2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament

The 2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, officially known as the 2013 Big East Championship, was the 34th annual Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, deciding the champion of the 2012–13 Big East Conference men's basketball season. For the 31st consecutive season, the tournament was held at Madison Square Garden in New York City, from March 12–16, 2013. The tournament only featured 14 teams due to Connecticut being given a one-year postseason ban due to APR penalties. This would have been the last year with as many as 16 teams participating in the Big East tournament, but Connecticut was ineligible and West Virginia moved to the Big 12 before the beginning of the season. The conference tournament champion received an automatic bid to the 2013 NCAA Tournament.

2013 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament
2013 Big East Championship logo
ClassificationDivision I
Season201213
Teams14
SiteMadison Square Garden
New York City
ChampionsLouisville (3rd title)
Winning coachRick Pitino (3rd title)
MVPPeyton Siva (Louisville)
TelevisionESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU
2012–13 Big East men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
No. 8 Georgetown144 .778  257  .781
No. 15 Marquette144 .778  269  .743
No. 20 Pittsburgh126 .667  249  .727
No. 16 Syracuse117 .611  3010  .750
No. 23 Notre Dame117 .611  2510  .714
Villanova108 .556  2014  .588
Connecticut*108 .556  2010  .667
Cincinnati99 .500  2212  .647
Providence99 .500  1915  .559
St. John's810 .444  1716  .515
Rutgers513 .278  1516  .484
Seton Hall315 .167  1518  .455
South Florida315 .167  1219  .387
DePaul216 .111  1121  .344
No. 2 Louisville†**04 .000  05  .000
2013 Big East Tournament winner
As of March 30, 2013[1]; Rankings from AP Poll
*Ineligible for postseason play due to APR penalties. **Louisville: 29 reg. season games, 6 postseason games vacated due to sanctions against the program; Disputed Record-(35–5)(14–4)

Following a period of turnover in the conference membership, the Big East name, its logos, and its tournament history were assumed by schools of the original Big East that do not sponsor FBS football. The reconfigured Big East continues to hold its tournament at Madison Square Garden. The FBS schools formerly in the Big East play under a new name, the American Athletic Conference; its first conference tournament was played in Memphis, Tennessee and that event has since alternated between Hartford, Connecticut and Orlando, Florida.

Seeds

All teams except for Connecticut (due to Academic Progress Rate violations) qualified for the tournament; seeds 11-14 played a first round game, while teams five through ten received byes to the second round. The top four seeds received double-byes to the quarterfinals.[2]

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

Seed School Conf (Overall) Tiebreaker
#1 Georgetown‡† 14-4 (24-5) 2-1 vs. Louisville/Marquette
#2 Louisville‡† 14-4 (26-5) 1-1 vs. Georgetown/Marquette
#3 Marquette‡† 14-4 (23-7) 1-2 vs. Georgetown/Louisville
#4 Pittsburgh† 12-6 (24-7)
#5 Syracuse# 11-7 (23-8) 1-0 vs. Notre Dame
#6 Notre Dame# 11-7 (23-8) 0-1 vs. Syracuse
#7 Villanova# 10-8 (19-12)
#8 Providence# 9-9 (17-13) 1-0 vs. Cincinnati
#9 Cincinnati# 9-9 (21-10) 0-1 vs. Providence
#10 St. John's# 8-10 (16-14)
#11 Rutgers 5-13 (14-15)
#12 Seton Hall 3-15 (14-17) 1-0 vs. South Florida
#13 South Florida 3-15 (12-18) 0-1 vs. Seton Hall
#14 DePaul 2-16 (11-20)
‡ – Big East regular season champions.
† – Received a double-bye in the conference tournament.
# – Received a single-bye in the conference tournament.
Overall records are as of the end of the regular season.


Schedule

All tournament games were nationally televised on an ESPN network:

Session Game Time* Matchup# Television Attendance
First Round – Tuesday, March 12
1
1
7:00 PM
#12 Seton Hall vs. #13 South Florida
ESPNU
2
9:00 PM
#11 Rutgers vs. #14 DePaul
ESPNU
Second Round – Wednesday, March 13
2
3
12:00 PM
#8 Providence vs. #9 Cincinnati
ESPN
4
2:00 PM
#5 Syracuse vs. #12 Seton Hall
ESPN
3
5
7:00 PM
#7 Villanova vs. #10 St. John's
ESPN2
6
9:00 PM
#6 Notre Dame vs. #11 Rutgers
ESPN2
Quarterfinals – Thursday, March 14
4
7
12:00 PM
#1 Georgetown vs. #9 Cincinnati
ESPN
8
2:00 PM
#4 Pittsburgh vs. #5 Syracuse
ESPN
5
9
7:00 PM
#2 Louisville vs. #7 Villanova
ESPN
10
9:00 PM
#3 Marquette vs. #6 Notre Dame
ESPN
Semifinals – Friday, March 15
6
11
7:00 PM
#1 Georgetown vs. #5 Syracuse
ESPN
12
9:00 PM
#2 Louisville vs. #6 Notre Dame
ESPN
Championship Game – Saturday, March 16
7
13
8:30 PM
#5 Syracuse vs. #2 Louisville
ESPN
*Game Times in EST. #-Rankings denote tournament seeding.

Bracket

  First Round
Tuesday, March 12
Second Round
Wednesday, March 13
Quarterfinals
Thursday, March 14
Semifinals
Friday, March 15
Championship Game
Saturday, March 16
                                               
9 Cincinnati 61  
8 Providence 44  
  9 Cincinnati 43
  1 #5 Georgetown 62  
  1 #5 Georgetown 55  
  5 #19 Syracuse 58OT  
13 South Florida 42  
12 Seton Hall 46OT  
  12 Seton Hall 63  
  5 #19 Syracuse 75  
  5 #19 Syracuse 62
  4 #17 Pittsburgh 59  
5 #19 Syracuse 61
2 #4 Louisville 78
10 St. John's 53  
7 Villanova 66  
  7 Villanova 55
  2 #4 Louisville 74  
  2 #4 Louisville 69
  6 #24 Notre Dame 57  
14 DePaul 57  
11 Rutgers 76  
  11 Rutgers 61  
  6 #24 Notre Dame 69  
  6 #24 Notre Dame 73
  3 #12 Marquette 65  

OT denotes overtime game

All-Tournament team

Dave Gavitt Trophy (Most Outstanding Player)[3]

References

  1. "Big East Conference Standings – 2012–13." ESPN.com. Retrieved: March 18, 2013.
  2. "2012-13 Big East men's basketball media guide" (PDF). Big East Conference. Retrieved 20 October 2012.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-05-11. Retrieved 2013-04-09.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.