Английская Википедия:2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox NCAA Division I men's basketball season

The 2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 10, 2008, and ended with the 2009 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament's championship game on April 6, 2009, at Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. The season saw six different teams achieve the AP #1 ranking during the year (just one shy of the NCAA record). Oklahoma sophomore Blake Griffin was the dominant individual performer, sweeping National Player of the Year honors. The season began with North Carolina becoming the first unanimous preseason #1 team, and ended with the Tar Heels dominating the NCAA tournament en route to their fifth NCAA title. UNC won its six NCAA tournament games by double digits, and by an average of 19.8 points per game. Junior Wayne Ellington was named Final Four Most Outstanding Player.

Season headlines

Major rule changes

Beginning in 2008–2009, the following rules changes were implemented:

  • The three-point line moved from 19 feet, 9 inches to 20 feet, 9 inches.[29]
  • If the entire ball is above the rim when it comes into contact with the backboard and is subsequently touched by a player, it is goaltending. Previously only a ball moving downward after hitting the backboard could be subject to goaltending.[30]

Season outlook

Pre-season polls

Шаблон:See also

The top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls, October 31, 2008.[31]

'Associated Press'
Ranking Team
1 North Carolina (72)
2 Connecticut
3 Louisville
4 UCLA
5 Pittsburgh
6 Michigan State
7 Texas
8 Duke
9 Notre Dame
10 Gonzaga
11 Purdue
12 Oklahoma
13 Memphis
14 Tennessee
15 Arizona State
16 Marquette
17 Шаблон:Cbb link
18 USC
19 Florida
20 Davidson
21 Wake Forest
22 Georgetown
23 Villanova
24 Kansas
25 Wisconsin
ESPN/USA Today Coaches
Ranking Team
1 North Carolina (31)
2 Connecticut
3 Louisville
4 UCLA
5 Duke
6 Pittsburgh
7 Michigan State
8 Texas
9 Notre Dame
10 Purdue
11 Gonzaga
12 Memphis
13 Tennessee
14 Oklahoma
15 Arizona State
16 Шаблон:Cbb link
17 Marquette
18 Georgetown
19 Florida
20 Davidson
21 USC
22 Wisconsin
23 Kansas
24 Wake Forest
25 Villanova

Conference membership changes

These schools joined new conferences for the 2008–09 season.

School Former conference New conference
Bryant NCAA Division II Northeast Conference
Gardner–Webb Atlantic Sun Conference Big South Conference
Houston Baptist NAIA NCAA Division I Independent
North Dakota NCAA Division II NCAA Division I Independent
Samford Ohio Valley Conference Southern Conference
Seattle NCAA Division II NCAA Division I Independent
SIU Edwardsville NCAA Division II Ohio Valley Conference
South Dakota NCAA Division II NCAA Division I Independent

Regular season

Early-season tournaments

Name Dates Num. teams Championship
2k Sports Classic Nov. 10–21 16 Duke 71 vs. Michigan 57
Charleston Classic Nov. 14–16 8 Clemson 76 vs. Temple 72
CBE Classic Nov. 14–25 4* Syracuse 89 vs. Kansas 81
NIT Season Tip-Off Nov. 17–28 16 Oklahoma 87 vs. Purdue 82
Puerto Rico Tip-Off Nov. 20–23 8 Xavier 63 vs. Memphis 58
Paradise Jam Tournament Nov. 21–24 8 Connecticut 76 vs. Wisconsin 57
Maui Invitational Tournament Nov. 24-26 8 UNC 102 vs. Notre Dame 87
Great Alaska Shootout Nov. 26–29 8 San Diego State 76 vs. Hampton 47
76 Classic Nov. 27–30 8 Wake Forest 87 vs. Baylor 74
Old Spice Classic Nov. 27–30 8 Gonzaga 83 vs. Tennessee 74
Las Vegas Invitational Nov. 28–29 4* Kentucky 54 vs. West Virginia 43
Legends Classic Nov. 28-29 4* Pittsburgh 57 vs. Washington State 43
Cancún Challenge Nov. 29-30 4* Vanderbilt 71 vs. VCU 66
  • *Although these tournaments technically have more teams involved, only 4 can play for the championship.

