2016–17 NCAA Division I men's basketball season









































The 2016–17 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 11, 2016. The first tournament was the 2K Sports Classic, and ended with the Final Four in Glendale, Arizona on April 3, 2017. Practices officially began on September 30, 2016.[1]




Contents






  • 1 Rule changes


  • 2 Season headlines


    • 2.1 Milestones and records




  • 3 Conference membership changes


  • 4 New arenas


  • 5 Season outlook


    • 5.1 Pre–season polls




  • 6 Regular season


    • 6.1 Early season tournaments


    • 6.2 Upsets


    • 6.3 Conference winners and tournaments


    • 6.4 Statistical leaders




  • 7 Postseason


    • 7.1 NCAA Tournament


      • 7.1.1 Tournament upsets


      • 7.1.2 Final Four – University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, AZ




    • 7.2 National Invitation Tournament


      • 7.2.1 NIT Semifinals and Final




    • 7.3 College Basketball Invitational


    • 7.4 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament




  • 8 Conference standings


  • 9 Award winners


    • 9.1 2017 Consensus All-America team


    • 9.2 Major player of the year awards


    • 9.3 Major freshman of the year awards


    • 9.4 Major coach of the year awards


    • 9.5 Other major awards




  • 10 Coaching changes


  • 11 Attendances


  • 12 See also


  • 13 Notes


  • 14 References





Rule changes


The only rule change for the regular season was allowing coaches to ask for timeouts in situations of inbounds on offense or defense. Coaches are still not permitted to call timeouts in live-ball situations.


The NCAA approved a number of experimental rule changes for use in the 2017 postseason NIT:[2]



  • Team fouls were reset to zero at the 10:00 mark of each half. This effectively divided the game into quarters for purposes of team fouls.

  • The "one-and-one" foul shot was not used. Instead, starting with the fifth total foul in each 10-minute period, non-shooting fouls by the defensive team resulted in two free throws, with the only exception being administrative technical fouls. This mirrored foul counting in NCAA women's basketball, which has been played in quarters since the 2015–16 season.

  • In a feature unique in the college game, but similar to that used by the NBA and WNBA, each overtime was considered a separate period for purposes of accumulating team fouls. The team foul limit was 3 per overtime period, with all non-shooting team fouls thereafter by the defense resulting in two free throws.

  • The shot clock was reset to 20 seconds whenever the ball was inbounded in the frontcourt.



Season headlines



  • March 10, 2016 – The Ivy League announced it will add a conference tournament beginning in the 2016–17 season.[3] Previously, the regular season champion earned the automatic berth into the NCAA Tournament.[3]

  • April 20 – The NCAA announces its Academic Progress Rate (APR) sanctions for the 2016–17 school year. A total of 23 programs in 13 sports are declared ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the required APR benchmark, including the following two Division I men's basketball teams:[4]

    • Alcorn State

    • Savannah State



  • November 2 – The Associated Press preseason All-American team was released. Duke guard Grayson Allen was the leading vote-getter (61 votes). Joining him on the team were California forward Ivan Rabb (55 votes), Villanova guard Josh Hart (53), Oregon forward Dillon Brooks (30) and Iowa State guard Monté Morris (24).[5]

  • November 22 – Fort Wayne upset 3rd-ranked Indiana for the first win over a ranked team in the program's history.[6]

  • December 5 – The Atlantic Sun Conference (ASUN) announced that North Alabama would move from the Division II Gulf South Conference and join the ASUN in 2018.[7]

  • January 2 – Duke announced that head coach Mike Krzyzewski would undergo surgery on January 6 to remove a fragment of a herniated disc in his lower back. He went on a medical leave following the Blue Devils' January 4 game against Georgia Tech and was expected to be out for about four weeks. Associate head coach Jeff Capel took over for Krzyzewski during his recuperation.[8]

  • January 5 – Before Austin Peay's game against Tennessee Tech, Peay announced that Dave Loos, the Governors' head coach since 1990, would take a medical leave effective immediately. Loos, who had undergone surgery to remove a malignant tumor from his colon in July 2016, has since been undergoing chemotherapy for a cancerous lymph node found during that procedure. Assistant Jay Bowen served as interim head coach[9] until Loos returned to the sidelines on January 19.[10]

  • January 13 – The Western Athletic Conference announced that California Baptist would move from the Division II Pacific West Conference and join the WAC in 2018.[11]

  • January 24 – For only the third time since the AP Poll was first compiled for college basketball in 1948, three of the top four teams lost on the same day. First, #2 Kansas lost 85–69 at West Virginia. Shortly thereafter, top-ranked Villanova lost 74–72 at Marquette. Finally, #4 Kentucky lost 82–80 at Tennessee.[12]

  • January 26 – The Summit League announced that North Dakota, currently a member of the Big Sky Conference, would join the league in 2018.[13]

  • February 4

    • Six teams in the AP Top 10 lose, tying the poll-era record for most losses by top-10 teams in one day. Additionally, it was the first day in poll history in which two of the top three teams (Baylor and Kansas) lost at home to unranked opponents.[14]

    • Krzyzewski returns from his medical leave to the Duke bench, with the Blue Devils defeating Pittsburgh 72–64.[15]



  • March 8 – A plane carrying Michigan to the Big Ten tournament in Washington, D.C. skidded off the runway and crashed while trying to take off from Willow Run Airport near Ypsilanti, Michigan. No one was injured, and the team safely arrived in Washington on a flight the following morning.[16]

  • March 13 – The Republican of Springfield, Massachusetts reported that a federal lawsuit had been filed against several UMass staff members. The suit was filed in December 2016 by a former girlfriend of assistant Lou Roe, and names Roe and three other staff members, including since-fired head coach Derek Kellogg, as defendants. The suit alleges that she was intimidated and falsely imprisoned in an attempt to keep her silent about doping by team members, domestic violence incidents involving staff members, and quashing of criminal complaints against team members.[17]



Milestones and records



  • During the season, the following players reached the 2000 career point milestone – NJIT guard Damon Lynn,[18]Valparaiso forward Alec Peters,[19]North Florida guard Dallas Moore,[20]Santa Clara guard Jared Brownridge,[21]VMI guard Q. J. Peterson,[22]Winthrop guard Keon Johnson,[23]Northwestern State guard Zeek Woodley,[24] Lehigh center Tim Kempton Jr.,[25]Davidson guard Jack Gibbs,[26]Weber State guard Jeremy Senglin,[27]Monmouth guard Justin Robinson,[28] and Texas A&M–Corpus Christi forward Rashawn Thomas.[29]

  • November 11 – NJIT's Damon Lynn surpasses Chris Flores as the school's all-time leading scorer for their Division I era.[30]

  • January 3 – Jacksonville's Darius Dawkins made 13-of-17 three-pointers en route to 41 points.[31] He set both school and Atlantic Sun Conference single game three-point scoring records in the process, which were previously 10 and 11, respectively.[31]

  • January 7 – Colorado State head coach Larry Eustachy won his 500th game in Division I.[32] The Rams defeated Air Force 85–58.[32]

  • February 11 – Villanova head coach Jay Wright won his 500th game in Division I.[33] The Wildcats defeated Xavier 73–57.[33]

  • February 16 – Austin Peay head coach Dave Loos also won his 500th game in Division I.[34] The Governors defeated Eastern Illinois 85–80.[34]

  • March 7 – With Gonzaga's 74–56 win over Saint Mary's in the final of the West Coast Conference Tournament, the Bulldogs' Przemek Karnowski became the winningest player in NCAA Division I men's history, although the NCAA does not officially recognize this milestone. This was Karnowski's 132nd winning appearance, surpassing the 131 of Duke's Shane Battier.[35] Karnowski would ultimately finish with 137 wins.

  • March 9 – John Beilein becomes the winningest coach in Michigan Wolverines men's basketball history (210 wins).[36]

  • March 18 – Gonzaga head coach Mark Few reached the 500-win mark in the Bulldogs' 79–73 win over Northwestern in the second round of the NCAA tournament. Among Division I men's coaches, only Adolph Rupp and Jerry Tarkanian reached the milestone in fewer games.[37]



Conference membership changes


Only one school joined a new conference for 2016–17:













School
Former conference
New conference

Coastal Carolina

Big South Conference

Sun Belt Conference


New arenas



  • South Dakota opened the new Sanford Coyote Sports Center. The completion of the 6,000-seat venue saw the South Dakota men's basketball, women's basketball, and women's volleyball teams move out of the considerably larger DakotaDome, which remains home to football, track & field, and swimming & diving. The first men's basketball game in the new arena was an exhibition on November 4 against NCAA Division III Loras, with the Coyotes winning 106–76;[38] the first official men's game was the second leg of a November 13 doubleheader with the Coyotes women's team, with the men defeating Bowling Green 78–72.[39]

This proved to be the last season for four Division I teams in their then-current venues:




  • DePaul, located in Chicago, left its current off-campus home of Allstate Arena in suburban Rosemont, Illinois for a new off-campus arena in the city proper. Wintrust Arena, a 10,000-seat venue at the McCormick Place convention center, opened for the 2017–18 season.[40]


  • NJIT left one on-campus venue for another. The aging Fleisher Center (capacity 1,600) was replaced by the Wellness and Events Center (capacity 3,500) for the 2017–18 season.[41]


  • Robert Morris closed the Charles L. Sewall Center, the on-campus home to the Colonials since 1985, in June 2017. The UPMC Events Center is currently being built at the Sewall Center site and is scheduled to open in the middle of the 2018–19 basketball season.[42] Until that time, the Colonials will play most of their home games at PPG Paints Arena in downtown Pittsburgh, with another Pittsburgh venue, Duquesne's A. J. Palumbo Center, used when PPG Paints Arena is not available.[43]


