Английская Википедия:1980 NCAA Division I basketball tournament

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

The 1980 NCAA Division I basketball tournament involved 48 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 6, 1980, and ended with the championship game on March 24 at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis. A total of 48 games were played, including a national third-place game.

Louisville, coached by Denny Crum, won the national title with a 59–54 victory in the final game over UCLA, coached by Larry Brown. Darrell Griffith of Louisville was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

Structurally speaking, this was the first tournament of the modern era.[1] For the first time:

  1. An unlimited number of at-large teams could come from any conference. (From 1975 to 1979, conferences were allowed only one at-large entry.)
  2. The bracket was seeded to make each region as evenly competitive as possible. (Previously, geographic considerations had trumped this.)
  3. All teams were seeded solely based on the subjective judgment of the committee. (In 1979, seeding was partially based on the prior performance of a conference winner's conference.)

In this, the second year the tournament field was seeded, no #1 seed reached the Final Four. Since then, it has happened three other times, in 2006, 2011, and 2023.

UCLA would forfeit its second place in the standings in 1981 after players representing the school were declared ineligible by the NCAA.[2]

Schedule and venues

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Шаблон:Location map+

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1980 tournament:

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals, 3rd-place game, and championship (Final Four and championship)

Teams

Region Seed Team Coach Conference Finished Final Opponent Score
East
East 1 Syracuse Jim Boeheim Big East Sweet 16 5 Iowa L 88–77
East 2 Maryland Lefty Driesell Atlantic Coast Sweet Sixteen 3 Georgetown L 74–68
East 3 Georgetown John Thompson Big East Regional Runner-up 5 Iowa L 81–80
East 4 NC State Norm Sloan Atlantic Coast Round of 32 5 Iowa L 77–64
East 5 Iowa Lute Olson Big Ten 4th Place 2 Purdue L 75-58
East 6 Iona Jim Valvano ECAC Metro Round of 32 3 Georgetown L 74–71
East 7 Tennessee Don DeVoe Southeastern Round of 32 2 Maryland L 86-75
East 8 Villanova Rollie Massimino Eastern Round of 32 1 Syracuse L 97-83
East 9 Marquette Hank Raymonds Independent Round of 48 8 Villanova L 77–59
East 10 Furman Eddie Holbrook Southern Round of 48 7 Tennessee L 80–69
East 11 Holy Cross George Blaney ECAC North Round of 48 6 Iona L 84–78
East 12 VCU J. D. Barnett Sun Belt Round of 48 5 Iowa L 86–72
Mideast
Mideast 1 Kentucky Joe B. Hall Southeastern Sweet Sixteen 4 Duke L 55–54
Mideast 2 Indiana Bob Knight Big Ten Sweet Sixteen 6 Purdue L 76–69
Mideast 3 St. John's Lou Carnesecca Big East Round of 32 6 Purdue L 87-72
Mideast 4 Duke Bill E. Foster Atlantic Coast Regional Runner-up 6 Purdue L 68–60
Mideast 5 Washington State George Raveling Pacific-10 Round of 48 12 Penn L 62–55
Mideast 6 Purdue Lee Rose Big Ten 3rd Place 5 Iowa W 75–58
Mideast 7 Virginia Tech Charles Moir Metro Round of 32 2 Indiana L 68–59
Mideast 8 Florida State Joe Williams Metro Round of 32 1 Kentucky L 97–78
Mideast 9 Toledo Bob Nichols Mid-American Round of 48 8 Florida State L 94–91
Mideast 10 Western Kentucky Gene Keady Ohio Valley Round of 48 7 Virginia Tech L 89–85
Mideast 11 La Salle Lefty Ervin East Coast Round of 48 6 Purdue L 90–82
Mideast 12 Penn Bob Weinhauer Ivy League Round of 32 4 Duke L 52–42
Midwest
Midwest 1 LSU Dale Brown Southeastern Regional Runner-up 2 Louisville L 86–66
Midwest 2 Louisville Denny Crum Metro Champion 8 UCLA W 59–54
Midwest 3 North Carolina Dean Smith Atlantic Coast Round of 32 6 Texas A&M L 78–61
Midwest 4 Notre Dame Digger Phelps Independent Round of 32 5 Missouri L 87–84
Midwest 5 Missouri Norm Stewart Big Eight Sweet Sixteen 1 LSU L 68–63
Midwest 6 Texas A&M Shelby Metcalf Southwest Sweet Sixteen 2 Louisville L 66–55
Midwest 7 Kansas State Jack Hartman Big Eight Round of 32 2 Louisville L 71–69
Midwest 8 Alcorn State Davey Whitney Southwest Athletic Round of 32 1 LSU L 98–88
Midwest 9 South Alabama Cliff Ellis Sun Belt Round of 48 8 Alcorn State L 70–62
Midwest 10 Arkansas Eddie Sutton Southwest Round of 48 7 Kansas State L 71–53
Midwest 11 Bradley Dick Versace Missouri Valley Round of 48 6 Texas A&M L 55–53
Midwest 12 San Jose State Bill Berry Pacific Coast Round of 48 5 Missouri L 61–51
West
West 1 DePaul Ray Meyer Independent Round of 32 8 UCLA L 77–71
West 2 Oregon State Ralph Miller Pacific-10 Round of 32 10 Lamar L 81–77
West 3 BYU Frank Arnold Western Athletic Round of 32 6 Clemson L 71–66
West 4 Ohio State Eldon Miller Big Ten Sweet Sixteen 8 UCLA L 72–68
West 5 Arizona State Ned Wulk Pacific-10 Round of 32 4 Ohio State L 89–75
West 6 Clemson Bill Foster Atlantic Coast Regional Runner-up 8 UCLA L 85–74
West 7 Weber State Neil McCarthy Big Sky Round of 48 10 Lamar L 87–86
West 8 UCLA Larry Brown Pacific-10 Runner Up 2 Louisville L 59–54
West 9 Old Dominion Paul Webb ECAC South Round of 48 8 UCLA L 87–74
West 10 Lamar Billy Tubbs Southland Sweet Sixteen 6 Clemson L 74–66
West 11 Utah State Rod Tueller Pacific Coast Round of 48 6 Clemson L 76–73
West 12 Loyola Marymount Ron Jacobs West Coast Round of 48 5 Arizona State L 99–71

