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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Tournament procedures  





2 Schedule and venues  





3 Qualification and selection  



3.1  Automatic qualifiers  





3.2  Tournament seeds  







4 Bracket  



4.1  First Four  Dayton, Ohio  



4.1.1  Game summaries  







4.2  East Regional  New York City, New York  



4.2.1  East Regional First round  





4.2.2  East Regional Final  





4.2.3  East Regional all tournament team  







4.3  West Regional  San Jose, California  



4.3.1  West Regional First round  





4.3.2  West Regional Final  





4.3.3  West Regional all tournament team  







4.4  Midwest Regional  Kansas City, Missouri  



4.4.1  Midwest Regional First round  





4.4.2  Midwest Regional Final  





4.4.3  Midwest Regional all tournament team  







4.5  South Regional  Memphis, Tennessee  



4.5.1  South Regional Final  





4.5.2  South Regional all tournament team  









5 Final Four  



5.1  University of Phoenix Stadium  Glendale, Arizona  



5.1.1  Final Four  





5.1.2  National Championship  





5.1.3  Final Four all-tournament team  









6 Game summaries and 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  







8.2  Radio  



8.2.1  First Four  





8.2.2  First and Second rounds  





8.2.3  Regionals  





8.2.4  Final Four  







8.3  Internet  



8.3.1  Video  





8.3.2  Audio  









9 See also  





10 Notes  





11 References  





12 External links  














2017 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament






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2017 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season2016–17
Teams68
Finals siteUniversity of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, Arizona
ChampionsNorth Carolina Tar Heels (6th title, 11th title game,
20th Final Four)
Runner-upGonzaga Bulldogs (1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Semifinalists
  • South Carolina Gamecocks (1st Final Four)
  • Winning coachRoy Williams (3rd title)
    MOPJoel Berry II (North Carolina)
    NCAA Division I men's tournaments
    «2016 2018»

    The 2017 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 68 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the men's National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I college basketball national champion for the 2016–17 season. The 79th edition of the tournament began on March 14, 2017, and concluded with the championship game on April 3 at University of Phoenix StadiuminGlendale, Arizona. The championship game was the first to be contested in the Western United States since the 1995 tournament when Seattle was the host of the Final Four.

    In the Final Four, North Carolina beat Oregon (making their first Final Four appearance since the inaugural tournament in 1939)[1] while Gonzaga defeated South Carolina (both making their first ever Final Four appearance).[2] This was the first NCAA tournament since 1979 to see two first-time Final Four participants. North Carolina then defeated Gonzaga 71–65 to win their 6th national championship, and 3rd under Roy Williams.[3]

    After being the only longstanding Power Five team to never made the tournament, Northwestern from the Big Ten finally made the tournament for the first time in program history.[4] North Dakota (Big Sky), UC Davis (Big West), Northern Kentucky (Horizon League), and Jacksonville State (Ohio Valley) also all made their tournament debuts.

    Tournament procedures

    [edit]

    A total of 68 teams entered the 2017 tournament, with all 32 conference tournament winners receiving an automatic bid. The Ivy League, which previously granted its automatic tournament bid to its regular season champion, hosted a postseason tournament to determine a conference champion for the first time. In previous years, had the Ivy League had two schools tied for first in the standings, a one-game playoff (or series as was the case in the 2002 season) determined the automatic bid. On March 10, 2016, the Ivy League's council of presidents approved a four-team tournament where the top four teams in the regular season would play on March 11 and 12 at Philadelphia's Palestra.[5]

    The remaining 36 teams received "at-large" bids which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. On January 24, 2016, the NCAA announced that the Selection Committee would, for the first time, unveil in-season rankings of the top four teams in each division on February 11, 2017.[6]

    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 known as "play-in games" through the 2010 tournament). The winners of these games advanced to the main draw of the tournament.

    The Selection Committee also seeded the entire field from 1 to 68.[7]

    The committee's selections resulted in two historic milestones. The Northwestern Wildcats of the Big Ten Conference made their first-ever NCAA Tournament in school history, officially becoming the last "power conference" school to make the tournament. (This fact is ironic considering that Northwestern hosted the first-ever NCAA Tournament in 1939). The Wildcats' First round opponent, the Vanderbilt Commodores of the Southeastern Conference, also made history: with a record of 19–15, they set the mark for the most ever losses for an at-large team in tournament history.

    Four conference champions also made their first NCAA appearances: North Dakota (Big Sky Conference), UC Davis (Big West Conference), Jacksonville State (Ohio Valley Conference), and first-year Division I school Northern Kentucky (Horizon League).

