Английская Википедия:2005 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

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

Файл:2005 NCAA North Carolina v Michigan State.JPG
2005 Final Four, Edward Jones Dome

The 2005 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 65 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 15, 2005, and ended with the championship game on April 4 at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis.

The Final Four consisted of top seed Illinois, in their first Final Four appearance since 1989, Louisville, making their first appearance since winning the national championship in 1986, North Carolina, reaching their first Final Four since their 2000 Cinderella run, and Michigan State, back in the Final Four for the first time since 2001.

North Carolina emerged as the national champion for a fourth time, defeating Illinois in the final 75–70.[1] North Carolina's Sean May was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.[1] It was coach Roy Williams's first national championship.[1]

For the first time since 1999, when Weber State defeated North Carolina, a #14 seed defeated a #3 seed when Bucknell upset Kansas.[2] A #13 seed, Vermont, advanced by defeating Syracuse in the first round[3] and a #12 seed, Wisconsin-Milwaukee, advanced to the Sweet Sixteen in the Chicago region.[4][5]

Tournament procedure

Шаблон:Further A total of 65 teams entered the tournament, thirty having earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. The automatic bid of the Ivy League, which does not conduct a postseason tournament, went to its regular season champion. The remaining 34 teams were granted "at-large" bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.

Two teams play an opening-round game, popularly called the "play-in game," the winner of which advances to the main draw of the tournament and plays a top seed in one of the regionals. Since its inception in 2001, this game has been played at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio.

All 64 teams were seeded 1 to 16 within their regionals; the winner of the play-in game automatically received a 16 seed. The Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 65.

The 2005 regionals, along with their top seeds, are listed below.

  • Chicago Regional (top seed: Illinois; top overall seed)
  • Albuquerque Regional (top seed: Washington; fourth overall seed)
  • Syracuse Regional (top seed: North Carolina; second overall seed)
  • Austin Regional (top seed: Duke; third overall seed)

Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four, held April 2–4 in St. Louis.

Schedule and venues

Шаблон:Location map+

Шаблон:Location map+

Sites hosting each round of the 2005 tournament:

Opening round

First and second rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Qualifying teams

Шаблон:Further

Automatic bids

The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2005 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).

Conference School Appearance Last bid
ACC Duke 29th 2004
America East Vermont 3rd 2004
Atlantic 10 George Washington 8th 1999
Atlantic Sun Central Florida 4th 2004
Big 12 Oklahoma State 22nd 2004
Big East Syracuse 30th 2004
Big Sky Montana 6th 2002
Big South Winthrop 5th 2002
Big Ten Illinois 25th 2004
Big West Utah State 16th 2003
Colonial Old Dominion 8th 1997
C-USA Louisville 32nd 2004
Horizon UW-Milwaukee 2nd 2003
Ivy League Penn 21st 2003
MAAC Niagara 2nd 1970
MAC Ohio 4th 1994
MEAC Delaware State 1st Never
Mid-Con Oakland 1st Never
Missouri Valley Creighton 15th 2003
Mountain West New Mexico 11th 1999
Northeast Fairleigh Dickinson 4th 1998
Ohio Valley Шаблон:Cbb link 6th 1979
Pac-10 Washington 12th 2004
Patriot Bucknell 3rd 1989
SEC Florida 11th 2004
Southern Шаблон:Cbb link 9th 1997
Southland Southeastern Louisiana 1st Never
Sun Belt Louisiana–Lafayette 9th 2004
SWAC Alabama A&M 1st Never
WAC UTEP 16th 2004
West Coast Gonzaga 8th 2004

