2003 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament

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2003 NCAA Men's Division I
Basketball Tournament
2003 Final Four logo
2003 Final Four logo
Season 2002–03
Teams 65
Finals site Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana
Champions Syracuse (1st title, 3rd title game,
4th Final Four)
Runner-up Kansas (7th title game,
12th Final Four)
Semifinalists Marquette (3rd Final Four)
Texas (3rd Final Four)
Winning coach Jim Boeheim (1st title)
MOP Carmelo Anthony Syracuse
Attendance 715,080
Top scorer Carmelo Anthony Syracuse
(21 points)
NCAA Men's Division I Tournaments
«2002  2004»

The 2003 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament involved 65 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 18, 2003, and ended with the championship game on April 7 in New Orleans, Louisiana. A total of 64 games were played. Syracuse University, coached by Jim Boeheim, earned a 81-78 victory in the final game over Kansas, coached by Roy Williams. Carmelo Anthony of Syracuse was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. Syracuse beat four Big 12 teams on its way to the title: Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas. Those victories helped earn Boeheim the national title that had eluded him in 1987 and 1996.

Contents

Locations [edit]

The 2003 play-in game was played on Tuesday, March 18, at the University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio, as it had been since its inception in 2001.

The first and second-round games were played at the following sites:

March 20 and 22
Ford Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (Host: Big 12 Conference)
Jon M. Huntsman Center, Salt Lake City, Utah (Host: University of Utah)
RCA Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana (Hosts: Butler University and Horizon League)
Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena, Spokane Arena (Host: Washington State University)
March 21 and 23
Birmingham-Jefferson Convention Center, Birmingham, Alabama (Host: Southeastern Conference)
FleetCenter, Boston, Massachusetts (Host: Boston College)
Gaylord Entertainment Center, Nashville, Tennessee (Host: Vanderbilt University)
St. Pete Times Forum, Tampa, Florida (Host: University of South Florida)

The regional final sites were:

March 27 and 29
Midwest Regional, Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota (Host: University of Minnesota)
West Regional, Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim, Anaheim, California (Host: Big West Conference)
March 28 and 30
East Regional, Pepsi Arena, Albany, New York (Host: Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference and Siena College)
South Regional, Alamodome, San Antonio, Texas (Host: University of Texas at San Antonio)

Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four at the Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana, hosted by the Sun Belt Conference and the University of New Orleans. The semi-final games were held on April 5 and the final on April 7, 2003.

Qualifying teams [edit]

