The 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 10, 2017. The first tournament was the 2K Sports Classic and the season ended with the Final Four in San Antonio on April 2, 2018. Practices officially began on September 29, 2017.[1]

Rule changes

The following rule changes were proposed for the 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season:

  • Expanding the coaches' box from 28 feet to 38 feet.
  • Resetting the shot clock to 20 seconds when the ball is inbounded in the front court after a foul or violation (ex. kicked ball) by the defense. If there are more than 20 seconds on the shot clock in this situation, the shot clock will not be reset. Previously the shot clock was reset to the full 30 seconds regardless of the time remaining on the shot clock.
  • Allow referees to use instant replay in the final 2:00 of the second half and/or overtime to determine if a secondary defensive player was either inside or outside of the restricted arc. If the defender was inside the arc, a blocking foul will be called. If the defender is outside of the restricted area, then a player control foul (charge) will be called.
  • Require a minimum of 0.3 seconds to be taken off the game clock when the ball is legally touched on a throw-in or other situation.
  • Make throw-in spots more consistent in the front court.
  • Redefine a "legal screen" to require the inside of the screener's feet be no wider than his shoulders.[2]

The NCAA approved a number of experimental rule changes for use in the 2018 postseason NIT:[3]

  • Games were played in 10-minute quarters instead of 20-minute halves, matching current practice in NCAA women's basketball.
  • The "one-and-one" foul shot was not used. Instead, starting with the fifth total foul in each quarter, non-shooting fouls by the defensive team resulted in two free throws, with the only exception being administrative technical fouls. This also matched current NCAA women's practice.
  • The three-point line was extended to the current FIBA distance of 6.75 m (22 ft 1.75 in) from the center of the basket, except where the arc approaches the sideline; the line was a minimum distance of 3 feet (0.91 m) from the sidelines.
  • The free throw lane was extended to the 16-foot width used in NBA and FIBA play, instead of the NCAA standard of 12 feet.
  • After an offensive rebound, the shot clock was reset to 20 seconds instead of 30.

Season headlines

  • May 9, 2017 – The Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) announced that it extended an invitation to Valparaiso University to take effect July 1, with negotiations between the parties ongoing. Under its terms, the Crusaders would replace Wichita State University, departing on the same date for the American Athletic Conference.[4]
  • May 10 – The NCAA announced its Academic Progress Rate (APR) sanctions for the 2017–18 school year. A total of 17 programs in 9 sports were declared ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the required APR benchmark, including the following four Division I men's basketball teams:[5]
  • May 25 – The MVC officially announced Valparaiso would join on July 1, as reported earlier in the month.[8]
  • June 15 – Following a prolonged investigation into the Louisville program, after claims by a self-described madam that she had provided strip shows and sex parties at the Cardinals' team residence, Minardi Hall, for Cardinals players and prospective recruits, the NCAA announced the following penalties, subject to a planned appeal by Louisville:[9][10]
    • Four years of probation.
    • A reduction of four scholarships in all over the probation period, with Louisville choosing when to take the reductions.
    • Former director of basketball operations Andre McGee, who was found to have paid $10,000 from 2010 to 2014 in exchange for the parties, received a 10-year show-cause penalty.
    • Head coach Rick Pitino was suspended for the Cardinals' first five ACC games in the coming season.
    • Louisville was required to forfeit all money received from conference revenue sharing stemming from its appearances in the 2012–2015 NCAA tournaments.
    • All players who participated in the parties and played for Louisville were held to be ineligible. The school had 45 days to provide the NCAA with a list of games affected, and was to vacate any games in which ineligible players were involved. This would ultimately cost Louisville its 2013 national championship and 2012 Final Four appearance (see February 20), making Louisville the first Division I basketball champion (for either sex) to be stripped of its title.
  • June 16 – The governing boards of the Indiana University and Purdue University systems gave final approval to the split of Summit League member Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW) into two separate institutions, ratifying a plan that both boards had approved in December 2016. On July 1, 2018, IU took over IPFW's degree programs in health sciences under the identity of Indiana University Fort Wayne, while Purdue took over all other degree programs as Purdue University Fort Wayne. The IPFW athletic program would continue in Division I and the Summit League, but represent only Purdue Fort Wayne.[11][12] The athletic program branding was changed from Fort Wayne Mastodons to Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons on June 18, 2018.[13]
  • June 28 – The Horizon League announced that IUPUI would move from the Summit League to replace Valparaiso effective July 1.[14]
  • August 24 – The University of Alaska Anchorage announced that the Great Alaska Shootout, which the school had hosted since 1978 and was the longest-running regular-season college basketball tournament, would be discontinued after this season.[15]
  • September 26 – The office of the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York announced that 10 individuals, including assistant coaches at Arizona, Auburn, Oklahoma State, and USC, had been arrested on federal corruption charges. The accused were allegedly part of a scheme by which coaches accepted bribes to steer NBA-bound college players toward certain agents and financial advisers. Court documents also allege that an apparel company later identified as Adidas paid $100,000 to the family of an unnamed player to ensure his signing with an unnamed school that was later identified as Louisville.[16]
  • September 27 – In the first major fallout from the breaking bribery scandal, Louisville placed head coach Rick Pitino on unpaid administrative leave and athletic director Tom Jurich on paid administrative leave. Media reports indicated that both would be formally fired once contractual issues were sorted out. Assistant David Padgett was named interim head coach.[17]
  • September 28 – CBS News reported that Rick Pitino was the Louisville coach identified in court documents as "Coach-2", who was alleged to have spoken several times with an Adidas executive in the attempt to pay the family of a recruit in exchange for the player attending Louisville.[18]
  • November 6 – The Associated Press preseason All-American team was released. Michigan State forward Miles Bridges was the leading vote-getter (61 votes). Joining him on the team were Notre Dame forward Bonzie Colson (47 votes), Arizona guard Allonzo Trier (39), Villanova guard Jalen Brunson (33) and Missouri forward Michael Porter Jr. (30).[19]
  • November 27 – The Big West Conference announced that California State University, Bakersfield (CSU Bakersfield) and the University of California, San Diego (UC San Diego), already affiliate members, will join the conference in July 2020. CSU Bakersfield, a Big West beach volleyball member, will leave the Western Athletic Conference. UC San Diego, a member of Big West men's volleyball that will add women's water polo to its Big West membership in 2019–20, will transition from NCAA Division II and the California Collegiate Athletic Association; it will not be eligible for Division I national championships until the 2024–25 school year.[20][lower-alpha 1]
  • December 30 – On what ESPN called "the day college basketball went nuts", four top-10 teams lost—top-ranked Villanova, #3 Arizona State, #5 Texas A&M, and #10 TCU, with all except for A&M entering the day unbeaten. The end result marked the first time in the AP Poll era (since 1948–49) that no major-college men's team was unbeaten before the new calendar year.[21]
  • February 12 – Virginia rose to #1 in the AP Poll for the first time since 1982, becoming the first team in poll history to move up to the #1 ranking despite losing a game in the prior week. Despite the Cavaliers' overtime loss at home to Virginia Tech the previous weekend, the previous #1 and #3 teams, respectively Villanova and Purdue, also lost at home.[22]
  • February 20 – The NCAA announced that it had denied Louisville's appeal of sanctions imposed in the wake of the basketball program's sex scandal, officially making the Cardinals the first Division I basketball program stripped of a national title.[23]
  • February 28 – Mountain West Conference commissioner Craig Thompson confirmed to the San Diego Union-Tribune that his conference had discussed potential expansion with six schools since August 2017, with current West Coast Conference member Gonzaga the only school he specifically named. Thompson added that if the MW added Gonzaga, it could do so possibly as early as the 2018–19 school year. In addition, while Thompson said that BYU had not contacted him about expansion, several sources indicated that the school may return to the MW, at least in non-football sports, if Gonzaga were to join.[24]
  • April 2 – Gonzaga athletic director Mike Roth notified the MW and WCC that the school would remain in the WCC for the immediate future. This followed WCC scheduling and revenue distribution changes that Gonzaga had long advocated.[25]

Milestones and records

Conference membership changes

Three schools joined new conferences for the 2017–18 season.

