizona; Xavier Thames, San Diego State[9]

    Regional most outstanding player: Frank Kaminsky, Wisconsin

    Midwest Regional – Indianapolis, Indiana[edit]

    First round
    Round of 64
    March 20–21
    Second round
    Round of 32
    March 22–23
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 28
    Regional finals
    Elite 8
    March 30
                
    1Wichita State 64
    16Cal Poly 37
    1Wichita State 76
    St. Louis – Fri/Sun
    8Kentucky 78
    8Kentucky 56
    9Kansas State 49
    8Kentucky 74
    4Louisville# 69
    5Saint Louis 83OT
    12NC State 80
    5Saint Louis 51
    Orlando – Thu/Sat
    4Louisville# 66
    4Louisville# 71
    13Manhattan 64
    8Kentucky 75
    2Michigan 72
    6Massachusetts 67
    11Tennessee 86
    11Tennessee 83
    Raleigh – Fri/Sun
    14Mercer 63
    3Duke 71
    14Mercer 78
    11Tennessee 71
    2Michigan 73
    7Texas 87
    10Arizona State 85
    7Texas 65
    Milwaukee – Thu/Sat
    2Michigan 79
    2Michigan 57
    15Wofford 40

    # — On February 20, 2018, the NCAA announced that the wins and records for Louisville's 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, and 2014–15 seasons were vacated due to the sex scandal at Louisville.[10] Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with Louisville removing the wins from its own record.

    Regional Final summary[edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 30
    5:05 pm ET

    box score

    #8 Kentucky Wildcats 75, #2 Michigan Wolverines 72
    Scoring by half: 37–37, 38–35
    Pts: J. Randle – 16
    Rebs: J. Randle – 11
    Asts: A. Harrison – 6
    Pts: N. Stauskas – 24
    Rebs: J. Morgan, G. Robinson III – 4
    Asts: C. LeVert – 5

    Lucas Oil Stadium – Indianapolis, IN
    Attendance: 35,551
    Referees: Ed Corbett, Don Daily, Randall McCall

    Midwest Regional all-tournament team[edit]

    Regional all-tournament team: Aaron Harrison, Kentucky; Marcus Lee, Kentucky; Caris LeVert, Michigan; Nik Stauskas, Michigan

    Regional most outstanding player: Julius Randle, Kentucky[11]

    Final Four[edit]

    During the Final Four round, regardless of the seeds of the participating teams, the champion of the top overall top seed's region plays against the champion of the fourth-ranked top seed's region, and the champion of the second overall top seed's region plays against the champion of the third-ranked top seed's region.[12] Florida (placed in the South Regional) was selected as the top overall seed, and Virginia (in the East Regional) was named as the #4 overall seed.[13] Thus, the South champion (Florida) played the East Champion (UConn) in one semifinal game, and the West Champion (Wisconsin) faced the Midwest Champion (Kentucky) in the other semifinal game.[14] The overall No. 1 seed Florida lost only two games during the regular season: to West Champion Wisconsin and to East Champion (and eventual National Champion) UConn; Florida also played and beat Midwest Champion Kentucky twice during the regular season and again in the conference championship game.

    Final Four – AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas[edit]

    National Semifinals
    Final Four
    Saturday, April 5
    National Championship Game
    Monday, April 7
          
    MW8 Kentucky 74
    W2 Wisconsin 73
    MW8 Kentucky 54
    E7 UConn 60
    E7 UConn 63
    S1 Florida 53

    Game summaries[edit]

    Final four[edit]

    TBS
    TNT
    truTV

    Saturday, April 5
    5:15 pm CT

    Recap

    E7 UConn Huskies 63, S1 Florida Gators 53
    Scoring by half: 25–22, 38–31
    Pts: D. Daniels – 20
    Rebs: D. Daniels – 10
    Asts: S. Napier – 6
    Pts: P. Young – 19
    Rebs: C. Prather – 6
    Asts: S. Wilbekin, C. Prather, D. Finney-Smith – 1

