1964 NCAA University Division Basketball Tournament

The 1964 NCAA University Division Basketball Tournament involved 25 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball in the United States. It began on March 9, 1964, and ended with the championship game on March 21 in Kansas City, Missouri. A total of 29 games were played, including a third place game in each region and a national third place game.

1964 NCAA University Division
Basketball Tournament
Teams25
Finals siteMunicipal Auditorium
Kansas City, Missouri
ChampionsUCLA Bruins (1st title, 1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Runner-upDuke Blue Devils (1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachJohn Wooden (1st title)
MOPWalt Hazzard (UCLA)
Attendance140,790
Top scorerJeff Mullins Duke
(116 points)
NCAA Division I Men's Tournaments
«1963 1965»

UCLA, coached by John Wooden, won the national title with a 9883 victory in the final game over Duke, coached by Vic Bubas. Walt Hazzard of UCLA was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. The title was the first in the history of the UCLA program, and was a sign of things to come as, the Bruins would win nine more championships in the next eleven seasons.

Locations

RoundRegionSiteVenue
First Round East Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The Palestra
Mideast Evanston, Illinois McGaw Memorial Hall
Midwest Dallas, Texas SMU Coliseum
West Eugene, Oregon McArthur Court
Regionals East Raleigh, North Carolina Reynolds Coliseum
Mideast Minneapolis, Minnesota Williams Arena
Midwest Wichita, Kansas U. of Wichita Field House
West Corvallis, Oregon Oregon State Coliseum
Final Four Kansas City, Missouri Municipal Auditorium

For the ninth and final time, the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City would host the Final Four. This would be the last tournament for the historic venue, which still stands in the city. Future games in the city would be held at Kemper Arena (which would hold the tenth and, to date, most recent Final Four in the city in 1988) and the Sprint Center. Municipal Auditorium was the only non-campus arena used in the tournament, which featured no new arenas, something that hadn't happened in the tournament since 1950 and would not happen again until 1989. Along with Municipal Auditorium, this was the last year which saw Williams Arena on the University of Minnesota campus host games. Future games in the Twin Cities would be held in the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, its replacement, U.S. Bank Stadium (for the 2019 Final Four) and the Target Center (scheduled to host in 2021).

Teams

RegionTeamCoachFinishedFinal OpponentScore
East
EastConnecticutFred ShabelRegional Runner-upDukeL 101–54
EastDukeVic BubasRunner UpUCLAL 98–83
EastPrincetonButch van Breda KolffRegional Fourth PlaceVillanovaL 74–62
EastProvidenceJoe MullaneyFirst roundVillanovaL 77–66
EastTempleHarry LitwackFirst roundConnecticutL 53–48
EastVillanovaJack KraftRegional Third PlacePrincetonW 74–62
EastVMIWeenie MillerFirst roundPrincetonL 86–60
Mideast
MideastKentuckyAdolph RuppRegional Fourth PlaceLoyola–ChicagoL 100–91
MideastLouisvillePeck HickmanFirst roundOhioL 71–69
MideastLoyola–ChicagoGeorge IrelandRegional Third PlaceKentuckyW 100–91
MideastMichiganDave StrackThird PlaceKansas StateW 100–90
MideastMurray StateCal LutherFirst roundLoyola–ChicagoL 101–91
MideastOhioJames SnyderRegional Runner-upMichiganL 69–57
Midwest
MidwestCreightonRed McManusRegional Fourth PlaceTexas WesternL 63–52
MidwestKansas StateTex WinterFourth PlaceMichiganL 100–90
MidwestOklahoma CityAbe LemonsFirst roundCreightonL 89–78
MidwestTexas A&MShelby MetcalfFirst roundTexas WesternL 68–62
MidwestTexas WesternDon HaskinsRegional Third PlaceCreightonW 63–52
MidwestWichita StateRalph MillerRegional Runner-upKansas StateL 94–86
West
WestArizona StateNed WulkFirst roundUtah StateL 92–90
WestOregon StateSlats GillFirst roundSeattleL 61–57
WestSan FranciscoPete PelettaRegional Runner-upUCLAL 76–72
WestSeattleBob BoydRegional Third PlaceUtah StateW 88–78
WestUCLAJohn WoodenChampionDukeW 98–83
WestUtah StateLaDell AndersenRegional Fourth PlaceSeattleL 88–78

Bracket

* – Denotes overtime period

East region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
       
    Duke 87  
      Villanova 73  
  Villanova 77
    Providence 66  
      Duke 101
    Connecticut 54
    Connecticut 53  
  Temple 48  
  Connecticut 52
      Princeton 50  
  Princeton 86
    VMI 60  

Mideast region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
       
    Kentucky 69  
      Ohio 85  
  Ohio 71
    Louisville 69*  
      Ohio 57
    Michigan 69
         
       
  Michigan 84
      Loyola–Chicago 80  
  Loyola–Chicago 101
    Murray State 91  

Midwest region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
       
    Wichita State 84  
      Creighton 68  
  Creighton 89
    Oklahoma City 78  
      Wichita State 86
    Kansas State 94
         
       
  Kansas State 64
      Texas Western 60  
  Texas Western 68
    Texas A&M 62  

West region

  Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
                           
       
    UCLA 95  
      Seattle 90  
  Seattle 61
    Oregon State 57  
      UCLA 76
    San Francisco 72
         
       
  San Francisco 64
      Utah State 58  
  Utah State 92
    Arizona State 90  

Final Four

National Semifinals National Championship Game
      
E Duke 91
ME Michigan 80
E Duke 83
W UCLA 98
MW Kansas State 84
W UCLA 90

National Third Place Game

National Third Place Game [1]
   
ME Michigan 100
MW Kansas State 90

Regional Third Place Games

gollark: But they don't.
gollark: I would be fine with C if people actually used it for small amounts of low-level stuff you can audit very well.
gollark: Well, you could argue it's with people using C for odd things.
gollark: OpenSSL had Heartbleed for ages. They have competent programmers, and yet this issue - which a more memory safe language could not easily have - persisted for ages.
gollark: A good language should be safe *automatically*, and actually *warn* you about things.

See also

References

  1. "1954 NCAA Basketball Tournament Bracket". Retrieved October 14, 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.