Listed by region and seeding

<section begin="RegionSeeds" />

Chicago Regional
Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Illinois Big Ten 32–1 Automatic
#2 Oklahoma State Big 12 24–6 Automatic
#3 Arizona Pac-10 27–6 At-large
#4 Boston College Big East 24–4 At-large
#5 Alabama SEC 24–7 At-large
#6 LSU SEC 20–9 At-large
#7 Southern Illinois Missouri Valley 26–7 At-large
#8 Texas Big 12 20–10 At-large
#9 Nevada WAC 24–6 At-large
#10 Saint Mary's WCC 25–8 At-large
#11 UAB C-USA 21–10 At-large
#12 UW-Milwaukee Horizon 24–5 Automatic
#13 Penn Ivy 20–8 Automatic
#14 Utah State Big West 24–7 Automatic
#15 Southeastern Louisiana Southland 24–8 Automatic
#16 Fairleigh Dickinson Northeast 20–12 Automatic
Albuquerque Regional
Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Washington Pac-10 27–5 Automatic
#2 Wake Forest ACC 26–5 At-large
#3 Gonzaga WCC 25–4 Automatic
#4 Louisville C-USA 29–4 Automatic
#5 Georgia Tech ACC 19–11 At-large
#6 Texas Tech Big 12 20–10 At-large
#7 West Virginia Big East 21–10 At-large
#8 Pacific Big West 26–3 At-large
#9 Pittsburgh Big East 20–8 At-large
#10 Creighton Missouri Valley 23–10 Automatic
#11 UCLA Pac-10 18–10 At-large
#12 George Washington Atlantic 10 22–7 Automatic
#13 Louisiana–Lafayette (vacated)[6] Sun Belt 20–10 Automatic
#14 Winthrop Big South 27–5 Automatic
#15 Шаблон:Cbb link SoCon 20–10 Automatic
#16 Montana Big Sky 18–12 Automatic
Syracuse Regional
Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
#1 North Carolina ACC 27–4 At-large
#2 Connecticut Big East 22–7 At-large
#3 Kansas Big 12 23–6 At-large
#4 Florida SEC 23–7 Automatic
#5 Villanova Big East 22–7 At-large
#6 Wisconsin Big Ten 22–8 At-large
#7 Charlotte C-USA 21–7 At-large
#8 Minnesota Big Ten 21–10 At-large
#9 Iowa State Big 12 18–11 At-large
#10 NC State ACC 19–13 At-large
#11 Northern Iowa Missouri Valley 21–10 At-large
#12 New Mexico Mountain West 26–6 Automatic
#13 Ohio Mid-American 21–10 Automatic
#14 Bucknell Patriot 22–9 Automatic
#15 Central Florida Atlantic Sun 24–8 Automatic
#16 Oakland Mid-Continent 12–18 Automatic
Alabama A&M SWAC 18–14 Automatic
Austin Regional
Seed School Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Duke ACC 25–5 Automatic
#2 Kentucky SEC 25–5 At-large
#3 Oklahoma Big 12 24–7 At-large
#4 Syracuse (vacated)[7][8] Big East 27–6 Automatic
#5 Michigan State Big Ten 22–6 At-large
#6 Utah Mountain West 27–5 At-large
#7 Cincinnati C-USA 24–7 At-large
#8 Stanford Pac-10 18–12 At-large
#9 Mississippi State SEC 22–10 At-large
#10 Iowa Big Ten 21–11 At-large
#11 UTEP WAC 27–7 Automatic
#12 Old Dominion CAA 28–5 Automatic
#13 Vermont America East 24–6 Automatic
#14 Niagara MAAC 20–9 Automatic
#15 Шаблон:Cbb link Ohio Valley 22–8 Automatic
#16 Delaware State MEAC 19–13 Automatic

<section end="RegionSeeds" />

Bids by conference

Bids Conference Schools
6 Big 12 Iowa State, Kansas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas Tech
Big East Boston College, Connecticut, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Villanova, West Virginia
5 ACC Duke, Georgia Tech, NC State, North Carolina, Wake Forest
Big Ten Illinois, Iowa, Michigan State, Minnesota, Wisconsin
SEC Alabama, Florida, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi State
4 C-USA Charlotte, Cincinnati, Louisville, UAB
Pac-10 Arizona, Stanford, UCLA, Washington
3 Missouri Valley Creighton, Northern Iowa, Southern Illinois
2 Big West Pacific, Utah State
Mountain West New Mexico, Utah
WAC Nevada, UTEP
West Coast Gonzaga, Saint Mary's
1 19 other conferences

Opening round

First round

Chicago Regional

Albuquerque Regional

Syracuse Regional

Austin Regional

Second round

Chicago Regional

Albuquerque Regional

  • March 19, Taco Bell Arena, Boise
  • March 20, Gaylord Entertainment Center, Nashville
  • March 19, McKale Center, Tucson
    • Texas Tech (6) 71, Gonzaga (3) 69
      Texas Tech edged Gonzaga to earn a trip to the Sweet Sixteen. Ronald Ross led Texas Tech with 24, and Jarrius Jackson added 18.
  • March 19, Wolstein Center, Cleveland
    • West Virginia (7) 111, Wake Forest (2) 105 (2 OT)
      West Virginia continued their upset run to the Sweet Sixteen with a double-overtime shootout win, erasing a thirteen-point halftime deficit. Mike Gansey led West Virginia with 29 including 19 in the overtime periods, with Tyrone Sally, the hero of the first-round victory over Creighton, scoring 21, and D'or Fischer scoring 15 off the bench.

