NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship - Biblioteka.sk

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NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship
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NCAA Division III men's basketball tournament
Current season, competition or edition:
Current sports event 2024 NCAA Division III men's basketball tournament
SportBasketball
Founded1975
No. of teams64
CountryNCAA Division III (USA)
Most recent
champion(s)
Trine (2024; 1st title)
Most titlesNorth Park (5 titles)
TV partner(s)CBS Sports Network
Official websiteNCAA.com

The NCAA Division III men's basketball tournament (officially styled as "Championship" instead of "Tournament") is a tournament to determine the NCAA Division III national champion. It has been held annually from 1975 to 2019 & since 2022, but not played in 2020 and 2021 due to COVID-19 issues.

From 1996 to 2012 and 2014 to 2018, the NCAA Division III men's basketball championship was held at the Salem Civic Center in Salem, Virginia. The event had been hosted by the Old Dominion Athletic Conference and the City of Salem. From 2017 to 2020 & since 2022, the tournament has been a 64-team single-elimination tournament, with teams advancing from four sectionals to the semifinals and final in Fort Wayne.

For 2013, as part of the celebration of the 75th NCAA Division I tournament, the championship games in both the NCAA Division II and Division III tournaments were played at Philips Arena, now known as State Farm Arena, in Atlanta.[1] From 2014 to 2018, the final game returned to Salem.[2] Currently, the Final Four is held in Fort Wayne, Indiana at Allen County War Memorial Coliseum. For 2020 only, the national semifinals were to be played in Fort Wayne, but the championship game was to have returned to Atlanta, with the NCAA choosing to hold the championship games of both Divisions II and III as part of the festivities surrounding the men's Division I Final Four; however, the NCAA decided to abandon the tournament after the second round, 16 teams remaining.[3] The NCAA also canceled the 2021 tournament after a majority of D-III conferences chose not to play due to continued COVID-19 issues. Of teams and conferences that played, D3Hoops' top two ranked teams, No. 1 Randolph-Macon College and No. 2 Trine University, opted to play a self-organised mythical national championship game. Randolph-Macon won, 69-55.[4]

Trine is the defending national champion, beating Hampden–Sydney 69–61 in the 2024 championship.

Qualification

Since 2023–24, a total of 64 bids have been available for each tournament:

  • 42 automatic bids, awarded to the champions of all Division III conferences.
  • 22 at-large bids.

Conference tournaments

Schools in italics are, as of the current 2023–24 basketball season, no longer members of that specific conference.

NCAA Division III men's conference tournaments
Conference Tournament Most titles Current champion (2024)
Allegheny Mountain Tournament La Roche, Medaille, & Penn State Behrend (6) La Roche (6th)
American Rivers Tournament Buena Vista (7) Loras (3rd)
American Southwest Tournament Mississippi College & Texas–Dallas (5) Texas–Dallas (5th)
Atlantic East Tournament Marymount (2) Marymount (2nd)
Centennial Tournament Franklin & Marshall (8) Swarthmore (4th)
CUNYAC Tournament Staten Island (15) Baruch (6th)
Coast to Coast (C2C) Tournament Catholic (7) Christopher Newport (6th)
CCIW Tournament Augustana (6) Elmhurst (3rd)
CCS* Tournament Maryville (TN) (2) Maryville (TN) (2nd)
Commonwealth Coast Tournament Endicott (7) Roger Williams (3rd)
Empire 8 Tournament St. John Fisher (8) Utica (2nd)
Great Northeast Tournament Albertus Magnus (9) Saint Joseph (CT) (3rd)
Heartland Tournament Franklin & Hanover (6) Anderson (2nd)
Landmark Tournament Scranton (8) Catholic (3rd)
Liberty Tournament Skidmore (5) Hobart (3rd)
Little East Tournament UMass Dartmouth (12) Keene State (7th)
MASCAC Tournament Salem State (18) Worcester State (3rd)
Michigan Tournament Hope (15) Hope (15th)
MAC Commonwealth Tournaments Scranton (16) Eastern (1st)
MAC Freedom Stevens (3rd)
Midwest Tournament Ripon (8) Illinois College (3rd)
Minnesota Tournament St. Thomas (9) Gustavus Adolphus (4th)
NESCAC Tournament Amherst (8) Trinity (2nd)
NEWMAC Tournament Babson & MIT (6) Babson (6th)
NJAC Tournament Stockton (6) TCNJ (2nd)
North Atlantic Championship Husson (9) Husson (9th)
NCAC Tournament Wooster (16th) Wabash (3rd)
NACC Tournament Aurora (5) Wisconsin Lutheran (2nd)
Northwest Tournament Whitworth (16) Whitworth (16th)
Ohio Tournament Wittenberg (14) John Carroll (6th)
ODAC Tournament Hampden-Sydney (11) Hampden-Sydney (11th)
Presidents Tournament Bethany (6) Geneva (1st)
SLIAC Tournament Fontbonne (7) Fontbonne (7th)
Skyline Tournament Farmingdale State (7) Farmingdale State (7th)
SAA Tournament Berry (4) Berry (4th)
SCIAC Tournament Claremont–Mudd–Scripps (7) Claremont–Mudd–Scripps (7th)
SCAC Tournament Trinity (TX) (6) Centenary (LA) (2nd)
SUNYAC Tournament Buffalo State (15) New Paltz (1st)
United East Championship Morrisville State (5) Penn State Harrisburg (3rd)
UAA No tournament
UMAC Tournament Northwestern–St. Paul (13) Bethany Lutheran (4rd)
USA South Tournament Christopher Newport (15) Mary Baldwin
WIAC Tournament Wisconsin–Stevens Point (9) Wisconsin–Platteville (4th)