    Schedule and venues

    [edit]
    2017 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Dayton

    Dayton

    Buffalo

    Buffalo

    Milwaukee

    Milwaukee

    Orlando

    Orlando

    Salt Lake City

    Salt Lake City

    Greenville

    Greenville

    Indianapolis

    Indianapolis

    Tulsa

    Tulsa

    Sacramento

    Sacramento

    2017 First Four (orange) and First and Second rounds (green)
    Note: Greensboro, North Carolina was originally awarded First and Second round games, but the games were relocated to Greenville, South Carolina due to NCAA objections over HB2.
    2017 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
    Kansas City

    Kansas City

    San Jose

    San Jose

    Memphis

    Memphis

    New York City

    New York City

    Glendale

    Glendale

    2017 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

    The following sites were selected to host each round of the 2017 tournament[8]

    First Four

    First and Second Rounds

    Regional semifinals and Finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

    National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

    Qualification and selection

    [edit]
    UCLA
    USC
    Nevada
    Arizona
    Gonzaga
    Oregon
    New Mexico St.
    North Dakota
    South Dakota St.
    Creighton
    Kansas St.
    Wichita St.
    Oklahoma St.
    SMU
    Baylor
    Texas Southern
    Minnesota
    Iowa St.
    Arkansas
    New Orleans
    Wisconsin
    Marquette
    Michigan St.
    Michigan
    Notre Dame
    Purdue
    Butler
    Florida
    Florida St.
    FGCU
    Miami
    Villanova
    Kansas
    NCCU
    Troy
    Jacksonville St.
    Middle Tenn.
    Vanderbilt
    ETSU
    Louisville
    NKU
    Kentucky
    URI
    Providence
    Iona
    Seton Hall
    Princeton
    MSM
    Virginia Tech
    Maryland
    West Virginia
    Virginia
    South Carolina
    Winthrop
    UNCW
    Northwestern
    Bucknell
    Xavier
    Cincinnati
    St. Mary's
    VCU
    Vermont
    Duke
    Dayton
    Kent St.
    UNC
    WFU
    2017 Participants: East Region (blue), South Region (red), Midwest Region (green), and West Region (purple)

    Eight teams, out of 351 in Division I, were ineligible to participate in the 2017 tournament due to failing to meet APR requirements, self-imposed postseason bans, or reclassification from a lower division.[n 1] Hawaii had previously been banned from entering the tournament as a penalty for infractions, but the NCAA later reversed its ban.[13][14]

    Automatic qualifiers

    [edit]

    The following 32 teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2017 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's automatic bid.[15]

    Conference Team Appearance Last bid
    America East Vermont 6th 2012
    American SMU 12th 2015
    Atlantic 10 Rhode Island 9th 1999
    ACC Duke 41st 2016
    ASUN Florida Gulf Coast 3rd 2016
    Big 12 Iowa State 19th 2016
    Big East Villanova 37th 2016
    Big Sky North Dakota 1st Never
    Big South Winthrop 10th 2010
    Big Ten Michigan 27th 2016
    Big West UC Davis 1st Never
    CAA UNC Wilmington 6th 2016
    C-USA Middle Tennessee 9th 2016
    Horizon Northern Kentucky 1st Never [a 1]
    Ivy League[a 2] Princeton 25th 2011
    MAAC Iona 12th 2016
    MAC Kent State 6th 2008
    MEAC North Carolina Central 2nd 2014
    Missouri Valley Wichita State 14th 2016
    Mountain West Nevada 7th 2007
    NEC Mount St. Mary's 5th 2014
    Ohio Valley Jacksonville State 1st Never
    Pac-12 Arizona 34th 2016
    Patriot Bucknell 7th 2013
    SEC Kentucky 57th 2016
    Southern East Tennessee State 10th 2010
    Southland New Orleans 5th 1996
    SWAC Texas Southern 7th 2015
    Summit League South Dakota State 4th 2016
    Sun Belt Troy 2nd 2003
    WCC Gonzaga 20th 2016
    WAC New Mexico State 23rd 2015
    Notes
    1. ^ First year of eligibility for NCAA-sponsored Division I postseason play
  • ^ Inaugural conference tournament
  • Tournament seeds