East Regional - Albany
Seed School Coach Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Oklahoma Kelvin Sampson Big 12 24-6 Tournament Champion
#2 Wake Forest Skip Prosser ACC 24-5 At-Large Bid
#3 Syracuse Jim Boeheim Big East 24-5 At-Large Bid
#4 Louisville Rick Pitino Conference USA 24-6 Tournament Champion
#5 Mississippi State Rick Stansbury SEC 21-9 At-Large Bid
#6 Oklahoma State Eddie Sutton Big 12 21-9 At-Large Bid
#7 Saint Joseph's Phil Martelli Atlantic 10 23-6 At-Large Bid
#8 California Ben Braun Pac-10 21-8 At-Large Bid
#9 North Carolina State Herb Sendek ACC 18-12 At-Large Bid
#10 Auburn Cliff Ellis SEC 20-11 At-Large Bid
#11 Pennsylvania Fran Dunphy Ivy League 22-5 Regular Season Champion
#12 Butler Todd Lickliter Horizon 25-5 At-Large Bid
#13 Austin Peay Dave Loos OVC 23-7 Tournament Champion
#14 Manhattan Bobby Gonzalez MAAC 23-6 Tournament Champion
#15 East Tennessee State Ed DeChellis Southern 20-10 Tournament Champion
#16 South Carolina State Cy Alexander MEAC 20-10 Tournament Champion
South Regional - San Antonio
Seed School Coach Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Texas Rick Barnes Big 12 22-6 At-Large Bid
#2 Florida Billy Donovan SEC 24-7 At-Large Bid
#3 Xavier Thad Matta Atlantic 10 25-5 At-Large Bid
#4 Stanford Mike Montgomery Pac-10 23-8 At-Large Bid
#5 Connecticut Jim Calhoun Big East 21-9 At-Large Bid
#6 Maryland Gary Williams ACC 19-9 At-Large Bid
#7 Michigan State Tom Izzo Big Ten 19-12 At-Large Bid
#8 LSU John Brady SEC 21-10 At-Large Bid
#9 Purdue Gene Keady Big Ten 18-10 At-Large Bid
#10 Colorado Ricardo Patton Big 12 20-11 At-Large Bid
#11 UNC Wilmington Brad Brownell CAA 24-6 Tournament Champion
#12 BYU Steve Cleveland Mountain West 23-8 At-Large Bid
#13 San Diego Brad Holland WCC 18-11 Tournament Champion
#14 Troy State Don Maestri Atlantic Sun 26-5 Tournament Champion
#15 Sam Houston St. Billy Kennedy Southland 24-9 Tournament Champion
#16 UNC Asheville Eddie Biedenbach Big South 14-16 Tournament Champion
Texas Southern Ronnie Courtney SWAC 18-12 Tournament Champion
Midwest Regional - Minneapolis
Seed School Coach Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Kentucky Tubby Smith SEC 29-3 Tournament Champion
#2 Pittsburgh Ben Howland Big East 26-4 Tournament Champion
#3 Marquette Tom Crean Conference USA 23-5 At-Large Bid
#4 Dayton Oliver Purnell Atlantic 10 24-5 Tournament Champion
#5 Wisconsin Bo Ryan Big Ten 22-7 At-Large Bid
#6 Missouri Quin Snyder Big 12 21-10 At-Large Bid
#7 Indiana Mike Davis Big Ten 20-12 At-Large Bid
#8 Oregon Ernie Kent Pac-10 23-9 Tournament Champion
#9 Utah Rick Majerus Mountain West 24-7 At-Large Bid
#10 Alabama Mark Gottfried SEC 17-11 At-Large Bid
#11 Southern Illinois Bruce Weber Missouri Valley 24-6 At-Large Bid
#12 Weber State Joe Cravens Big Sky 26-5 Tournament Champion
#13 Tulsa John Phillips WAC 22-9 Tournament Champion
#14 Holy Cross Ralph Willard Patriot 26-4 Tournament Champion
#15 Wagner Dereck Whittenburg Northeast 21-10 Tournament Champion
#16 IUPUI Ron Hunter Mid-Continent 20-13 Tournament Champion
West Regional - Anaheim
Seed School Coach Conference Record Berth Type
#1 Arizona Lute Olson Pac-10 25-3 At-Large Bid
#2 Kansas Roy Williams Big 12 25-7 At-Large Bid
#3 Duke Mike Krzyzewski ACC 24-6 Tournament Champion
#4 Illinois Bill Self Big Ten 24-6 Tournament Champion
#5 Notre Dame Mike Brey Big East 22-9 At-Large Bid
#6 Creighton Dana Altman Missouri Valley 29-4 Tournament Champion
#7 Memphis John Calipari Conference USA 23-6 At-Large Bid
#8 Cincinnati Bob Huggins Conference USA 17-11 At-Large Bid
#9 Gonzaga Mark Few WCC 23-8 At-Large Bid
#10 Arizona State Rob Evans Pac-10 19-11 At-Large Bid
#11 Central Michigan Jay Smith MAC 24-6 Tournament Champion
#12 UW-Milwaukee Bruce Pearl Horizon 24-7 Tournament Champion
#13 WKU Dennis Felton Sun Belt 24-8 Tournament Champion
#14 Colorado State Dale Layer Mountain West 19-13 Tournament Champion
#15 Utah State Stew Morrill Big West 24-8 Tournament Champion
#16 Vermont Tom Brennan America East 21-11 Tournament Champion

Bids by conference [edit]

Bids by Conference
Bids Conference(s)
6 Big 12, SEC
5 Big Ten, Pac-10
4 ACC, Big East, C-USA
3 Atlantic 10, Mountain West
2 Horizon, Missouri Valley, WCC
1 19 others

Final four [edit]

The Louisiana Superdome was host of the Final Four and National Championship in 2003.

At Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans

National Semifinals [edit]

  • April 5, 2003
    Freshman Carmelo Anthony scored 33 points leading the Syracuse Orangemen past the Texas Longhorns in the night cap of the National Semifinal doubleheader. Syracuse opened up a comfortable 2nd half lead, but that was trimmed to four with just 1:08 remaining. However, freshman Gerry McNamara iced the game with clutch foul shooting in the final minutes. The win put Syracuse and coach Jim Boeheim one win away from their first ever National Championship. Texas was the last number one seed remaining in the tournament.[1]

Championship Game [edit]

  • April 7, 2003
    This battle was described as which future Hall of Fame coach would win his first ever national title.[citation needed] Jim Boeheim was in his 27th season as Syracuse head coach, and Roy Williams was in his fifteenth season as Kansas head coach. Both had previously lost in championship games (Boeheim: 1987, 1996 Williams: 1991). Syracuse dominated with a hot shooting first half to lead by 11 at the break. Gerry McNamara connected on an impressive six three-pointers in the half, which were his 18 points for the game. Kansas fought back to within 80-78 in the final minute and had a chance to tie after Hakim Warrick missed a pair of free throws in the final moments. Warrick, however, then blocked Michael Lee's three point attempt with 0.7 seconds remaining on the game clock. After Kirk Hinrich's three-pointer at the buzzer went over the net, Syracuse's victory gave them, and Jim Boeheim, their first ever national championship. Carmelo Anthony was named Most Outstanding Player (MOP) with 21 points in the win. Syracuse also avenged a second-round loss to Kansas two years earlier.[3]

Bracket [edit]

