Pacific-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

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Pacific-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Pac 12 tourney logo.jpg
Official logo of the tournament
Sport Basketball
Conference Pacific-12 Conference
Number of teams 12
Format Single-elimination tournament
Current stadium Staples Center
Current location Los Angeles, California
Played 1987–present
Last contest 2011 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Current champion Washington
Most championships Arizona Wildcats (4)
TV partner(s) FSN and CBS
Official website Pac-12.org Men's Basketball
Sponsors
Pacific Life (2003–present)

The Pacific-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, known since 2003 under sponsorship agreements as the Pacific Life Pac-10 Men’s Basketball Tournament, and otherwise known as the Pac-12 Tournament, is the annual concluding tournament for the NCAA college basketball in the Pacific-12 Conference, taking place in Los Angeles at the Staples Center every year.

Contents

[edit] History

The predecessor conference of the Pacific-12, the Pacific Coast Conference began playing basketball in the 1915–16 season. The PCC was split into North and South Divisions for basketball beginning with the 1922–23 season. The winners of the two divisions would play a best of three series of games to determine the PCC basketball champion. If two division teams tied, they would have a one game playoff to produce the division representative. Starting with the first NCAA Men's Basketball Championship in 1939, the winner of the PCC divisional playoff was given the automatic berth in the NCAA tournament. Oregon, the 1939 PCC champion, won the championship game in the 1939 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament.

The last divisional playoff was in the 1954–55 season. After that, there was no divisional play and all teams played each other in a round robin competition. From the 1955–56 season through the 1985–86 season, the regular season conference champion was awarded the NCAA tournament berth from the PCC, later AAWU, Pac-8 and Pac-10.

Beginning with the 1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, the Pac-12 would usually place at least one other at-large team in the tournament. Although, since the run by UCLA that ended in the 1970s, the PAC-10 would struggle to get out of the early rounds of the NCAA tournament.

By the 1985–86 season, the Pac-10 was one of three remaining conferences that gave their automatic NCAA tournament bid to the regular season round-robin champion. The other two conferences were the Ivy League and the Big Ten Conference.

[edit] 1987–1990

The old version of the tournament logo, 2003–2010
The old version of the tournament logo, 2010–2011

The modern tournament format began in 1987. The first incarnation of the tournament ran from 1987 to 1990, hosted at different school sites. UCLA was awarded the inaugural tournament, which was won by the Bruins. The Arizona Wildcats would take the next three. It was dropped after 1990 upon opposition from coaches, poor revenue, and poor attendance.[1] The Pac-10 went back to having the regular season conference champion get awarded the automatic NCAA tournament bid for the 1990–2001 seasons. During that time Arizona and UCLA both won NCAA championships.

[edit] 2002 to the present

In 1998, the Big Ten began to hold a conference tournament, leaving the Pac-10 and Ivy League the lone conferences without post season tournaments. The tournament was restarted by a 8–2 vote of the athletic directors of the conference in 2000 after determining that a tournament would help increase exposure of the conference and help the seeding of the schools in the NCAA tournament.[2] Stanford University and the University of Arizona opposed the tournament, while UCLA's and USC's votes, considered the deciding votes, were swayed by permanently hosting the tournament at Staples Center.[3] Los Angeles is the second largest media market in the United States. The championship game has been broadcast nationally by CBS Sports.

With the 2011 championship game attracting only 12,074 paid attendees, less than two thirds the capacity of Staples Center, commissioner Larry Scott has reopened bids from other cities to host the Pac-12 Tournament. Other models including a round-robin model and hosting the tournament at conference sites have also been considered.[4]

[edit] Television coverage

Until 2012, the tournament is broadcast on FSN (Fox Sports Net) cable. The final game is broadcast on the CBS network.

Effective the 2012-13 season, as part of the new television contract signed with Fox Sports Net and ESPN, the quarterfinals, semifinals, and championship will rotate between FSN/FX and ESPN/ESPN2, with ESPN obtaining odd year tournaments and FSN even numbered tournaments. The opening round games will be broadcast on the Pac-12 Network.

[edit] Format

From 1987 to 1990 and 2006-11, all ten teams participated in the tournament, with the top six teams receiving a bye in the opening round. Between 2002 and 2005, only the top eight teams in the conference participated in the tournament. Of the Pac-10 schools, Washington State is the only team to have never played in the championship game. For 2012, all 12 teams participate. The top 4 teams get byes into the quarterfinals.

[edit] Results

Year Champion Score Runner-Up Tournament MVP Arena (City) Total Attendance
1987 UCLA 76–64 Washington Reggie Miller, UCLA Pauley Pavilion (Los Angeles, California) 37,663
1988 Arizona 93–67 Oregon State Sean Elliott, Arizona McKale Center (Tucson, Arizona) 66,477
1989 Arizona 73–51 Stanford Sean Elliott, Arizona Great Western Forum (Inglewood, California) 41,994
1990 Arizona 94–78 UCLA Jud Buechler, Arizona University Activity Center (Tempe, Arizona) 36,052
2002 Arizona 81–71 USC Luke Walton, Arizona Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 67,819
2003 Oregon 74–66 USC Luke Ridnour, Oregon Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 63,663
2004 Stanford 77–66 Washington Josh Childress, Stanford Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 60,126
2005 Washington 81–72 Arizona Salim Stoudamire, Arizona Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 62,147
2006 UCLA 71–52 California Leon Powe, California Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 74,801
2007 Oregon 81–57 USC Tajuan Porter, Oregon Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 84,477
2008 UCLA 67–64 Stanford Darren Collison, UCLA Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 81,809
2009 USC 66–63 Arizona State DeMar DeRozan, USC Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 77,452
2010 Washington 79–75 California Isaiah Thomas, Washington Staples Center (Los Angeles, California) 62,292
2011 Washington 77–75 (OT) Arizona Isaiah Thomas, Washington Staples Center (Los Angeles, California)
2012 Staples Center (Los Angeles, California)

The tourney will be held at the Staples Center through 2012.

[edit] Tournament championships by school

Member Winners Winning Years
Arizona 4 1988, 1989, 1990, 2002
UCLA 3 1987, 2006, 2008
Washington 3 2005, 2010, 2011
Oregon 2 2003, 2007
Stanford 1 2004
USC 1 2009

[edit] Most consecutive championships

4 – Arizona (1988, 1989, 1990, 2002)- Note: No tournament held between 1990-2002.


[edit] Records All-Time by Team

As of March 9, 2012
School Record Winning Pct Championships Runners-Up
Arizona 19–10 .655 4 2
Washington 16–10 .615 3 2
UCLA 16–11 .593 3 1
Oregon 15–11 .577 2 0
USC *13–12 (14-12) .522 1 3
Stanford 13–13 .500 1 2
Cal 11–14 .440 0 2
Oregon St. 7–12 .368 0 1
Washington St. 5–13 .278 0 0
Arizona St. 5-14 .263 0 1
Colorado 1–0 1.000 0 0
Utah 0–1 .000 0 0

*USC vacated its win vs. ASU in the 2005 Pac-10 Tournament. The % is calculated without the vacated win.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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