1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

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1993 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season1992–93
Teams64
Finals siteLouisiana Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana
ChampionsNorth Carolina (3rd title)
Runner-upMichigan (Vacated) (5th title game)
Semifinalists
Winning coachDean Smith (2nd title)
MOPDonald Williams (North Carolina)
Attendance70,719
Top scorerDonald Williams (North Carolina)
(118 points)
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
«1992 1994»

The 1993 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament involved 64 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 18, 1993, and ended with the championship game on April 5 in New Orleans, Louisiana. A total of 63 games were played.

North Carolina, coached by Dean Smith, won the national title with a 77–71 victory in the final game over Michigan, coached by Steve Fisher. Donald Williams of North Carolina was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. The most memorable play in the championship game came in the last seconds as Michigan's Chris Webber tried to call a timeout with his team down by 2 points when double-teamed by North Carolina.[1] Michigan had already used all of its timeouts, so Webber's gaffe resulted in a technical foul. Michigan subsequently vacated its entire 1992-93 schedule, including its six NCAA Tournament games, after it emerged that Webber had received under-the-table payments from a booster.

In a game that featured two great individual battles (one between Bobby Hurley and Jason Kidd, and the other between Grant Hill and Lamond Murray), two time defending champion Duke was upset in the second round by California.

This year's Final Four was the closest the tournament came to having all four top seeds advance to the semifinals until all four did advance in the 2008 tournament. North Carolina received a #1 seeding in this tournament, having gaining entry into the tournament with an at-large bid; the only time this has ever been the case. Indiana University was the only top seed not to make it out of its regional; it was defeated by the 2-seed, the University of Kansas, in the Midwest regional finals. This tournament is also notable for the uneven distribution of first-round upsets. While there were no upsets in the East, one 'minor' upset in the Midwest (9th seed Xavier defeated 8th seed New Orleans), and one 'medium' upset in the Southeast (11th seed Tulane beat 6th seed Kansas State), the West featured three remarkable upsets amongst the top 5 seeds, with a 12, a 13, and a 15-seed advancing to the second round in that region. At the time, 15-seed Santa Clara's victory over 2-seed Arizona was only the second such upset, and following the 2013 tournament, is one of only seven times that a 15-seed defeated a 2-seed since the tournament field expanded to 64 teams.

Locations

First and Second Rounds

Later Rounds

Region Site
East East Rutherford, New Jersey (Meadowlands Arena)
Midwest St. Louis, Missouri (St. Louis Arena)
Southeast Charlotte, North Carolina (Charlotte Coliseum)
West Seattle, Washington (Kingdome)
Finals New Orleans, Louisiana (Louisiana Superdome)