  • Wofford also moved within its campus, abandoning its home since 1981, Benjamin Johnson Arena (capacity 3,500), for the new Jerry Richardson Indoor Stadium (capacity 3,400).[44]



Season outlook



Pre–season polls



The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.

















































































































AP
Ranking
Team
1

Duke (58)
2

Kentucky (2)
3

Kansas
4

Villanova (4)
5

Oregon (1)
6

North Carolina
7

Xavier
8

Virginia
9

Wisconsin
10

Arizona
11

Indiana
12

Michigan State
13

Louisville
14

Gonzaga
15

Purdue
16

UCLA
17

Saint Mary's
18

Connecticut
19

Syracuse
20

West Virginia
21

Texas
22

Creighton
23

Rhode Island
24

Iowa State
25

Maryland














































































































USA Today Coaches
Ranking
Team
1

Duke (27)
2

Kansas (1)
3

Villanova (1)
4

Kentucky (2)
5

Oregon (1)
6

North Carolina
7

Virginia
8

Xavier
9

Michigan State
10

Wisconsin
11

Arizona
12

Indiana
13

Gonzaga
14

Louisville
15

Purdue
16

Connecticut
17

Syracuse
18

West Virginia
19

Saint Mary's
20

UCLA
21

Maryland
22

Texas
23

Creighton
24

Rhode Island
25

Cincinnati




Regular season



Early season tournaments




































































































































































Name Dates Location No. teams Champion

2K Sports Classic
November 17–18

Madison Square Garden
(Manhattan, NY)
4

Michigan

Puerto Rico Tip-Off
November 17–18, 20

HP Field House
(Lake Buena Vista, FL)[a]
8

Xavier

Charleston Classic
November 17–18, 20

TD Arena
(Charleston, SC)
8

Villanova

Paradise Jam Tournament
November 18–21

Sports and Fitness Center
(Saint Thomas, VI)
8

Creighton

Hall of Fame Tip Off
November 19–20

Mohegan Sun Arena
(Uncasville, CT)
4

Duke

CBE Hall of Fame Classic
November 21–22

Sprint Center
(Kansas City, MO)
4

Kansas

Legends Classic
November 21–22
Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
4

Notre Dame

Gulf Coast Showcase
November 21–23

Germain Arena
(Estero, FL)
8
Houston

Maui Invitational
November 21–23

Lahaina Civic Center
(Lahaina, HI)
8

North Carolina

Men Who Speak Up Main Event
November 21, 23

MGM Grand Garden Arena
(Paradise, NV)
8
Valparaiso

Cancun Challenge
November 22–23
Moon Palace Golf & Spa Resort
(Cancun, MX)
8
Georgia State (Mayan Division)

Purdue (Riviera Division)



Battle 4 Atlantis
November 23–25
Imperial Arena
(Nassau, BAH)
8
Baylor

Great Alaska Shootout
November 23–26

Sullivan Arena
(Anchorage, AK)
8
Iona

NIT Season Tip-Off
November 24–25

Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
4
Temple

Las Vegas Invitational
November 24–25

Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)
4
Butler

Bucknell



AdvoCare Invitational
November 24–25, 27
HP Field House
(Lake Buena Vista, FL)
8
Gonzaga

Wooden Legacy
November 24–25, 27

Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, CA)
8
UCLA

Emerald Coast Classic
November 25–26
Emerald Coast Classic Arena
(Niceville, FL)
4
Virginia

UTRGV



Barclays Center Classic
November 25–26
Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
4
Maryland
Challenge in Music City
November 25–27
Nashville Music Auditorium
(Nashville, TN)
4
Middle Tennessee

Las Vegas Classic
December 22–23
Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)
4
Southern Cal

Diamond Head Classic
December 22–23, 25
Stan Sheriff Center
(Honolulu, HI)
8
San Diego St.




  1. ^ The tournament was originally scheduled to be played at Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, Puerto Rico, but due to concerns over the Zika virus outbreak, it was moved to the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at the Walt Disney World resort near Orlando, Florida.[45]




Upsets


An upset is a victory by an underdog team. In the context of NCAA Division I Men's Basketball, this generally constitutes an unranked team defeating a team currently ranked in the Top 25. This list will highlight those upsets of ranked teams by unranked teams as well as upsets of #1 teams. Rankings are from the AP poll.





















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Winner Score Loser Date Tournament
Wagner 67–58 #18 UConn November 11[46]

#7 Kansas 77–75 #1 Duke November 15[47]

Champions Classic
Georgetown 65–61 #13 Oregon November 21[48]

Maui Invitational
Fort Wayne 71–68 #3 Indiana November 22[49]

Colorado 68–54 #22 Texas November 22[50]

South Carolina 61–46 #25 Michigan November 23[51]

Temple 89–86 #25 Florida State November 24[52]

NIT Season Tip-Off
Butler 69–65 #8 Arizona November 25[53]

Las Vegas Invitational
Temple 81–77 #19 West Virginia November 25[54]

NIT Season Tip-Off
South Carolina 64–50 #18 Syracuse November 26[55]

Valparaiso 65–62 #21 Rhode Island November 29[56]

Cincinnati 55–54OT
#19 Iowa State December 1[57]

#11 UCLA 97–92 #1 Kentucky December 3[58]

Providence 63–60 #21 Rhode Island December 3[59]

Colorado 68–66 #13 Xavier December 7[60]

Indiana State 72–71 #16 Butler December 7[61]

UT Arlington 65–51 #12 St. Mary's December 8[62]

Iowa 78–64 #25 Iowa State December 8[63]

Florida State 83–78 #21 Florida December 11[64]

Seton Hall 67–64 #16 South Carolina December 12[65]

Clemson 62–60 #22 South Carolina December 21[66]

Nebraska 87–83 #16 Indiana December 28[67]

St. John's 76–73 #13 Butler December 29[68]

Georgia Tech 75–63 #9 North Carolina December 31[69]

Virginia Tech 89–75 #5 Duke December 31[70]

Minnesota 91–82OT
#15 Purdue January 1[71]

Texas Tech 77–76 #7 West Virginia January 3[72]

#18 Butler 66–58 #1 Villanova January 4[73]

Pittsburgh 88–76 #11 Virginia January 4[74]

NC State 104–78 #21 Virginia Tech January 4[75]

California 74–73 #25 USC January 8[76]

#10 West Virginia 89–68 #1 Baylor January 10[77]

Texas Tech 66–65 #25 Kansas State January 10[78]

Michigan State 65–47 #24 Minnesota January 11[79]

Iowa 83–78 #17 Purdue January 12[80]

Utah 86–64 #25 USC January 12[81]

Penn State 52–50 #24 Minnesota January 14[82]

Oklahoma 89–87 #7 West Virginia January 18[83]

Marquette 102–94 #7 Creighton January 21[84]

Kansas State 79–75 #7 West Virginia January 21[85]

Vanderbilt 68–66 #19 Florida January 21[86]

NC State 84–82 #17 Duke January 23[87]

Marquette 74–72 #1 Villanova January 24[88]

Tennessee 82–80 #4 Kentucky January 24[89]

Georgia Tech 78–56 #6 Florida State January 25[90]

USC 84–76 #8 UCLA January 25[91]

Georgetown 71–51 #16 Creighton January 25[92]

Syracuse 82–72 #6 Florida State January 28[93]

Miami (FL) 77–62 #9 North Carolina January 28[94]

Colorado 74–65 #10 Oregon January 28[95]

Georgetown 85–81 #11 Butler January 28[96]

Nebraska 83–80 #20 Purdue January 29[97]

Kansas State 56–54 #2 Baylor February 4[98]

Iowa State 92–89OT
#3 Kansas February 4[99]

Oklahoma State 82–75 #7 West Virginia February 4[100]

Syracuse 66–62 #9 Virginia February 4[101]

Xavier 82–80 #22 Creighton February 4[102]

Penn State 70–64 #21 Maryland February 7[103]

Alabama 90–864OT
#19 South Carolina February 7[104]

Notre Dame 84–72 #14 Florida State February 11[105]

Providence 71–65 #22 Butler February 11[106]

Northwestern 66–59 #7 Wisconsin February 12[107]

Virginia Tech 80–782OT
#12 Virginia February 12[108]

Texas Tech 84–78 #4 Baylor February 13[109]

Arkansas 83–76 #21 South Carolina February 15[110]

Seton Hall 87–81 #20 Creighton February 15[111]

Michigan 64–58 #11 Wisconsin February 16[112]

Pittsburgh 80–66 #17 Florida State February 18[113]

Vanderbilt 71–62 #21 South Carolina February 18[114]

Miami (FL) 54–48 #18 Virginia February 20[115]

Syracuse 78–75 #10 Duke February 22[116]

Minnesota 89–75 #24 Maryland February 22[117]

Providence 68–66 #23 Creighton February 22[118]

Ohio State 83–73 #16 Wisconsin February 23[119]

Iowa State 72–69 #9 Baylor February 25[120]

Michigan 82–70 #14 Purdue February 25[121]

Miami (FL) 55–50 #10 Duke February 25[122]

Iowa 83–69 #24 Maryland February 25[123]

BYU 79–71 #1 Gonzaga February 25[124]

UCF 53–49 #15 Cincinnati February 26[125]

Michigan State 84–74 #16 Wisconsin February 26[126]

Virginia Tech 66–61 #25 Miami (FL) February 27[127]

Wake Forest 88–81 #8 Louisville March 1[128]