School Former conference New conference
IUPUI Summit League Horizon League[14]
Valparaiso Horizon League Missouri Valley Conference[8]
Wichita State Missouri Valley Conference American Athletic Conference[57]

In addition to the schools changing conferences, the 2017–18 season was the last for four schools in their then-current conferences.

Arenas

New arenas

Arenas closing

Temporary arenas

Three Division I men's teams played the 2017–18 season in temporary homes due to renovation of their current venues. A fourth team moved its home schedule to what is normally an alternate home for the same reason. One additional team is playing in two temporary venues while its previous venue is being replaced by a completely new structure at the same site.

Season outlook

Pre–season polls

The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.

AP
Ranking Team
1 Duke (33)
2 Michigan State (13)
3 Arizona (18)
4 Kansas (1)
5 Kentucky
6 Villanova
7 Wichita State
8 Florida
9 North Carolina
10 USC
11 West Virginia
12 Cincinnati
13 Miami
14 Notre Dame
15 Minnesota
16 Louisville
17 Xavier
18 Gonzaga
19 Northwestern
20 Purdue
21 UCLA
22 Saint Mary's
23 Seton Hall
24 Baylor
25 Texas A&M
USA Today Coaches
Ranking Team
1 Duke (20)
2 Michigan State (9)
3 Kansas
4 Kentucky
5 Arizona (2)
6 Villanova
7 Florida (1)
8 Wichita State
9 North Carolina
10 West Virginia
11 USC
12 Miami
13 Cincinnati
14 Notre Dame
15 Minnesota
16 Louisville
17 Xavier
18 UCLA
19 Gonzaga
20 Northwestern
21 Purdue
22 Saint Mary's
23 Seton Hall
24 Baylor
25 Alabama

Regular season

Early season tournaments

NameDatesLocationNo. teamsChampion
2K Sports Classic November 16–17 Madison Square Garden
(Manhattan, NY)
4 Providence
Puerto Rico Tip-Off November 16–17, 19 HTC Center
(Conway, SC)[lower-alpha 2]
8 Iowa State
Charleston Classic November 16–17, 19 TD Arena
(Charleston, SC)
8 Temple
The Islands of the Bahamas Showcase November 17–19 Kendal Isaacs National Gymnasium
(Nassau, BAH)
8 Vermont
Paradise Jam tournament November 17–20 Vines Center
Lynchburg, VA[lower-alpha 3][76]
8 Colorado
Hall of Fame Tip Off November 18–19 Mohegan Sun Arena
(Uncasville, CT)
4 Texas Tech (Naismith)

South Alabama (Springfield)

CBE Hall of Fame Classic November 20–21 Sprint Center
(Kansas City, MO)
4 Baylor
Legends Classic November 20–21 Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
4 Texas A&M
Cayman Islands Classic November 20–22 John Gray Gymnasium
(Cayman Islands)
8 Cincinnati
Gulf Coast Showcase November 20–22 Germain Arena
(Estero, FL)
8 Towson
Maui Invitational November 20–22 Lahaina Civic Center
(Lahaina, HI)
8 Notre Dame
MGM Resorts Main Event November 20, 22 T-Mobile Arena
(Las Vegas, NV)
8 Prairie View A&M (Middleweight)

UNLV (Heavyweight)

Cancun Challenge November 21–22 Moon Palace Golf & Spa Resort
(Cancún, MX)
8 Montana State (Mayan)

Louisiana Tech (Riviera)

Battle 4 Atlantis November 22–24 Imperial Arena
(Nassau, BAH)
8 Villanova
Great Alaska Shootout November 22–25 Sullivan Arena
(Anchorage, AK)
8 Central Michigan
NIT Season Tip-Off November 23–24 Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
4 Virginia
Las Vegas Invitational November 23–24 Orleans Arena
(Las Vegas, NV)
4 Arizona State & Rider
AdvoCare Invitational November 23–24, 26 HP Field House
(Lake Buena Vista, FL)
8 West Virginia
Phil Knight Invitational November 23–24, 26 Veterans Memorial Coliseum &
Moda Center
(Portland, OR)
16 Michigan State (Victory Bracket)
Duke (Motion Bracket)
Wooden Legacy November 23–24, 26 Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, CA)
8 Washington State
Emerald Coast Classic November 24–25 Emerald Coast Arena
(Niceville, FL)
4 Tennessee Tech & TCU
Barclays Center Classic November 24–25 Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
4 Minnesota
Las Vegas Classic December 22–23 Orleans Arena
(Las Vegas, NV)
4 Radford (Visitors)
Diamond Head Classic December 22–23, 25 Stan Sheriff Center
(Honolulu, HI)
8 USC
  1. UCSD will remain eligible for national championships in four of its sports during its transition to Division I. Men's and women's water polo and the coeducational sport of fencing have one national championship for all three NCAA divisions, while men's volleyball has a combined Division I/II national championship.
  2. The tournament was originally scheduled to be held at Coliseo Municipal Tomás Dones in Fajardo, Puerto Rico,[73] but was moved to Coastal Carolina University due to major damage from Hurricane Maria. Coastal was chosen in part because its arena was available on every scheduled tournament day.[74]
  3. The tournament was originally scheduled for the Sports and Fitness Center in Saint Thomas, US Virgin Islands, but was moved due to damage from Hurricanes Irma and Maria. Organizers decided to solicit hosting bids from the eight participating teams, with Liberty selected as the substitute host on September 29.[75]

Upsets

An upset is a victory by an underdog team. In the context of NCAA Division I Men's Basketball, this generally constitutes an unranked team defeating a team currently ranked in the Top 25. This list will highlight those upsets of ranked teams by unranked teams as well as upsets of #1 teams. Rankings are from the AP poll.

Bold type indicates winning teams in "true road games"—i.e., those played on an opponent's home court (including secondary homes, such as Intrust Bank Arena for Wichita State).