East Regional — Albany, New York [edit]

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
1  Oklahoma 71  
16  South Carolina St 54  
  1  Oklahoma 74  
Oklahoma City  
  8  California 65  
8  California 76*
 
9  North Carolina State 74  
  1  Oklahoma 65  
  12  Butler 54  
5  Mississippi St 46  
 
12  Butler 47  
  12  Butler 79
Birmingham  
  4  Louisville 71  
4  Louisville 86
 
13  Austin Peay 64  
  1  Oklahoma 47
  3  Syracuse 63
6  Oklahoma St 77  
11  Pennsylvania 63  
  6  Oklahoma St 56
Boston  
  3  Syracuse 68  
3  Syracuse 76
 
14  Manhattan 65  
  3  Syracuse 79
  10  Auburn 78  
7  Saint Joseph's 63  
10  Auburn 65*  
  10  Auburn 68
Tampa  
  2  Wake Forest 62  
2  Wake Forest 76
15  East Tennessee State 73  

South Regional — San Antonio, Texas [edit]

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
1  Texas 82  
16  UNC-Asheville 61  
  1  Texas 77  
Birmingham  
  9  Purdue 67  
8  LSU 56
 
9  Purdue 80  
  1  Texas 82  
  5  Connecticut 78  
5  Connecticut 58  
 
12  BYU 53  
  5  Connecticut 85
Spokane  
  4  Stanford 74  
4  Stanford 77
 
13  San Diego 69  
  1  Texas 85
  7  Michigan St 76
6  Maryland 75  
11  UNC-Wilmington 73  
  6  Maryland 77
Nashville  
  3  Xavier 64  
3  Xavier 71
 
14  Troy St 59  
  6  Maryland 58
  7  Michigan St 60  
7  Michigan St 79  
10  Colorado 64  
  7  Michigan St 68
Tampa  
  2  Florida 46  
2  Florida 85
15  Sam Houston St 55  

Midwest Regional — Minneapolis, Minnesota [edit]

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
1  Kentucky 95  
16  IUPUI 64  
  1  Kentucky 74  
Nashville  
  9  Utah 54  
8  Oregon 58
 
9  Utah 60  
  1  Kentucky 63  
  5  Wisconsin 57  
5  Wisconsin 81  
 
12  Weber State 74  
  5  Wisconsin 61
Spokane  
  13  Tulsa 60  
4  Dayton 71
 
13  Tulsa 84  
  1  Kentucky 69
  3  Marquette 83
6  Missouri 72  
11  Southern Illinois 71  
  6  Missouri 92
Indianapolis  
  3  Marquette 101*  
3  Marquette 72
 
14  Holy Cross 68  
  3  Marquette 77
  2  Pittsburgh 74  
7  Indiana 67  
10  Alabama 62  
  7  Indiana 52
Boston  
  2  Pittsburgh 74  
2  Pittsburgh 87
15  Wagner 61  

West Regional — Anaheim, California [edit]

  First round Second round Regional Semifinals Regional Finals
                                     
1  Arizona 80  
16  Vermont 51  
  1  Arizona 96**  
Salt Lake City  
  9  Gonzaga 95  
8  Cincinnati 69
 
9  Gonzaga 74  
  1  Arizona 88  
  5  Notre Dame 71  
5  Notre Dame 70  
 
12  UW–Milwaukee 69  
  5  Notre Dame 68
Indianapolis  
  4  Illinois 60  
4  Illinois 65
 
13  Western Kentucky 60  
  1  Arizona 75
  2  Kansas 78
6  Creighton 73  
11  Central Michigan 79  
  11  Central Michigan 60
Salt Lake City  
  3  Duke 86  
3  Duke 67
 
14  Colorado State 57  
  3  Duke 65
  2  Kansas 69  
7  Memphis 71  
10  Arizona State 84  
  10  Arizona St 76
Oklahoma City  
  2  Kansas 108  
2  Kansas 64
15  Utah St 61  

Final Four — New Orleans, Louisiana [edit]

National Semifinals National Championship Game
               
E3  Syracuse 95  
S1  Texas 84  
    E3  Syracuse 81
  W2  Kansas 78
M3  Marquette 61
W2  Kansas 94  

Broadcast information [edit]

Originally, CBS Sports was to have shown all 63 games of the tournament following the opening round, which was on ESPN. However, because of the start of the Iraq war, CBS moved its telecasts of the games played on the first Thursday afternoon of the tournament to ESPN, opting to join other broadcast and non-broadcast outlets in showing extended news coverage.

By Thursday night, coverage had returned to CBS, albeit with frequent news updates. To make up for lost advertising revenue, an additional time slot was opened the following Sunday evening for more CBS telecasts.

Also, Mega March Madness was launched as an exclusive feature on DirecTV. This allowed for additional game broadcasts of the first three rounds other than those assigned to a viewer's home market.

Westwood One had exclusive national radio coverage.

CBS Sports announcers [edit]

See also [edit]

References [edit]