    [edit]
    East Regional – Madison Square Garden, New York City
    Seed School Conference Record Berth type Overall rank
    1 Villanova Big East 31–3 Auto 1
    2 Duke ACC 27–8 Auto 7
    3 Baylor Big 12 25–7 At-Large 12
    4 Florida SEC 24–8 At-Large 14
    5 Virginia ACC 22–10 At-Large 17
    6 SMU American 30–4 Auto 21
    7 South Carolina SEC 22–10 At-Large 26
    8 Wisconsin Big Ten 25–9 At-Large 29
    9 Virginia Tech ACC 22–10 At-Large 36
    10 Marquette Big East 19–12 At-Large 39
    11* Providence Big East 20–12 At-Large 42
    USC Pac-12 24–9 At-Large 45
    12 UNC Wilmington CAA 29–5 Auto 49
    13 East Tennessee State Southern 27–7 Auto 52
    14 New Mexico State WAC 28–5 Auto 55
    15 Troy Sun Belt 22–14 Auto 60
    16* Mount St. Mary's NEC 19–15 Auto 68
    New Orleans Southland 20–11 Auto 67
    West Regional – SAP Center, San Jose, California
    Seed School Conference Record Berth type Overall rank
    1 Gonzaga WCC 32–1 Auto 4
    2 Arizona Pac-12 30–4 Auto 6
    3 Florida State ACC 25–8 At-Large 10
    4 West Virginia Big 12 26–8 At-Large 15
    5 Notre Dame ACC 25–9 At-Large 19
    6 Maryland Big Ten 24–8 At-Large 23
    7 Saint Mary's WCC 28–4 At-Large 25
    8 Northwestern Big Ten 23–11 At-Large 32
    9 Vanderbilt SEC 19–15 At-Large 33
    10 VCU Atlantic 10 26–8 At-Large 40
    11 Xavier Big East 21–13 At-Large 41
    12 Princeton Ivy League 23–6 Auto 50
    13 Bucknell Patriot 26–8 Auto 51
    14 Florida Gulf Coast Atlantic Sun 26–7 Auto 56
    15 North Dakota Big Sky 22–9 Auto 62
    16 South Dakota State Summit League 18–16 Auto 64
    Midwest Regional – Sprint Center, Kansas City, Missouri
    Seed School Conference Record Berth type Overall rank
    1 Kansas Big 12 28–4 At-Large 2
    2 Louisville ACC 24–8 At-Large 8
    3 Oregon Pac-12 29–5 At-Large 9
    4 Purdue Big Ten 25–7 At-Large 16
    5 Iowa State Big 12 23–10 Auto 20
    6 Creighton Big East 25–9 At-Large 24
    7 Michigan Big Ten 24–11 Auto 27
    8 Miami (FL) ACC 21–11 At-Large 30
    9 Michigan State Big Ten 19–14 At-Large 35
    10 Oklahoma State Big 12 20–12 At-Large 37
    11 Rhode Island Atlantic 10 24–9 Auto 44
    12 Nevada Mountain West 28–6 Auto 47
    13 Vermont America East 29–5 Auto 53
    14 Iona MAAC 22–12 Auto 58
    15 Jacksonville State Ohio Valley 20–14 Auto 61
    16* North Carolina Central MEAC 25–8 Auto 66
    UC Davis Big West 22–12 Auto 65
    South Regional – FedExForum, Memphis, Tennessee
    Seed School Conference Record Berth type Overall rank
    1 North Carolina ACC 27–7 At-Large 3
    2 Kentucky SEC 29–5 Auto 5
    3 UCLA Pac-12 29–4 At-Large 11
    4 Butler Big East 23–8 At-Large 13
    5 Minnesota Big Ten 24–9 At-Large 18
    6 Cincinnati American 29–5 At-Large 22
    7 Dayton Atlantic 10 24–7 At-Large 28
    8 Arkansas SEC 25–9 At-Large 31
    9 Seton Hall Big East 21–11 At-Large 34
    10 Wichita State Missouri Valley 30–4 Auto 38
    11* Kansas State Big 12 20–13 At-Large 46
    Wake Forest ACC 19–13 At-Large 43
    12 Middle Tennessee Conference USA 30–4 Auto 48
    13 Winthrop Big South 26–6 Auto 54
    14 Kent State MAC 22–13 Auto 57
    15 Northern Kentucky Horizon 24–10 Auto 59
    16 Texas Southern SWAC 23–11 Auto 63

    *See First Four

    Bracket

    [edit]

    All times are listed as Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−4)