Winner Score Loser Date Tournament/Event
Creighton92–88#20 NorthwesternNovember 15, 2017Gavitt Tipoff Games
Texas Tech85–49#20 NorthwesternNovember 19, 2017Hall of Fame Tip Off
Creighton100–89#23 UCLANovember 20, 2017CBE Hall of Fame Classic
Tennessee78–75OT#18 PurdueNovember 22, 2017Battle 4 Atlantis
NC State90–84#2 ArizonaNovember 22, 2017Battle 4 Atlantis
Rhode Island75–74#20 Seton HallNovember 23, 2017NIT Season Tip-Off
Western Kentucky77–73#18 PurdueNovember 23, 2017Battle 4 Atlantis
SMU66–60#2 ArizonaNovember 23, 2017Battle 4 Atlantis
Washington State84–79#21 Saint Mary'sNovember 24, 2017Wooden Legacy
Arizona State102–86#15 XavierNovember 24, 2017Las Vegas Invitational
Georgia83–81OT#21 Saint Mary'sNovember 26, 2017Wooden Legacy
Purdue66–57#17 LouisvilleNovember 28, 2017ACC–Big Ten Challenge
Seton Hall89–79#22 Texas TechNovember 30, 2017Under Armour Reunion
SMU72–55#14 USCDecember 2, 2017
UCF65–62#24 AlabamaDecember 3, 2017
Seton Hall79–77#17 LouisvilleDecember 3, 2017Billy Minardi Classic
Florida State83–66#5 FloridaDecember 4, 2017
Ball State80–77#9 Notre DameDecember 5, 2017
Texas Tech82–76OT#22 NevadaDecember 5, 2017
Arizona67–64#7 Texas A&MDecember 5, 2017Valley of the Sun Shootout
Nebraska78–68#14 MinnesotaDecember 5, 2017
Loyola (IL)65–59#5 FloridaDecember 6, 2017
Washington74–65#2 KansasDecember 6, 2017Jayhawk Shootout
Oklahoma85–83#25 USCDecember 8, 2017Basketball Hall of Fame Classic
Boston College89–84#1 DukeDecember 9, 2017
Arkansas95–79#14 MinnesotaDecember 9, 2017
Rutgers71–65#15 Seton HallDecember 16, 2017
Oklahoma State71–70#19 Florida StateDecember 16, 2017Orange Bowl Classic
Indiana80–77OT#18 Notre DameDecember 16, 2017Crossroads Classic
Oklahoma91–83#3 Wichita StateDecember 16, 2017Intrust Bank Arena Showcase
Clemson71–69#22 FloridaDecember 16, 2017Orange Bowl Classic
Wofford79–75#5 North CarolinaDecember 20, 2017
San Diego State72–70#12 GonzagaDecember 21, 2017
UCLA83–75#7 KentuckyDecember 23, 2017CBS Sports Classic
New Mexico State63–54#6 MiamiDecember 23, 2017Diamond Head Classic
Arkansas95–93OT#19 TennesseeDecember 30, 2017
Butler101–93#1 VillanovaDecember 30, 2017
Alabama79–57#5 Texas A&MDecember 30, 2017
Auburn94–84#23 TennesseeJanuary 2, 2018
Florida83–66#11 Texas A&MJanuary 2, 2018
Mississippi State78–75#22 ArkansasJanuary 2, 2018
Georgia Tech64–54#15 MiamiJanuary 3, 2018
Colorado90–81OT#4 Arizona StateJanuary 4, 2018
Providence81–72#5 XavierJanuary 6, 2018
Colorado80–77#14 ArizonaJanuary 6, 2018
LSU69–68#11 Texas A&MJanuary 6, 2018
Auburn88–77#22 ArkansasJanuary 6, 2018
NC State96–85#2 DukeJanuary 6, 2018
Ohio State80–64#1 Michigan StateJanuary 7, 2018
Marquette84–64#13 Seton HallJanuary 9, 2018
Louisville73–69#23 Florida StateJanuary 10, 2018
Texas99–982OT#16 TCUJanuary 10, 2018
NC State78–77#19 ClemsonJanuary 11, 2018
Oregon76–72#11 Arizona StateJanuary 11, 2018
Michigan82–72#4 Michigan StateJanuary 13, 2018
Kansas State87–69#4 OklahomaJanuary 16, 2018
South Carolina76–68#18 KentuckyJanuary 16, 2018
SMU83–78#7 Wichita StateJanuary 17, 2018
Alabama76–71#17 AuburnJanuary 17, 2018
Texas67–58#8 Texas TechJanuary 17, 2018
Creighton80–63#19 Seton HallJanuary 17, 2018
Missouri59–55#21 TennesseeJanuary 17, 2018
Stanford86–77#16 Arizona StateJanuary 17, 2018
Saint Mary's74–71#13 GonzagaJanuary 18, 2018
Nebraska72–52#23 MichiganJanuary 18, 2018
Houston73–59#7 Wichita StateJanuary 20, 2018
Iowa State70–52#8 Texas TechJanuary 20, 2018
Oklahoma State83–81OT#4 OklahomaJanuary 20, 2018
Kansas State73–68#24 TCUJanuary 20, 2018
Florida66–64#18 KentuckyJanuary 20, 2018
Virginia Tech80–69#10 North CarolinaJanuary 22, 2018
TCU82–73#7 West VirginiaJanuary 22, 2018
South Carolina77–72#20 FloridaJanuary 24, 2018
Wyoming104–1032OT#23 NevadaJanuary 24, 2018
Penn State82–79#13 Ohio StateJanuary 25, 2018
Utah80–77OT#21 Arizona StateJanuary 25, 2018
NC State95–91OT#10 North CarolinaJanuary 27, 2018
Alabama80–73#12 OklahomaJanuary 27, 2018Big 12/SEC Challenge
Kentucky83–76#7 West VirginiaJanuary 27, 2018Big 12/SEC Challenge
Georgia72–60#23 FloridaJanuary 30, 2018
Iowa State93–77#15 West VirginiaJanuary 31, 2018
Temple81–79OT#16 Wichita StateFebruary 1, 2018
Washington68–64#25 Arizona StateFebruary 1, 2018
Oklahoma State84–79#7 KansasFebruary 3, 2018
St. John's81–77#4 DukeFebruary 3, 2018The Garf
Missouri69–60#21 KentuckyFebruary 3, 2018
Alabama68–50#23 FloridaFebruary 3, 2018
Texas79–74#12 OklahomaFebruary 3, 2018
Washington78–75#9 ArizonaFebruary 3, 2018
Northwestern61–52#20 MichiganFebruary 6, 2018
St. John's79–75#1 VillanovaFebruary 7, 2018
Texas A&M81–80#8 AuburnFebruary 7, 2018
UNLV86–78#23 NevadaFebruary 7, 2018
UCLA82–74#13 ArizonaFebruary 8, 2018
Oklahoma State88–85#19 West VirginiaFebruary 10, 2018
Boston College72–70#25 MiamiFebruary 10, 2018
Baylor80–64#10 KansasFebruary 10, 2018
Iowa State88–80#17 OklahomaFebruary 10, 2018
Alabama78–50#15 TennesseeFebruary 10, 2018
Virginia Tech61–60OT#2 VirginiaFebruary 10, 2018
Texas A&M85–74#24 KentuckyFebruary 10, 2018
Missouri62–58#21 Texas A&MFebruary 13, 2018
Providence76–71#3 VillanovaFebruary 14, 2018
Florida State81–79OT#11 ClemsonFebruary 14, 2018
Wisconsin57–53#6 PurdueFebruary 15, 2018
Houston67–62#5 CincinnatiFebruary 15, 2018
Penn State79–56#8 Ohio StateFebruary 15, 2018
San Francisco70–63#15 Saint Mary'sFebruary 15, 2018
St. Bonaventure77–74#16 Rhode IslandFebruary 16, 2018
Texas77–66#23 OklahomaFebruary 17, 2018
South Carolina84–75#10 AuburnFebruary 17, 2018
Arkansas94–75#21 Texas A&MFebruary 17, 2018
Georgia73–62#18 TennesseeFebruary 17, 2018
Baylor59–57#7 Texas TechFebruary 17, 2018
Virginia Tech65–58#15 ClemsonFebruary 21, 2018
Oklahoma State79–71#6 Texas TechFebruary 21, 2018
Memphis91–85#23 HoustonFebruary 22, 2018
Creighton89–83OT#3 VillanovaFebruary 24, 2018
Florida72–66#12 AuburnFebruary 24, 2018
Oregon98–93OT#14 ArizonaFebruary 24, 2018
NC State92–72#25 Florida StateFebruary 25, 2018
Virginia Tech64–63#5 DukeFebruary 26, 2018
Saint Joseph's78–48#17 Rhode IslandFebruary 27, 2018
Miami91–88#9 North CarolinaFebruary 27, 2018
Arkansas91–82#14 AuburnFebruary 27, 2018
Penn State69–68#13 Ohio StateMarch 2, 2018Big Ten tournament
Davidson63–61#17 Rhode IslandMarch 2, 2018
Florida80–67#23 KentuckyMarch 3, 2018
Texas87–79OT#20 West VirginiaMarch 3, 2018
Syracuse55–52#18 ClemsonMarch 3, 2018
Oklahoma State82–64#6 KansasMarch 3, 2018
Marshall76–67#24 Middle TennesseeMarch 3, 2018
San Diego State79–74#21 NevadaMarch 3, 2018
BYU85–72#20 Saint Mary'sMarch 5, 2018West Coast tournament
Alabama81–63#16 AuburnMarch 9, 2018SEC tournament
Providence75–72OT#3 XavierMarch 9, 2018Big East tournament
San Diego State90–73#22 NevadaMarch 9, 2018Mountain West tournament
Arkansas80–72#23 FloridaMarch 9, 2018SEC Tournament
Davidson58–57#25 Rhode IslandMarch 11, 2018Atlantic 10 tournament
Kentucky77–72#13 TennesseeMarch 11, 2018SEC Tournament