Teams

Region Seed Team Coach Finished Final Opponent Score
East
East 1 North Carolina Dean Smith Champion 1 Michigan W 77-71
East 2 Cincinnati Bob Huggins Regional Runner-up 1 North Carolina L 75-68
East 3 Massachusetts John Calipari Round of 32 6 Virginia L 71-56
East 4 Arkansas Nolan Richardson Sweet Sixteen 1 North Carolina L 80-74
East 5 St. John's Brian Mahoney Round of 32 4 Arkansas L 80-74
East 6 Virginia Jeff Jones Sweet Sixteen 2 Cincinnati L 71-54
East 7 New Mexico State Neil McCarthy Round of 32 2 Cincinnati L 92-55
East 8 Rhode Island Al Skinner Round of 32 1 North Carolina L 112-67
East 9 Purdue Gene Keady Round of 64 8 Rhode Island L 74-68
East 10 Nebraska Danny Nee Round of 64 7 New Mexico State L 93-79
East 11 Manhattan Fran Fraschilla Round of 64 6 Virginia L 78-66
East 12 Texas Tech James Dickey Round of 64 5 St. John's L 85-67
East 13 Holy Cross George Blaney Round of 64 4 Arkansas L 94-64
East 14 Penn Fran Dunphy Round of 64 3 Massachusetts L 54-50
East 15 Coppin State Ron Mitchell Round of 64 2 Cincinnati L 93-66
East 16 East Carolina Eddie Payne Round of 64 1 North Carolina L 85-65
Midwest
Midwest 1 Indiana Bob Knight Regional Runner-up 2 Kansas L 83-77
Midwest 2 Kansas Roy Williams National Semifinals 1 North Carolina L 78-68
Midwest 3 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Round of 32 6 California L 82-77
Midwest 4 Louisville Denny Crum Sweet Sixteen 1 Indiana L 82-69
Midwest 5 Oklahoma State Eddie Sutton Round of 32 4 Louisville L 78-63
Midwest 6 California Todd Bozeman Sweet Sixteen 2 Kansas L 93-76
Midwest 7 BYU Roger Reid Round of 32 2 Kansas L 90-76
Midwest 8 New Orleans Tim Floyd Round of 64 9 Xavier L 73-55
Midwest 9 Xavier Pete Gillen Round of 32 1 Indiana L 73-70
Midwest 10 SMU John Shumate Round of 64 7 BYU L 80-71
Midwest 11 LSU Dale Brown Round of 64 6 California L 66-64
Midwest 12 Marquette Kevin O'Neill Round of 64 5 Oklahoma State L 74-62
Midwest 13 Delaware Steve Steinwedel Round of 64 4 Louisville L 76-70
Midwest 14 Southern Illinois Rich Herrin Round of 64 3 Duke L 105-70
Midwest 15 Ball State Dick Hunsaker Round of 64 2 Kansas L 94-72
Midwest 16 Wright State Ralph Underhill Round of 64 1 Indiana L 97-54
Southeast
Southeast 1 Kentucky Rick Pitino National Semifinals 1 Michigan L 81-78
Southeast 2 Seton Hall P.J. Carlesimo Round of 32 7 Western Kentucky L 72-68
Southeast 3 Florida State Pat Kennedy Regional Runner-up 1 Kentucky L 106-81
Southeast 4 Iowa Tom Davis Round of 32 5 Wake Forest L 84-78
Southeast 5 Wake Forest Dave Odom Sweet Sixteen 1 Kentucky L 103-69
Southeast 6 Kansas State Dana Altman Round of 64 11 Tulane L 55-53
Southeast 7 Western Kentucky Ralph Willard Sweet Sixteen 3 Florida State L 81-78
Southeast 8 Utah Rick Majerus Round of 32 1 Kentucky L 83-62
Southeast 9 Pittsburgh Paul Evans Round of 64 8 Utah L 86-65
Southeast 10 Memphis State Larry Finch Round of 64 7 Western Kentucky L 55-52
Southeast 11 Tulane Perry Clark Round of 32 3 Florida State L 94-63
Southeast 12 Chattanooga Mack McCarthy Round of 64 5 Wake Forest L 81-58
Southeast 13 Northeast Louisiana Mike Vining Round of 64 4 Iowa L 82-69
Southeast 14 Evansville Jim Crews Round of 64 3 Florida State L 82-70
Southeast 15 Tennessee State Frankie Allen Round of 64 2 Seton Hall L 81-59
Southeast 16 Rider Kevin Bannon Round of 64 1 Kentucky L 96-52
West
West 1 Michigan* Steve Fisher Runner Up (Later Vacated) 1 North Carolina L 77-71
West 2 Arizona Lute Olson Round of 64 15 Santa Clara L 64-61
West 3 Vanderbilt Eddie Fogler Sweet Sixteen 7 Temple L 67-59
West 4 Georgia Tech Bobby Cremins Round of 64 13 Southern L 93-78
West 5 New Mexico Dave Bliss Round of 64 12 George Washington L 82-68
West 6 Illinois Lou Henson Round of 32 3 Vanderbilt L 85-68
West 7 Temple John Chaney Regional Runner-up 1 Michigan L 77-72
West 8 Iowa State Johnny Orr Round of 64 9 UCLA L 81-70
West 9 UCLA Jim Harrick Round of 32 1 Michigan L 86-84
West 10 Missouri Norm Stewart Round of 64 7 Temple L 75-61
West 11 Long Beach State Seth Greenberg Round of 64 6 Illinois L 75-72
West 12 George Washington Mike Jarvis Sweet Sixteen 1 Michigan L 72-64
West 13 Southern Ben Jobe Round of 32 12 George Washington L 90-80
West 14 Boise State Bob Dye Round of 64 3 Vanderbilt L 92-72
West 15 Santa Clara Dick Davey Round of 32 7 Temple L 68-57
West 16 Coastal Carolina Russ Bergman Round of 64 1 Michigan L 84-53