    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 14 – East Region
       
    16 Mount St. Mary's 67
    16New Orleans 66
    March 14 – South Region
       
    11Kansas State 95
    11Wake Forest 88
    March 15 – Midwest Region
       
    16North Carolina Central 63
    16UC Davis 67
    March 15 – East Region
       
    11Providence 71
    11USC 75

    Game summaries

    [edit]

    truTV

    March 14
    6:40 PM

    Report

    #16 Mount Saint Mary's 67, #16 New Orleans 66
    Scoring by half: 32–29, 35–37
    Pts: J. Robinson (23)
    Rebs: M. Wilson (11)
    Asts: M. Wilson, E. Mitrou-Long (4)
    Pts: N. Frye (18)
    Rebs: T. Broyles, E. Thomas (8)
    Asts: T. Broyles (3)

    University of Dayton Arena
    Dayton, OH
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Jeb Hartness, Brent Hampton, Steve McJunkins

    truTV

    March 14
    9:10 PM

    Report

    #11 Kansas State 95, #11 Wake Forest 88
    Scoring by half: 40–36, 55–52
    Pts: W. Iwundu (24)
    Rebs: W. Iwundu, D. Johnson (6)
    Asts: W. Iwundu (7)
    Pts: J. Collins (26)
    Rebs: J. Collins (9)
    Asts: B. Crawford (10)

    University of Dayton Arena
    Dayton, OH
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Nathan Ferrell, Jeff Anderson, Bill McCarthy

    truTV

    March 15
    6:40 PM

    Report

    #16 North Carolina Central 63, #16 UC Davis 67
    Scoring by half: 34–31, 29–36
    Pts: D. Graf (15)
    Rebs: K. Benton (12)
    Asts: D. Graf (5)
    Pts: C. Moneke (18)
    Rebs: C. Moneke (12)
    Asts: L. White (4)

    University of Dayton Arena
    Dayton, OH
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Lamar Simpson, Tony Chiazza, Todd Austin

    truTV

    March 15
    9:10 PM

    Report

    #11 Providence 71, #11 USC 75
    Scoring by half: 44–29, 27–46
    Pts: E. Holt (18)
    Rebs: E. Holt (11)
    Asts: K. Cartwright (7)
    Pts: B. Boatwright (24)
    Rebs: J. McLaughlin (10)
    Asts: J. McLaughlin, D. Melton (4)

    University of Dayton Arena
    Dayton, OH
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Bo Boroski, Bill Covington, Nate Harris

    East Regional – New York City, New York

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    March 16–17
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    March 18–19
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 24
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    March 26
                
    1 Villanova 76
    16Mount St. Mary's 56
    1Villanova 62
    Buffalo – Thu/Sat
    8 Wisconsin 65
    8 Wisconsin 84
    9Virginia Tech 74
    8Wisconsin 83
    4 Florida 84OT
    5 Virginia 76
    12UNC Wilmington 71
    5Virginia 39
    Orlando – Thu/Sat
    4 Florida 65
    4 Florida 80
    13East Tennessee State 65
    4Florida 70
    7 South Carolina 77
    6SMU 65
    11 USC 66
    11USC 78
    Tulsa – Fri/Sun
    3 Baylor 82
    3 Baylor 91
    14New Mexico State 73
    3Baylor 50
    7 South Carolina 70
    7 South Carolina 93
    10Marquette 73
    7 South Carolina 88
    Greenville – Fri/Sun
    2Duke 81
    2 Duke 87
    15Troy 65

    East Regional First round

    [edit]

    CBS

    March 16
    7:10 PM

    Report

    #1 Villanova Wildcats 76, #16 Mount Saint Mary's 56
    Scoring by half: 30–29, 46–27
    Pts: D. DiVincenzo (21)
    Rebs: D. DiVincenzo (13)
    Asts: K. Jenkins, M. Bridges, J. Brunson (3)
    Pts: M. Wilson (22)
    Rebs: M. Wilson (7)
    Asts: E. Mitrou-Long (4)

    KeyBank Center
    Buffalo, NY
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Dwayne Gladden, Mike Scyphers, Tony Padilla

    CBS

    March 16
    9:43 PM

    Report

    #8 Wisconsin 84, #9 Virginia Tech 74
    Scoring by half: 34–30, 50–44
    Pts: B. Koenig (28)
    Rebs: N. Hayes (10)
    Asts: Z. Showalter (4)
    Pts: Z. LeDay (23)
    Rebs: T. Outlaw (7)
    Asts: J. Robinson, S. Allen (6)