Iowa 59–57 #22 Wisconsin March 2[129]

Vanderbilt 73–71 #12 Florida March 4[130]

Seton Hall 70–64 #13 Butler March 4[131]

TCU 85–82 #1 Kansas March 9[132]

Big 12 Tournament
Kansas State 70–64 #9 Baylor March 9[133]

Big 12 Tournament
Xavier 62–57 #18 Butler March 9[134]

Big East Tournament
Michigan 74–70OT
#13 Purdue March 10[135]

Big Ten Tournament
Vanderbilt 72–62OT
#17 Florida March 10[136]

SEC Tournament
Northwestern 72–64 #25 Maryland March 10[137]

Big Ten Tournament
Michigan 71–56 #24 Wisconsin March 12[138]

Big Ten Tournament


Conference winners and tournaments


Each of the 32 Division I athletic conferences ends its regular season with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference is given the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2017 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament. This was the first season in which the Ivy League held a conference tournament.[139]












































































































































































































































































































Conference
Regular
season first place

Conference
Player of the Year

Conference
Coach of the Year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (city)
Tournament
winner

America East Conference

Vermont

Trae Bell-Haynes, Vermont[140]

John Becker, Vermont[140]

2017 America East Men's Basketball Tournament
Campus sites
Vermont

American Athletic Conference

SMU

Semi Ojeleye, SMU[141]

Tim Jankovich, SMU[141]

2017 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

XL Center
(Hartford, CT)
SMU

Atlantic 10 Conference

Dayton

T. J. Cline, Richmond[142]

Archie Miller, Dayton[142]

2017 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament

PPG Paints Arena
(Pittsburgh, PA)

Rhode Island

Atlantic Coast Conference

North Carolina

Justin Jackson, North Carolina[143]

Josh Pastner, Georgia Tech[143]

2017 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament
Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)

Duke

Atlantic Sun Conference

Florida Gulf Coast

Dallas Moore, North Florida[144]

Joe Dooley, Florida Gulf Coast[144]

2017 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament
Campus sites
Florida Gulf Coast

Big 12 Conference

Kansas

Frank Mason III, Kansas[145]

Bill Self, Kansas[145]

2017 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament
Sprint Center
(Kansas City, MO)

Iowa State

Big East Conference

Villanova

Josh Hart, Villanova[146]

Chris Holtmann, Butler[146]

2017 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament
Madison Square Garden
(New York, NY)
Villanova

Big Sky Conference

North Dakota

Jacob Wiley, Eastern Washington[147]

Brian Jones, North Dakota[148]

2017 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Reno Events Center
(Reno, NV)
North Dakota

Big South Conference

UNC Asheville & Winthrop[n 1]

Keon Johnson, Winthrop[149]

Nick McDevitt, UNC Asheville[149]

2017 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

First round: Campus sites
Quarterfinals/semifinals: #1 seed
Final: Top surviving seed
Winthrop

Big Ten Conference

Purdue

Caleb Swanigan, Purdue[150]

Richard Pitino, Minnesota[150]

2017 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Verizon Center
(Washington, DC)

Michigan

Big West Conference

UC Irvine

Luke Nelson, UC Irvine[151]

Russell Turner, UC Irvine[151]

2017 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Honda Center
(Anaheim, CA)

UC Davis

Colonial Athletic Association

UNC Wilmington

T. J. Williams, Northeastern[152]

Earl Grant, College of Charleston[152]

2017 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament

North Charleston Coliseum
(North Charleston, SC)
UNC Wilmington

Conference USA

Middle Tennessee

JaCorey Williams, Middle Tennessee[153]

Kermit Davis, Middle Tennessee[153]

2017 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament

Legacy Arena
(Birmingham, AL)
Middle Tennessee

Horizon League

Oakland[n 1] & Valparaiso

Alec Peters, Valparaiso[154]

John Brannen, Northern Kentucky[154]

2017 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament

Joe Louis Arena
(Detroit, MI)
Northern Kentucky

Ivy League

Princeton

Spencer Weisz, Princeton[155]

Mitch Henderson, Princeton[155]

2017 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament

Palestra
(Philadelphia, PA)
Princeton

Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference

Monmouth

Justin Robinson, Monmouth[156]

King Rice, Monmouth[157]

2017 MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament

Times Union Center
(Albany, NY)

Iona

Mid-American Conference

Akron[n 1] (East)
Ball State & Western Michigan (West)

Isaiah Johnson, Akron[158]

Keith Dambrot, Akron[158]

2017 Mid-American Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
First round at campus sites
Remainder at Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, OH)

Kent State

Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference

North Carolina Central

Patrick Cole, North Carolina Central[159]

LeVelle Moton, North Carolina Central[159]

2017 MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament

Norfolk Scope
(Norfolk, VA)
North Carolina Central

Missouri Valley Conference

Illinois State[n 1] & Wichita State

Paris Lee, Illinois State[160]

Dan Muller, Illinois State[161]

2017 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, MO)
Wichita State

Mountain West Conference

Nevada

Gian Clavell, Colorado State[162]

Larry Eustachy, Colorado State[162]

2017 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Thomas & Mack Center
(Paradise, NV)
Nevada

Northeast Conference

Mount St. Mary's

Jerome Frink, LIU Brooklyn[163]

Jamion Christian, Mount St. Mary's[163]

2017 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Campus sites
Mount St. Mary's

Ohio Valley Conference

Belmont[n 1] (East)
UT Martin (West)

Evan Bradds, Belmont[164]

Rick Byrd, Belmont[164]

2017 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Nashville Municipal Auditorium
(Nashville, TN)

Jacksonville State

Pac-12 Conference

Arizona & Oregon[n 1]

Dillon Brooks, Oregon[165]

Sean Miller, Arizona[165]

2017 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

T-Mobile Arena
(Paradise, NV)
Arizona

Patriot League

Bucknell

Nana Foulland, Bucknell[166]

Nathan Davis, Bucknell[166]

2017 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament
Campus sites
Bucknell

Southeastern Conference

Kentucky

Sindarius Thornwell, South Carolina (coaches)[167]
Malik Monk, Kentucky (AP)[168]

Mike White, Florida[167][168]

2017 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament

Bridgestone Arena
(Nashville, TN)
Kentucky

Southern Conference

East Tennessee State, Furman, & UNC Greensboro[n 1]

Devin Sibley, Furman[169]

Niko Medved, Furman[169]

2017 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

U.S. Cellular Center
(Asheville, NC)
East Tennessee State

Southland Conference

New Orleans

Erik Thomas, New Orleans[170]

Mark Slessinger, New Orleans[170]

2017 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Leonard E. Merrell Center
(Katy, TX)
New Orleans

Southwestern Athletic Conference

Texas Southern

Zach Lofton, Texas Southern[171]

Montez Robinson, Alcorn State[171]

2017 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament

Toyota Center
(Houston, TX)
Texas Southern

The Summit League

South Dakota

Mike Daum, South Dakota State[172]

Craig Smith, South Dakota[172]

2017 Summit League Men's Basketball Tournament

Denny Sanford PREMIER Center
(Sioux Falls, SD)
South Dakota State

Sun Belt Conference

Texas–Arlington

Kevin Hervey, Texas–Arlington[173]

Scott Cross, Texas–Arlington[173]

2017 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

Lakefront Arena
(New Orleans, LA)

Troy

West Coast Conference

Gonzaga

Nigel Williams-Goss, Gonzaga[174]

Mark Few, Gonzaga[174]

2017 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)
Gonzaga

Western Athletic Conference

Cal State Bakersfield

Ian Baker, New Mexico State[175]

Rod Barnes, Cal State Bakersfield[175]

2017 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)
New Mexico State




Statistical leaders


















































































































Points per game Rebounds per game Assists per game
Steals per game
Player School PPG Player School RPG Player School APG Player School SPG
Marcus Keene C. Michigan 30.0 Ángel Delgado Seton Hall 13.1 Lonzo Ball UCLA 7.6 Ehab Amin Texas A&M-CC 3.44
Chris Clemons Campbell 25.1 Caleb Swanigan Purdue 12.5 Austin Luke Belmont 7.1 Tra-Deon Hollins Omaha 3.38
Mike Daum South Dakota St. 25.1 Steve Taylor Jr. Toledo 12.2 Eric Garcia Wofford 6.8 Joseph Chartouny Fordham 3.24
Dallas Moore N. Florida 23.9 Rokas Gustys Hofstra 12.1 Kyron Cartwright Providence 6.7 Laquincy Rideau Gardner-Webb 3.03
Randy Onwuasor S. Utah 23.6 Sebastián Sáiz Ole Miss 11.4 Erick Neal UT Arlington 6.5 Ahmad Thomas UNC Asheville 3.00

















































































































Blocked shots per game Field goal percentage Three-point field goal percentage
Free throw percentage
Player School BPG Player School FG% Player School 3FG% Player School FT%
Liam Thomas Nicholls St. 4.2 Devontae Cacok UNC Wilmington .800 Markus Howard Marquette .547 Phil Forte III Oklahoma St. .955
Reggie Lynch Minnesota 3.5 Justin Patton Creighton .676 Nick Masterson Kennesaw St. .541 Devin Cannady Princeton .938
Ben Lammers Georgia Tech 3.4 Javier Martinez UT Martin .671 Francis Alonso UNC Greensboro .462 Donte McGill FIU .929
Brandon Gilbeck W. Illinois 3.0 Aundre Jackson Loyola (IL) .669 Corey Allen Detroit .448 Andrew Rowsey Marquette .926
Tai Odiase UIC 2.9 Justin Tuoyo Chattanooga .645 Jeremy Senglin Weber St. .447 Kahlil Dukes Niagara .921


Postseason



NCAA Tournament




Tournament upsets


For this list, an "upset" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.