Syracuse Regional

Austin Regional

Regionals

Chicago Regional

At Allstate Arena, Rosemont, Illinois

Semifinals

  • March 24
    • Illinois (1) 77, Milwaukee (12) 63
      Milwaukee, who had knocked off powerhouses Alabama and Boston College in the last week, had their Cinderella run come to an abrupt end against the tournament's top-seeded team. Milwaukee stayed with Illinois for most of the first half, only trailing 29–26 with 3:38 to play in the half, but then Illinois reeled off a 7–0 run to push the lead to ten, and Milwaukee never recovered, never getting closer than seven points for the rest of the game. Following this impressive run, Milwaukee coach Bruce Pearl accepted a job as the head basketball coach at the University of Tennessee.
    • Arizona (3) 79, Oklahoma State (2) 78
      In the other and more climactic Midwest Regional semifinal, Arizona squeaked by Oklahoma State when Salim Stoudamire canned a jumper with 2.8 seconds remaining. The game had been back-and-forth all night long, with Arizona leading by three at halftime but then letting up, allowing Oklahoma State to take a five-point lead at 72–67 with 4:29 remaining. Arizona and Oklahoma State then traded baskets, and Stoudamire sliced the Oklahoma State lead to 76–75 with 1:58 left on a three-pointer. After Joey Graham put Oklahoma State back up by one with eighteen seconds to play, Stoudamire nailed his game-winner to send Arizona to the Regional Finals.

Final

  • March 26
    • Illinois (1) 90, Arizona (3) 89 (OT)
      In one of the most thrilling NCAA basketball games ever, Illinois pulled off an improbable comeback to break the hearts of Wildcats fans everywhere. After a close first half, Arizona came out gunning in the second half, opening up a 75–60 lead with only four minutes left in the second half. Illinois then closed the half on a 20–5 run to force overtime using a stingy defense, layups, and three-pointers, the last of which by Deron Williams tied the game at 80–80 with 39 seconds in regulation. The run broke down Arizona completely, and Illinois opened up a 90–84 lead in overtime before Arizona scored five straight to cut the lead to one, but Hassan Adams missed a three at the buzzer to give Illinois the win and a berth in the Final Four.

Albuquerque Regional

At University Arena, Albuquerque

Semifinals

  • March 24
    • Louisville (4) 93, Washington (1) 79
      Louisville dominated top-seeded Washington, using a big spurt late in the first half and then cruising from there. After an evenly matched sixteen minutes that saw Washington lead 30–29, Louisville went on an 18–5 run to close the first half, with the big shots coming from Francisco García, who nailed two three-pointers during that stretch to extend the lead. Washington tried a second-half comeback, cutting Louisville's lead to 67–61 with 8:41 left, but Louisville had enough to pull away.
    • West Virginia (7) 65, Texas Tech (6) 60
      Seventh-seeded West Virginia continued to roll onto the Regional Finals, engaging in a close battle with Texas Tech before pulling away in the second half. West Virginia took the lead for good when Kevin Pittsnogle drained a three with 6:14 to play, and held it from there, with Pittsnogle sinking two huge free throws with seventeen seconds left and West Virginia up by two to put the game out of reach.

Final

  • March 26
    • Louisville (4) 93, West Virginia (7) 85 (OT)
      In another Regional Final overtime game (and a preview of a future Big East rivalry), West Virginia opened up the game at a blistering pace, using five three-pointers to jump out to a 19–5 lead. When Joe Herber made a three, West Virginia had a 32–13 lead with 5:30 to play in the first half. West Virginia led by thirteen at halftime, but Louisville finally went to a zone defense coming out of the half, and West Virginia began to go cold. Louisville cut the lead to three nine minutes into the second half, but Kevin Pittsnogle extended the West Virginia lead to ten with six minutes to play with a three. But West Virginia missed their last four field goals and Louisville tied the game with 38 seconds to play on Larry O'Bannon's layup. Louisville had grabbed the momentum and scored sixteen points in overtime to secure a berth in the Final Four.

Syracuse Regional

At Carrier Dome, Syracuse

Semifinals

  • March 25
    • North Carolina (1) 67, Villanova (5) 66
      In a tight Sweet Sixteen contest, the top-seeded Tar Heels barely made it to the Regional Finals. The entire game was officiated closely—the first television timeout came after Villanova garnered its fifth personal foul, and two fouls led to the disqualification from the game of North Carolina star Raymond Felton with under five minutes left. Fifth-seeded Villanova stuck with UNC despite falling behind 64–54 with 3:45 left in the game. The Wildcats stormed back to cut the lead to 66–63. With eleven seconds left Allan Ray drove the lane, received contact as he made a basket, but was called for a travel on the play. On the ensuing possession, Villanova immediately fouled. Rashad McCants then made a free throw to seal the North Carolina victory.
    • Wisconsin (6) 65, N.C. State (10) 56
      After upsetting two higher-seeded teams, including the defending national champion, N.C. State took a nine-point halftime lead against sixth-seeded Wisconsin before the Badgers woke up, using a 13–0 second-half run to turn a three-point deficit into a ten-point lead. N.C. State hung in, cutting the Wisconsin lead to 53–49 with 5:03 to play, and then only trailed 59–54 with 1:50 to play, but N.C. State ran out of miracles and energy and their Cinderella run ended, denying them a matchup with their most hated rival for a trip to St. Louis.