Conference winners and tournaments

Thirty athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2009 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The Ivy League does not have a conference tournament, instead giving their automatic invitation to their regular-season champion Cornell.

Conference Regular
season winner[32]
Conference
player of the year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (City)
Tournament
Winner
America East Conference Binghamton & Vermont Marqus Blakely, Vermont[33] 2009 America East men's basketball tournament SEFCU Arena (Albany, New York)
Final at campus site
Binghamton[34]
Atlantic 10 Conference Xavier Ahmad Nivins, St. Joseph's[35] 2009 Atlantic 10 men's basketball tournament Boardwalk Hall
(Atlantic City, New Jersey)
Temple[36]
Atlantic Coast Conference North Carolina Ty Lawson, North Carolina[37] 2009 ACC men's basketball tournament Georgia Dome
(Atlanta)
Duke[38]
Atlantic Sun Conference Jacksonville Alex Renfroe, Belmont[39] 2009 Atlantic Sun men's basketball tournament Allen Arena
(Nashville, Tennessee)
East Tennessee State[40]
Big 12 Conference Kansas Blake Griffin, Oklahoma[41] 2009 Big 12 men's basketball tournament Ford Center
(Oklahoma City)
Missouri[42]
Big East Conference Louisville Hasheem Thabeet, Connecticut & DeJuan Blair, Pittsburgh[43] 2009 Big East men's basketball tournament Madison Square Garden
(New York City)
Louisville[44]
Big Sky Conference Weber State Kellen McCoy, Weber State[45] 2009 Big Sky men's basketball tournament Campus Sites Portland State[46]
Big South Conference Radford Artsiom Parakhouski, Radford[47] 2009 Big South Conference men's basketball tournament Campus Sites Radford[48]
Big Ten Conference Michigan State Kalin Lucas, Michigan State[49] 2009 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament Conseco Fieldhouse
(Indianapolis, Indiana)
Purdue[50]
Big West Conference Cal State Northridge Josh Akognon, Cal State Fullerton[51] 2009 Big West Conference men's basketball tournament Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, California)
Cal State Northridge[52]
Colonial Athletic Association VCU Eric Maynor, VCU[53] 2009 CAA men's basketball tournament Richmond Coliseum
(Richmond, Virginia)
VCU[54]
Conference USA Memphis Jermaine Taylor, Central Florida[55] 2009 Conference USA men's basketball tournament FedExForum
(Memphis, Tennessee)
Memphis[56]
Horizon League Butler Matt Howard, Butler[57] 2009 Horizon League men's basketball tournament Campus Sites Cleveland State[58]
Independent Seattle David Holston, Chicago State[59] No Tournament
Ivy League Cornell Alex Barnett, Dartmouth[60] No Tournament
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Siena Kenny Hasbrouck, Siena[61] 2009 MAAC men's basketball tournament Times Union Center
(Albany, New York)
Siena[62]
Mid-American Conference Buffalo & Bowling Green (East)
Ball State, Central Michigan & Western Michigan (West)
Michael Bramos, Miami[63] 2009 MAC men's basketball tournament Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, Ohio)
Akron[64]
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Morgan State Tywain McKee, Coppin State[65] 2009 MEAC men's basketball tournament Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum
(Winston-Salem, North Carolina)
Morgan State[66]
Missouri Valley Conference Creighton & Northern Iowa Booker Woodfox, Creighton[67] 2009 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball tournament Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, Missouri)
Northern Iowa[68]
Mountain West Conference BYU, Utah & New Mexico Luke Nevill, Utah[69] 2009 Mountain West Conference men's basketball tournament Thomas & Mack Center
(Las Vegas, Nevada)
Utah[70]
Northeast Conference Robert Morris Jeremy Chappell, Robert Morris[71] 2009 Northeast Conference men's basketball tournament Campus Sites Robert Morris[72]
Ohio Valley Conference Tennessee-Martin Lester Hudson, Tennessee-Martin[73] 2009 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball tournament First round at campus sites, Final Four at Sommet Center
(Nashville, Tennessee)
Morehead State[74]
Pacific-10 Conference Washington James Harden, Arizona State[75] 2009 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball tournament Staples Center
(Los Angeles)
USC[76]
Patriot League American Derrick Mercer, American[77] 2009 Patriot League men's basketball tournament Campus Sites American[78]
Southeastern Conference South Carolina & Tennessee (East) LSU (West) Marcus Thornton, LSU[79] 2009 SEC men's basketball tournament St. Pete Times Forum
(Tampa, Florida)
Mississippi State[80]
Southern Conference Western Carolina &
Chattanooga (North)
Davidson (South)
Stephen Curry, Davidson[81] 2009 Southern Conference men's basketball tournament McKenzie Arena
(Chattanooga, Tennessee)
Chattanooga[82]
Southland Conference Stephen F. Austin (East) Sam Houston State (West) Matt Kingsley, Stephen F. Austin[83] 2009 Southland Conference men's basketball tournament Leonard E. Merrell Center
(Katy, Texas)
Stephen F. Austin[84]
Southwestern Athletic Conference Alabama State Brandon Brooks, Alabama State[85] 2009 SWAC men's basketball tournament Fair Park Arena
(Birmingham, Alabama)
Alabama State[86]
The Summit League North Dakota State Ben Woodside, North Dakota State[87] 2009 Summit League men's basketball tournament Sioux Falls Arena
(Sioux Falls, South Dakota)
North Dakota State[88]
Sun Belt Conference Western Kentucky (East)
Arkansas–Little Rock (West)
Orlando Mendez-Valdez, Western Kentucky[89] 2009 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball tournament Summit Arena
(Hot Springs, Arkansas)
(Except First Round)
Western Kentucky[90]
West Coast Conference Gonzaga John Bryant, Santa Clara[91] 2009 West Coast Conference men's basketball tournament Orleans Arena
(Las Vegas, Nevada)
Gonzaga[92]
Western Athletic Conference Utah State Gary Wilkinson, Utah State[93] 2009 WAC men's basketball tournament Lawlor Events Center
(Reno, Nevada)
Utah State[94]