Bracket

* – Denotes overtime period.

East region

Шаблон:4RoundBracket

Midwest region

Шаблон:4RoundBracket

Mideast region

Шаблон:4RoundBracket

West region

Шаблон:4RoundBracket

Final Four

Шаблон:4TeamBracket-with 3rd

Announcers

  • Dick Enberg, Billy Packer, and Al McGuire – Mideast Regional Final at Lexington, Kentucky; Midwest Regional Final at Houston, Texas; Final Four at Indianapolis, Indiana
  • Don Criqui and Gary Thompson – East Regional Final at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; West Regional Final at Tucson, Arizona
  • Bill O'Donnell and Bucky Waters – East Regional semifinals at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • Fred White and Larry Conley – Mideast Regional semifinals at Lexington, Kentucky
  • Jay Randolph and Jeff Mullins – Midwest Regional semifinals at Houston, Texas
  • Dick Enberg and Al McGuire – second round at Lincoln, Nebraska (Louisville–Kansas State, Notre Dame–Missouri); Second Round at Tempe, Arizona (DePaul–UCLA, Ohio State–Arizona State)
  • Don Criqui and Billy Packer – second round at West Lafayette, Indiana (St. John's–Purdue, Duke–Pennsylvania); Second Round at Bowling Green, Kentucky (Indiana–Virginia Tech, Kentucky–Florida State)
  • Merle Harmon and Joe Dean – second round at Greensboro, North Carolina (North Carolina State–Iowa, Maryland–Tennessee)
  • Bob Costas and Bucky Waters – second round at Providence, Rhode Island (Georgetown–Iona, Syracuse–Villanova)
  • Charlie Jones and Lynn Shackelford – second round at Ogden, Utah (Brigham Young–Clemson, Oregon State–Lamar)
  • Jay Randolph and Gary Thompson – first round at Lincoln, Nebraska (Kansas State–Arkansas, Missouri–San Jose State); Second Round at Denton, Texas (LSU–Alcorn State, North Carolina–Texas A&M)

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament navbox Шаблон:1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament navbox Шаблон:1980 Louisville Cardinals men's basketball navbox Шаблон:College Basketball on NBC

  1. Шаблон:Cite web
  2. U.C.L.A. ON PROBATION IN BASKETBALL - New York Times (UPI) December 9, 1981