Final

  • March 27
    • North Carolina (1) 88, Wisconsin (6) 82
      The third regional final matched up the top seeded North Carolina Tar Heels and the sixth seeded Badgers from Wisconsin. The Tar Heels started off hot in this one as Sean May and Rashad McCants scored at will. When point guard Raymond Felton garnered his second foul, head coach Roy Williams decided to pull him to prevent further foul trouble. Up 11 at the time, it seemed to be the right move. Wisconsin would prove Williams wrong as they finished the half on an 11–0 run, tying the game at 44 heading into the half. The Tar Heels struggled to start the second half as hot as the first and trailed for the first time since the opening minutes of the game. Sparked by May's 29 points and 11 boards and Felton's clutch free throws, they outlasted the Badgers and won the game by six in regulation.

Austin Regional

At Frank Erwin Center, Austin

Semifinals

  • March 25
    • Michigan State (5) 78, Duke (1) 68
      The Spartans of Michigan State continued on to the Regional Finals by outplaying Duke in the second half and breaking a 32–32 halftime tie. Michigan State came out in the second half and secured the momentum in slowly, but surely, pulling away from Duke. The Spartans got out to a nine-point lead, allowed Duke to get within two, but then, scoring their last ten points of the game on free throws, moved on to the Regional Finals.
    • Kentucky (2) 62, Utah (6) 52
      After playing Kentucky well in the first half, only trailing by five at halftime, Utah ran out of steam. Utah's last chance to win the game came after Andrew Bogut missed a free throw with Utah down 38–35 with 12:17 to play. Kentucky gradually pulled away to meet Michigan State in the Regional Finals.

Final

  • March 27
    • Michigan State (5) 94, Kentucky (2) 88 (2 OT)
      In this double-overtime thriller, Kentucky started out well and led Michigan State by four at halftime, but Michigan State caught up in the second half, actually leading 70–62 with 5:43 to play. Kentucky rallied back, however, cutting the lead to one when Kelenna Azubuike drained a three with 1:19 to play. After Patrick Sparks missed the front end of a one-and-one with 41 seconds to play, Michigan State's Shannon Brown appeared to ice the game with two free throws with 20 seconds to play. But with time expiring, Sparks put up a prayer from three, and the ball bounced around the rim four times before falling in. After the referees spent nearly ten minutes reviewing the play, they upheld that Sparks' shot was a three pointer, sending the game into overtime. In the first overtime, neither team relented, and Brown hit a key three-point basket for Michigan State to keep them in the game. Kentucky's Azubuike missed a three as time expired to send the game into double overtime. In the second overtime, Michigan State's mettle finally won the game for them, as they scored 11 of their 13 points from the free throw line to finally seal the game and send them to the Final Four for the fourth time under coach Tom Izzo.

Final Four

Файл:Edward Jones Dome KM.jpg
The Edward Jones Dome was host of the Final Four and National Championship in 2005.

At Edward Jones Dome, St. Louis

National semifinals

  • April 2
    In a packed Edwards Jones Dome, the battle between Chicago Regional Champions Illinois and Albuquerque Regional Champions Louisville took place. Although nearly three-fourths of the crowd were Illini fans, the fourth-seeded Louisville Cardinals were not fazed and gave the overall top-seeded Fighting Illini all they could handle, trailing only by three at halftime, but Illinois used an early second-half run to pull away from the Cardinals and earn a bid in the national championship game.
    In the battle between Syracuse Regional Champions North Carolina and Austin Regional Champions Michigan State, North Carolina used a 54-point second half to erase a five-point halftime deficit and down the Spartans, who were making their fourth appearance in the Final Four under coach Tom Izzo.

