2011 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

The 2011 Pacific Life Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was played on March 9–11, 2011 at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California.[3] The tournament champion became the NCAA Tournament automatic qualifier from the conference. The Arizona Wildcats, finish the season atop of the conference with a 14–4 record, and the UCLA Bruins were the two top-seed teams in the tournament. The third-seeded Washington Huskies won the tournament. This was the final tournament ever held under the "Pac-10" name, as Colorado and Utah joined the conference in July, making it the "Pac-12."

2011 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
ClassificationDivision I
Season201011
SiteStaples Center
Los Angeles, California
ChampionsWashington Huskies (3rd title)
Winning coachLorenzo Romar (3rd title)
MVPIsaiah Thomas (Washington)
Attendance12,074
Top scorerKlay Thompson (Washington State)
(43 points)
TelevisionCBS, FSN
Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournaments
2010–11 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
No. 17 Arizona144 .778  308  .789
UCLA135 .722  2311  .676
No. 23 Washington117 .611  2411  .686
USC108 .556  1915  .559
California108 .556  1815  .545
Washington State99 .500  2213  .629
Oregon711 .389  2118  .538
Stanford711 .389  1516  .484
Oregon State513 .278  1120  .355
Arizona State414 .222  1219  .387
2011 Pacific-10 Tournament winner
As of March 30, 2011[1]; Rankings from AP Poll[2]

Seeds

Teams were seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records.

Seed School Conf Overall Tiebreaker
#1 Arizona 14–4 25–6
#2 UCLA 13–5 22–9
#3 Washington 11–7 20–10
#4 USC 10–8 18–13 1–1 vs. Cal, 1–1 vs. UA
#5 California 10–8 17–13 1–1 vs. USC, 0–2 vs. UA
#6 Washington State 9–9 19–11
#7 Oregon 7–11 14–16
#8 Stanford 7–11 15–15
#9 Oregon State 5–13 10–19
#10 Arizona State 4–14 12–18

Schedule

Session Game Time* Matchup# Television Attendance
First Round – Wednesday, March 9
1
1
6:00 PM
#8 Stanford vs #9 Oregon State
FSN
7,814
2
8:30 PM
#7 Oregon vs #10 Arizona State
FSN
Quarterfinals – Thursday, March 10
2
3
12:00 PM
#4 USC vs #5 Cal
FSN
10,782
4
2:30 PM
#1 Arizona vs #9 Oregon State
FSN
3
5
6:00 PM
#2 UCLA vs #7 Oregon
FSN
12,191
6
8:30 PM
#3 Washington vs #6 Washington State
FSN
Semifinals – Friday, March 11
4
7
6:00 PM
#4 USC vs. #1 Arizona
FSN
13,190
8
8:30 PM
#7 Oregon vs. #3 Washington
FSN
Championship Game – Saturday, March 12
5
9
3:00 PM
#1 Arizona vs. #3 Washington
CBS
12,074
*Game Times in PT. #-Rankings denote tournament seeding.[4]

Bracket

  First Round
March 9
Quarterfinals
March 10
Semifinals
March 11
Final
March 12
                                     
  1 Arizona (#16) 78  
  9 Oregon State 69  
8 Stanford 67  
9 Oregon State 69
  1 Arizona (#16) 67  
  4 Southern California 62  
4 Southern California 70
5 California 56  
  1 Arizona (#16) 75
  3 Washington 77
3 Washington 89  
6 Washington State 87  
  3 Washington 69
  7 Oregon 51  
7 Oregon 76  
10 Arizona State 69  
  2 UCLA 59
7 Oregon 76  

Tournament notes

  • Both men’s and women’s basketball tournament semi-final and final games were held at the Staples Center.
  • The annual Coach of the Year Award was renamed to honor Coach John Wooden.[5] Sean Miller of the Arizona Wildcats was the 2011 winner.
  • Chick Hearn Court between Staples Center and LA Live was the location for the new Pac-10 FanFest, featuring a basketball sport court, beer garden, family-friendly activities like face painting and sign making, a live DJ, band and cheer performances, and Wolfgang Puck food specials. The Women's trophy presentation and institutional headquarters were also located at the FanFest.
  • The championship game was the first title game in conference history to require an overtime period.[6]
  • Washington and Washington St. were the only arch rivals to meet up in this year. It was the first arch rival tournament game of any pair in two years.
  • Klay Thompson of Washington State had a record setting 29 FG attempts vs. Washington. His record still stands. He was 15 of 29 .
  • Jeremy Green's 15 3-pt. FG attempts vs. Oregon State set a tournament record. Playing for Stanford, he was 7 of 15.[7]
  • With the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, Washington made its 16th appearance. Three other teams were invited to the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship: UCLA, USC, and Arizona.

All-Tournament Team

Most Outstanding Player

2011 Hall of Honor inductees

The induction ceremony took place on Saturday, March 12, 2011, during the Pac-10 Hall of Honor breakfast:

See also

  • 2010–11 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball standings

References

  1. "Pac-10 Standings - 2010-11". ESPN. Retrieved February 17, 2011.
  2. "2011 NCAA Men's Basketball Rankings". ESPN. Retrieved February 7, 2011.
  3. "Pac-10 Tournament official site". Archived from the original on 2009-02-22. Retrieved 2010-11-05.
  4. "Pacific Life Pac-10 Basketball Tournament". pac-10.org. Retrieved 2 March 2011.
  5. Pac-10 To Honor Wooden, Host Combined Men's And Women's Basketball Tournament, Pac-10 News, October 28, 2010
  6. Associated Press, Isaiah Thomas' fadeaway beats buzzer, crowns Washington as Pac-10 champions, ESPN.com, March 12, 2011
  7. 2013-14 Pac-12 Men’s Basketball Media Guide
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