Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball

The Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team is the basketball team that represents Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Georgia, United States. The school's team currently competes in the Sun Belt Conference and is coached by Brian Burg.

Georgia Southern Eagles
2019–20 Georgia Southern Eagles men's basketball team
UniversityGeorgia Southern University
Head coachBrian Burg (1st season)
ConferenceSun Belt
LocationStatesboro, Georgia
ArenaHanner Fieldhouse
(Capacity: 4,358)
NicknameEagles
ColorsBlue and White[1]
         
NCAA Tournament Appearances
1983, 1987, 1992
Conference Tournament Champions
TAAC/A-Sun: 1983, 1987, 1992
Conference Regular Season Champions
TAAC/A-Sun: 1985, 1988, 1989, 1992

Postseason results

NCAA Tournament

The Eagles have appeared in three NCAA Tournaments. Their combined record is 0–3.

Year Round Opponent Result
1983Preliminary RoundRobert MorrisL 54–64
1987First RoundSyracuseL 73–79
1992First RoundOklahoma StateL 73–100

[2]

NIT

The Eagles have appeared in three National Invitation Tournaments (NIT). Their combined record is 0–3.

Year Round Opponent Result
1988First RoundGeorgiaL 48–53
1989First RoundUABL 74–83
2006Opening RoundCharlotteL 61–77

[3]

CBI

The Eagles have appeared in one College Basketball Invitational (CBI). Their record is 0–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
2017First RoundUtah ValleyL 49–74
gollark: I was referring to filtering "liches and other stuff necromancers stumble upon".
gollark: *Can* they actually filter that (EDIT: referring to "liches and other stuff necromancers stumble upon") in practice, given the whole "end to end encryption" thing, apart from somehow not letting those on the network?
gollark: SCP-2167 and the other demonics stuff (http://www.scp-wiki.net/a-brief-explanation-on-demonics) probably qualifies.
gollark: Yep, a few came.
gollark: https://www.ibm.com/blogs/research/2019/10/on-quantum-supremacy/Interesting article related to the quantum supremacy thing - apparently IBM ran the same thing on classical computers in a few days, rather than the cited 10000 years.

References

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