Statistical leaders

Шаблон:Center Шаблон:Center Шаблон:Center Шаблон:Center
Player School PPG Player School RPG Player School APG Player School SPG
Stephen Curry Davidson 28.6 Blake Griffin Oklahoma 14.4 Johnathon Jones Oakland 8.1 Chavis Holmes VMI 3.4
Lester Hudson Tenn.-Martin 27.5 John Bryant Santa Clara 14.2 Brock Young East Carolina 7.6 Travis Holmes VMI 3.2
Jermaine Taylor Central Florida 26.2 Kenneth Faried Morehead St. 13.0 Levance Fields Pittsburgh 7.5 Devin Gibson TX-San Antonio 3.0
David Holston Chicago St. 25.9 DeJuan Blair Pittsburgh 12.3 DiJuan Harris Charlotte 7.2 David Holston Chicago St. 3.0
Stefon Jackson UTEP 24.5 Ahmad Nivins St. Joseph's 11.8 Ashton Mitchell Sam Houston St. 6.8 Cedric Jackson Cleveland St. 3.0
Шаблон:Center Шаблон:Center Шаблон:Center Шаблон:Center
Player School BPG Player School FG% Player School 3FG% Player School FT%
Jarvis Varnado Miss. St. 4.7 Jeff Pendergraph Arizona St. 66.0 Mike Rose Eastern Kentucky 48.1 Brett Harvey Loyola (MD) 91.0
Hasheem Thabeet UConn 4.2 Blake Griffin Oklahoma 65.4 Booker Woodfox Creighton 47.6 Josh White North Texas 90.6
Tony Gaffney UMass 3.8 Joey Henley Sacred Heart 62.6 Jared Stohl Portland 45.6 Jodie Meeks Kentucky 90.2
Kleon Penn McNeese St. 3.5 Keith Benson Oakland 62.2 Ryan Tillema Green Bay 45.4 Darren Collison UCLA 89.7
Taj Gibson USC 2.9 Ahmad Nivins St. Joseph's 61.2 Jimmy Baron Rhode Island 45.4 Alan Voskuil Texas Tech 89.6