In addition to the above listed upsets in which an unranked team defeated a ranked team, there were eleven non-Division I teams to defeat a Division I team this season. Bold type indicates winning teams in "true road games"—i.e., those played on an opponent's home court (including secondary homes).

Winner Score Loser Date Tournament/event
Ouachita Baptist (Division II)81–79[77]Little RockNovember 11, 2017
LeTourneau (Division III)99–84[78]Northwestern StateNovember 12, 2017Jamaica Classic
Lynchburg (Division III)83–80[79]Norfolk StateNovember 13, 2017
Embry–Riddle (AZ) (NAIA)82–70[80]Northern ArizonaNovember 13, 2017
Concordia–St. Paul (Division II)69–55[81]MilwaukeeNovember 17, 2017Black & Gold Shootout
Chaminade (Division II)96–72[82]CaliforniaNovember 22, 2017Maui Invitational
Alaska Anchorage (Division II)78–73OT[83]Santa ClaraNovember 23, 2017Great Alaska Shootout
Southern Nazarene (Division II)68–60[84]Oral RobertsDecember 8, 2017
LSU Shreveport (NAIA)85–84[85]Northwestern StateDecember 16, 2017Shreveport–Bossier Holiday Classic
Elizabeth City State (Division II)76–67[86]Norfolk StateJanuary 15, 2018
William Jewell (Division II)86–74[87]UMKCJanuary 23, 2018

Conference winners and tournaments

Each of the 32 Division I athletic conferences ends its regular season with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference is given the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2018 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.