This definition is based solely on seeding—in the Middle Tennessee–Minnesota game listed below, the #12 seed Middle Tennessee entered the game as a 1.5-point favorite in Las Vegas sports books.[176]











































Date
Winner
Score
Loser
Region
Round
March 16
Middle Tennessee (#12)
81–72
Minnesota (#5)
South First Round
March 18
Wisconsin (#8)
65–62
Villanova (#1)
East Second Round
March 18
Xavier (#11)
91–66
Florida State (#3)
West Second Round
March 23
Xavier (#11)
73–71
Arizona (#2)
West Sweet Sixteen


Final Four – University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, AZ



















































































National Semifinals
April 1
National Championship Game
April 3
           
E7

South Carolina
73
W1

Gonzaga

77
W1
Gonzaga
65

S1

North Carolina

71
MW3

Oregon
76
S1

North Carolina

77


National Invitation Tournament



After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the NCAA invited 32 teams to participate in the National Invitation Tournament. The tournament began on March 14, 2017 with all games prior to the semifinals being played at campus sites.



NIT Semifinals and Final


Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City on March 28 and 30


















































































Semifinals
March 28
Championship game
March 30
           
6

Georgia Tech
76
8
Cal State Bakersfield
61
6
Georgia Tech
56

4

TCU

88
4
UCF
53
4

TCU
68


College Basketball Invitational



The tenth College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament began on March 14, 2017. This tournament features 16 teams who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT.




































































 
Semifinals
March 22

Championship Series
March 27, 29, 31
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

UIC 78
 

Coastal Carolina

89
 

 
 
Coastal Carolina
91
57
59

 
Wyoming
81

81

83

Utah Valley 68

Wyoming

74
 


CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament



The seventh CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament began on March 13, 2017 and ended with the championship game on March 31. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. 26 teams participate in this tournament.













































































Semifinals
March 29

Championship
March 31
           

Texas A&M–Corpus Christi

79
UMBC
61
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi
61


Saint Peter's

62
Furman
51

Saint Peter's

77


Conference standings


























































































































































































































































2016–17 American Athletic Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 11 SMU † 17 1   .944     30 5
  .857
No. 18 Cincinnati
16 2   .889     30 6
  .833
Houston 12 6   .667     21 11
  .656
UCF 11 7   .611     24 12
  .667
Memphis 9 9   .500     19 13
  .594
Connecticut 9 9   .500     16 17
  .485
Tulsa 8 10   .444     15 17
  .469
Temple 7 11   .389     16 16
  .500
East Carolina 6 12   .333     15 18
  .455
Tulane 3 15   .167     6 25
  .194
South Florida 1 17   .056     7 23
  .233

† 2017 AAC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll




































































































































































2016–17 America East Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Vermont †
16 0   1.000     29 6
  .829
Stony Brook 12 4   .750     18 14
  .563
Albany 10 6   .625     21 14
  .600
New Hampshire 10 6   .625     20 12
  .625
UMBC 9 7   .563     21 13
  .618

UMass Lowell*
5 11   .313     11 20
  .355
Hartford 4 12   .250     9 23
  .281
Binghamton 3 13   .188     12 20
  .375
Maine 3 13   .188     7 25
  .219
* Ineligible for postseason during transition to Division I.

† 2017 America East Tournament winner

















































































































































































































































2016–17 Atlantic 10 men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
Dayton 15 3   .833     24 8
  .750
VCU 14 4   .778     26 9
  .743

Rhode Island †
13 5   .722     25 10
  .714
Richmond 13 5   .722     22 13
  .629
Saint Bonaventure 11 7   .611     20 12
  .625
George Washington 10 8   .556     20 15
  .571
George Mason 9 9   .500     20 14
  .588
La Salle 9 9   .500     15 15
  .500
Davidson 8 10   .444     17 15
  .531
Fordham 7 11   .389     13 19
  .406
Saint Louis 6 12   .333     12 21
  .364
UMass 4 14   .222     15 18
  .455
Saint Joseph's 4 14   .222     11 20
  .355
Duquesne 3 15   .167     10 22
  .313


† 2017 A10 Tournament winner























































































































































2016–17 Atlantic Sun men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Florida Gulf Coast †
12 2   .857     26 8
  .765
Lipscomb 11 3   .786     20 13
  .606
North Florida 8 6   .571     15 19
  .441
USC Upstate 7 7   .500     17 16
  .515
Kennesaw State 7 7   .500     14 18
  .438
Jacksonville 5 9   .357     17 16
  .515
NJIT 3 11   .214     11 20
  .355
Stetson 3 11   .214     11 21
  .344


† 2017 ASUN Tournament winner































































































































































































































































2016–17 ACC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 5 North Carolina
14 4   .778     33 7
  .825
No. 16 Florida State
12 6   .667     26 9
  .743
No. 14 Notre Dame
12 6   .667     26 10
  .722
No. 10 Louisville
12 6   .667     25 9
  .735
No. 7 Duke † 11 7   .611     28 9
  .757
No. 24 Virginia
11 7   .611     23 11
  .676
Virginia Tech 10 8   .556     22 11
  .667
Miami (FL) 10 8   .556     21 12
  .636
Syracuse 10 8   .556     19 15
  .559
Wake Forest 9 9   .500     19 14
  .576
Georgia Tech 8 10   .444     21 16
  .568
Clemson 6 12   .333     17 16
  .515
NC State 4 14   .222     15 17
  .469
Pittsburgh 4 14   .222     16 17
  .485
Boston College 2 16   .111     9 23
  .281

† 2017 ACC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































2016–17 Big East men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 1 Villanova † 15 3   .833     32 4
  .889
No. 21 Butler
12 6   .667     25 9
  .735
Creighton 10 8   .556     25 10
  .714
Seton Hall 10 8   .556     21 12
  .636
Providence 10 8   .556     20 13
  .606
Marquette 10 8   .556     19 13
  .594
Xavier 9 9   .500     24 14
  .632
Saint John's 7 11   .389     14 19
  .424
Georgetown 5 13   .278     14 18
  .438
DePaul 2 16   .111     9 23
  .281

† 2017 Big East Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll
















































































































































































































2016–17 Big Sky men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

North Dakota †
14 4   .778     22 10
  .688
Eastern Washington 13 5   .722     22 12
  .647
Idaho 12 6   .667     19 14
  .576
Weber State 12 6   .667     20 14
  .588
Montana 11 7   .611     16 16
  .500
Montana State 11 7   .611     16 16
  .500
Sacramento State 9 9   .500     13 18
  .419
Portland State 7 11   .389     15 16
  .484

Northern Colorado*
7 11   .389     11 18
  .379
Northern Arizona 6 12   .333     9 23
  .281
Southern Utah 3 15   .167     6 27
  .182
Idaho State 3 15   .167     5 26
  .161

† Conference tournament winner




















































































































































































2016–17 Big South men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Winthrop †
15 3   .833     26 7
  .788
UNC Asheville 15 3   .833     23 10
  .697
Liberty 14 4   .778     21 14
  .600
Gardner–Webb 11 7   .611     19 14
  .576
High Point 9 9   .500     15 16
  .484
Radford 8 10   .444     14 18
  .438
Campbell 7 11   .389     19 18
  .514
Charleston Southern 7 11   .389     12 19
  .387
Longwood 3 15   .167     6 24
  .200
Presbyterian 1 17   .056     5 25
  .167


† 2017 Big South Tournament winner
















































































































































































































































2016–17 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 15 Purdue
14 4   .778     27 8
  .771
No. 25 Wisconsin
12 6   .667     27 10
  .730
Maryland 12 6   .667     24 9
  .727
Minnesota 11 7   .611     24 10
  .706
No. 23 Michigan † 10 8   .556     26 12
  .684
Northwestern 10 8   .556     24 12
  .667
Michigan State 10 8   .556     20 15
  .571
Iowa 10 8   .556     19 15
  .559
Illinois 8 10   .444     20 15
  .571
Ohio State 7 11   .389     17 15
  .531
Indiana 7 11   .389     18 16
  .529
Penn State 6 12   .333     15 18
  .455
Nebraska 6 12   .333     12 19
  .387
Rutgers 3 15   .167     15 18
  .455

† 2017 Big Ten Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll



































































































































































2016–17 Big West men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
UC Irvine 12 4   .750     21 15
  .583

UC Davis †
11 5   .688     23 13
  .639
Cal State Fullerton 10 6   .625     17 15
  .531
Long Beach State 9 7   .563     15 19
  .441
Hawaii 8 8   .500     14 16
  .467
Cal State Northridge 7 9   .438     11 19
  .367
Cal Poly 6 10   .375     11 20
  .355
UC Riverside 5 11   .313     7 21
  .250
UC Santa Barbara 4 12   .250     6 22
  .214

† 2017 Big West Tournament winner




















































































































































































2016–17 Big 12 men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 3 Kansas
16 2   .889     31 5
  .861
No. 13 West Virginia
12 6   .667     28 9
  .757
No. 12 Baylor
12 6   .667     27 8
  .771
No. 16 Iowa State † 12 6   .667     24 11
  .686
Oklahoma State 9 9   .500     20 13
  .606
Kansas State 8 10   .444     21 14
  .600
Texas Tech 6 12   .333     18 14
  .563
TCU 6 12   .333     24 15
  .615
Oklahoma 5 13   .278     11 20
  .355
Texas 4 14   .222     11 22
  .333