Defunct conferences

Defunct NCAA Division III men's conference tournaments
Conference Tournament First year Last year Most titles
Colonial States Tournament 1994 2023 Cabrini (13)
NECC Tournament 2009 2023 Elms and Mitchell (4)

Summary

Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=NCAA_Men's_Division_III_Basketball_Championship
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NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Championship
Year Finals Site Championship Game Semifinalists Tournament MOP
(University)
Winner Score Runner-up
1975 Reading, Pennsylvania LeMoyne–Owen 57–54 Glassboro State Augustana (IL)
Brockport
Bob Newman
(LeMoyne–Owen)
1976 Scranton 60–57
(OT)
Wittenberg Augustana (IL)
Plattsburgh State
Jack Maher
(Scranton)
1977 Rock Island, Illinois Wittenberg 79–66 Oneonta State Scranton
Hamline
Rick White
(Wittenberg)
1978 North Park 69–57 Widener Albion
Stony Brook
Michael Harper
(North Park)
1979 North Park (2) 66–62 SUNY Potsdam Franklin & Marshall
Centre
Michael Harper
(North Park)
1980 North Park (3) 83–76 Upsala Wittenberg
Longwood
Michael Thomas
(North Park)
1981 Potsdam State 67–65
(OT)
Augustana (IL) Ursinus
Otterbein
Maxwell Artis
(Augustana–IL)
1982 Grand Rapids, Michigan Wabash 83–62 Potsdam State Brooklyn
Stanislaus State
Pete Metzelaars
(Wabash)
1983 Scranton (2) 64–63 Wittenberg Roanoke
Wisconsin–Whitewater
Bill Bessoir
(Scranton)
1984 Wisconsin–Whitewater 103–86 Clark (MA) DePauw
Upsala
Andre McKoy
(Wisconsin–Whitewater)
1985 North Park (4) 72–71 Potsdam State Nebraska Wesleyan
Widener
Earnest Hubbard
(North Park)
1986 Potsdam State (2) 76–73 LeMoyne–Owen Nebraska Wesleyan
New Jersey City
Roosevelt Bullock
(Potsdam State)
1987 North Park (5) 106–100 Clark (MA) Wittenberg
Richard Stockton
Michael Starks
(North Park)
1988 Ohio Wesleyan 92–70 Scranton Nebraska Wesleyan
Hartwick
Scott Tedder
(Ohio Wesleyan)
1989 Springfield, Ohio Wisconsin–Whitewater (2) 94–86 Trenton State Southern Maine
Centre
Greg Grant
(Trenton State)
1990 Rochester 43–42 DePauw Washington College
Calvin
Chris Fite
(Rochester)
1991 Wisconsin–Platteville 81–74 Franklin & Marshall Otterbein
Ramapo
Shawn Frison
(Wisconsin–Platteville)
1992 Calvin 62–49 Rochester Wisconsin–Platteville
New Jersey City
Steve Honderd
(Calvin)
1993 Buffalo, New York Ohio Northern 71–68 Augustana (IL) Rowan
UMass–Dartmouth
Kirk Anderson
(Augustana–IL)
1994 Lebanon Valley 66–59
(OT)
NYU Wittenberg
St. Thomas (MN)
Mike Rhoades/Adam Crawford
(Lebanon Valley/NYU)
1995 Wisconsin–Platteville (2) 69–55 Manchester (IN) Rowan
Trinity (CT)
Ernie Peavy
(Wisconsin–Platteville)