2007 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament

The 2007 Big East Men's Basketball Championship was played from March 7 to March 10, 2007. The tournament took place at Madison Square Garden in New York City and was sponsored by Aéropostale. The Georgetown Hoyas won the tournament for the first time since 1989 and the seventh time overall, and were awarded an automatic bid to the 2007 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. Jeff Green of Georgetown was given the Dave Gavitt Trophy, awarded to the tournament's most outstanding player.

2007 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament
2007 Tournament logo
ClassificationDivision I
Season200607
Teams12
SiteMadison Square Garden
New York City
ChampionsGeorgetown (7th title)
Winning coachJohn Thompson III (1st title)
MVPJeff Green (Georgetown)
2006–07 Big East men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
No. 8 Georgetown133 .813  307  .811
No. 16 Louisville124 .750  2410  .706
No. 12 Pittsburgh124 .750  298  .784
No. 17 Notre Dame115 .688  248  .750
No. 20 Marquette106 .625  2410  .706
West Virginia97 .563  279  .750
DePaul97 .563  2014  .588
Villanova97 .563  2211  .667
Providence88 .500  1813  .581
St. John's79 .438  1615  .516
Connecticut610 .375  1714  .548
*Seton Hall412 .250  1316  .448
*South Florida313 .188  1218  .400
*Rutgers313 .188  1019  .345
*Cincinnati214 .125  1119  .367
**Syracuse06 .000  211  .154
2007 Big East Tournament winner
As of April 2, 2007[1]; Rankings from AP Poll
*Did not qualify for 2007 Big East Tournament
**Syracuse had 22 regular season games and two postseason games vacated due to sanctions against the program; Syracuse′s disputed record was 10–6, 24–11.

Bracket

  First round Quarterfinals Semifinals Championship Game
                                     
       
  1 #9 Georgetown 62  
    9 Villanova 57  
8 DePaul 67
9 Villanova 75  
  1 #9 Georgetown 84  
  4 #20 Notre Dame 82  
       
       
  4 #20 Notre Dame 89
    5 Syracuse 83  
5 Syracuse 78
12 Connecticut 65  
  1 #9 Georgetown 65
  3 #13 Pittsburgh 42
       
       
  3 #13 Pittsburgh 89
    6 #18 Marquette 79  
6 #18 Marquette 76
11 St. John's 67  
  3 #13 Pittsburgh 65
  2 #12 Louisville 59  
       
       
  2 #12 Louisville 82
    7 West Virginia 71  
7 West Virginia 92
10 Providence 79  

Only the teams with the 12 best records during the regular season qualified for the tournament. The thirteenth through sixteenth finishers (Seton Hall, South Florida, Rutgers, and Cincinnati) did not take part.

Games

  • 1st round: Wednesday, March 7
  • Quarterfinals: Thursday, March 8
  • Semifinals: Friday, March 9
  • Finals: Saturday, March 10
9 PM
Team 1 2 Total
(1) Georgetown 3233 65
(3) Pittsburgh 1725 42

Championship Game

On March 10, Georgetown defeated Pittsburgh, 65–42. The Panthers shot just 26.2 percent from the field in the loss. After Pittsburgh cut the lead to 13–11 with 9:04 remaining, Georgetown went on a huge run and led 28–13 with 2:58 left. The game was not close again. Jeff Green led all scorers with 21 points, while Roy Hibbert had 18. Hibbert also added eleven rebounds.

Georgetown and Pittsburgh had previously split their two regular season meetings, each winning at home. It was the Hoyas first conference tournament title since 1989 when Alonzo Mourning and Charles Smith led the way. Pittsburgh was in the championship game for the sixth time in seven years, but set a record for fewest points in a Big East final. Sam Young led the team with a meager 10 points. Pittsburgh's Aaron Gray had a season-low 3 points, going 1-of-13 from the floor.[2]

Awards

Dave Gavitt Trophy (Most Outstanding Player): Jeff Green, Georgetown

All-Tournament Team

gollark: I haven't done German in a while but I think it's feminine?
gollark: I wonder if they deliberately made the page scroll terribly.
gollark: I "like" how all websites must now include megabytes of JS, giant irrelevant background images, tons of whitespace and low information density.
gollark: Technically, Powerpoint is Turing-complete and so can be used to execute arbitrary computations.
gollark: This is innovation. This is the *future* of meeting room naming.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.