NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship records
Champions, runners-up, and locations
Year |
Champion |
Runner-up |
Venue and city |
1999 |
Connecticut | 77 |
Duke | 74 |
Tropicana Field | St. Petersburg, Florida |
2000 |
Michigan State (2) | 89 |
Florida | 76 |
RCA Dome | Indianapolis, Indiana (4) |
2001 |
Duke (3) | 82 |
Arizona | 72 |
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome | Minneapolis, Minnesota (3) |
2002 |
Maryland | 64 |
Indiana | 52 |
Georgia Dome | Atlanta, Georgia (2) |
2003 |
Syracuse | 81 |
Kansas | 78 |
Louisiana Superdome | New Orleans, Louisiana (4) |
2004 |
Connecticut (2) | 82 |
Georgia Tech | 73 |
Alamodome | San Antonio, Texas (2) |
2005 |
North Carolina (4) | 75 |
Illinois | 70 |
Edward Jones Dome | St. Louis, Missouri (3) |
2006 |
Florida | 73 |
UCLA | 57 |
RCA Dome | Indianapolis, Indiana (5) |
2007 |
Florida (2) | 84 |
Ohio State | 75 |
Georgia Dome | Atlanta, Georgia (3) |
2008† |
Kansas (3) | 75 |
Memphis* | 68 |
Alamodome | San Antonio, Texas (3) |
2009 |
North Carolina (5) | 89 |
Michigan State | 72 |
Ford Field | Detroit, Michigan |
2010 |
Duke (4) | 61 |
Butler | 59 |
Lucas Oil Stadium | Indianapolis, Indiana (6) |
2011 |
Connecticut (3) | 53 |
Butler | 41 |
Reliant Stadium | Houston, Texas (2) |
2012 |
Kentucky (8) | 67 |
Kansas | 59 |
Mercedes-Benz Superdome | New Orleans, Louisiana (5) |
2013 |
Louisville (3) | 82 |
Michigan | 76 |
Georgia Dome | Atlanta, Georgia (4) |
2014 |
Connecticut (4) | 60 |
Kentucky | 54 |
AT&T Stadium | Arlington, Texas |
2015 |
Duke (5) | 68 |
Wisconsin | 63 |
Lucas Oil Stadium | Indianapolis, Indiana (7) |
2016 |
Villanova (2) | 77 |
North Carolina | 74 |
NRG Stadium | Houston, Texas (3) |
* Appearance vacated due to NCAA violations.
† denotes overtime games. Multiple †'s indicate number of overtimes.
All-time coaching records
Single game wins
Final Four appearances
Multiple championship coaches
All-time team records
NCAA Championships
Rank |
School |
# and Coach(es) |
1 |
UCLA |
11 - John Wooden (10), Jim Harrick (1) |
2 |
Kentucky |
8 - Adolph Rupp (4), Joe B. Hall (1), Rick Pitino (1), Tubby Smith (1) John Calipari (1) |
3 |
North Carolina |
5 - Frank McGuire (1), Dean Smith (2), Roy Williams (2) |
3 |
Indiana |
5 - Branch McCracken (2), Bob Knight (3) |
3 |
Duke |
5 - Mike Krzyzewski |
6 |
Connecticut |
4 - Jim Calhoun (3), Kevin Ollie (1) |
7 |
Kansas |
3 - Phog Allen (1), Larry Brown (1), Bill Self (1) |
7 |
Louisville |
3 - Denny Crum (2), Rick Pitino (1) |
9 |
Villanova |
2- Jay Wright (1), Rollie Massimino (1) |
9 |
Cincinnati |
2 - Ed Jucker |
9 |
Florida |
2 - Billy Donovan |
9 |
Michigan State |
2 - Jud Heathcote (1), Tom Izzo (1) |
9 |
NC State |
2 - Norm Sloan (1), Jim Valvano (1) |
9 |
Oklahoma State |
2 - Henry Iba |
9 |
San Francisco |
2 - Phil Woolpert |
NCAA Championship Game appearances
*Does not include appearances vacated by the NCAA.
NCAA Tournament Final Four appearances
*Does not include appearances vacated by the NCAA.
NCAA Tournament appearances
* NCAA vacated 2-1 tournament record (1988).
^ NCAA vacated 5-2 tournament record (1980, 1999).
† NCAA vacated 4-1 tournament record (1971).
Consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances
* NCAA vacated 1999 and 2008 appearances.
^ NCAA vacated 1980 appearance.
† NCAA vacated 1999 appearance.
NCAA Tournament victories
* NCAA vacated 2-1 tournament record (1988). Otherwise wins would be 123.
^ NCAA vacated 5-2 tournament record (1980, 1999). Otherwise wins would be 102.
† NCAA vacated 2-1 tournament record (1996). Otherwise wins would be 59.
- Margin of 10 points: Oregon (1939), Kentucky (1949), San Francisco (1956), Ohio State (1960), UCLA (1967, 1970, 1973), Michigan State (1979, 2000), Indiana (1981), Duke (2001), and North Carolina (2009), are teams to win every game in the tournament by 10 points or more on their way to a championship.
