1980 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament

1980 NCAA Men's Division I
Basketball Tournament
Season 197980
Teams 48
Finals site Market Square Arena
Indianapolis, Indiana
Champions Louisville (1st title, 1st title game,
4th Final Four)
Runner-up UCLA (Vacated) (11th title game,
14th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coach Denny Crum (1st title)
MOP Darrell Griffith Louisville
Attendance 321,260
Top scorer Joe Barry Carroll Purdue
(158 points)
NCAA Men's Division I Tournaments
«1979 1981»

The 1980 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament involved 48 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 6, 1980, and ended with the championship game on March 24 at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, Indiana. A total of 48 games were played, including a national third place game.

Louisville, coached by Denny Crum, won the national title with a 59-54 victory in the final game over UCLA, coached by Larry Brown. Darrell Griffith of Louisville was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

Structurally speaking, this was the first tournament of the modern era.[1] For the first time:

1. An unlimited number of at-large teams could come from any conference (From 1975-1979, conferences were only allowed one at-large entry).

2. The bracket was seeded to make each region as evenly competitive as possible (previously, geographic considerations had trumped this).

3. All teams were seeded solely based on the subjective judgment of the committee (in 1979, seeding was also partially based on the prior performance of a conference winner's conference).

In the second year the tournament field was seeded, no number one seed reached the Final Four. This would not happen again until 2006 and also occurred in 2011.

UCLA would later forfeit its place in the standings after players representing the school were declared ineligible by the NCAA.

Locations

Greensboro
Denton
Bowling Green
Lincoln
Ogden
Providence
Tempe
West Lafayette
1980 sites for first and second round games
Philadelphia
Lexington
Houston
Tucson
Indianapolis
1980 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

First and second rounds

Later rounds

Region Site
East Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (The Spectrum)
Mideast Lexington, Kentucky (Rupp Arena)
Midwest Houston, Texas (The Summit)
West Tucson, Arizona (McKale Center)
Finals Indianapolis, Indiana (Market Square Arena)

Teams

Region Seed Team Coach Finished Final Opponent Score
East
East 1 Syracuse Jim Boeheim Sweet Sixteen5 IowaL 88-77
East 2 Maryland Lefty Driesell Sweet Sixteen3 GeorgetownL 74-68
East 3 Georgetown John Thompson Regional Runner-up5 IowaL 81-80
East 4 North Carolina State Norm Sloan Round of 325 IowaL 77-64
East 5 Iowa Lute Olson Fourth Place2 PurdueL 75-58
East 6 Iona Jim Valvano Round of 323 GeorgetownL 74-71
East 7 Tennessee Don DeVoe Round of 322 MarylandL 86-75
East 8 Villanova Rollie Massimino Round of 321 SyracuseL 97-83
East 9 Marquette Hank Raymonds Round of 488 VillanovaL 77-59
East 10 Furman Eddie Holbrook Round of 487 TennesseeL 80-69
East 11 Holy Cross George Blaney Round of 486 IonaL 84-78
East 12 VCU J. D. Barnett Round of 485 IowaL 86-72
Mideast
Mideast 1 Kentucky Joe B. Hall Sweet Sixteen4 DukeL 55-54
Mideast 2 Indiana Bob Knight Sweet Sixteen6 PurdueL 76-69
Mideast 3 St. John's Lou Carnesecca Round of 326 PurdueL 87-72
Mideast 4 Duke Bill E. Foster Regional Runner-up6 PurdueL 68-60
Mideast 5 Washington State George Raveling Round of 4812 PennL 62-55
Mideast 6 Purdue Lee Rose Third Place5 IowaW 75-58
Mideast 7 Virginia Tech Charles Moir Round of 322 IndianaL 68-59
Mideast 8 Florida State Joe Williams Round of 321 KentuckyL 97-78
Mideast 9 Toledo Bob Nichols Round of 488 Florida StateL 94-91
Mideast 10 Western Kentucky Gene Keady Round of 487 Virginia TechL 89-85
Mideast 11 La Salle Lefty Ervin Round of 486 PurdueL 90-82
Mideast 12 Penn Bob Weinhauer Round of 324 DukeL 52-42
Midwest
Midwest 1 LSU Dale Brown Regional Runner-up2 LouisvilleL 86-66
Midwest 2 Louisville Denny Crum Champion8 UCLAW 59-54
Midwest 3 North Carolina Dean Smith Round of 326 Texas A&ML 78-61
Midwest 4 Notre Dame Digger Phelps Round of 325 MissouriL 87-84
Midwest 5 Missouri Norm Stewart Sweet Sixteen1 LSUL 68-63
Midwest 6 Texas A&M Shelby Metcalf Sweet Sixteen2 LouisvilleL 66-55
Midwest 7 Kansas State Jack Hartman Round of 322 LouisvilleL 71-69
Midwest 8 Alcorn State Davey Whitney Round of 321 LSUL 98-88
Midwest 9 South Alabama Cliff Ellis Round of 488 Alcorn StateL 70-62
Midwest 10 Arkansas Eddie Sutton Round of 487 Kansas StateL 71-53
Midwest 11 Bradley Dick Versace Round of 486 Texas A&ML 55-53
Midwest 12 San Jose State Bill Berry Round of 485 MissouriL 61-51
West
West 1 DePaul Ray Meyer Round of 328 UCLAL 77-71
West 2 Oregon State Ralph Miller Round of 3210 LamarL 81-77
West 3 BYU Frank Arnold Round of 326 ClemsonL 71-66
West 4 Ohio State Eldon Miller Sweet Sixteen8 UCLAL 72-68
West 5 Arizona State Ned Wulk Round of 324 Ohio StateL 89-75
West 6 Clemson Bill Foster Regional Runner-up8 UCLAL 85-74
West 7 Weber State Neil McCarthy Round of 4810 LamarL 87-86
West 8 UCLA Larry Brown Runner Up2 LouisvilleL 59-54
West 9 Old Dominion Paul Webb Round of 488 UCLAL 87-74
West 10 Lamar Billy Tubbs Sweet Sixteen6 ClemsonL 74-66
West 11 Utah State Rod Tueller Round of 486 ClemsonL 76-73
West 12 Loyola Marymount Ron Jacobs Round of 485 Arizona StateL 99-71

