Английская Википедия:2014 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament

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Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox NCAA Basketball Conference tournament Шаблон:2013–14 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball standings

The 2014 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament was the post-season men's basketball tournament for the Pac-12 during the 2013–14 season. It was played from March 12–15 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Paradise, Nevada. The champion received an automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA tournament. The UCLA Bruins won the tournament with a 75–71 victory over the Arizona Wildcats in the championship game.

Seeds

Seed School Conference Overall Tiebreaker
1 Arizona†# 15–3 28–3
2 UCLA# 12–6 23–8
3 Arizona State# 10–8 21–10 5–3 vs. Cal, Col, Oreg & Stan
4 California# 10–8 19–12 3–1 vs. Col, Oreg & Stan
5 Colorado 10–8 21–10 2–0 vs. Oreg & Stan
6 Stanford 10–8 19–11 1–0 vs. Oregon
7 Oregon 10–8 22–8 0–1 vs. Stanford
8 Utah 9–9 20–10 1–1 vs. Wash, 0–2 vs. Ariz, 1–1 vs. UCLA
9 Washington 9–9 17–14 1–1 vs. Utah, 0–1 vs. Ariz, 0–1 vs. UCLA
10 Oregon State 8–10 16–14
11 Washington State 3–15 10–20
12 USC 2–16 11–20
† – Pac-12 regular season champions, and tournament No. 1 seed.
# – Received a first round bye in the conference tournament.
Overall records include all games played in the Pac-12 Tournament.

Teams will be seeded by conference record, with ties broken by record between the tied teams followed by record against the regular-season champion, if necessary.[1]

Schedule

Wednesday–Saturday, March 12–15, 2014

The top four seeds received a first-round bye.

Session Game Time* Matchup# Final Score Television Attendance
First round – Wednesday, March 12
1 1 12:00 pm #8 Utah vs. #9 Washington 67–61 Pac-12 Network 8,734
2 2:30 pm #5 Colorado vs. #12 USC 59–56 Pac-12 Network
2 3 6:00 pm #7 Oregon vs. #10 Oregon State 88–74 Pac-12 Network 9,047
4 8:30 pm #6 Stanford vs. #11 Washington State 74–63 Pac-12 Network
Quarterfinals – Thursday, March 13
3 5 12:00 pm #1 Arizona vs. #8 Utah 71–39 Pac-12 Network 12,916
6 2:30 pm #4 California vs. #5 Colorado 56–59 Pac-12 Network
4 7 6:00 pm #2 UCLA vs. #7 Oregon 82–63 Pac-12 Network 12,916
8 8:30 pm #3 Arizona State vs. #6 Stanford 58–79 Fox Sports 1
Semifinals – Friday, March 14
5 9 6:00 pm #1 Arizona vs. #5 Colorado 63–43 Pac-12 Network 12,916
10 8:30 pm #2 UCLA vs. #6 Stanford 84–59 Fox Sports 1
Championship – Saturday, March 15
6 11 3:00 pm #1 Arizona vs. #2 UCLA 71–75 Fox Sports 1 12,916
*Game times in PT. #-Rankings denote tournament seed

Bracket

Шаблон:4RoundBracket-Byes

Game summaries

Шаблон:Expand section Шаблон:Basketballbox In a matchup of the two best teams in the Pac-12, UCLA upset No. 4 Arizona 75–71 to win the conference tournament final.[2] The Bruins' Jordan Adams made a three-point field goal that broke a tie with 45 seconds remaining. Teammate Kyle Anderson had 21 points, 15 rebounds and five assists, and was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.[3] "I don't know that I've ever seen [those numbers] and just one turnover for a point guard," said Arizona coach Sean Miller of Anderson's performance.[4]

UCLA twice led by 11 in the first half, including 12–0 spurt at the start of the game that put them ahead 14–3.[2][3] It temporarily quieted Arizona fans, who made up an overwhelming majority of the crowd.[5] The Wildcats used a 12–2 run to cut the Bruins lead to 43–40 at halftime.[6] UCLA exceeded Utah's 39 points from their entire second-round game against Arizona, and matched Colorado's game total of 43 against the Wildcats in the semifinals.[3] One the nation's top defenses, Arizona allowed the Bruins to shoot 58.1 percent, making 18 of 31 from the field.[2][3] The Wildcats defense tightened in the second half, when the game saw seven ties and eight lead changes.[3] Arizona took their second lead of the game with less than 16 minutes remaining in the game—they first led 3–2 early. Arizona's Nick Johnson, the Pac-12 Player of the Year, scored 14 of his 22 in the second half. However, Anderson countered with 10 points and nine rebounds in the half.[7]

Free throws were a key difference in the game, with UCLA making 21 of 25, while Arizona was only 6 of 16.[3] The Wildcats surrendered 75 points just twice all season, both times to the Bruins; UCLA lost 79–75 to Arizona earlier in January.[6]

Tournament notes

Файл:Kyle Anderson dunk.JPG
Kyle Anderson of UCLA dunks during quarterfinals against Oregon
  • Arizona's 71-39 win over Utah tied the tournament record for largest margin in a game (32), set in 2006 when UCLA won 79–47 over Oregon.[8]
  • The No. 1 and 2 seeds met in the final game for the first time since 2008, which UCLA also won.[8]
  • Travis Wear of UCLA tied the record for best field goal % in a tournament game at 100% (8-of-8), vs. STAN, Mar. 14, 2014. This perfect % had been done only twice before with a min. of 7 attempts.[8]
  • Six teams were invited to the NCAA tournament: Arizona, UCLA, Colorado, Oregon, Stanford, and Arizona State. Arizona received a number one seed.[9]
  • Oregon became the first Pac-12 team to play all eleven other Pac-12 opponents in the conference tournament upon playing Oregon St.

All-tournament team

The following were honored as the top players of the tournament:[3]

Most outstanding player

The MVP was determined after the Tournament. Kyle Anderson, who scored 21 points and grabbed 15 rebounds for UCLA in the championship game, was named Tournament MVP.

Hall of Honor inductees

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Файл:2014 Pac-12 Hall of Honor induction.JPG
2014 Hall of Honor induction ceremony

Induction ceremony was held on Friday, March 14, 2014, during the tournament:[10]

References

See also

External links

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