Jump to content

2011 MAC men's basketball tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Hugo999 (talk | contribs) at 10:06, 14 September 2017 (removed Category:2011 in Ohio; added Category:2011 in sports in Ohio using HotCat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

2011 MAC men's basketball tournament
2011 MAC Tournament logo
ClassificationDivision I
Season2010–11
Teams12
SiteQuicken Loans Arena
Cleveland, Ohio
ChampionsAkron Zips (2nd title)
Winning coachKeith Dambrot (2nd title)
MVPZeke Marshall (Akron)
TelevisionSportsTime Ohio and ESPN2
MAC men's basketball tournaments
← 2010
2012 →

The 2011 Mid-American Conference men's basketball tournament is the post-season basketball tournament for the Mid-American Conference (MAC) 2010–11 season. The winner of the tournament receives the MAC's automatic bid into the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship tournament.

2010–11 Mid-American Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
East
Kent State 12 4   .750 25 12   .676
Miami (OH) 11 5   .688 16 17   .485
Ohio 9 7   .563 19 16   .543
Akron 9 7   .563 23 13   .639
Bowling Green 8 8   .500 14 19   .424
Buffalo 8 8   .500 20 14   .588
West
Western Michigan 11 5   .688 21 13   .618
Ball State 10 6   .625 19 13   .594
Central Michigan 7 9   .438 10 21   .323
Northern Illinois 5 11   .313 9 21   .300
Eastern Michigan 5 11   .313 9 22   .290
Toledo 1 15   .063 4 28   .125
Conference tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll

Format

Each of the 12 men's basketball teams in the MAC receives a berth in the conference tournament. Teams are seeded by conference record with the following two-team tiebreakers:[1]

  • Head-to-head competition
  • Division record (10 games)
  • Winning percentage vs. ranked conference teams (top to bottom, regardless of division, vs. common opponents regardless of the number of times played)
  • Coin flip

For multiple team ties:

  • Total won-lost record of games played among the tied teams
  • Two-team tie-breaker procedure goes into effect

Once a three-team tie has been reduced to two teams, the two-team tiebreaker will go into effect.

The top four seeds receive byes into the quarterfinals. The winners of each division are awarded the #1 and #2 seeds. The team with the best record of the two receives the #1 seed. First round games will be played on campus sites at the higher seed. The remaining rounds will be held at Quicken Loans Arena.[1]

Bracket

First round
Campus sites
March 8
Quarterfinals
Quicken Loans Arena
March 10
Semifinals
Quicken Loans Arena
March 11
Championship game
Quicken Loans Arena
March 12
            
1 Kent State 73
8 Buffalo 62
8 Buffalo 64
9 Central Michigan 50
1 Kent State 79
4 Ball State 68
4 Ball State 76*
5 Ohio 73
5 Ohio 74
12 Toledo 57
1 Kent State 65
6 Akron 66*
2 Western Michigan 67
7 Bowling Green 56
7 Bowling Green 74
10 Northern Illinois 54
2 Western Michigan 68
6 Akron 79
3 Miami 75
6 Akron 82**
6 Akron 67
11 Eastern Michigan 53

Asterisk denotes game ended in overtime.

Tiebreakers

Seed Team Record Tiebreaker #1
1 Kent State 12–4
2 Western Michigan 11–5 Division champ
3 Miami 11–5
4 Ball State 10–6
5 Ohio 9–7 2–0 head-to-head
6 Akron 9–7 0–2 head-to-head
7 Bowling Green 8–8 2–0 head-to-head
8 Buffalo 8–8 0–2 head-to-head
9 Central Michigan 7–9
10 Northern Illinois 5–11 2–0 head-to-head
11 Eastern Michigan 5–11 0–2 head-to-head
12 Toledo 1–15

Championship game

In the championship game, Akron defeated Kent State 66–65. Senior Brett McKnight led Akron with 15 points and scored the final two points of the game, hitting two free throws to put his team up by one. With 12 seconds to go in the overtime period, Kent State had the ball and a chance to win, but Zeke Marshall blocked Kent State's first attempt and the second attempt was deflected. As Akron celebrated after the final buzzer, one of the Kent State players, who had laid down on the court in disappointment, was accidentally stepped on by the jumping mob of Akron players, and a slight skirmish broke out after his teammates came to his defense.[2]

The Akron Zips advanced to their third NCAA Tournament of the Division I era. They would go on to lose to Notre Dame in their first game.

References