    AT&T Stadium – Arlington, TX
    Attendance: 79,444[15]
    Referees: John Higgins, Michael Stephens, Doug Simmons

    TBS
    TNT
    truTV

    Saturday, April 5, 2014
    8:12 pm CT

    Recap

    MW8 Kentucky Wildcats 74, W2 Wisconsin Badgers 73
    Scoring by half: 36–40, 38–33
    Pts: J. Young – 17
    Rebs: D. Johnson, A. Poythress – 7
    Asts: A. Harrison – 4
    Pts: B. Brust, S. Dekker – 15
    Rebs: J. Gasser, F. Kaminsky III – 5
    Asts: T. Jackson, J. Gasser – 3

    AT&T Stadium – Arlington, TX
    Attendance: 79,444[16]
    Referees: Mike Stuart, Pat Adams, Terry Wymer

    National Championship[edit]

    CBS

    Monday, April 7, 2014
    8:10 pm CT

    Recap

    #8 Kentucky Wildcats 54, #7 UConn Huskies 60
    Scoring by half: 31–35, 23–25
    Pts: J. Young – 22
    Rebs: J. Young – 7
    Asts: A. Harrison – 5
    Pts: S. Napier – 22
    Rebs: L. Kromah, D. Daniels, S. Napier – 6
    Asts: R. Boatright, S. Napier – 3

    AT&T Stadium – Arlington, TX
    Attendance: 79,238[17]
    Referees: Verne Harris, Doug Shows, Joe DeRosa

    Final Four all-tournament team[edit]

    Tournament notes[edit]

    Wichita State became the first team since UNLV in 1991 to go into the tournament undefeated. The Shockers entered the tournament 34–0. Their perfect record of 35–0 (a then NCAA men's record) was spoiled by Kentucky in the second round. Kentucky in turn set an NCAA-men's-record 38 straight wins to start a season the next year.

    Kentucky became the first team to field all-freshman starters at the Final Four and championship games since the 1991–92 Michigan Wolverines under the Fab Five.[18] The 1992 Final Four and championship appearances by Michigan were subsequently vacated.

    MEAC champion North Carolina Central University[19] and Big West champion Cal Poly[20] made their first NCAA Division I tournament appearances.

    For only the second time since 1973 no teams from the state of Indiana (a state noted for its basketball powerhouse programs) were in the tournament.[21]

    There were five overtime games in the second round of the tournament, the most overtime games ever in tournament history. In contrast, the previous two tournaments had two overtime games combined.

    North Dakota State's victory against Oklahoma secured the first tournament win for the state of North Dakota. Mercer, Stephen F. Austin, Albany, and Cal Poly had their first NCAA tournament wins. Cal Poly's victory over Texas Southern marked only the third time a team with a losing record won a game in the tournament.

    Upsets[edit]

    Per the NCAA, "Upsets are defined as when the winner of the game was seeded five or more places lower than the team it defeated." The 2014 tournament saw a total of 13 upsets; 6 of them were in the first round, 4 of them were in the second round, none in the Sweet Sixteen, one in the Elite Eight, and 2 in the Final Four.

    Round South East West Midwest
    First round
  • No. 11 Dayton defeated No. 6 Ohio State, 60–59
  • No. 12 Harvard defeated No. 5 Cincinnati, 61–57 No. 12 North Dakota State defeated No. 5 Oklahoma, 80–75 (OT)
  • No. 11 Tennessee defeated No. 6 Massachusetts, 86–67
  • Second Round
    • No. 11 Dayton defeated No. 3 Syracuse, 55–53
  • No. 10 Stanford defeated No. 2 Kansas, 60–57
  • No. 7 UConn defeated No. 2 Villanova, 77–65 None No. 8 Kentucky defeated No. 1 Wichita State, 78–76
    Sweet 16 None None None None
    Elite 8 None None None No. 8 Kentucky defeated No. 2 Michigan, 75–72
    Final 4
    • No. 7 UConn defeated No. 1 Florida, 63–53
  • No. 8 Kentucky defeated No. 2 Wisconsin, 74–73
  • Record by conference[edit]