Bracket

* indicates overtime; in case of multiple overtime, there is one * per overtime.

East region

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
8  Villanova 77  
9  Marquette 59  
  8  Villanova 83  
    1  Syracuse 97  
      
        
  1  Syracuse 77  
  5  Iowa 88  
        
        
  4  N.C. State 64
    5  Iowa 77  
5  Iowa 86
12  Virginia Commonwealth 72  
  5  Iowa 81
  3  Georgetown 80
6  Iona 84  
11  Holy Cross 78  
  6  Iona 71
    3  Georgetown 74  
      
        
  3  Georgetown 74
  2  Maryland 68  
        
        
  2  Maryland 86
    7  Tennessee 75  
7  Tennessee 80
10  Furman 69  

Midwest region

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
8  Alcorn State 70  
9  South Alabama 62  
  8  Alcorn State 88  
    1  LSU 98  
      
        
  1  LSU 68  
  5  Missouri 63  
        
        
  4  Notre Dame 84*
    5  Missouri 87  
5  Missouri 61
12  San Jose State 51  
  1  LSU 66
  2  Louisville 86
6  Texas A&M 55  
11  Bradley 53  
  6  Texas A&M 78
    3  North Carolina 61**  
      
        
  6  Texas A&M 55*
  2  Louisville 66  
        
        
  2  Louisville 71
    7  Kansas State 69*  
7  Kansas State 71
10  Arkansas 53  

Mideast region

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
8  Florida State 94  
9  Toledo 91  
  8  Florida State 78  
    1  Kentucky 97  
      
        
  1  Kentucky 54  
  4  Duke 55  
        
        
  4  Duke 52
    12  Pennsylvania 42  
5  Washington State 55
12  Pennsylvania 62  
  4  Duke 60
  6  Purdue 68
6  Purdue 90  
11  La Salle 82  
  6  Purdue 87
    3  St. John's 72  
      
        
  6  Purdue 76
  2  Indiana 69  
        
        
  2  Indiana 68
    7  Virginia Tech 59  
7  Virginia Tech 89
10  Western Kentucky 85*  

West region

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
8  UCLA 87  
9  Old Dominion 74  
  8  UCLA 77  
    1  DePaul 71  
      
        
  8  UCLA 72  
  4  Ohio State 68  
        
        
  4  Ohio State 89
    5  Arizona State 75  
5  Arizona State 99
12  Loyola-CA 71  
  8  UCLA 85
  6  Clemson 74
6  Clemson 76  
11  Utah State 73  
  6  Clemson 71
    3  BYU 66  
      
        
  6  Clemson 74
  10  Lamar 66  
        
        
  2  Oregon State 77
    10  Lamar 81  
7  Weber State 86
10  Lamar 87  

Final Four

  National Semifinals     National Finals
                 
  E5  Iowa 72  
  MW2  Louisville 80    
      MW2  Louisville 59
      W8  UCLA 54
  ME6  Purdue 62    
  W8  UCLA 67   National Third Place Game
 
ME6  Purdue 75
  E5  Iowa 58

References

  1. "NCAA 2008 Final Four - San Antonio". Archived from the original on 2009-05-06. Retrieved 2009-03-06.
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