Английская Википедия:1985 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NCAA basketball tournament

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 1982–1986). 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

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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

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

Bracket

* – Denotes overtime period

East Regional – Providence, Rhode Island

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Regional Final Summary

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West Regional – Denver, Colorado

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First round Summary

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Second Round Summary

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Regional semifinal Summary

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Regional Final Summary

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Southeast Regional – Birmingham, Alabama

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Regional Final Summary

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Midwest Regional – Dallas, Texas

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Regional Final Summary

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Final Four – Lexington, Kentucky

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Game summaries

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National Championship

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Announcers

Television

CBS Sports

  • Brent Musburger First round (Kentucky–Washington), (Arizona–Alabama), second round & Dick Stockton Regional, Final Four served as studio hosts and Bill Raftery Regional, Final Four served as studio analyst.
  • Dick Stockton/Brent Musburger and Billy Packer – Stockton/Packer, first round (Kentucky–Washington), second round at Salt Lake City, Utah & Houston, Texas; Musburger/Packer, East Regionals at Providence, Rhode Island, Southeast Regional Finals at Birmingham, Alabama, Final Four at Lexington, Kentucky
  • Gary Bender and Doug Collins – Second Round at South Bend, Indiana & Dayton, Ohio, West Regionals at Denver, Colorado
  • Frank Glieber and James Brown – Second Round at Hartford, Connecticut, Midwest Regionals at Dallas, Texas
  • Pat Summerall/Verne Lundquist and Larry Conley – Summerall/Conley, second round at Atlanta, Georgia; Lundquist/Conley, Southeast Regional semifinals (Auburn–North Carolina) at Birmingham, Alabama
  • Verne Lundquist and Steve Grote – First round (Arizona–Alabama) & Second Round at Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Tim Ryan and Bill Raftery – Second Round at Tulsa, Oklahoma

ESPN and NCAA Productions

  • Bob Ley (NCAA Tournament Today/NCAA Tournament Tonight) served as studio host and Dick Vitale served as studio analyst.
  • – First round (Lehigh–Georgetown) & (Old Dominion–SMU) at Hartford, Connecticut
  • – First round (Virginia Tech–Temple) & (Iona–Loyola-Chicago) at Hartford, Connecticut
  • Mike Patrick and Larry Conley – First round (Northeastern–Illinois) & (Mercer–Georgia Tech) at Atlanta, Georgia
  • – First round (Wichita State–Georgia) & (DePaul–Syracuse) at Atlanta, Georgia
  • – First round (Iowa State–Ohio State) & (Illinois State–Southern California) at Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • – First round (Pittsburgh–Louisiana Tech) & (North Carolina A&T–Oklahoma) at Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • – First round (Penn–Memphis State) & (Pepperdine–Duke) at Houston, Texas
  • – First round (Navy–Louisiana State) & (Dayton–Villanova) at Dayton, Ohio
  • Frank Herzog/Ralph Hacker and Joe Dean– First round (Miami (OH)–Maryland) & (Fairleigh Dickinson–Michigan) at Dayton, Ohio
  • – First round (Ohio–Kansas) & (Oregon State–Notre Dame) at South Bend, Indiana
  • Tom Hammond and Jack Givens – First round (Auburn–Purdue) & (Middle Tennessee–North Carolina) at South Bend, Indiana
  • – First round (Southern–St. John's) at Salt Lake City, Utah
  • – First round (Arkansas–Iowa) & (San Diego State–UNLV) at Salt Lake City, Utah
  • Larry Zimmer and Ted Owens – First round (Nevada–NC State) at Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • – First round (UTEP–Tulsa) & (Marshall–VCU) at Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Frank Fallon and Gary Thompson- First round (Michigan State–UAB) & (Boston College–Texas Tech) at Houston, Texas Midwest Regional semifinals (Louisiana Tech–Oklahoma) at Dallas, Texas
  • Mike Patrick and Larry Conley – Southeast Regional semifinals (Villanova–Maryland) at Birmingham, Alabama

Radio

Regionals

CBS Radio

  • – East Regionals at Providence, Rhode Island
  • – Midwest Regionals at Dallas, Texas
  • – Southeast Regionals at Birmingham, Alabama
  • – West Regionals at Denver, Colorado

Final four

  • – at Lexington, Kentucky

Further reading

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament navbox Шаблон:1985 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament navbox Шаблон:1985 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball navbox