    Conference Bids Record Win % R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC
    American 4 9–3 .750 4 3 2 1 1 1 1
    SEC 3 12–3 .800 3 3 3 2 2 1
    Big Ten 6 10–6 .625 5 3 3 3 1
    Pac-12 6 8–6 .571 6 4 3 1
    Atlantic 10 6 4–6 .400 6 2 1 1
    Big 12 7 6–7 .462 7 4 2
    ACC 6 6–6 .500 6 4 1
    Mountain West 2 2–2 .500 2 1 1
    Big East 4 2–4 .333 3 2
    WCC 2 1–2 .333 2 1
    Atlantic Sun 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Ivy 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    MVC 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Southland 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Summit 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    America East 1 1–1 .500 1
    Big West 1 1–1 .500 1

    Media coverage[edit]

    Television[edit]

    The year 2014 marked the fourth year of a 14-year partnership between CBS and Turner cable networks TBS, TNT and truTV to cover the entire tournament under the NCAA March Madness banner. TBS aired the Final Four for the first year since CBS' 32 consecutive years of airing. The tournament was considered a ratings success. Tournament games averaged 10.5 million viewers, and the championship game garnered an average of 21.2 million viewers and a peak viewership of 24.3 million.

    Studio hosts[edit]

    [23]

    Studio analysts[edit]

    [23]

    Commentary teams[edit]

    [23][24][25]

    Team casts[edit]

    For the first time in the history of the tournament, Turner broadcast the semifinals. TBS aired the traditional neutral broadcast (with Nantz/Anthony/Kerr/Wolfson commentator set that is also being used for CBS's national championship coverage). However, Turner also distributed team-centered broadcasts for the Final Four broadcasts on TNT and truTV. The announcers for these broadcasts are as follows:[25]

    International[edit]

    ESPN International distributes broadcast rights to the tournament outside the United States, and will produce separate international broadcasts of the semi-final and championship games with announcers Dan Shulman (play-by-play), Dick Vitale (analyst for the final and one semi-final), and Jay Bilas (analyst for the other semi-final).[26] For the initial rounds, they use CBS/Turner coverage with an additional host to transition between games, with whiparound coverage similar to the CBS-only era. ESPN also has exclusive digital rights to the NCAA tournament outside of North America.

    InCanada, the broadcasting rights are with TSN.[27] In The Philippines it's aired on TV5.[28]

    Radio[edit]

    Westwood One has exclusive national radio rights to the entire tournament.[29] Team radio networks also hold the rights to broadcast their teams through their entire progression within the tournament and no flagship restrictions. However men's team radio networks cannot stream the games online during the NCAA tournament. WestwoodOne is the only group authorized to stream the tournament online.

    See also[edit]

    Notes[edit]

    1. ^ Louisiana–Lafayette had more recent NCAA tournament appearances in 2004 and 2005, but those appearances were later vacated.

    References[edit]