    KeyBank Center
    Buffalo, NY
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Gregory Nixon, Gary Prager, Jeff Anderson

    truTV

    March 16
    12:40 PM

    Report

    #5 Virginia 76, #12 UNC Wilmington 71
    Scoring by half: 30–29, 46–42
    Pts: L. Perrantes (24)
    Rebs: D. Hall (7)
    Asts: L. Perrantes, D. Hall (3)
    Pts: C. Flemmings (18)
    Rebs: D. Cacok (15)
    Asts: J. Talley (5)

    Amway Center
    Orlando, FL
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Bill Ek, Pat Adams, Karl Hess

    truTV

    March 16
    3:26 PM

    Report

    #4 Florida 80, #13 East Tennessee State 65
    Scoring by half: 33–32, 47–33
    Pts: D. Robinson (24)
    Rebs: D. Robinson, K. Hayes (7)
    Asts: K. Hill (6)
    Pts: T. Cromer (19)
    Rebs: T. Glass (9)
    Asts: J. Long (6)

    Amway Center
    Orlando, FL
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Larry Scirotto, Rodrick Dixon, Mike Eades

    East Regional Final

    [edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 26
    2:20 pm EDT

    Box score

    #7 South Carolina Gamecocks 77, #4 Florida Gators 70
    Scoring by half: 33–40, 44–30
    Pts: S. Thornwell – 26
    Rebs: C. Silva – 9
    Asts: D. Notice – 3
    Pts: J. Leon – 18
    Rebs: K. Hayes – 8
    Asts: K. Hill – 5

    Madison Square Garden – New York City
    Attendance: 20,047
    Referees: Ron Groover, Jeffrey Anderson, Mike Eades

    East Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    West Regional – San Jose, California

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    March 16
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    March 18
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 23
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    March 25
                
    1 Gonzaga 66
    16South Dakota State 46
    1 Gonzaga 79
    Salt Lake City – Thu/Sat
    8Northwestern 73
    8 Northwestern 68
    9Vanderbilt 66
    1 Gonzaga 61
    4West Virginia 58
    5 Notre Dame 60
    12Princeton 58
    5Notre Dame 71
    Buffalo – Thu/Sat
    4 West Virginia 83
    4 West Virginia 86
    13Bucknell 80
    1 Gonzaga 83
    11Xavier 59
    6Maryland 65
    11 Xavier 76
    11 Xavier 91
    Orlando – Thu/Sat
    3Florida State 66
    3 Florida State 86
    14Florida Gulf Coast 80
    11 Xavier 73
    2Arizona 71
    7 Saint Mary's 85
    10VCU 77
    7Saint Mary's 60
    Salt Lake City – Thu/Sat
    2 Arizona 69
    2 Arizona 100
    15North Dakota 82

    West Regional First round

    [edit]

    TBS

    March 16
    2:00 PM

    Report

    #1 Gonzaga 66, #16 South Dakota State 46
    Scoring by half: 26–22, 40–24
    Pts: J. Mathews (16)
    Rebs: J. Williams (14)
    Asts: N. Williams-Goss (4)
    Pts: M. Daum (17)
    Rebs: T. King (9)
    Asts: M. Orris, C. Howell (3)

    Vivint Smart Home Arena
    Salt Lake City, UT
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: Jeff Clark, Larry Spaulding, Eric Curry

    West Regional Final

    [edit]

    TBS

    Saturday, March 25
    3:09 pm PDT

    Box score

    #11 Xavier Musketeers 59, #1 Gonzaga Bulldogs 83
    Scoring by half: 39–49, 20–34
    Pts: J. Macura – 18
    Rebs: K. Gates, T. Bluiett – 7
    Asts: J. Macura, Q. Goodin – 2
    Pts: N. Williams-Goss – 23
    Rebs: N. Williams-Goss – 8
    Asts: N. Williams-Goss – 4

    SAP Center – San Jose, California
    Attendance: 17,011
    Referees: James Breeding, Kipp Kissinger, Michael Stephens

    West Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    Midwest Regional – Kansas City, Missouri

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    March 16–17
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    March 18–19
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 23
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    March 25
                
    1 Kansas 100
    16UC Davis 62
    1 Kansas 90
    Tulsa – Fri/Sun
    9Michigan State 70
    8Miami (FL) 58
    9 Michigan State 78
    1 Kansas 98
    4Purdue 66
    5 Iowa State 84
    12Nevada 73
    5Iowa State 76
    Milwaukee – Thu/Sat
    4 Purdue 80
    4 Purdue 80
    13Vermont 70
    1Kansas 60
    3 Oregon 74
    6Creighton 72
    11 Rhode Island 84
    11Rhode Island 72
    Sacramento – Fri/Sun
    3 Oregon 75
    3 Oregon 93
    14Iona 77
    3 Oregon 69
    7Michigan 68
    7 Michigan 92
    10Oklahoma State 91
    7 Michigan 73
    Indianapolis – Fri/Sun
    2Louisville 69
    2 Louisville 78
    15Jacksonville State 63

