Английская Википедия:2000 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

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

The 2000 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. It began on March 16, 2000, and ended with the championship game on April 3 in Indianapolis, Indiana at the RCA Dome. A total of 63 games were played.

Due to a string of upsets throughout the tournament, only one top-four seed advanced to the Final Four. That was Michigan State, who finished the season as the #2 team in the nation and was given the top seed in the Midwest Region. The highest seeded of the other three Final Four teams was Florida, who won the East Region as the fifth seed. Two eight-seeds made the Final Four, with Wisconsin and North Carolina rounding the bracket out. Wisconsin won the West Region while North Carolina won the South Region, with both regions seeing their top three seeds eliminated during the first weekend of play.

Michigan State won their first national championship since 1979 by defeating Florida 89–76 in the final game. Mateen Cleaves of Michigan State was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, while Morris Peterson was its leading scorer.

Despite the string of upsets, no seed lower than 11 won a game in the tournament. The only 11 seed to win was Pepperdine, which defeated Indiana in the East Region's first round in what turned out to be Bob Knight's last game coaching the Hoosiers before his firing that offseason. Also, two teams that qualified as 10 seeds advanced to the Sweet Sixteen as Seton Hall in the East and Gonzaga in the West both advanced.

Because of the upsets, the Elite Eight consisted of one top seed (Michigan State), one second seed (Iowa State), one third seed (Oklahoma State), one fifth seed (Florida), one sixth seed (Purdue), one seventh seed (Tulsa), and two eighth seeds (Wisconsin and North Carolina). This is the most recent title won by the Big Ten Conference.

Schedule and venues

Шаблон:Location map+

Шаблон:Location map+

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 2000 tournament:

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Teams

There were 30 automatic bids awarded to the tournament - of these, 28 were given to the winners of their conference's tournament, while two were awarded to the team with the best regular-season record in their conference (Ivy League and Pac-10).

Three conference champions made their first NCAA tournament appearances: UNC Wilmington (CAA), Central Connecticut State (NEC), and Southeast Missouri State (Ohio Valley).

While the Mountain West Conference held a conference tournament, the conference was not granted an automatic bid to the tournament until the 2000–01 season.[1]

Automatic qualifiers

Automatic qualifiers
Conference Team Appearance Last bid
ACC Duke 24th 1999
America East Hofstra 3rd 1977
Atlantic 10 Temple 24th 1999
Big 12 Iowa State 11th 1997
Big East St. John's 26th 1999
Big Sky Northern Arizona 2nd 1998
Big South Winthrop 2nd 1999
Big Ten Michigan State 14th 1999
Big West Utah State 13th 1998
CAA UNC Wilmington 1st Шаблон:Sort
Conference USA Saint Louis 6th 1998
Ivy League Penn 18th 1999
MAAC Iona 5th 1998
MAC Ball State 7th 1995
MCC Butler 4th 1998
MEAC South Carolina State 4th 1998
Mid-Continent Valparaiso 5th 1999
Missouri Valley Creighton 11th 1999
NEC Central Connecticut State 1st Шаблон:Sort
Ohio Valley Southeast Missouri State 1st Шаблон:Sort
Pac-10 Arizona 18th 1999
Patriot Lafayette 3rd 1999
SEC Arkansas 25th 1999
Southern Appalachian State 2nd 1979
Southland Lamar 5th 1983
SWAC Jackson State 2nd 1997
Sun Belt Louisiana–Lafayette 5th 1994
TAAC Samford 2nd 1999
WAC Fresno State (vacated) 1984
West Coast Gonzaga 3rd 1999