    1. ^ "Party continues with title sweep". ESPN. Associated Press. April 9, 2014.
  • ^ "運営者情報 - 一押し、旬!ドキ". www.marchmadness2014.net. Archived from the original on March 19, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  • ^ "Preliminary round sites announced for 2014, 2015 NCAA tournaments". NCAA. December 16, 2012. Archived from the original on May 11, 2013. Retrieved May 12, 2013.
  • ^ Borzello, Jeff. "Official NCAA 1-68 seeding order". CBS Sports. Retrieved March 20, 2014.
  • ^ "NCAA tournament: Florida finally gets over the hump in Elite Eight, beats Dayton for Final Four berth". The Washington Post.
  • ^ "Wilbekin's shot pivotal in turning momentum for Florida". Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
  • ^ "ISU's Hogue named to all-East Region team". Des Moines Register.
  • ^ "UConn Advances to Final Four with 60-54 Win Over Michigan State". UConnHuskies.com. Archived from the original on September 18, 2016. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  • ^ "Badgers men's basketball notes: Yet again, Frank Kaminsky's play has everyone talking". Madison.com. March 30, 2014.
  • ^ James, Emily (February 20, 2018). "Louisville men's basketball must vacate wins and pay fine". NCAA.org - The Official Site of the NCAA (Press release). Retrieved February 20, 2018.
  • ^ "U-M Has Tourney Run End on Last-Second Shot by Kentucky". MGOBLUE.com - University of Michigan Official Athletic Site. Archived from the original on September 21, 2016. Retrieved March 31, 2014.
  • ^ "2013-14 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship – Principles And Procedures For Establishing The Bracket". NCAA. Retrieved March 27, 2014. The committee will place the four No. 1 seeded teams 1 through 4 in each of the four regions, thus determining the Final Four semifinals pairings (overall 1 vs. 4; 2 vs. 3).
  • ^ "Official NCAA 1-68 seeding order". CBS Sports. March 16, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  • ^ "2014 NCAA Tournament Printable Bracket". probasketballtalk.com. NBC Sports. March 17, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  • ^ "Final Four: Connecticut vs. Florida". Stat Broadcast. Retrieved April 5, 2014.
  • ^ "Final Four: Kentucky vs. Wisconsin". Stat Broadcast. Retrieved April 5, 2014.
  • ^ "Championship: Connecticut vs. Kentucky". Stat Broadcast. Retrieved April 7, 2014.
  • ^ Strauss, Ben; Gerstner, Joanne C. (March 29, 2014). "Kentucky's Five Freshman Looking to Separate Themselves From Michigan's Fab Five". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 7, 2019.
  • ^ "NCCU claims historic MEAC title, lands 1st NCAA Tournament berth". heraldsun.com. Archived from the original on January 11, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  • ^ "NCAA College Basketball Scores". CBSSports.com.
  • ^ Macur, Juliet (March 16, 2014). "For Land of Hoops, No Shot in N.C.A.A. Tournament t". The New York Times. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  • ^ Paulsen (March 11, 2014). "2014 March Madness TV Schedule on CBS, TBS, TNT and TruTV". Sports Media Watch. Retrieved March 11, 2014.
  • ^ a b c "CBS/Turner Releases the Tip Times and Announcing Assignments for First Two Rounds of 2014 NCAA Tournament". Fangs Bites. March 16, 2014. Retrieved March 16, 2014.
  • ^ "2014 NCAA Tournament Tip Times and Announcing Assignments for Sweet 16". Fangs Bites. March 23, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
  • ^ a b "CBS/Turner Announces 2014 NCAA Men's Final Four Broadcast Plans ☆". Fangs Bites. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  • ^ Blackburn, Gracie (March 6, 2014). "Bilas, Shulman and Vitale to Call Final Four Games for ESPN International". ESPN MediaZone. Retrieved March 6, 2014.
  • ^ "TSN offers multi-platform coverage of March Madness". TSN. Archived from the original on August 26, 2014. Retrieved December 9, 2017.
  • ^ "TV5 to air US NCAA March Madness | InterAksyon.com | Sports5". Archived from the original on May 6, 2014. Retrieved April 8, 2014.
  • ^ "NCAA, Westwood One extend deal". NCAA. January 13, 2011. Archived from the original on May 16, 2013. Retrieved May 12, 2013.
  • ^ a b "2014 NCAA Men's Division 1 Tournament Week 1 Schedule". Eye on Sky and Air Sports. March 17, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
  • ^ "2014 NCAA Men's Division 1 Tournament Week 2 Schedule". Eye on Sky and Air Sports. March 23, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2014.
  • ^ "2014 NCAA Men's Division I Tournament Final Four & Championship Broadcast Information". Eye on Sky and Air Sports. April 1, 2014. Retrieved April 1, 2014.

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