1994 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament
The 1994 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 10–13 at the Pyramid Arena in Memphis, Tennessee. The entire tournament, including the SEC Championship Game, was televised by Jefferson Pilot Sports, which at the time was in its seventh season with the syndication rights to the SEC. Play-by-play commentary was provided by Tom Hammond and Barry Booker, with sideline reports provided by Dave Baker, and Bob Kesling with the halftime reports. [1]
1994 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament | |
---|---|
Classification | Division I |
Season | 1993–94 |
Teams | 12 |
Site | The Pyramid Arena Memphis, Tennessee |
Champions | Kentucky (19th title) |
Winning coach | Rick Pitino (3rd title) |
MVP | Travis Ford (Kentucky) |
Attendance | 195,942 |
Television | Jefferson Pilot Sports |
The Kentucky Wildcats won the SEC Tournament for an overall 19th SEC Tournament title, and receiving the automatic bid to the 1994 NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Tournament by defeating the Florida Gators 73–60.
Bracket
First round | Second Round | Semifinals | Championship Game | |||||||||||||||
South Carolina | 80 | |||||||||||||||||
Ole Miss | 57 | |||||||||||||||||
#17 Florida | 84 | |||||||||||||||||
South Carolina | 57 | |||||||||||||||||
#17 Florida | 68 | |||||||||||||||||
Alabama | 52 | |||||||||||||||||
Alabama | 83 | |||||||||||||||||
Auburn | 55 | |||||||||||||||||
Auburn | 81 | |||||||||||||||||
Vanderbilt | 56 | |||||||||||||||||
#17 Florida | 60 | |||||||||||||||||
#10 Kentucky | 73 | |||||||||||||||||
Georgia | 83 | |||||||||||||||||
LSU | 70 | |||||||||||||||||
#1 Arkansas | 95 | |||||||||||||||||
Georgia | 83 | |||||||||||||||||
#10 Kentucky | 90 | |||||||||||||||||
#1 Arkansas | 78 | |||||||||||||||||
#10 Kentucky | 95 | |||||||||||||||||
Mississippi State | 76 | |||||||||||||||||
Mississippi State | 73 | |||||||||||||||||
Tennessee | 69 |
gollark: no.
gollark: And the liquid rules are pretty bizarre.
gollark: Sometimes they decide they don't like you, and will randomly pat you down or something.
gollark: The economic damage of having people end up wasting tons of time there is significant, let alone the cost of hiring "security" staff and the expensive scanning equipment, and the "cultural cost" of getting people used to intrusive scanning and bizarre restrictions just on travel.
gollark: But primarily, all airport "security" does is inconvenience people and act as a source for jobs for vaguely sociopathic people.
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