Conference Regular
season first place
Conference
player of the year
Conference
Coach of the Year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (city)
Tournament
winner
America East Conference Vermont Trae Bell-Haynes, Vermont[88] John Becker, Vermont &
John Gallagher, Hartford[88]
2018 America East men's basketball tournament Campus sites UMBC
American Athletic Conference Cincinnati Gary Clark, Cincinnati[89] Kelvin Sampson, Houston[89] 2018 American Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament Amway Center
(Orlando, FL)
Cincinnati
Atlantic 10 Conference Rhode Island Jaylen Adams, St. Bonaventure & Peyton Aldridge, Davidson[90] Dan Hurley, Rhode Island[90] 2018 Atlantic 10 men's basketball tournament Capital One Arena
(Washington, D.C.)
Davidson
Atlantic Coast Conference Virginia Marvin Bagley III, Duke[91] Tony Bennett, Virginia[91] 2018 ACC men's basketball tournament Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, NY)
Virginia
Atlantic Sun Conference Florida Gulf Coast Brandon Goodwin, Florida Gulf Coast[92] Joe Dooley, Florida Gulf Coast[92] 2018 Atlantic Sun men's basketball tournament Campus sites Lipscomb
Big 12 Conference Kansas Devonte' Graham, Kansas[93] Chris Beard, Texas Tech
& Bill Self, Kansas[93]
2018 Big 12 men's basketball tournament Sprint Center
(Kansas City, MO)
Kansas
Big East Conference Xavier Jalen Brunson, Villanova[94] Chris Mack, Xavier[94] 2018 Big East men's basketball tournament Madison Square Garden
(New York City, NY)
Villanova
Big Sky Conference Montana Bogdan Bliznyuk, Eastern Washington[95] Travis DeCuire, Montana[96] 2018 Big Sky Conference men's basketball tournament Reno Events Center
(Reno, NV)
Montana
Big South Conference UNC Asheville Xavier Cooks, Winthrop[97] Mike Jones, Radford[97] 2018 Big South Conference men's basketball tournament First round: Campus sites
Quarterfinals/semifinals: #1 seed
Final: Top surviving seed
Radford
Big Ten Conference Michigan State Keita Bates-Diop, Ohio State[98] Chris Holtmann, Ohio State[98] 2018 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament Madison Square Garden
(New York City, NY)
Michigan
Big West Conference UC Davis T. J. Shorts, UC Davis[99] Jim Les, UC Davis[99] 2018 Big West Conference men's basketball tournament Honda Center
(Anaheim, CA)
Cal State Fullerton
Colonial Athletic Association Charleston[lower-alpha 1] and Northeastern Justin Wright-Foreman, Hofstra[100] Bill Coen, Northeastern[100] 2018 CAA men's basketball tournament North Charleston Coliseum
(North Charleston, SC)
Charleston
Conference USA Middle Tennessee Nick King, Middle Tennessee[101] Steve Henson, UTSA[101] 2018 Conference USA men's basketball tournament Ford Center
(Frisco, TX)
Marshall
Horizon League Northern Kentucky Kendrick Nunn, Oakland[102] Scott Nagy, Wright State[102] 2018 Horizon League men's basketball tournament Little Caesars Arena
(Detroit, MI)
Wright State
Ivy League Harvard[lower-alpha 1] and Penn Seth Towns, Harvard[103] Steve Donahue, Penn[103] 2018 Ivy League men's basketball tournament Palestra
(Philadelphia, PA)
Penn
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Canisius and
Rider[lower-alpha 1]
Jermaine Crumpton, Canisius
& Kahlil Dukes, Niagara[104]
Kevin Baggett, Rider[105] 2018 MAAC men's basketball tournament Times Union Center
(Albany, NY)
Iona
Mid-American Conference Buffalo (East) and Toledo (West) Tre'Shaun Fletcher, Toledo[106] Nate Oats, Buffalo[106] 2018 Mid-American Conference men's basketball tournament First round: Campus sites
Remainder: Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, OH)
Buffalo
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Bethune–Cookman,
Hampton[lower-alpha 1] and
Savannah State
Brandon Tabb, Bethune–Cookman[107] Jay Joyner, North Carolina A&T[107] 2018 MEAC men's basketball tournament Norfolk Scope
(Norfolk, VA)
North Carolina Central
Missouri Valley Conference Loyola–Chicago Clayton Custer, Loyolan (Illinois)[108] Porter Moser, Loyola (Illinois)[109] 2018 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball tournament Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, MO)
Loyola (Illinois)
Mountain West Conference Nevada Caleb Martin, Nevada[110] Eric Musselman, Nevada (coaches & media)[110][111] 2018 Mountain West Conference men's basketball tournament Thomas & Mack Center
(Paradise, NV)
San Diego State
Northeast Conference Wagner Junior Robinson, Mount St. Mary's[112] Bashir Mason, Wagner[112] 2018 Northeast Conference men's basketball tournament Campus sites LIU Brooklyn
Ohio Valley Conference Murray State Jonathan Stark, Murray State[113] Matt Figger, Austin Peay[113] 2018 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball tournament Ford Center
(Evansville, IN)
Murray State
Pac-12 Conference Arizona Deandre Ayton, Arizona[114] Mike Hopkins, Washington[114] 2018 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament T-Mobile Arena
(Paradise, NV)
Arizona
Patriot League Bucknell Zach Thomas, Bucknell[115] Matt Langel, Colgate[115] 2018 Patriot League men's basketball tournament Campus sites Bucknell
Southeastern Conference Auburn[lower-alpha 1] and Tennessee Grant Williams, Tennessee (coaches)[116]
Yante Maten, Georgia (AP)[117]
Rick Barnes, Tennessee[116][117] 2018 SEC men's basketball tournament Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, MO)
Kentucky
Southern Conference UNC Greensboro Desonta Bradford, East Tennessee State (coaches)
& Fletcher Magee, Wofford (media)[118]
Wes Miller, UNC Greensboro[118] 2018 Southern Conference men's basketball tournament U.S. Cellular Center
(Asheville, NC)
UNC Greensboro
Southland Conference Nicholls State and Southeastern Louisiana[lower-alpha 1] Jordan Howard, Central Arkansas[119] Richie Riley, Nicholls State[119] 2018 Southland Conference men's basketball tournament Leonard E. Merrell Center
(Katy, TX)
Stephen F. Austin
Southwestern Athletic Conference Grambling State[lower-alpha 2] Martaveous McKnight, Arkansas–Pine Bluff[120] Donte Jackson, Grambling State[120] 2018 SWAC men's basketball tournament Quarterfinals: Campus sites
Semifinals and final: Delmar Fieldhouse
(Houston, TX)
Texas Southern
Summit League South Dakota State Mike Daum, South Dakota State[121] T. J. Otzelberger, South Dakota State[121] 2018 Summit League men's basketball tournament Denny Sanford Premier Center
(Sioux Falls, SD)
South Dakota State
Sun Belt Conference Louisiana D'Marcus Simonds, Georgia State[122] Bob Marlin, Louisiana[122] 2018 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball tournament Lakefront Arena
(New Orleans, LA)
Georgia State
West Coast Conference Gonzaga Jock Landale, Saint Mary's[123] Mark Few, Gonzaga[123] 2018 West Coast Conference men's basketball tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)
Gonzaga
Western Athletic Conference New Mexico State Jemerrio Jones, New Mexico State[124] Chris Jans, New Mexico State[124] 2018 WAC men's basketball tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, NV)
New Mexico State
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Top seed in conference tournament.
  2. Ineligible for postseason play.

Statistical leaders

PlayerSchoolPPGPlayerSchoolRPGPlayerSchoolAPGPlayerSchoolSPG
Trae YoungOklahoma27.4Devontae CacokUNC Wilmington13.5Trae YoungOklahoma8.7Joseph ChartounyFordham3.34
Kendrick NunnOakland25.9Jemerrio JonesNew Mexico St.13.2Emmett NaarSt. Mary's7.9Jevon CarterWest Virginia3.03
Jordan HowardC. Arkansas25.1Rokas GustysHofstra12.0Jordan McLaughlinUSC7.8Matisse ThybulleWashington2.97
Chris ClemonsCampbell24.9Ángel DelgadoSeton Hall11.8Austin LukeBelmont7.5Paris CollinsJackson St.2.92
Justin Wright-ForemanHofstra24.4Alize JohnsonMissouri St.11.6Markell JohnsonNC State7.3Brian Beard Jr.FIU2.90
Field goal percentageThree-point field goal percentageFree throw percentage
PlayerSchoolBPGPlayerSchoolFG%PlayerSchool3FG%PlayerSchoolFT%
Ajdin PenavaMarshall3.94Udoka AzubuikeKansas.770Connor BurchfieldWilliam & Mary.520Darnell EdgeFairleigh Dickinson.944
Mohamed BambaTexas3.70James Thompson IVE. Michigan.672Andre WolfordSt. Francis (PA).495Markus HowardMarquette.938
Sagaba KonateWest Virginia3.22Raasean DavisNC Central.671Sam HauserMarquette.487Jacobi BoykinsLouisiana Tech.915
Tai OdiaseUIC3.11Jehyve FloydHoly Cross.668Anthony MathisNew Mexico.473Brandon TabbBethune–Cookman.914
Hayden KovalC. Arkansas3.09Josh CunninghamDayton.646Carl PierreUMass.472David CohnWilliam & Mary.912

Postseason

NCAA tournament

Tournament upsets

For this list, an "upset" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.

Date Winner Score Loser Region Round
March 15Buffalo (#13)89–68Arizona (#4)SouthFirst Round
March 16UMBC (#16)74–54Virginia (#1)SouthFirst Round
March 16Marshall (#13)81–75Wichita State (#4)EastFirst Round
March 17Loyola–Chicago (#11)64–62Tennessee (#3)SouthSecond Round
March 18Florida State (#9)75–70Xavier (#1)WestSecond Round
March 18Syracuse (#11)55–53Michigan State (#3)MidwestSecond Round

Final Four – Alamodome, San Antonio, TX

National Semifinals
March 31
National Championship Game
April 2
      
S11 Loyola–Chicago 57
W3 Michigan 69
W3 Michigan 62
E1 Villanova 79
MW1 Kansas 79
E1 Villanova 95

National Invitation tournament

After the NCAA tournament field was announced, the NCAA invited 32 teams to participate in the National Invitation Tournament. The tournament began on March 13, 2018 with all games prior to the semifinals being played at campus sites.

NIT Semifinals and Final

Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City on March 27 and 29

Semifinals
March 27
Championship game
March 29
      
4 Western Kentucky 64
2 Utah 69
4 Penn State 82
2 Utah 66
4 Penn State 75
4 Mississippi State 60

College Basketball Invitational

The eleventh College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament began on March 13, 2018. This tournament features 16 teams who were left out of the NCAA tournament and NIT.