Bracket

East region

First round Quarter-finals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 North Carolina 85
16 East Carolina 65
1 North Carolina 112
8 Rhode Island 67
8 Rhode Island 74
9 Purdue 68
1 North Carolina 80
4 Arkansas 74
5 St John's 85
12 Texas Tech 67
5 St John's 74
4 Arkansas 80
4 Arkansas 94
13 Holy Cross 64
1 North Carolina 75
2 Cincinnati 68*
6 Virginia 78
11 Manhattan 66
6 Virginia 71
3 Massachusetts 56
3 Massachusetts 54
14 Pennsylvania 50
6 Virginia 54
2 Cincinnati 71
7 New Mexico St. 93
10 Nebraska 79
7 New Mexico St. 55
2 Cincinnati 92
2 Cincinnati 93
15 Coppin St. 66

Midwest region

First round Quarter-finals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 Indiana 97
16 Wright St. 54
1 Indiana 73
9 Xavier 70
8 New Orleans 55
9 Xavier 73
1 Indiana 82
4 Louisville 69
5 Oklahoma St. 74
12 Marquette 62
5 Oklahoma St. 63
4 Louisville 78
4 Louisville 76
13 Delaware 70
1 Indiana 77
2 Kansas 83
6 California 66
11 LSU 64
6 California 82
3 Duke 77
3 Duke 105
14 Southern Illinois 70
6 California 76
2 Kansas 93
7 BYU 80
10 SMU 71
7 BYU 76
2 Kansas 90
2 Kansas 94
15 Ball St. 72

Southeast region

First round Quarter-finals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 Kentucky 96
16 Rider 52
1 Kentucky 83
8 Utah 62
8 Utah 86
9 Pittsburgh 65
1 Kentucky 103
5 Wake Forest 69
5 Wake Forest 81
12 Tennessee-Chattanooga 58
5 Wake Forest 84
4 Iowa 78
4 Iowa 82
13 Northeast Louisiana 69
1 Kentucky 106
3 Florida St. 81
6 Kansas St. 53
11 Tulane 55
11 Tulane 63
3 Florida St. 94
3 Florida St. 82
14 Evansville 70
3 Florida St. 81
7 Western Kentucky 78*
7 Western Kentucky 55
10 Memphis St. 52
7 Western Kentucky 72
2 Seton Hall 68
2 Seton Hall 81
15 Tennessee St. 59

West region

First round Quarter-finals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
            
1 Michigan* 84
16 Coastal Carolina 53
1 Michigan* 86
9 UCLA 84*
8 Iowa St. 70
9 UCLA 81
1 Michigan* 72
12 George Washington 64
5 New Mexico 68
12 George Washington 82
12 George Washington 90
13 Southern 80
4 Georgia Tech 78
13 Southern 93
1 Michigan * 77
7 Temple 72
6 Illinois 75
11 Long Beach St. 72
6 Illinois 68
3 Vanderbilt 85
3 Vanderbilt 92
14 Boise St 72
3 Vanderbilt 59
7 Temple 67
7 Temple 75
10 Missouri 61
7 Temple 68
15 Santa Clara 57
2 Arizona 61
15 Santa Clara 64

Final Four

National Semifinals National Championship Game
      
E1 North Carolina 78
M2 Kansas 68
E1 North Carolina 77
W1 Michigan * 71
SE1 Kentucky 78
W1 Michigan * 81*

* Michigan's entire 1992-93 schedule results were vacated, on November 7, 2002, as part of the settlement of the University of Michigan basketball scandal. Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with Michigan removing the wins from its own record.

Announcers

References