    Midwest Regional First round

    [edit]

    TNT

    March 17
    6:50 PM

    Report

    #1 Kansas 100, #16 UC Davis 62
    Scoring by half: 50–28, 50–34
    Pts: F. Mason III (22)
    Rebs: L. Lucas (11)
    Asts: F. Mason III (8)
    Pts: C. Moneke (20)
    Rebs: C. Moneke (9)
    Asts: D. Graham, B. Lemar, A. Hennings (2)

    Bank of Oklahoma Center
    Tulsa, OK
    Attendance: N/A
    Referees: DJ Carstensen, Deldre Carr, Ray Acosta

    Midwest Regional Final

    [edit]

    TBS

    Saturday, March 25
    7:49 pm CDT

    Box score

    #3 Oregon Ducks 74, #1 Kansas Jayhawks 60
    Scoring by half: 44–33, 30–27
    Pts: T. Dorsey – 27
    Rebs: J. Bell – 13
    Asts: J. Bell, D. Brooks – 4
    Pts: F. Mason III – 21
    Rebs: J. Jackson – 12
    Asts: J. Jackson – 5

    Sprint Center – Kansas City, Missouri
    Attendance: 18,643
    Referees: Randy McCall, Terry Oglesby, Ted Valentine

    Midwest Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    South Regional – Memphis, Tennessee

    [edit]
    First round
    Round of 64
    March 16–17
    Second Round
    Round of 32
    March 18–19
    Regional semifinals
    Sweet 16
    March 24
    Regional Final
    Elite 8
    March 26
                
    1 North Carolina 103
    16Texas Southern 64
    1 North Carolina 72
    Greenville – Fri/Sun
    8Arkansas 65
    8 Arkansas 77
    9Seton Hall 71
    1 North Carolina 92
    4Butler 80
    5Minnesota 72
    12 Middle Tennessee 81
    12Middle Tennessee 65
    Milwaukee – Thu/Sat
    4 Butler 74
    4 Butler 76
    13Winthrop 64
    1 North Carolina 75
    2Kentucky 73
    6 Cincinnati 75
    11Kansas State 61
    6Cincinnati 67
    Sacramento – Fri/Sun
    3 UCLA 79
    3 UCLA 97
    14Kent State 80
    3UCLA 75
    2 Kentucky 86
    7Dayton 58
    10 Wichita State 64
    10Wichita State 62
    Indianapolis – Fri/Sun
    2 Kentucky 65
    2 Kentucky 79
    15Northern Kentucky 70

    South Regional Final

    [edit]

    CBS

    Sunday, March 26
    4:05 pm CDT

    Box score

    #2 Kentucky Wildcats 73, #1 North Carolina Tar Heels 75
    Scoring by half: 33–38, 40–37
    Pts: E. Adebayo, D. Fox – 13
    Rebs: E. Adebayo – 7
    Asts: I. Briscoe – 8
    Pts: J. Jackson – 19
    Rebs: K. Meeks – 17
    Asts: J. Jackson – 4

    FedExForum – Memphis, Tennessee
    Attendance: 16,412
    Referees: John Higgins, Keith Kimble, Mike Reed

    South Regional all tournament team

    [edit]

    Final Four

    [edit]
    University of Phoenix Stadium, the site of the 2017 Final Four

    During the Final Four round, regardless of the seeds of the participating teams, the champion of the top overall top seed's region (Villanova's East Region) plays against the champion of the fourth-ranked top seed's region (Gonzaga's West Region), and the champion of the second overall top seed's region (Kansas's Midwest Region) plays against the champion of the third-ranked top seed's region (North Carolina's South Region).

