stringtranslate.com

1990 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

The 1990 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 64 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of NCAA Division I men's college basketball. It began on March 15, 1990, and ended with the championship game on April 2 in Denver, Colorado. A total of 63 games were played.

UNLV, coached by Jerry Tarkanian, won the national title with a 103–73 victory in the final game over Duke, coached by Mike Krzyzewski. In doing so, UNLV set the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament record for largest margin of victory in a championship game. UNLV's win marks the last time a school from a non-power conference has won the championship game. Anderson Hunt of UNLV was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

This tournament is also remembered for an emotional run by Loyola Marymount in the West regional. In the quarterfinals of the West Coast Conference tournament against the Portland Pilots, Lions star forward Hank Gathers collapsed and died due to a heart condition. The WCC tournament was immediately suspended, with the regular-season champion Lions given the conference's automatic bid. The team defeated New Mexico State, then laid a 34-point thrashing on defending national champion Michigan, and defeated Alabama in the Sweet Sixteen (the only game in which Loyola Marymount did not score 100 or more points in the tournament) before running into eventual champion UNLV in the regional final. Gathers' childhood friend Bo Kimble, the team's undisputed floor leader in the wake of the tragedy, paid tribute to his friend by attempting his first free throw in each game left-handed despite being right-handed. (Gathers was right-handed, but struggled so much with free throws that he tried shooting them left-handed for a time.) Kimble made all of his left-handed attempts in the tournament.

The tournament employed a new timing system borrowed from FIBA & the NBA: when the game was played in an NBA arena, the final minute of the period is measured in tenths-seconds, rather than whole seconds as in previous years.

Schedule and venues

1990 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
Atlanta
Atlanta
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Austin
Austin
Hartford
Hartford
Richmond
Richmond
Knoxville
Knoxville
Long Beach
Long Beach
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City
1990 first and second rounds
1990 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
Oakland
Oakland
Dallas
Dallas
New Orleans
New Orleans
E. Rutherford
E. Rutherford
Denver
Denver
1990 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1990 tournament, and their host(s):

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Teams

Bracket

East Regional – East Rutherford, New Jersey

* – denotes overtime period

Regional Final summary

Midwest Regional – Dallas, Texas

Regional Final summary

Southeast Regional – New Orleans, Louisiana

* – denotes overtime period

Regional Final summary

West Regional – Oakland, California

* – denotes overtime period

Regional Final summary

Final Four – Denver, Colorado

Game summaries

National Championship

Announcers

CBS and NCAA Productions broadcast all tournament games. CBS

ESPN/NCAA Productions

This would be the last year that ESPN would be involved in broadcasting games of the tournament, as CBS took over exclusive coverage of the tournament the following year.

Tournament notes

See also

References

  1. ^ "NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament". 6 April 2023. Retrieved 9 April 2023 – via Wikipedia.
  2. ^ a b "Which is the only basketball team to have scored over 100 points in a NCAA championship game?". 6 April 2017.
  3. ^ a b "The Tournament" (PDF). Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  4. ^ "The highest-scoring men's basketball games in NCAA March Madness history | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com.
  5. ^ "March Madness History".
  6. ^ "100 worst blowouts in history: Nos. 50-26". ESPN.com. 15 September 2015. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  7. ^ "The longest winning streaks in college basketball history | NCAA.com". www.ncaa.com.