Individual single-game records
- 61, Austin Carr, Notre Dame vs. Ohio, 1970
- 25, Austin Carr, Notre Dame vs. Ohio, 1970
- 44, Austin Carr, Notre Dame vs. Ohio, 1970
- 11, Jeff Fryer, Loyola Marymount vs. Michigan, 1990
- Three-point Field Goal Attempts
- 22, Jeff Fryer, Loyola Marymount vs. Arkansas, 1989
- 23, Bob Carney, Bradley vs. Colorado, 1954
- 23, Travis Mays, Texas vs. Georgia, 1990
- 27, Travis Mays, Texas vs. Georgia, 1990
- 27, David Robinson, Navy vs. Syracuse, 1986
- 34, Fred Cohen, Temple vs. Connecticut, 1956
- 18, Mark Wade, UNLV vs. Indiana, 1987
- 11, Shaquille O'Neal, LSU vs. BYU, 1992
- 8, Ty Lawson, North Carolina vs. Michigan State, 2009
- 8, Russ Smith, Louisville vs. North Carolina A&T, 2013
- Triple-doubles (see Final Four records section for other tournament triple-doubles)
- Assists were not recorded nationally by the NCAA until the 1984–85 season, and steals and blocks were not officially added as NCAA statistics until the 1986–87 season. As a result, the NCAA only officially recognizes tournament triple-doubles recorded from 1987 onward.[1]
- Gary Grant, Michigan — 24 points, 10 rebounds, 10 assists vs. North Carolina, East Regional second round, March 14, 1987[2]
- Shaquille O'Neal, LSU — 26 points, 13 rebounds, 11 blocks vs. BYU, West Regional first round, March 19, 1992[3]
- David Cain, St. John's — 12 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists vs. Texas Tech, East Regional first round, March 18, 1993[4]
- Andre Miller, Utah — 18 points, 14 rebounds, 13 assists vs. Arizona, West Regional Final, March 21, 1998[3]
- Dwyane Wade, Marquette — 29 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists vs. Kentucky, Midwest Regional Final, March 29, 2003[3]
- Cole Aldrich, Kansas — 13 points, 20 rebounds, 10 blocks vs. Dayton, Midwest Regional Second Round, March 22, 2009
- Draymond Green, Michigan State — 23 points, 11 rebounds, 10 assists vs. UCLA, Southeast Regional Second Round, March 18, 2011[1]
- Draymond Green, Michigan State — 24 points, 12 rebounds, 10 assists vs. LIU–Brooklyn, West Regional Second Round, March 16, 2012[5]
Team single-game records
All tournament games
- 264, Loyola Marymount vs. Michigan, 1990
- Fewest points for a single team
- 20, North Carolina vs. Pittsburgh, 1941
- 52, Iowa vs. Notre Dame, 1970
- 112, Marshall vs. Southwestern Louisiana, 1972
- 21, Loyola Marymount vs. Michigan, 1990
- Three-point Field Goal Attempts
- 43, Saint Joseph's vs. Boston College, 1997
- 43, Arizona vs. Illinois, 2001
- 56, Arizona vs. Illinois, 2001
- 86, Notre Dame vs. Tennessee Tech, 1958
- 36, North Carolina vs. Loyola Marymount, 1988
- 15, Kentucky vs. Stony Brook, 2016
- 20, Louisville vs. North Carolina A&T, 2013
- 35, UCLA vs. Kansas, 2007
National Championship game
- 181, UCLA vs. Duke, 1964
- Most points by a single team
- 103, UNLV vs. Duke, 1990
- Largest margin at half time
- 21, North Carolina vs. Michigan State, 2009
- Largest score at half time
- 55, North Carolina vs. Michigan State, 2009
- Largest margin of victory
- 30, UNLV vs. Duke, 1990
Final Four records
Final Four Single Game - Individual
- 58, Bill Bradley, Princeton vs. Wichita St., N3rd, 3-20-1965
- 22, Bill Bradley, Princeton vs. Wichita St., N3rd, 3-20-1965
- 42, Lennie Rosenbluth, North Carolina vs. Michigan St., NSF, 3-22-1957
- 10, Freddie Banks, UNLV vs. Indiana, NSF, 3-28-1987
- 27, Bill Russell, San Francisco vs. Iowa, CH, 3-23-1956
- 18, Mark Wade, UNLV vs. Indiana, NSF, 3-28-1987
- 7, Jeff Withey, Kansas vs. Ohio State, NSF, 3-31-2012
- 18, Ty Lawson, Michigan State vs. North Carolina, CH, 4-6-2009
- 8, Ty Lawson, Michigan State vs. North Carolina, CH, 4-6-2009
- Final Four Triple-Doubles
- The NCAA recognizes these achievements as unofficial triple-doubles. As noted earlier, assists, steals, and blocks were not kept on a national basis until well into the 1980s; the current array of national statistics did not fully take shape until the 1986–87 season.[1]
- B.H. Born, Kansas vs. Indiana, CH, 3-18-1953: 26 pts., 15 rebs. & 13 blocked shots.[6]
- Oscar Robertson, Cincinnati vs. Louisville, N3rd, 3-21-1959: 39 pts., 17 rebs. & 10 asts.
- Magic Johnson, Michigan St. vs. Pennsylvania, NSF, 3-24-1979: 29 pts., 10 rebs. & 10 asts.
- Largest margin of victory: 44, Villanova vs. Oklahoma, 4-2-2016
Key to initials: NSF- National Semi-Final; N3rd - National Third-Place Game (Discontinued after 1981); CH - Championship Game.
See Also
NCAA Tournament Records Book
References
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