    University of Phoenix Stadium – Glendale, Arizona

    [edit]
    National semifinals
    April 1
    National championship game
    April 3
          
    E7 South Carolina 73
    W1 Gonzaga 77
    W1 Gonzaga 65
    S1 North Carolina 71
    MW3 Oregon 76
    S1 North Carolina 77

    Final Four

    [edit]

    CBS

    Saturday, April 1
    3:09 pm MST

    Box score

    #7 South Carolina Gamecocks 73, #1 Gonzaga Bulldogs 77
    Scoring by half: 36–45, 37–32
    Pts: P. Dozier – 17
    Rebs: C. Silva – 13
    Asts: D. Notice – 3
    Pts: N. Williams-Goss – 23
    Rebs: Z. Collins – 13
    Asts: N. Williams-Goss – 6

    University of Phoenix Stadium – Glendale, Arizona
    Attendance: 77,612
    Referees: John Higgins, Doug Sirmons, Jeffrey Anderson

    CBS

    Saturday, April 1
    5:49 pm MST

    Box score

    #3 Oregon Ducks 76, #1 North Carolina Tar Heels 77
    Scoring by half: 36–39, 40–38
    Pts: T. Dorsey – 21
    Rebs: J. Bell – 16
    Asts: D. Ennis – 3
    Pts: K. Meeks – 25
    Rebs: K. Meeks – 14
    Asts: T. Pinson – 5

    University of Phoenix Stadium – Glendale, Arizona
    Attendance: 77,612
    Referees: Ron Groover, Tony Padilla, Ted Valentine

    National Championship

    [edit]

    CBS

    Monday, April 3
    6:20 pm MST

    Box score

    #1 Gonzaga Bulldogs 65, #1 North Carolina Tar Heels 71
    Scoring by half: 35–32, 30–39
    Pts: N. Williams-Goss – 15
    Rebs: N. Williams-Goss – 9
    Asts: N. Williams-Goss – 6
    Pts: J. Berry II – 22
    Rebs: K. Meeks – 10
    Asts: J. Berry II – 6

    University of Phoenix Stadium – Glendale, Arizona
    Attendance: 76,168
    Referees: Verne Harris, Michael Stephens, Mike Eades

    Final Four all-tournament team

    [edit]

    Game summaries and tournament notes

    [edit]

    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 2017 tournament saw a total of 9 upsets; 4 of them were in the first round, 4 of them were in the second round, and one of them in the Sweet Sixteen.

    Round East West Midwest South
    First round No. 11 USC defeated No. 6 SMU, 66–65 No. 11 Xavier defeated No. 6 Maryland, 76–65 No. 11 Rhode Island defeated No. 6 Creighton, 84–72 No. 12 Middle Tennessee defeated No. 5 Minnesota, 81–72
    Second Round
  • No. 7 South Carolina defeated No. 2 Duke, 88–81
  • No. 11 Xavier defeated No. 3 Florida State, 91–66 No. 7 Michigan defeated No. 2 Louisville, 73–69 None
    Sweet 16 None No. 11 Xavier defeated No. 2 Arizona, 73–71 None None
    Elite 8 None None None None

    Record by conference

    [edit]
    Conference Bids Record Win % R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC
    ACC 9 11–8 .579 8 6 1 1 1 1 1
    WCC 2 6–2 .750 2 2 1 1 1 1
    Pac-12 4 10–4 .714 4 4 3 1 1
    SEC 5 11–5 .688 5 4 3 3 1
    Big 12 6 9–6 .600 6 4 3 1
    Big East 7 6–7 .462 6 3 2 1
    Big Ten 7 8–7 .533 7 5 3
    Atlantic 10 3 1–3 .250 3 1
    American 2 1–2 .333 2 1
    C-USA 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Missouri Valley 1 1–1 .500 1 1
    Big West 1 1–1 .500 1
    NEC 1 1–1 .500 1

    Media coverage

    [edit]

    Television

    [edit]

    CBS Sports and Turner Sports held joint U.S. television broadcast rights to the Tournament under the NCAA March Madness brand. As part of a cycle beginning in 2016, CBS held rights to the Final Four and championship game.[21][22][23][24] As CBS did not want its audience to be diffused across multiple outlets, there were no localized "Team Stream" telecasts of the Final Four or championship games on Turner channels as in previous years.[25]

    Following criticism of the two-hour format of the 2016 edition, the Selection Sunday broadcast was shortened to 90 minutes. CBS Sports executive Harold Bryant promised that the unveiling of the bracket would be conducted in an "efficient" manner, and leave more time to discuss and preview the tournament.[26]

    Studio hosts

    [edit]

    Studio analysts

    [edit]

    Commentary teams

    [edit]

    Radio

    [edit]

    Westwood One had exclusive radio rights to the entire tournament. For the first time in the history of the tournament, broadcasts of the Final Four and championship game were available in Spanish.[27]

    Internet

    [edit]

    Video

    [edit]