Listed by region and seeding

<section begin="RegionSeeds" />

East Regional – Carrier Dome, Syracuse, New York
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Duke ACC 28–4 Automatic
2 Temple Atlantic 10 26–5 Automatic
3 Oklahoma State Big 12 24–6 At-Large
4 Illinois Big Ten 21–9 At-Large
5 Florida SEC 24–7 At-Large
6 Indiana Big Ten 20–8 At-Large
7 Oregon Pac-10 22–7 At-Large
8 Kansas Big 12 23–9 At-Large
9 DePaul Conference USA 21–10 At-Large
10 Seton Hall Big East 20–9 At-Large
11 Pepperdine West Coast 24–8 At-Large
12 Butler MCC 23–7 Automatic
13 Penn Ivy League 21–7 Automatic
14 Hofstra America East 24–6 Automatic
15 Lafayette Patriot 24–6 Automatic
16 Lamar Southland 15–15 Automatic
Midwest Regional – The Palace of Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Michigan
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Michigan State Big Ten 26–7 Automatic
2 Iowa State Big 12 29–4 Automatic
3 Maryland ACC 24–9 At-Large
4 Syracuse Big East 24–5 At-Large
5 Kentucky SEC 22–9 At-Large
6 UCLA Pac-10 19–11 At-Large
7 Auburn SEC 23–9 At-Large
8 Utah Mountain West 22–8 At-Large
9 Saint Louis Conference USA 19–13 Automatic
10 Creighton Missouri Valley 23–9 Automatic
11 Ball State MAC 22–8 Automatic
12 St. Bonaventure Atlantic 10 21–9 At-Large
13 Samford TAAC 21–10 Automatic
14 Iona MAAC 20–10 Automatic
15 Central Connecticut State Northeast 25–5 Automatic
16 Valparaiso Mid-Continent 19–12 Automatic
South Regional – Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Stanford Pac-10 26–3 At-Large
2 Cincinnati Conference USA 28–3 At-Large
3 Ohio State (vacated) Big Ten 22–6 At-Large
4 Tennessee SEC 24–6 At-Large
5 Connecticut Big East 24–9 At-Large
6 Miami (FL) Big East 21–10 At-Large
7 Tulsa WAC 29–4 At-Large
8 North Carolina ACC 18–13 At-Large
9 Missouri Big 12 18–12 At-Large
10 UNLV Mountain West 20–9 At-Large
11 Arkansas SEC 19–14 Automatic
12 Utah State Big West 28–5 Automatic
13 Louisiana-Lafayette Sun Belt 25–8 Automatic
14 Appalachian State Southern 23–8 Automatic
15 UNC Wilmington CAA 18–12 Automatic
16 South Carolina State MEAC 20–13 Automatic
West Regional – The Pit, Albuquerque, New Mexico
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Arizona Pac-10 26–6 Automatic
2 St. John's Big East 24–7 Automatic
3 Oklahoma Big 12 26–6 At-Large
4 LSU SEC 26–5 At-Large
5 Texas Big 12 23–8 At-Large
6 Purdue Big Ten 21–9 At-Large
7 Louisville Conference USA 19–11 At-Large
8 Wisconsin Big Ten 18–13 At-Large
9 Fresno State (vacated) WAC 24–9 Automatic
10 Gonzaga West Coast 24–8 Automatic
11 Dayton Atlantic 10 22–8 At-Large
12 Indiana State Missouri Valley 22–9 At-Large
13 Southeast Missouri State Ohio Valley 22–6 Automatic
14 Winthrop Big South 21–8 Automatic
15 Northern Arizona Big Sky 20–10 Automatic
16 Jackson State SWAC 17–15 Automatic

<section end="RegionSeeds" />

Bids by conference

Bids by Conference
Bids Conference(s)
6 Big Ten, Big 12, SEC
5 Big East
4 C-USA, Pac-10
3 ACC, Atlantic 10
2 Mountain West, Missouri Valley, WAC, WCC
1 19 others

