Английская Википедия:Colorado State Rams men's basketball

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox college basketball team

The Colorado State Rams men's basketball team represents Colorado State University, located in Fort Collins, in the U.S. state of Colorado, in NCAA Division I basketball competition. They play their home games at the Moby Arena and are members of the Mountain West Conference. They are led by head coach Niko Medved.[1]

History

The men's basketball team at Colorado State University—then called Colorado Agricultural College—began competing in the 1901–02 season.[2] The school became a member of the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference in the 1910–11 season, and followed most of the larger schools in that conference into the Mountain States Conference in the 1938–39 season and stayed in the conference until 1961–62. Colorado State then joined the Western Athletic Conference (WAC) in 1969–70. After 20 seasons in the WAC, Colorado State moved to its current MWC in 1999–00.[2] Colorado State was an inaugural member of the MWC.[3]

Postseason

NCAA tournament results

The Rams have appeared in eleven NCAA Tournaments, with a combined record of 4–12.

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
1954 Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd Place
Шаблон:Cbb link
Шаблон:Cbb link
L 50–73
L 57–62
1963 Round of 25 Шаблон:Cbb link L 67–70
1965 Round of 23 Шаблон:Cbb link L 68–70
1966 Round of 22 Шаблон:Cbb link L 76–82
1969 Round of 25
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Dayton
#18 Шаблон:Cbb link
#11 Drake
W 52–50
W 64–56
L 77–84
1989 10 MW Round of 64
Round of 32
(7) Florida
(2) #7 Syracuse
W 68–46
L 50–65
1990 10 W Round of 64 (7) Alabama L 54–71
2003 14 W Round of 64 (3) #7 Duke L 57–67
2012 11 W Round of 64 (6) Murray State L 41–58
2013 8 MW Round of 64
Round of 32
(9) Missouri
(1) #2 Louisville
W 84–72
L 56–82
2022 6 S Round of 64 (11) Michigan L 63–75

NIT results

The Rams have appeared in ten National Invitation Tournaments (NIT), with a combined record of 9–11.

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
1961 Quarterfinals Saint Louis L 53–59
1962 First Round Holy Cross L 71–72
1988 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
New Orleans
Houston
Arkansas State
Ohio State
Boston College
W 63–54
W 71–61
W 69–49
L 62–64
W 58–57
1996 First Round Nebraska L 83–91
1998 First Round Minnesota L 65–77
1999 First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Mississippi State
Colorado
California
W 69–56
W 86–76
L 62–71
2011 First Round Fairfield L 60–62
2015 First Round South Dakota State L 76–86
2017 First Round
Second Round
Charleston
California State, Bakersfield
W 81–74
L 63–81
2021 First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd Place Game
Buffalo
NC State
Memphis
Louisiana Tech
W 75–73
W 65–61
L 67–90
L 74–76
Файл:CSU vs Oral Roberts.jpg
CSU hosts Oral Roberts on November 9, 2021 in Moby Arena.

CBI results

The Rams have appeared in one College Basketball Invitational (CBI) and lost the opener.

Шаблон:CollegePrimaryHeader
2010 First Round Morehead State L 60–74

Notable games

  • March 13, 1969, in the "Sweet 16" round of the NCAA tournament: Colorado State beat in-state rival and AP #18[4] Colorado 64–56.[5]
  • January 19, 1984, at Moby Arena: Colorado State beat AP #5 UTEP 63–51.[6]
  • December 29, 1989, at McNichols Sports Arena: Colorado State beat AP #24 North Carolina 78–67 in the Mile High Classic, a four-team tournament in Denver also featuring Colorado and Massachusetts. Colorado State beat Massachusetts the next night to win the tournament.[7]
  • December 22, 1999, at the Cannon Activities Center at Laie, Hawaii: In a Pearl Harbor Classic tournament game, Colorado State upset AP #18 UCLA 55–54. John Ford made a free throw with 23 seconds left that turned out to be the winning margin.[8]
  • December 30, 2003, at Moby Arena: Colorado State hosted AP #22[9] Purdue. Down 4 points with 7 seconds left, Colorado State committed a foul. In the double bonus, Purdue missed both free throws. CSU scored a three pointer with 0.7 seconds left. The ensuing Purdue inbound pass was tipped; the ball fell into the hands of Michael Moris who shot the game winning three pointer at the buzzer. The game was not televised. CSU was awarded the points and won the game by two points.[10][11]
  • March 21, 2013, in the "Round of 64" of the NCAA tournament: Colorado State beat #9 seed Missouri 84–72 to advance to the Round of 32.[12]
  • January 2, 2021, at Viejas Arena: Colorado State came back from a 26-point deficit to beat San Diego State 70–67, the largest comeback in Mountain West history.[13]
  • November 22, 2021, at Sports and Fitness Center: After trailing Northeastern by 20 points early in the second half of the 2021 Paradise Jam tournament championship game, the Rams put together a comeback and outscored the Huskies 47–17 in the final 17 minutes to win the game — and the tournament — 71–61. David Roddy, who scored 27 points — and averaged 31 points a game — was named the MVP of the tournament.[14]

Rivalries

Within the Mountain West Conference, Colorado State has notable rivalries with these schools:

Outside the MW, these are noted rivalries:

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Colorado State Rams men's basketball navbox Шаблон:Colorado State University Шаблон:Mountain West Conference men's basketball navbox