    Live video of games was available for streaming through the following means:[24]

    Audio

    [edit]

    Live audio of games was available for streaming through the following means:

    See also

    [edit]

    Notes

    [edit]
    1. ^ These 8 teams are ineligible for the following reasons:
      Academic Progress Rate[9]
    Alcorn State
    Savannah State
    Self-imposed bans
    Northern Colorado[10]
    Cal State Northridge[11]
    Reclassification[12]
    Abilene Christian
    Grand Canyon
    Incarnate Word
    UMass Lowell

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Woo, Jeremy. "UNC holds off Oregon, to face Gonzaga in final". SI.com. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  • ^ "Final Four 2017: Gonzaga holds on to beat South Carolina, advances to title game". CBSSports.com. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  • ^ Schonbrun, Zach (April 4, 2017). "North Carolina Stops Gonzaga, Turning Heartbreak Into Joy". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 5, 2017.
  • ^ Martin, Jill (March 12, 2017). "At long last, Northwestern reaches NCAAs". CNN. Retrieved April 2, 2024.
  • ^ "The Ivy League Adds Men's, Women's Basketball Tournaments Beginning in 2017" (Press release). Ivy League. March 10, 2016. Archived from the original on March 11, 2016. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  • ^ Auerbach, Nicole (January 24, 2017). "Midseason March Madness sneak preview should bring positive buzz". USA Today. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  • ^ "March Madness bracket: How the 68 teams are selected for the Division I men's basketball tournament". National Collegiate Athletic Association. February 18, 2016. Retrieved March 3, 2017.
  • ^ "2016–18 preliminary rounds". NCAA. November 14, 2014. Archived from the original on April 23, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  • ^ "Division I student-athletes still making gains in APR". NCAA. April 20, 2016.
  • ^ "University of Northern Colorado imposed penalties on itself over NCAA violations". Denver Post. The Associated Press. October 8, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
  • ^ "CSUN admits violations in men's basketball program, self-imposes postseason ban". Los Angeles Times. January 8, 2016. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
  • ^ "Multidivision and Reclassifying for 2015–16" (PDF). NCAA. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 22, 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
  • ^ "Former Hawaii head men's basketball coach violated NCAA ethical conduct rules". NCAA. December 22, 2015.
  • ^ "Hawaii men's basketball eligible for postseason after Committee on Infractions reconsideration". NCAA. March 3, 2017.
  • ^ "March Madness 2017: Conference tournament scores, schedule, NCAA tournament automatic qualifiers". NCAA. February 20, 2017. Retrieved February 28, 2017.
  • ^ a b c d e Andrew Astleford (March 26, 2017). "South Carolina, Florida dominate All-East Region team". SECCountry.com. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  • ^ a b c d e Thorpe, Jacob (March 25, 2017). "Johnathan Williams was the Best in the West". The Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  • ^ a b c d e Shane Keyser (March 25, 2017). "KU's Frank Mason and Josh Jackson make NCAA All-Midwest Regional team". Kansas City Star. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  • ^ a b c d e Jerry Tipton (March 26, 2017). "Fox on UK's foul trouble: 'I'm not blaming the officials, man'". Lexington Herald-Leader. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  • ^ a b c d e "Joel Berry named Final Four Most Outstanding Player". theScore.com. April 4, 2017. Retrieved April 5, 2017.
  • ^ "CBS Sports, Turner Sports announce programming schedule for 2014, 2015". National Collegiate Athletic Association. May 7, 2013. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
  • ^ "Turner Sports and CBS Sports Announce 2017 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Commentator Teams". NCAA. March 2, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2017.
  • ^ "March Madness: Jim Nantz, Grant Hill, Casey Stern and Debbie Antonelli highlight March Madness Commentator Teams". NCAA. March 2, 2017. Retrieved March 2, 2017.
  • ^ a b Maiman, Beth (March 8, 2017). "March Madness TV schedule: How to watch and live stream every game in the NCAA men's basketball tournament". NCAA. Retrieved March 9, 2017.
  • ^ "Media Circus: Breaking down CBS and Turner's March Madness broadcast package". Sports Illustrated. March 12, 2017. Retrieved March 13, 2017.
  • ^ "CBS cuts bloated Selection Sunday show to 90 minutes from two hours". Sporting News. March 7, 2017. Retrieved March 8, 2017.
  • ^ "Westwood One and the NCAA make history with first Spanish language audio call of NCAA Men's Final Four". NCAA. February 28, 2017. Retrieved March 1, 2017.
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