† 2017 Big 12 Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































2016–17 CAA men's basketball standings



Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

UNC Wilmington †
15 3   .833     29 6
  .829
College of Charleston 14 4   .778     25 10
  .714
Towson 11 7   .611     20 13
  .606
Elon 10 8   .556     18 14
  .563
William & Mary 10 8   .556     17 14
  .548
Northeastern 8 10   .444     15 16
  .484
Hofstra 7 11   .389     15 17
  .469
James Madison 7 11   .389     10 23
  .303
Delaware 5 13   .278     13 20
  .394
Drexel 3 15   .167     9 23
  .281

† 2017 CAA Tournament winner

















































































































































































































































2016–17 Conference USA men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Middle Tennessee †
17 1   .944     31 5
  .861
Louisiana Tech 14 4   .778     23 10
  .697
Old Dominion 12 6   .667     19 12
  .613
UTEP 12 6   .667     15 17
  .469
Rice 11 7   .611     23 12
  .657
Marshall 10 8   .556     20 15
  .571
UAB 9 9   .500     17 16
  .515
Western Kentucky 9 9   .500     15 17
  .469
UTSA 8 10   .444     14 19
  .424
Charlotte 7 11   .389     13 17
  .433
Florida Atlantic 6 12   .333     10 20
  .333
Southern Miss 6 12   .333     9 22
  .290
FIU 3 15   .167     7 24
  .226
North Texas 2 16   .111     8 22
  .267


† 2017 C-USA Tournament winner



















































































































































































2016–17 Horizon League men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
Oakland 14 4   .778     25 9
  .735
Valparaiso 14 4   .778     24 9
  .727
Green Bay 12 6   .667     18 14
  .563

Northern Kentucky †
12 6   .667     24 11
  .686
Wright State 11 7   .611     20 12
  .625
UIC 7 11   .389     17 19
  .472
Detroit 6 12   .333     8 23
  .258
Cleveland State 5 13   .278     9 22
  .290
Youngstown State 5 13   .278     13 21
  .382
Milwaukee 4 14   .222     11 24
  .314

† 2017 Horizon League Tournament winner






















































































































































2016–17 Ivy League men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Princeton †
14 0   1.000     23 7
  .767
Harvard 10 4   .714     18 10
  .643
Yale 9 5   .643     18 11
  .621
Penn 6 8   .429     13 15
  .464
Columbia 5 9   .357     11 16
  .407
Brown 4 10   .286     13 17
  .433
Cornell 4 10   .286     8 21
  .276
Dartmouth 4 10   .286     7 20
  .259

† 2017 Ivy League Tournament winner



















































































































































































































2016–17 Mid-American Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

East
Akron 14 4   .778     27 9
  .750
Ohio 11 7   .611     20 11
  .645
Buffalo 11 7   .611     17 15
  .531

Kent State †
10 8   .556     22 14
  .611
Bowling Green 7 11   .389     13 19
  .406
Miami (OH) 4 14   .222     11 21
  .344

West
Ball State 11 7   .611     21 13
  .618
Western Michigan 11 7   .611     16 16
  .500
Toledo 9 9   .500     17 17
  .500
Eastern Michigan 7 11   .389     16 17
  .485
Northern Illinois 7 11   .389     15 17
  .469
Central Michigan 6 12   .333     16 16
  .500

† 2017 MAC Tournament winner



































































































































































































2016–17 MAAC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
Monmouth 18 2   .900     27 7
  .794
Saint Peter's 14 6   .700     23 13
  .639

Iona †
12 8   .600     22 13
  .629
Siena 12 8   .600     17 17
  .500
Fairfield 11 9   .550     16 15
  .516
Rider 10 10   .500     18 15
  .545
Canisius 10 10   .500     18 16
  .529
Quinnipiac 7 13   .350     10 21
  .323
Niagara 6 14   .300     10 23
  .303
Marist 5 15   .250     8 24
  .250
Manhattan 5 15   .250     10 22
  .313


† 2017 MAAC Tournament winner

































































































































































































































2016–17 MEAC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

NC Central †
13 3   .813     25 9
  .735
Norfolk State 12 4   .750     17 17
  .500
Morgan State 11 5   .688     14 16
  .467
Hampton 11 5   .688     14 17
  .452

Savannah State*
10 6   .625     13 16
  .448
MD Eastern Shore 9 7   .563     14 20
  .412
South Carolina State 7 9   .438     11 20
  .355
Delaware State 7 9   .438     10 22
  .313
Coppin State 7 9   .438     8 24
  .250
Bethune–Cookman 6 10   .375     10 22
  .313
Howard 5 11   .313     10 24
  .294
Florida A&M 5 11   .313     7 23
  .233
North Carolina A&T 1 15   .063     3 29
  .094
*ineligible for postseason due to APR violations

† 2017 MEAC Tournament winner




















































































































































































2016–17 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
Illinois State 17 1   .944     28 7
  .800
No. 19 Wichita State† 17 1   .944     31 5
  .861
Northern Iowa 9 9   .500     14 16
  .467
Southern Illinois 9 9   .500     17 16
  .515
Loyola (IL) 8 10   .444     18 14
  .563
Missouri State 7 11   .389     17 16
  .515
Bradley 7 11   .389     13 20
  .394
Evansville 6 12   .333     16 17
  .485
Indiana State 5 13   .278     11 20
  .355
Drake 5 13   .278     7 24
  .226

† 2017 MVC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll

































































































































































































2016–17 Mountain West Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Nevada †
14 4   .778     28 7
  .800
Colorado State 13 5   .722     24 12
  .667
Boise State 12 6   .667     20 12
  .625
Fresno State 11 7   .611     20 13
  .606
New Mexico 10 8   .556     17 14
  .548
San Diego State 9 9   .500     19 14
  .576
Wyoming 8 10   .444     23 15
  .605
San Jose State 7 11   .389     14 16
  .467
Utah State 7 11   .389     14 17
  .452
Air Force 4 14   .222     12 21
  .364
UNLV 4 14   .222     11 21
  .344

† 2017 MW Tournament winner





















































































































































































2016–17 Northeast Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Mount St. Mary's †
14 4   .778     20 16
  .556
LIU Brooklyn 13 5   .722     20 12
  .625
Wagner 11 7   .611     16 14
  .533
Saint Francis (PA) 11 7   .611     17 17
  .500
Robert Morris 9 9   .500     14 19
  .424
Bryant 9 9   .500     12 20
  .375
Fairleigh Dickinson 9 9   .500     11 19
  .367
Sacred Heart 8 10   .444     13 19
  .406
Central Connecticut 4 14   .222     6 23
  .207
St. Francis Brooklyn 2 16   .111     4 27
  .129


† 2017 NEC Tournament winner



















































































































































































































2016–17 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

East
Belmont 15 1   .938     23 7
  .767
Morehead State 10 6   .625     14 16
  .467

Jacksonville State †
9 7   .563     20 15
  .571
Tennessee State 8 8   .500     17 13
  .567
Tennessee Tech 8 8   .500     12 20
  .375
Eastern Kentucky 5 11   .313     12 19
  .387

West
UT Martin 10 6   .625     22 13
  .629
Southeast Missouri St. 9 7   .563     15 18
  .455
Murray State 8 8   .500     16 17
  .485
Austin Peay 7 9   .438     11 19
  .367
Eastern Illinois 6 10   .375     14 15
  .483
SIU Edwardsville 1 15   .063     6 24
  .200

† 2017 OVC Tournament winner


















































































































































































































2016–17 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 9 Oregon
16 2   .889     33 6
  .846
No. 4 Arizona † 16 2   .889     32 5
  .865
No. 8 UCLA
15 3   .833     31 5
  .861
Utah 11 7   .611     20 12
  .625
California 10 8   .556     21 13
  .618
USC 10 8   .556     26 10
  .722
Colorado 8 10   .444     19 15
  .559
Arizona State 7 11   .389     15 18
  .455
Stanford 6 12   .333     14 17
  .452
Washington State 6 12   .333     13 18
  .419
Washington 2 16   .111     9 22
  .290
Oregon State 1 17   .056     5 27
  .156

† 2017 Pac-12 Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































2016–17 Patriot League men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Bucknell †
15 3   .833     26 9
  .743
Lehigh 12 6   .667     20 12
  .625
Boston University 12 6   .667     18 14
  .563
Navy 10 8   .556     16 16
  .500
Holy Cross 9 9   .500     15 17
  .469
Loyola (MD) 8 10   .444     16 17
  .485
Colgate 8 10   .444     10 22
  .313
Army 6 12   .333     13 19
  .406
Lafayette 5 13   .278     9 21
  .300
American 5 13   .278     8 22
  .267


† 2017 Patriot League Tournament winner



















































































































































































2016–17 Southern Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

East Tennessee State †
14 4   .778     27 8
  .771
UNC Greensboro 14 4   .778     25 10
  .714
Furman 14 4   .778     23 12
  .657
Chattanooga 10 8   .556     19 12
  .613
Wofford 10 8   .556     16 17
  .485
Mercer 9 9   .500     15 17
  .469
Samford 8 10   .444     20 16
  .556
The Citadel 4 14   .222     12 21
  .364
Western Carolina 4 14   .222     9 23
  .281
VMI 3 15   .167     6 24
  .200

† 2017 SoCon Tournament winner

































































































































































































































2016–17 Southland Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

New Orleans †
13 5   .722     20 12
  .625
Texas A&M–CC 12 6   .667     24 12
  .667
Houston Baptist 12 6   .667     17 14
  .548
Stephen F. Austin 12 6   .667     18 15
  .545
Sam Houston State 10 8   .556     21 13
  .618
Lamar 10 8   .556     19 15
  .559
Southeastern Louisiana 9 9   .500     16 16
  .500
Nicholls State 7 11   .389     14 17
  .452