Conference standings

Шаблон:2008-09 America East men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Atlantic 10 men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 ACC men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008-09 Atlantic Sun men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Big East men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Big Sky men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008–09 Big South men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 Big Ten men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 Big 12 men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008–09 Big West men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 CAA men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Conference USA men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008-09 Horizon League men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 Ivy League men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 MAAC men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008–09 Mid-American Conference men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 MEAC men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008–09 Mountain West Conference men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball independents standings Шаблон:2008-09 Northeast Conference men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008–09 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 Patriot League men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008–09 Southeastern Conference men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 Southern Conference men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008-09 Southland Conference men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008-09 SWAC men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Summit League men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball standings
Шаблон:2008-09 WAC men's basketball standings Шаблон:2008–09 West Coast Conference men's basketball standings

Post-season tournaments

NCAA tournament

Шаблон:Main

The NCAA Tournament tipped off on March 18, 2009, with the opening round game in Dayton, Ohio, and concluded on April 6 at the Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan. Of the 65 teams that were invited to participate, 31 were automatic bids while 34 were at-large bids. The 34 at-large teams came from 8 conferences, with the Big East, ACC and Big Ten each receiving seven bids. The Big 12 and Pac-10 each received six bids. The SEC and Atlantic 10 each received three bids. This season also marked the first time that three teams from the same conference were selected as #1 seeds (Louisville, Pittsburgh and Connecticut). North Carolina tore through the tournament, winning each game by 12 or more points and beating Michigan State in the Final 89–72 behind an NCAA-record 55 first-half points to win its fifth National championship. Ty Lawson recorded a record 8 steals, while Wayne Ellington was named tournament Most Outstanding Player.[95]

Final Four – Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan

Шаблон:4TeamBracket

National Invitation tournament

Шаблон:Main After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the National Invitation Tournament invited 32 teams to participate. Five teams were automatic qualifiers for winning their conference regular-season championships, while the remaining 27 bids were named from an at-large pool. Notable entrants included Kentucky, who broke a 17-year NCAA tournament appearance streak by missing the field, as well as preseason top ten team Notre Dame and 2008 Regional Finalist Davidson. Penn State defeated Baylor 69–63 in the Final on April 2. The Nittany Lions' Jamelle Cornley was named tournament Most Outstanding Player.

NIT Semifinals and Final

Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City on March 31 and April 2 Шаблон:4TeamBracket

College Basketball Invitational

Шаблон:Main

The second College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament was held beginning March 17 and ended with a best-of-three final, ending March 30. It was the second year that the CBI tournament has conducted a post-season tournament. Oregon State defeated UTEP 2-1 in the final series to win the title.[96] Oregon State's Roeland Schaftenaar was named tournament MVP.

CollegeInsider.com tournament

Шаблон:Main

The inaugural CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament was held beginning March 17 and ended with a championship game on March 30. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. Old Dominion defeated Bradley 66–62 to win the first CIT championship in Peoria, Illinois.[97] The Monarchs' Frank Hassell was named tournament MVP. Шаблон:4TeamBracket

Award winners

Consensus All-American teams

Шаблон:Main 2009 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans

Major player of the year awards

Major freshman of the year awards

Major coach of the year awards

Other major awards

Coaching changes

A number of teams changed coaches throughout the season and after the season ended.[116]