Semifinals
March 22
Championship Series
March 26, 28, 30
      
North Texas 90
Jacksonville State 68
North Texas 62 69 88
San Francisco 72 55 77
San Francisco 65
Campbell 62

CollegeInsider.com Postseason tournament

The eighth CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament began on March 12, 2018 and ended with the championship game on March 30. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA tournament and NIT. 26 teams participate in this tournament.

Semifinals
March 28
Championship
March 30
      
UIC 67
Liberty 51
UIC 71
Northern Colorado 76
Sam Houston State 88
Northern Colorado 99

Conference standings

2017–18 American Athletic Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 6 Cincinnati162 .889315  .861
No. 21 Houston144 .778278  .771
No. 16 Wichita State144 .778258  .758
Tulsa126 .6671912  .613
Memphis108 .5562113  .618
UCF99 .5001913  .594
Temple810 .4441716  .515
UConn711 .3891418  .438
SMU612 .3331716  .515
Tulane513 .2781417  .452
East Carolina414 .2221020  .333
South Florida315 .1671022  .313
2018 AAC tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 America East Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Vermont151 .938278  .771
UMBC124 .7502511  .694
Hartford115 .6881914  .576
Albany106 .6252210  .688
Stony Brook79 .4381319  .406
New Hampshire610 .3751021  .323
UMass Lowell610 .3751218  .400
Maine313 .188626  .188
Binghamton214 .1251120  .355
2018 America East tournament winner
2017–18 Atlantic 10 men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Rhode Island153 .833268  .765
St. Bonaventure144 .778268  .765
Davidson135 .7222112  .636
Saint Joseph's108 .5561616  .500
VCU99 .5001815  .545
Saint Louis99 .5001716  .515
George Mason99 .5001617  .485
Richmond99 .5001220  .375
Dayton810 .4441417  .452
Duquesne711 .3891616  .500
George Washington711 .3891518  .455
La Salle711 .3891319  .406
Massachusetts513 .2781320  .394
Fordham414 .222922  .290
2018 A10 Tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 ASUN men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Florida Gulf Coast122 .8572312  .657
Lipscomb104 .7142310  .697
Jacksonville86 .5711518  .455
NJIT77 .5001416  .467
North Florida77 .5001419  .424
Kennesaw State68 .4291020  .333
Stetson410 .2861220  .375
USC Upstate212 .143725  .219
2018 ASUN Tournament winner
2017–18 ACC men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 1 Virginia171 .944313  .912
No. 9 Duke135 .722298  .784
No. 22 Miami (FL)117 .6112210  .688
No. 20 Clemson117 .6112510  .714
NC State117 .6112112  .636
No. 10 North Carolina117 .6112611  .703
Virginia Tech108 .5562112  .636
Florida State99 .5002312  .657
Louisville99 .5002214  .611
Notre Dame810 .4442115  .583
Syracuse810 .4442314  .622
Boston College711 .3891916  .543
Georgia Tech612 .3331319  .406
Wake Forest414 .2221120  .355
Pittsburgh018 .000824  .250
2018 ACC tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 Big East men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 3 Xavier153 .833296  .829
No. 2 Villanova144 .778364  .900
Seton Hall108 .5562212  .647
Creighton108 .5562112  .636
Providence108 .5562114  .600
Butler99 .5002114  .600
Marquette99 .5002114  .600
Georgetown513 .2781515  .500
St. John's414 .2221617  .485
DePaul414 .2221120  .355
2018 Big East tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 Big Sky men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Montana162 .889268  .765
Idaho144 .778229  .710
Weber State135 .7222011  .645
Eastern Washington135 .7222015  .571
Northern Colorado117 .6112612  .684
Idaho State99 .5001416  .467
Portland State99 .5002014  .588
Montana State612 .3331319  .406
North Dakota612 .3331220  .375
Southern Utah513 .2781319  .406
Sacramento State414 .222725  .219
Northern Arizona216 .111527  .156
Conference tournament winner
2017–18 Big South men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
UNC Asheville135 .7222113  .618
Radford126 .6672313  .639
Winthrop126 .6671912  .613
Campbell108 .5561816  .529
Liberty99 .5002215  .595
Charleston Southern99 .5001516  .484
High Point99 .5001416  .467
Gardner–Webb99 .5001418  .438
Presbyterian414 .2221121  .344
Longwood315 .167726  .212
2018 Big South tournament winner
2017–18 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 5 Michigan State162 .889305  .857
No. 11 Purdue153 .833307  .811
No. 17 Ohio State153 .833259  .735
No. 7 Michigan135 .722338  .805
Nebraska135 .7222211  .667
Penn State99 .5002613  .667
Indiana99 .5001615  .516
Maryland810 .4441913  .594
Wisconsin711 .3891518  .455
Northwestern612 .3331517  .469
Minnesota414 .2221517  .469
Illinois414 .2221418  .438
Iowa414 .2221419  .424
Rutgers315 .1671519  .441
2018 Big Ten tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 Big West men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
UC Davis124 .7502211  .667
UC Santa Barbara115 .688239  .719
UC Irvine115 .6881817  .514
Cal State Fullerton106 .6252012  .625
Long Beach State97 .5631518  .455
Hawai'i88 .5001713  .567
Cal Poly412 .250922  .290
UC Riverside412 .250922  .290
Cal State Northridge313 .188624  .200
2018 Big West tournament winner
2017–18 Big 12 men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 4 Kansas135 .722318  .795
No. 14 Texas Tech117 .6112710  .730
No. 15 West Virginia117 .6112611  .703
Kansas State108 .5562512  .676
TCU99 .5002112  .636
Baylor810 .4441915  .559
Texas810 .4441915  .559
Oklahoma State810 .4442115  .583
Oklahoma810 .4441814  .563
Iowa State414 .2221318  .419
2018 Big 12 Tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll [125]
2017–18 CAA men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
College of Charleston 144 .778268  .765
Northeastern144 .7782310  .697
Hofstra126 .6671912  .613
William & Mary117 .6111912  .613
Towson810 .4441814  .563
UNC Wilmington711 .3891121  .344
Delaware612 .3331419  .424
Drexel612 .3331320  .394
James Madison612 .3331022  .313
Elon612 .3331418  .438
2018 CAA tournament winner
2017–18 Conference USA men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Middle Tennessee162 .889258  .758
Old Dominion153 .833257  .781
Western Kentucky144 .7782711  .711
Marshall126 .6672511  .694
UTSA117 .6112015  .571
UAB108 .5562013  .606
North Texas810 .4442018  .526
FIU810 .4441418  .438
Southern Miss711 .3891618  .471
Louisiana Tech711 .3891716  .515
Florida Atlantic612 .3331219  .387
UTEP612 .3331120  .355
Rice414 .222724  .226
Charlotte216 .111623  .207
2018 C-USA Tournament winner
2017–18 Horizon League men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Northern Kentucky153 .8332210  .688
Wright State144 .7782510  .714
UIC126 .6672016  .556
Oakland108 .5561914  .576
Milwaukee810 .4441617  .485
IUPUI810 .4441119  .367
Green Bay711 .3891320  .394
Cleveland State612 .3331223  .343
Youngstown State612 .333824  .250
Detroit414 .222824  .250
2018 Horizon League Tournament winner
2017–18 Ivy League men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
x-Harvard122 .8571814  .563
x-Penn122 .857249  .727
Yale95 .6431615  .516
Cornell68 .4291216  .429
Princeton59 .3571316  .448
Columbia59 .357819  .296
Brown410 .2861116  .407
Dartmouth311 .214720  .259
x – Ivy League co-champions
2018 Ivy League Tournament winner
2017–18 Mid-American Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
East
Buffalo153 .833279  .750
Kent State99 .5001717  .500
Miami (OH)810 .4441618  .471
Bowling Green711 .3891616  .500
Ohio711 .3891417  .452