Abilene Christian*
7 11   .389     13 16
  .448
Northwestern State 7 11   .389     13 16
  .448

Incarnate Word*
7 11   .389     12 17
  .414
Central Arkansas 7 11   .389     8 24
  .250
McNeese State 4 14   .222     7 22
  .241
* Ineligible for postseason during transition to Division I

† 2017 Southland Tournament winner
















































































































































































































































2016–17 Southeastern Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 5 Kentucky † 16 2   .889     32 6
  .842
No. 20 Florida
14 4   .778     27 9
  .750
Arkansas 12 6   .667     26 10
  .722
South Carolina 12 6   .667     26 11
  .703
Ole Miss 10 8   .556     22 14
  .611
Alabama 10 8   .556     19 15
  .559
Vanderbilt 10 8   .556     19 16
  .543
Georgia 9 9   .500     19 15
  .559
Texas A&M 8 10   .444     16 15
  .516
Tennessee 8 10   .444     16 16
  .500
Auburn 7 11   .389     18 14
  .563
Mississippi State 6 12   .333     16 16
  .500
LSU 2 16   .111     10 21
  .323
Missouri 2 16   .111     8 24
  .250

† 2017 SEC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll



















































































































































































2016–17 SWAC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT

Texas Southern †
16 2   .889     23 12
  .657

Alcorn State*
13 5   .722     18 14
  .563
Grambling State 10 8   .556     16 17
  .485
Jackson State 10 8   .556     14 18
  .438
Southern 10 8   .556     15 18
  .455
Prairie View A&M 10 8   .556     13 20
  .394
Mississippi Valley State 7 11   .389     7 25
  .219
Alabama State 6 12   .333     8 23
  .258
Arkansas–Pine Bluff 6 12   .333     7 25
  .219
Alabama A&M 2 16   .111     2 27
  .069
*ineligible for postseason due to APR violations

† 2017 SWAC Tournament winner

















































































































































































































2016–17 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
Texas–Arlington 14 4   .778     27 9
  .750
Georgia State 12 6   .667     20 13
  .606
Arkansas State 11 7   .611     20 12
  .625
Texas State 11 7   .611     22 14
  .611
Georgia Southern 11 7   .611     18 15
  .545
Louisiana–Lafayette 10 8   .556     21 12
  .636

Troy †
10 8   .556     22 14
  .611
Coastal Carolina 10 8   .556     20 19
  .513
South Alabama 7 11   .389     14 18
  .438
Little Rock 6 12   .333     15 17
  .469
Appalachian State 4 14   .222     9 21
  .300
Louisiana–Monroe 2 16   .111     9 24
  .273

† 2017 Sun Belt Conference Tournament winner





































































































































































2016–17 Summit League men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
South Dakota 12 4   .750     22 12
  .647
North Dakota State 11 5   .688     19 11
  .633
Omaha 9 7   .563     18 14
  .563
Fort Wayne 8 8   .500     20 13
  .606
Denver 8 8   .500     16 14
  .533

South Dakota State †
8 8   .500     18 17
  .514
IUPUI 7 9   .438     14 18
  .438
Western Illinois 5 11   .313     8 20
  .286
Oral Roberts 4 12   .250     8 22
  .267


† 2017 Summit League Tournament winner





















































































































































































2016–17 West Coast Conference men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
No. 2 Gonzaga † 17 1   .944     37 2
  .949
No. 22 Saint Mary's
16 2   .889     29 5
  .853
BYU 12 6   .667     22 12
  .647
San Francisco 10 8   .556     20 13
  .606
Santa Clara 10 8   .556     17 16
  .515
Loyola Marymount 8 10   .444     15 15
  .500
San Diego 6 12   .333     13 18
  .419
Pepperdine 5 13   .278     9 22
  .290
Pacific 4 14   .222     11 22
  .333
Portland 2 16   .111     11 22
  .333


† 2017 West Coast Conference Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll





















































































































































2016–17 WAC men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L  
PCT
Cal State Bakersfield 12 2   .857     25 10
  .714

New Mexico State †
11 3   .786     28 5
  .848

Grand Canyon*
11 3   .786     22 9
  .710
UMKC 8 6   .571     18 17
  .514
Utah Valley 6 8   .429     17 17
  .500
Seattle 5 9   .357     13 17
  .433
UT Rio Grande Valley 2 12   .143     10 22
  .313
Chicago State 1 13   .071     6 26
  .188
* Ineligible for postseason during transition to Division I.

† 2017 WAC Tournament winner




Award winners



2017 Consensus All-America team












































Consensus First Team
Player
Position
Class
Team

Lonzo Ball
PG
Freshman

UCLA

Josh Hart
SG
Senior

Villanova

Justin Jackson
SF
Junior

North Carolina

Frank Mason III
PG
Senior

Kansas

Caleb Swanigan
PF
Sophomore

Purdue












































Consensus Second Team
Player
Position
Class
Team

Dillon Brooks
SF
Junior

Oregon

Luke Kennard
SG
Sophomore

Duke

Malik Monk
SG
Freshman

Kentucky

Johnathan Motley
PF
Junior

Baylor

Nigel Williams-Goss
PG
Junior

Gonzaga


Major player of the year awards




  • Wooden Award: Frank Mason III, Kansas


  • Naismith Award: Frank Mason III, Kansas


  • Associated Press Player of the Year: Frank Mason III, Kansas [177]


  • NABC Player of the Year: Frank Mason III, Kansas


  • Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Frank Mason III, Kansas[178]


  • Sporting News Player of the Year: Frank Mason III, Kansas[179]



Major freshman of the year awards




  • Wayman Tisdale Award (USBWA): Lonzo Ball, UCLA [180]


  • Sporting News Freshman of the Year: Lonzo Ball, UCLA[181]



Major coach of the year awards




  • Associated Press Coach of the Year: Mark Few, Gonzaga[182]


  • Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Mark Few, Gonzaga[183]


  • NABC Coach of the Year: Mark Few, Gonzaga


  • Naismith College Coach of the Year: Mark Few, Gonzaga


  • Sporting News Coach of the Year: Mark Few, Gonzaga[184]



Other major awards




  • Bob Cousy Award (Best point guard): Frank Mason III, Kansas


  • Jerry West Award (Best shooting guard): Malik Monk, Kentucky


  • Julius Erving Award (Best small forward): Josh Hart, Villanova


  • Karl Malone Award (Best power forward): Johnathan Motley, Baylor


  • Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award (Best center): Przemek Karnowski, Gonzaga


  • Pete Newell Big Man Award (Best big man): Caleb Swanigan, Purdue


  • NABC Defensive Player of the Year: Jevon Carter, West Virginia


  • Senior CLASS Award (top senior): Josh Hart, Villanova [185]


  • Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): Josh Hart, Villanova[186]


  • Haggerty Award (Top player in NYC metro area): Ángel Delgado, Seton Hall[187]


  • Ben Jobe Award (Top minority coach): Jamion Christian, Mount St. Mary's


  • Hugh Durham Award (Top mid-major coach): Rod Barnes, Cal State Bakersfield


  • Jim Phelan Award (Top head coach): Frank Martin, South Carolina


  • Lefty Driesell Award (Top defensive player): Jevon Carter, West Virginia


  • Lou Henson Award (Top mid-major player): Justin Robinson, Monmouth


  • Lute Olson Award (Top non-freshman or transfer player): Caleb Swanigan, Purdue


  • Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award (Coach with moral character): Danny Manning, Wake Forest


  • Academic All-American of the Year (Top scholar-athlete): Canyon Barry, Florida[188]


  • Elite 90 Award (Top GPA among upperclass players at Final Four): Nigel Williams-Goss, Gonzaga[189]


  • USBWA Most Courageous Award: Bronson Koenig, Wisconsin[190]



Coaching changes


49 teams changed coaches during and after the season.






























































































































































































































































































































































Team
Former
coach
Interim
coach
New
coach
Reason

Akron

Keith Dambrot


John Groce
Dambrot, the program's all-time winningest head coach with 305 wins, left his alma mater on March 27 after 13 seasons to take the Duquesne head coaching job.[191] The Zips hired former Ohio and Illinois head coach Groce on April 5.[192]

Alabama A&M

Willie Hayes


Donnie Marsh
Hayes resigned from his alma mater on March 7 after six seasons, which saw the Bulldogs finishing 54–121 overall and never finishing in the top four of the SWAC standings, capped off by a 2–27 mark this season.[193] Texas Southern assistant and former Florida International head coach Marsh was tapped to fill the role on April 12.[194]

Arkansas State

Grant McCasland


Mike Balado
McCasland left Arkansas State on March 13 after one season for the North Texas job.[195] The Red Wolves hired Louisville assistant Balado on March 19.[196]

Austin Peay

Dave Loos


Matt Figger
Peay announced on March 2 that Loos, 70, would retire after 27 seasons at APSU, which was followed by a press conference on March 6. As noted previously in this page, Loos had been undergoing chemotherapy for colon cancer during the season and took a brief medical leave from the team in January. He retired as the winningest men's head coach in Ohio Valley Conference history with 421 wins in the OVC.[197] The Governors hired South Carolina assistant Figger on April 3, just 2 days after the Gamecocks were eliminated by Gonzaga in the Final Four.[198]

Bethune–Cookman

Gravelle Craig


Ryan Ridder
Craig was fired on March 20 after six seasons at BCU, finishing with an overall record of 74–123 and one winning season.[199] On March 31, the Wildcats hired Ridder from Daytona State of the NJCAA.[200]