Team Former
Coach
Interim
Coach
New
Coach
Reason
Alabama Mark Gottfried Philip Pearson Anthony Grant Gottfried resigned mid-season and was replaced by VCU's Grant after the season[117]
Appalachian State Houston Fancher Buzz Peterson Fancher resigned,[118] the Mountaineers re-hired former head coach Peterson.[119]
Arizona Lute Olson Russ Pennell Sean Miller Olson retired after learning from his doctor that he had a stroke.
Army Jim Crews Zach Spiker[120] Crews was fired only weeks before the start of practice[121]
Boston University Dennis Wolff Pat Chambers[122] Wolff was fired after 15 seasons at BU.[123]
Cal Poly Kevin Bromley Joe Callero Bromley was fired following a 3-win season.[124]
Elon Ernie Nestor Matt Matheny Nestor resigned,[125] Davidson assistant Matt Matheny was hired as head coach after the season[126]
Fairleigh Dickinson Tom Green Greg Vetrone Green was fired after 26 years at the helm.[127]
Florida International Sergio Rouco Isiah Thomas[128] Rouco was fired after five losing seasons in his five years at FIU.[129]
Georgia Dennis Felton Pete Herrman Mark Fox Felton is fired after seven straight losses[130]
Georgia Southern Jeff Price Charlton Young Price resigned after an 8-win season[131]
Grambling Rick Duckett Bobby Washington Duckett left under uncertain circumstances following the death of Grambling player Henry White[132]
Hampton Kevin Nickelberry Edward Joyner Nickelberry resigned after three seasons.[133]
High Point Bart Lundy Scott Cherry Lundy was fired after a 21-loss season and last-place Big South finish[134]
Holy Cross Ralph Willard Sean Kearney[135] Willard returns to Rick Pitino's Louisville staff as an assistant[136]
Kentucky Billy Gillispie John Calipari Gillispie was fired after two years and missing the NCAA tournament[137]
Liberty Ritchie McKay Dale Layer McKay left Liberty after the transfer of Seth Curry to become Associate head coach for new Virginia coach Tony Bennett.[138]
Loyola Marymount Bill Bayno Max Good Bayno resigned for medical reasons.[139]
Memphis John Calipari Josh Pastner Calipari left to take the Kentucky job.[140]
Nevada Mark Fox David Carter Fox left to take the Georgia job.[141] Nevada elevated assistant Carter to replace him.[142]
NC Central Henry Dickerson LeVelle Moton
North Florida Matt Kilcullen Matthew Driscoll
Portland State Ken Bone Tyler Geving Portland State promoted assistant Geving after Bone keft for Washington State[143]
Seattle Joe Callero Cameron Dollar[144] Callero keft for the Cal Poly job.[145]
Southern California Tim Floyd Kevin O'Neill[146] Floyd resigned following allegations that player O. J. Mayo was paid during his time at USC.[147]
Southeast Missouri State Scott Edgar Zac Roman Dickey Nutt[148] Edgar was fired while on administrative leave over possible major NCAA violations.[149]
Tennessee-Martin Bret Campbell Jason James Campbell resigned after an audit turned up check-cashing irregularities.[150] UTM then hired James, who became the second-youngest coach in Division I.[151]
Tennessee State Cy Alexander Mark Pittman John Cooper Alexander was fired after starting 6-16, TSU hired Auburn associate head coach Cooper.[152]
Texas-Pan American Tom Schuberth Ryan Marks[153]
Virginia Dave Leitao Tony Bennett[154] Leitao resigned just two years removed from an ACC regular-season title.[155]
Virginia Commonwealth Anthony Grant Shaka Smart Popular Grant left for Alabama.[156] VCU hired Florida assistant Smart as his replacement.[157]
Xavier Sean Miller Chris Mack[158] Miller left Xavier to fill the vacancy at Arizona. He had reportedly turned down the job only to change his mind less than 24 hours later.
Washington State Tony Bennett Ken Bone[159] Bennett left for the Virginia job.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:2008–09 NCAA Division I men's basketball conference season navbox Шаблон:NCAA Division I men's basketball season navbox

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