National Championship Game

Шаблон:Main article

North Carolina was looking for its 4th National Championship, while Illinois was playing in its first. It was a tight contest for much of the first half before an 8–0 run by North Carolina allowed them to take a 35–25 lead. Eventually they would take a 40–27 lead into halftime. North Carolina increased its lead to 15 at one point in the second half. But Illinois began a furious charge: at one point, they would hit seven consecutive shots from the floor to turn a fifteen-point lead back to four. Unfazed, North Carolina would push the lead back up to ten before a 10–0 run by the Illini tied the game at 65-65. Illinois would tie the game at 70–70 on a three by Luther Head. But North Carolina would fight back as freshman Marvin Williams tapped back a Rashad McCants missed shot to put North Carolina back in front. Illinois would get several cracks to take the lead but were unable to convert. Eventually, Raymond Felton was able to steal the ball from Head, forcing Deron Williams to foul. However, Felton converted on 1 of 2 free throws, giving Illinois one last chance. But Luther Head's three pointer bounced high and out. Eventually it went into the hands of Felton who this time connected on both free throws to give North Carolina a 75–70 victory. For North Carolina head coach Roy Williams, it was his first national championship. Illinois was denied a chance to set the NCAA record for most wins in a season, instead tying it at 37. Sean May scored 26 points as he took the MOP of the Final Four.

Bracket

Winners in bold. * next to a score indicates that the game went to overtime; multiple stars indicate multiple overtimes.

Chicago Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

First round summary

Шаблон:Basketballbox Шаблон:Basketballbox

Second round summary

Шаблон:Basketballbox

Albuquerque Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

First round summary

Шаблон:Basketballbox Шаблон:Basketballbox

Second round summary

Шаблон:Basketballbox

Syracuse Regional

Шаблон:18TeamBracket

Austin Regional

Шаблон:16TeamBracket

Final Four — St. Louis, Missouri

Шаблон:4TeamBracket

Record by conference

Conference # of Bids Record Win % R32 S16 E8 F4 CG
Big East 6 7–6 Шаблон:Winpct 4 2 1
SEC 5 5–5 Шаблон:Winpct 3 1 1
Big Ten 5 12–5 Шаблон:Winpct 3 3 3 2 1
ACC 5 12–4 Шаблон:Winpct 5 3 1 1 1
Big 12 6 6–6 Шаблон:Winpct 4 2
Pac-10 4 5–4 Шаблон:Winpct 2 2 1
Missouri Valley 3 1–3 Шаблон:Winpct 1
Big West 2 1–2 Шаблон:Winpct 1 0
C–USA 4 6–4 Шаблон:Winpct 3 1 1 1
MWC 2 2–2 Шаблон:Winpct 1 1
WAC 2 1–2 Шаблон:Winpct 1 0
Horizon League 1 2–1 Шаблон:Winpct 1 1
WCC 2 1–2 Шаблон:Winpct 1
Patriot League 1 1–1 Шаблон:Winpct 1 0
America East Conference 1 1–1 Шаблон:Winpct 1 0
Mid-Continent 1 1–1 * Шаблон:Winpct - 0

* Oakland won the Opening Round game.

The Atlantic 10, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, CAA, Ivy, MAAC, MAC, MEAC, Northeast, Ohio Valley, SoCon, Southland, SWAC, and Sun Belt conferences all went 0–1.

The columns R32, S16, E8, F4, and CG respectively stand for the Round of 32, Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight, Final Four, and championship Game.

Television

ESPN carried the opening round game.

Rece Davis served as studio host, joined by analyst Fran Fraschilla.

CBS Sports carried the remaining 63 games. 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 analysts Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis.

The television rating indicated the tournament was watched by an average of 10.6 million viewers.

Radio

Westwood One had exclusive radio coverage.

Play-by-play announcer Color analyst(s) Round(s) Site(s)
1st/2nd rounds Cleveland, Ohio

John Tautges once again served as studio host.

Local radio

Шаблон:Unreferenced section

Region Seed Teams Flagship station Play-by-play announcer Color analyst(s)
Syracuse 3 Kansas KLWN-AM 1320 Bob Davis Max Falkenstein
Chicago 4 Boston College (Boston College)
Chicago 5 Alabama (Alabama)
Chicago 6 LSU WDGL-FM 98.1; WWL-AM 870 Jim Hawthorne Kevin Ford
Chicago 12 Wisconsin–Milwaukee (Wisconsin–Milwaukee)
Chicago 13 Penn (Penn)
Albuquerque 2 Wake Forest (Wake Forest)
Albuquerque 7 West Virginia (West Virginia) Tony Caridi Jay Jacobs
Albuquerque 10 Creighton (Creighton)
Albuquerque 15 UT-Chattanooga (UT-Chattanooga)

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament navbox Шаблон:2005 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament navbox Шаблон:2005 North Carolina Tar Heels men's basketball navbox