Final Four

At RCA Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana

National semifinals

  • April 1, Michigan State (M1) 53, Wisconsin (W8) 41
    In the first half it appeared that the Cinderella run of the Wisconsin Badgers had a great chance of continuing. Wisconsin's slow down offense, smothering defense tempo held the game to a Michigan State Spartans 19–17 lead. However, the only number one seed left in the tournament opened the second half with a 13–2 run, including 10 points from senior Morris Peterson. After the run, Michigan State coasted home against Wisconsin's limited offense.[2]
    Despite being behind 18–3 to start the game and trailing at halftime, the North Carolina Tar Heels took control of the early minutes of the second half, and managed to sneak ahead 48–42 on standout freshman guard Joseph Forte's second consecutive three-pointer with 15:44 to play. However, the Florida Gators answered back with a 9–0 run to give them the lead for good. The Gators held the Tar Heels to just six points over a 9Шаблон:Sfrac minute span to put them in great shape. Foul trouble ultimately doomed the Tar Heels, and the Gators advanced to their first ever National Championship game.[3]

Championship game

Шаблон:Main

  • April 3, 2000
    • Michigan State (M1) 89, Florida (E5) 76
    Michigan State senior Mateen Cleaves limped his way to the Most Outstanding Player (MOP) of the 2000 NCAA Tournament. Cleaves sprained his ankle with 16:18 to play in the 2nd half, and this was after Florida had trimmed Michigan State's double digit halftime lead to 50–44. Cleaves returned about four minutes later, and immediately helped lead the Spartans on a 16–6 run to put the game out of reach. The lone top-seed remaining would bring order to a tournament filled with upsets as they salted away the victory for the school's second national championship (1979). Michigan State coach Tom Izzo earned his first title, from his second straight final four appearance. Morris Peterson led the Spartans with 21 points.[4]

Bracket

* – Denotes overtime period

East Regional – Syracuse, New York

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

South Regional – Austin, Texas

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Midwest Regional – Auburn Hills, Michigan

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

West Regional – Albuquerque, New Mexico

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Final Four at Indianapolis, Indiana

Шаблон:4TeamBracket

Broadcast information

Television

CBS Sports had exclusive TV coverage. They were carried on a regional basis until the "Elite Eight", at which point all games were shown nationally.

Greg Gumbel once again served as the studio host, joined by analyst Clark Kellogg.

Radio

Westwood One had exclusive radio coverage.

Play-by-play announcer Color analyst(s) Round(s) Site(s)
John Rooney Midwest 1st/2nd rounds Cleveland
Wayne Larrivee Midwest 1st/2nd rounds Minneapolis
Kevin Harlan Jon Sundvold Midwest Regional Michigan
John Rooney (Michigan State games) Bill Raftery (Michigan State games) Final Four Indiana
Marty Brennaman (FloridaШаблон:Snd North Carolina) Dave Gavitt (FloridaШаблон:Snd North Carolina)

Tommy Tighe once again served as studio host.

Local radio

Region Seed Teams Flagship station Play-by-play announcer Color analyst(s)
E 5 Florida WRUF–AM (Florida) Mick Hubert Mark Wise
E 8 Kansas KLWN-AM Bob Davis Max Falkenstein
S 8 North Carolina WCHL–AM (North Carolina) Woody Durham Mick Mixon
MW 1 Michigan State WJIM–AM/WJIM-FM (Michigan State) Mark Champion Gus Ganakas
MW 4 Syracuse (Syracuse)
MW 5 Kentucky (Kentucky)
MW 8 Utah (Utah)
MW 9 Saint Louis (Saint Louis)
MW 12 St. Bonaventure WHDL–AM 1450/WPIG–FM 95.7 (St. Bonaventure) Gary Nease John Watson
MW 13 Samford WVSU–FM 91.1 (Samford) Scott Griffin Mike Royer
MW 16 Valparaiso (Valparaiso)
W 4 LSU WDGL-FM 98.1, WWL-AM 870 Jim Hawthorne Kevin Ford
W 8 Wisconsin WIBA–AM/WOLX-FM (Wisconsin) Matt Lepay Mike Lucas

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

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