Butler

Chris Holtmann


LaVall Jordan
Holtmann left Butler on June 9 after three seasons for the Ohio State opening.[201] On June 13, the school hired former Bulldog player Jordan, who spent the past season as the head coach of Milwaukee.[202]

California

Cuonzo Martin


Wyking Jones
Martin left Cal on March 15 after three seasons to take the open head coaching job at Missouri.[203] The Golden Bears promoted assistant Jones on March 24.[204]

Chattanooga

Matt McCall


Lamont Paris
McCall left Chattanooga on March 29 after 2 seasons to take the head coaching job at UMass, 6 days after Winthrop head coach Pat Kelsey, who was initially hired as head coach of the Minutemen, backed out.[205] The Mocs hired Wisconsin assistant Paris on April 2.[206]

Cleveland State

Gary Waters


Dennis Felton
The 65-year-old Waters announced his retirement on March 7 after 11 seasons at Cleveland State and 21 overall. He leaves as the winningest coach in program history with 194 wins.[207] On March 24, the Vikings hired Tulsa assistant Felton, who had previously been a Division I head coach at Western Kentucky and Georgia.[208]

Coppin State

Michael Grant


Juan Dixon
Grant was fired from Coppin State on March 20 after three seasons, finishing 25–69.[209] Baltimore native and former Maryland All-American Dixon was hired by the Eagles to replace Grant on April 22.[210]

Dayton

Archie Miller


Anthony Grant
Miller left Dayton on March 25 after 6 seasons for the Indiana opening.[211] On March 30, Dayton hired Oklahoma City Thunder assistant coach and ex-Flyer player Grant, who previously had head coaching jobs at VCU and Alabama.[212]

Drake

Ray Giacoletti

Jeff Rutter

Niko Medved
Giacoletti resigned midway into his 4th season at Drake on December 6 after a 1–7 start to the season. Top assistant Rutter assumed head coaching duties for the remainder of the 2016–17 season.[213] The Bulldogs hired Medved from Furman on March 26, where he had led the Paladins to the Southern Conference regular-season title and claimed conference Coach of the Year honors in 2016–17.[214]

Duquesne

Jim Ferry


Keith Dambrot
Ferry was fired from Duquesne on March 13 after five seasons. The Dukes went 60–97 during his tenure, never finishing higher than 10th in the Atlantic 10, and ended this season 10–22 overall and 3–15 in the conference.[215] Duquesne hired Akron head coach Dambrot for the job on March 27.[191]

Eastern Washington

Jim Hayford


Shantay Legans
Hayford left Eastern Washington on March 29 after 6 seasons for the head coaching job at in-state rival Seattle.[216] The Eagles immediately promoted assistant coach Legans to head coach.[217]

Florida A&M

Byron Samuels


Robert McCullum
Samuels was fired on March 17 after three seasons and a 17–71 overall record at FAMU, including a 7–23 mark this season.[218] The Rattlers hired Oregon assistant and former Western Michigan and South Florida head coach McCullum as the new head coach on May 16.[219]

Furman

Niko Medved

Bob Richey
Medved left Furman on March 26 after 4 seasons for the Drake head coaching job.[214] The Paladins, who had made the CIT Semifinals at the time of Medved's departure, named assistant Richey interim head coach for the remainder of the tournament,[220] and removed the interim tag after the season.[221]

Georgetown

John Thompson III


Patrick Ewing
Thompson was fired on March 23 after 13 seasons at Georgetown. JT3 finished with an overall record of 278–151 at the school, but the Hoyas went 14–18 overall and 5–13 in the Big East this season, and had failed to make the NCAA tournament in three of the past four seasons.[222] On April 3, the school turned to Ewing, a Hall of Fame player for his career at Georgetown and the NBA, who had previously been an assistant with the Charlotte Hornets.[223]

Grambling State

Shawn Walker


Donte Jackson
Walker's contract with Grambling was not renewed on March 22, ending his 3-year tenure with a 25–68 record, although the Tigers had their best season this year under Walker by going 16–17 and finishing in a 4-way tie for 3rd in SWAC play.[224] The school went to the NAIA for their next hire, tabbing Stillman's Jackson as the next head coach on May 12.[225]

Illinois

John Groce

Jamall Walker

Brad Underwood
Groce was fired on March 11 after five seasons at Illinois, finishing 95–75 overall with one appearance in the NCAA Tournament and no Big Ten regular-season finishes higher than seventh place. Assistant Walker took over on an interim basis for the team during the NIT, making this their 3rd appearance in the NIT in 4 years.[226] The Illini hired Underwood away from Oklahoma State as the permanent replacement on March 18.[227]

Indiana

Tom Crean


Archie Miller
Indiana fired Crean on March 16 after 9 seasons, following the Hoosiers' first round loss in the NIT. Although Crean made the NCAA Sweet Sixteen three times at IU, his record of 166–135 was the second-worst among Hoosiers coaches with at least 100 games, and the team went 18–16 and failed to make the NCAA tournament this season despite defeating two eventual #1 seeds (Kansas and North Carolina).[228] IU hired Miller from Dayton on March 25.[211]

LIU Brooklyn

Jack Perri


Derek Kellogg
Perri was fired on March 20 after a 77–79 record in five seasons at LIU Brooklyn, despite winning 20 games and finishing 2nd in the NEC this year.[229] On April 17, the Blackbirds hired former UMass head coach Kellogg for the job.[230]

LSU

Johnny Jones


Will Wade
Jones was fired from his alma mater on March 10 after five seasons and an overall record of 90–72. The Tigers failed to make the NCAA tournament in 2015–16 despite having #1 NBA draft pick Ben Simmons, and after starting this season 8–2 ended at 10–21, including a 1–17 stretch to finish the season.[231] LSU hired Wade from VCU on March 20, making this Wade's 3rd different head coaching job in 5 years.[232]

Massachusetts

Derek Kellogg


Matt McCall
Kellogg was fired on March 9 after nine seasons and a 155–139 overall record at his alma mater. The Minutemen made the NCAA tournament only once in Kellogg's tenure (in 2014) and finished 15–18 overall and 4–14 in Atlantic 10 play this season.[233] UMass initially hired Winthrop head coach Pat Kelsey on March 21, but he backed out two days later, citing personal reasons.[234] UMass then hired McCall from Chattanooga on March 29.[235]

Miami (OH)

John Cooper


Jack Owens
Cooper was fired on March 10 after five seasons and a 59–100 overall record at Miami, including an 11–21 mark this season.[236] On March 29, the RedHawks hired Owens, who spent the last 6 years as associate head coach at Purdue.[237]

Milwaukee

LaVall Jordan


Pat Baldwin
Jordan left Milwaukee on June 13 after one season to take the head coaching job at his alma mater, Butler.[202] The Panthers tabbed Northwestern assistant Baldwin to fill the vacancy on June 20.[238]

Missouri

Kim Anderson


Cuonzo Martin
Anderson was fired on March 5 effectively after the season, finishing 27–68 overall in his three seasons at his alma mater without an NCAA Tournament appearance, capped off with a 7–23 mark and last-place SEC finish this season.[239] The Tigers hired Martin from Cal on March 15, making this Martin's 4th different head coaching job in 10 years.[203]

Morehead State

Sean Woods

Preston Spradlin
Woods resigned midway into his 5th season at Morehead State on December 15 amid an investigation into alleged physical abuse of players. He had been suspended by the school since November 22, and at the time of his resignation was facing charges of misdemeanor battery following incidents during and after the Eagles' November 19 game at Evansville. Assistant coach Spradlin was named interim coach during Woods' suspension, and continued in that role for the remainder of the season following the former's resignation,[240] after which Morehead State removed the interim tag.[241]

NC State

Mark Gottfried


Kevin Keatts
Gottfried was fired on February 16, effective at the end of NC State's season. At the time, he was in his fifth season at NC State and 122–82 overall at the school, but was 14–13 overall and 3–11 in ACC play this season, with the Wolfpack losing each of their last three games by more than 20 points.[242] NC State stayed within its university system for its new hire, luring Keatts from UNC Wilmington on March 17.[243]

New Mexico

Craig Neal


Paul Weir
Neal was fired on March 31, 3 weeks after New Mexico athletic director Paul Krebs had announced that Neal would return next season. In his first season as head coach, Neal led the Lobos to a 27–7 record and an appearance in the NCAA Tournament by virtue of winning the Mountain West Tournament, but went 49–45 during the next 3 seasons with no postseason appearances.[244] The school hired Weir from in-state rival New Mexico State on April 11.[245]

New Mexico State

Paul Weir


Chris Jans
Weir left NMSU on April 11 after one season for the head coaching job at in-state rival New Mexico.[245] On April 17, the Aggies hired ex-Bowling Green head coach Jans, who spent the last 2 seasons at Wichita State in an administrative role and was promoted to associate head coach of the Shockers 4 days before being hired at NMSU.[246]

North Texas

Tony Benford


Grant McCasland
Benford was fired on March 5 after five seasons and a 62–95 overall record at UNT, capped off by an 8–22 overall record and 2–16 record in C-USA play this season.[247] The Mean Green filled the vacancy with Arkansas State head coach McCasland on March 13.[195]

Ohio State

Thad Matta


Chris Holtmann
Matta was fired on June 5 after 13 seasons at OSU. He left as the program's winningest coach with 337 wins, but this season, in which the Buckeyes finished 17–15 overall, was the first time during Matta's tenure that the team did not win at least 20 games, and the first time since Matta's first season at Ohio State in 04-05 to miss the postseason altogether.[248] The school hired Butler's Holtmann as their new head coach on June 9.[201]