Akron612 .3331418  .438
West
Toledo135 .7222311  .676
Eastern Michigan117 .6112213  .629
Ball State108 .5561913  .594
Western Michigan99 .5001715  .531
Central Michigan711 .3892115  .583
Northern Illinois612 .3331319  .406
2018 MAC tournament winner
2017–18 MAAC men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Rider153 .8332210  .688
Canisius153 .8332112  .636
Niagara126 .6671914  .576
Iona117 .6112014  .588
Manhattan99 .5001417  .452
Fairfield99 .5001716  .515
Quinnipiac711 .3891221  .364
Monmouth711 .3891120  .355
Saint Peter's612 .3331418  .438
Siena414 .222824  .250
Marist414 .222625  .194
2018 MAAC tournament winner
2017–18 MEAC men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Hampton124 .7501916  .543
Bethune–Cookman124 .7501814  .563
Savannah State124 .7501517  .469
North Carolina A&T115 .6882015  .571
Norfolk State115 .6881419  .424
North Carolina Central 97 .5631916  .543
Morgan State79 .4381319  .406
Howard79 .4381023  .303
Florida A&M79 .438925  .265
South Carolina State610 .3751022  .313
Coppin State511 .313527  .156
MD Eastern Shore313 .188725  .219
Delaware State214 .125428  .125
2018 MEAC tournament winner
2017–18 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Loyola Chicago153 .833326  .842
Southern Illinois117 .6112013  .606
Illinois State108 .5561815  .545
Drake108 .5561717  .500
Bradley99 .5002013  .606
Indiana State810 .4441318  .419
Missouri State711 .3891815  .545
Evansville711 .3891715  .531
Northern Iowa711 .3891616  .500
Valparaiso612 .3331517  .469
2018 MVC tournament winner
2017–18 Mountain West Conference
men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 24 Nevada153 .833298  .784
Boise State135 .722239  .719
New Mexico126 .6671915  .559
Fresno State117 .6112111  .656
San Diego State117 .6112211  .667
Wyoming108 .5562013  .606
UNLV810 .4442013  .606
Utah State810 .4441717  .500
Air Force612 .3331219  .387
Colorado State414 .2221121  .344
San Jose State117 .056426  .133
Conference tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 Northeast Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Wagner144 .7782310  .697
Saint Francis (PA)126 .6671813  .581
Mount St. Mary's126 .6671814  .563
LIU Brooklyn108 .5561817  .514
St. Francis Brooklyn108 .5561318  .419
Robert Morris99 .5001617  .485
Fairleigh Dickinson99 .5001318  .419
Central Connecticut711 .3891418  .438
Sacred Heart513 .2781021  .323
Bryant216 .111328  .097
2018 NEC tournament winner
2017–18 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Murray State162 .889266  .813
Belmont153 .833249  .727
Austin Peay126 .6671915  .559
Jacksonville State117 .6112313  .639
Tennessee Tech108 .5561914  .576
Tennessee State108 .5561515  .500
Southeast Missouri State*810 .4441417  .452
Eastern Illinois711 .3891219  .387
SIU Edwardsville513 .278921  .300
UT Martin513 .2781021  .323
Eastern Kentucky513 .2781120  .355
Morehead State414 .222821  .276
*ineligible for postseason due to APR violations
2018 OVC tournament winner
2017–18 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 12 Arizona144 .778278  .771
USC126 .6672412  .667
UCLA117 .6112112  .636
Utah117 .6112312  .657
Stanford117 .6111916  .543
Oregon108 .5562313  .639
Washington108 .5562113  .618
Colorado810 .4441715  .531
Arizona State810 .4442012  .625
Oregon State711 .3891616  .500
Washington State414 .2221219  .387
California216 .111824  .250
Pac-12 Tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 Patriot League men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Bucknell162 .8892510  .714
Colgate126 .6671914  .576
Navy117 .6112012  .625
Lehigh117 .6111614  .533
Boston University108 .5561516  .484
Holy Cross810 .4441219  .387
Lafayette711 .3891021  .323
Army612 .3331317  .433
Loyola (MD)612 .333922  .290
American315 .167624  .200
2018 Patriot League tournament winner
2017–18 Southern Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
UNC Greensboro153 .833278  .771
East Tennessee State144 .778259  .735
Furman135 .7222310  .697
Mercer117 .6111915  .559
Wofford117 .6112113  .618
Western Carolina810 .4441319  .406
Samford612 .3331022  .313
The Citadel513 .2781121  .344
VMI414 .222921  .300
Chattanooga315 .1671023  .303
2018 SoCon Tournament winner
2017–18 Southland Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Southeastern Louisiana153 .8332212  .647
Nicholls State153 .8332111  .656
Stephen F. Austin144 .778287  .800
Sam Houston State126 .6672115  .583
Lamar117 .6111914  .576
New Orleans117 .6111617  .485
Central Arkansas108 .5561817  .514
Abilene Christian810 .4441616  .500
Texas A&M–CC810 .4441118  .379
McNeese State810 .4441117  .393
Incarnate Word216 .111721  .250
Houston Baptist216 .111625  .194
Northwestern State117 .056425  .138
2018 Southland tournament winner
2017–18 Southeastern Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 19 Auburn135 .722268  .765
No. 13 Tennessee135 .722269  .743
No. 23 Florida117 .6112113  .618
No. 18 Kentucky108 .5562611  .703
Missouri108 .5562013  .606
Arkansas108 .5562312  .657
Mississippi State99 .5002512  .676
Texas A&M99 .5002213  .629
Alabama810 .4442016  .556
LSU810 .4441815  .545
Georgia711 .3891815  .545
South Carolina711 .3891716  .515
Vanderbilt612 .3331220  .375
Ole Miss513 .2781220  .375
2018 SEC tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 SWAC men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Grambling State*135 .7221714  .548
Prairie View A&M126 .6671618  .471
Texas Southern126 .6671620  .444
Arkansas–Pine Bluff126 .6671421  .400
Southern108 .5561518  .455
Jackson State99 .5001220  .375
Alabama State810 .444823  .258
Alcorn State711 .3891121  .344
Mississippi Valley State414 .222428  .125
Alabama A&M*315 .167328  .097
*ineligible for postseason due to APR violations
2018 SWAC tournament winner
2017–18 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
Louisiana162 .889277  .794
Georgia State126 .6672411  .686
Georgia Southern117 .6112112  .636
Texas–Arlington108 .5562113  .618
Louisiana–Monroe99 .5001616  .500
Troy99 .5001617  .485
Appalachian State99 .5001518  .455
Coastal Carolina810 .4441418  .438
South Alabama711 .3891418  .438
Texas State711 .3891518  .455
Arkansas State612 .3331121  .344
Little Rock414 .222725  .219
2018 Sun Belt Conference tournament winner
2017–18 Summit League men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
South Dakota State 131 .929287  .800
South Dakota113 .786269  .743
Denver86 .5711515  .500
Fort Wayne77 .5001815  .545
North Dakota State59 .3571517  .469
Oral Roberts59 .3571121  .344
Omaha410 .286922  .290
Western Illinois311 .2141216  .429
2018 Summit League Tournament winner
2017–18 West Coast Conference men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 8 Gonzaga171 .944325  .865
No. 25 Saint Mary's162 .889306  .833
BYU117 .6112411  .686
San Diego99 .5002014  .588
San Francisco99 .5002217  .564
Pacific99 .5001418  .438
Santa Clara810 .4441120  .355
Loyola Marymount513 .2781120  .355
Portland414 .2221022  .313
Pepperdine216 .111626  .188
Conference tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll
2017–18 WAC men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
New Mexico State122 .857286  .824
Utah Valley104 .7142311  .676
Grand Canyon95 .6432212  .647
Seattle86 .5712014  .588
Texas–Rio Grande Valley68 .4291518  .455
Cal State Bakersfield59 .3571218  .400
UMKC59 .3571022  .313
Chicago State113 .071329  .094
2018 WAC tournament winner