Oklahoma State

Brad Underwood


Mike Boynton
Underwood left Oklahoma State on March 18 after one season for the Illinois opening.[227] The Cowboys stayed in-house to fill the vacancy, promoting assistant Boynton on March 24.[249]

Oral Roberts

Scott Sutton


Paul Mills
Oral Roberts parted ways with Sutton on April 10 after 18 seasons. Sutton finishes as the school's all-time winningest head coach with 328 wins, but the Golden Eagles finished 8–22 and last in The Summit League this season.[250] ORU hired Baylor assistant Mills as their new head coach on April 28.[251]

Portland State

Tyler Geving


Barret Peery
Portland State parted ways with Geving on March 15 after 8 seasons, finishing with a 112–133 record.[252] The Vikings hired Santa Clara associate head coach and former Portland State assistant Peery on April 10.[253]

Presbyterian

Gregg Nibert


Dustin Kerns
Nibert resigned from Presbyterian on April 12 after 28 seasons. Nibert left as the school's winningest head coach with 419 wins, but the Blue Hose have gone 86–218 since making the transition to Division I in 2007.[254] The school would then hire Wofford associate head coach Kerns as the next head coach on May 23.[255]

Quinnipiac

Tom Moore


Baker Dunleavy
Moore was fired on March 7 after 10 seasons and an overall record of 162–150 at Quinnipiac. In his final two seasons, the Bobcats went 9–21 and 10–21.[256] Quinnipiac hired top Villanova assistant Baker Dunleavy, son of current Tulane head coach Mike Dunleavy Sr. and brother of NBA veteran Mike Dunleavy Jr. on March 27.[257]

Rice

Mike Rhoades


Scott Pera
Rhoades left Rice on March 21 after three seasons for the head coaching job at VCU, where he served as associate head coach under Shaka Smart from 2009–2014 before taking the Rice job.[258] 2 days later, the Owls named top assistant Pera as Rhoades' replacement.[259]

San Diego State

Steve Fisher


Brian Dutcher
According to multiple sources, the 72-year-old Fisher made the decision to retire on April 10 after 18 seasons at San Diego State, which he confirmed the following day. He leaves the Aztecs as the program's winningest head coach with 386 wins. Dutcher, who had been an assistant under Fisher throughout his tenure at SDSU and also at Fisher's previous coaching stop at Michigan, took over as Fisher's designated successor.[260]

San Jose State

Dave Wojcik


Jean Prioleau
Wojcik resigned from San Jose State on July 10 citing personal reasons, finishing 32-90 overall in 4 seasons with the Spartans.[261] Colorado assistant Prioleau was named head coach on August 4.[262]

Seattle

Cameron Dollar


Jim Hayford
Dollar was fired on March 13 after 8 seasons at Seattle with a record of 107–138.[263] The Redhawks hired Heyford from in-state rival Eastern Washington on March 29.[216]

Southern

Roman Banks

Morris Scott

Sean Woods
Banks, who had just completed his 6th season as Southern's head coach, was named the new long-term Athletic Director of the school on March 31. He had been serving as the interim AD of Southern for the past two years. Associate HC Scott was promoted to interim head coach for the 2017-18 season.[264] On April 12, 2018, Stetson assistant coach Woods was named full time head coach of the Jaguars.[265]

South Florida

Orlando Antigua

Murry Bartow

Brian Gregory
Antigua struggled during his 2 1/2-year tenure at USF, but after a 6–7 start to the 2016–17 season against the backdrop of an academic fraud investigation, he was fired on January 3. Assistant Bartow was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season.[266][267] After the season, the Bulls hired Gregory on March 14, one year following his departure from Georgia Tech.[268]

UC Santa Barbara

Bob Williams


Joe Pasternack
Williams, the program's all-time winningest coach with 313 wins, was fired on March 9 after a 6–22 season, his worst season in his 19-year tenure at UCSB.[269] The Gauchos hired Arizona associate head coach and former New Orleans head coach Pasternack on March 30.[270]

UNC Wilmington

Kevin Keatts


C. B. McGrath
Keatts left Wilmington on March 17 after 3 seasons for the NC State opening.[243] The Seahawks hired ex-Kansas player and North Carolina assistant McGrath on April 4.[271]

USC Upstate

Eddie Payne

Kyle Perry
Citing complications from surgeries on both of his ankles during the off-season, the 66-year-old Payne announced his retirement on October 3, 2017 after 15 seasons at USC Upstate and 32 overall as head coach. Associate head coach Perry was initially named interim head coach of the Spartans, but had the interim tag removed on October 20 and was named full-time head coach.[272][273]

VCU

Will Wade


Mike Rhoades
Wade left VCU on March 20 after two seasons to take the LSU head coaching job.[232] The Rams brought back former assistant Rhoades the next day, this time as head coach.[258]

Washington

Lorenzo Romar


Mike Hopkins
Romar was fired on March 15 after 15 seasons at Washington. Romar finished with an overall record of 298–195 at his alma mater, but this season, in which the Huskies finished 9–22 overall and 2–16 in Pac-12 play, was the sixth straight year in which the team failed to make the NCAA tournament, despite featuring two first-round NBA draft picks in 2015–16 (Marquese Chriss and Dejounte Murray) and the eventual #1 overall draft pick this season in Markelle Fultz.[274] Washington hired Syracuse assistant Mike Hopkins on March 19, who had been designated as Syracuse's head coach-in-waiting when Boeheim retires.[275]

Youngstown State

Jerry Slocum


Jerrod Calhoun
The 65-year-old Slocum announced his retirement on March 7 after 12 seasons at Youngstown State and 42 as an NCAA head coach. He left with 142 wins with the Penguins, the most in the program's Division I history, and 723 overall.[276] Calhoun was hired from Division II Fairmont State on March 25, fresh off the Falcons' loss in the D-II championship game.[277]


Attendances



2016-17 College basketball teams average home attendances of at least 10,000[278]:































































































































































































































Team
Total attendance
Home average
Kentucky 397,148 23,361
Syracuse 367,068 21,592
Louisville 396,333 20,859
North Carolina 293,219 18,326
Maryland 303,676 17,863
Wisconsin 311,166 17,287
Indiana 290,809 17,106
North Carolina St. 301,646 16,758
Kansas 279,412 16,436
Creighton 302,887 15,941
Nebraska 277,739 15,429
Arkansas 267,825 14,879
Michigan St. 236,752 14,797
BYU 264,588 14,699
Arizona 261,478 14,526
Iowa St. 228,326 14,270
Tennessee 227,725 14,232
Virginia 211,671 14,111
Iowa 207,528 13,835
Purdue 245,916 13,662
Marquette 252,858 13,308
Alabama 196,655 13,110
New Mexico 208,492 13,030
Utah 220,959 12,997
Dayton 220,012 12,941
Texas 218,082 12,828
Illinois 165,409 12,723
Ohio St. 257,957 12,283
San Diego St. 244,190 12,209
Memphis 240,579 12,028
South Carolina 227,911 11,995
Kansas St. 214,252 11,902
Michigan 197,398 11,611
UNLV 196,219 11,542
LSU 204,890 11,382
Vanderbilt 178,167 11,135
Wichita St. 162,088 10,805
Minnesota 182,006 10,706
West Virginia 158,750 10,583
UConn 177,027 10,413
Xavier 164,501 10,281
California 183,293 10,182
Oklahoma 150,003 10,000


See also



  • 2016–17 NCAA Division I women's basketball season


Notes





  1. ^ abcdefg Top seed in conference tournament




References





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  247. ^ Goodman, Jeff (March 5, 2017). "Tony Benford out as North Texas coach after 5 seasons". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 6, 2017.


  248. ^ Al-Khateeb, Zac (June 5, 2017). "Ohio State fires Thad Matta, announces search for replacement". Sportingnews.com. Retrieved June 5, 2017.


  249. ^ Goodman, Jeff (March 24, 2017). "Oklahoma State assistant Mike Boynton Jr. replaces Brad Underwood as next head coach". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 27, 2017.


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  252. ^ "Tyler Geving Will Not Return As Portland State Men's Basketball Coach In 2017-18" (Press release). Portland State Vikings. March 15, 2017. Retrieved March 15, 2017.


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  254. ^ "Presbyterian coach Gregg Nibert resigns after 28 seasons". ESPN.com. April 12, 2017. Retrieved April 12, 2017.


  255. ^ "Presbyterian hires Wofford's Kerns as men's basketball coach". foxsports.com. Associated Press. May 23, 2017. Retrieved May 24, 2017.


  256. ^ Borzello, Jeff (March 7, 2017). "Quinnipiac fires Tom Moore after 10 seasons". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 7, 2017.


  257. ^ Borzello, Jeff; Goodman, Jeff (March 27, 2017). "Quinnipiac hires Baker Dunleavy". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 27, 2017.


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  259. ^ "Pera Named 25th Men's Basketball Coach" (Press release). Rice Owls. March 23, 2017. Retrieved March 23, 2017.


  260. ^ Goodman, Jeff (April 10, 2017). "Sources: San Diego State coach Steve Fisher decides to retire". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 10, 2017.


  261. ^ "MEN'S BASKETBALL HEAD COACH DAVE WOJCIK RESIGNS". SJSUSpartans.com. July 10, 2017. Retrieved July 11, 2017.


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  263. ^ "Cameron Dollar out as head coach at Seattle after 8 seasons". ABC Seattle. Associated Press. March 13, 2017. Retrieved March 23, 2017.


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  278. ^ http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/Reports/attend/2016.pdf










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