Award winners

2018 Consensus All-America team

Consensus First Team
Player Position Class Team
Deandre Ayton PF/C Freshman Arizona
Marvin Bagley III PF Freshman Duke
Jalen Brunson PG Junior Villanova
Devonte' Graham PG Senior Kansas
Trae Young PG Freshman Oklahoma


Consensus Second Team
Player Position Class Team
Keita Bates-Diop SF Junior Ohio State
Trevon Bluiett SG Senior Xavier
Miles Bridges SF Sophomore Michigan State
Jevon Carter PG Senior West Virginia
Keenan Evans PG Senior Texas Tech
Jock Landale C Senior Saint Mary's

Major player of the year awards

Major freshman of the year awards

Major coach of the year awards

Other major awards

Coaching changes

Several teams changed coaches during and after the season.

Team Former
coach
Interim
coach
New
coach
Reason
Alabama A&M Donnie Marsh Dylan Howard Marsh resigned on May 11 after one season at Alabama A&M.[145] On May 17, AAMU associate head coach Howard was named interim head coach of the Bulldogs for the 2018–19 season,[146] and had the interim tag removed following the season.[147]
Bryant Tim O'Shea Jared Grasso The 56-year-old O'Shea announced on February 12 that he would retire at the end of the season.[148] The Bulldogs went 96–210 during O'Shea's 10-year tenure, including a 3–28 overall record and 2–16 in conference play this season. On March 30, Iona associate head coach Grasso was hired by Bryant for the head coaching position.[149]
Cal State Northridge Reggie Theus Mark Gottfried Cal State Northridge parted ways with Theus on March 6 after five seasons, finishing with a 53–105 record with no postseason appearances.[150] Former North Carolina State head coach Gottfried was named head coach of the Matadors on March 13.[151]
Charlotte Mark Price Houston Fancher Ron Sanchez Price was fired on December 14 after a 3–6 start and a 30–42 record overall in 2½ seasons at Charlotte. He was replaced on an interim basis by assistant Fancher for the rest of the season.[152] Virginia associate head coach Sanchez was hired as head coach of the 49ers on March 19.[153]
Chicago State Tracy Dildy Lance Irvin Chicago State fired Dildy on the week of March 5, although it was not officially confirmed until March 12. The Cougars struggled during Dildy's eight-year tenure, which saw them lose at least 20 games in seven of those seasons.[154] After a nearly five-month search, including hiring Chris Zorich as the new athletic director, the school hired Lance Irvin, a Chicago native and former assistant coach at DePaul and several other schools, as the new head coach on August 7.[155]
Colorado State Larry Eustachy Steve Barnes
Jase Herl
Niko Medved Eustachy, who was in his sixth season at Colorado State, was placed on administrative leave on February 3 amid an internal investigation into his conduct with players and staff members. He had previously been sanctioned by the university in 2017 for emotionally abusing players and assistant coaches from a university led investigation in 2014. Top assistant Steve Barnes was initially named as the interim replacement.[156] A later report by The Denver Post indicated that school officials planned to fire Eustachy with cause, and were negotiating a contract buyout.[157] On February 10, hours before the Rams' home game against San Jose State, the school placed Barnes on administrative leave after two games, and Barnes' top assistant Jase Herl was named interim coach for the rest of the season.[158] On February 26, Eustachy resigned after reaching a buyout agreement.[159] On March 22, Drake head coach and former Colorado State assistant Medved was named the new head coach.[160]
Delaware State Keith Walker Keith Johnson Eric Skeeters Walker was fired on February 22 after five seasons at Delaware State, finishing with a 43–96 record, including a 3–25 record this season at the time of his firing. Associate head coach Johnson was named interim head coach of the Hornets for the rest of the season.[161] More than five months after Walker's firing, along with hiring a new athletic director, the school hired UMBC assistant coach Skeeters for the job on July 25.[162]
Detroit Bacari Alexander Mike Davis Detroit fired Alexander on March 26 after two seasons at his alma mater, finishing 16–47 overall including a last place finish in Horizon league play this season.[163] The school hired Texas Southern's Mike Davis as the new head coach on June 13.[164]
Drake Niko Medved Darian DeVries Medved left Drake after one season for the Colorado State head coaching job on March 22.[160] Creighton assistant coach DeVries was named head coach of the Bulldogs on March 29.[165]
East Carolina Jeff Lebo Michael Perry Joe Dooley Lebo announced his resignation from ECU on November 29, 2017, after a 2–4 start to the season and a 116–122 overall record with no NCAA tournament appearances in eight seasons with the program. Assistant Michael Perry was named interim head coach of the Pirates for the rest of the season.[166] After the season was over, ECU brought back one of its former head coaches in Dooley, who had led the Pirates from 1995 to 1999, from Florida Gulf Coast on April 4.[167]
Eastern Kentucky Dan McHale A. W. Hamilton McHale was fired on February 26, the day after the Colonels ended the season 11–20 overall and 5–13 in Ohio Valley Conference play. In three seasons at EKU, he was 38–55 overall and 16–34 in OVC play, and failed to qualify for the OVC Tournament during his tenure at Eastern Kentucky.[168] On March 23, EKU hired North Carolina State assistant Hamilton as the new head coach.[169]
Evansville Marty Simmons Walter McCarty Evansville fired Simmons on March 13 after 11 seasons. Although the former Indiana and Evansville player had three 20-win seasons with the Purple Aces, the team never made the NCAA tournament during his tenure.[170] Evansville hired Boston Celtics assistant and Evansville native McCarty on March 22.[171]
FIU Anthony Evans Jeremy Ballard FIU parted ways with Evans on April 2 after five seasons and a 65–94 overall record.[172] On April 20, VCU associate head coach Ballard was hired by the Panthers for the job.[173]
Florida Atlantic Michael Curry Dusty May After posting a 39–84 overall record in four seasons, FAU fired Curry on March 16.[174] Florida assistant May was hired as head coach of the Owls on March 22.[175]
Florida Gulf Coast Joe Dooley Michael Fly Dooley left Florida Gulf Coast on April 4 after five seasons to return to East Carolina, having previously served as head coach of the school from 1995 to 1999.[167] Longtime FGCU assistant coach Fly was promoted to head coach of the Eagles the following day.[176]
Fresno State Rodney Terry Justin Hutson Terry left Fresno State on March 12 after seven seasons for the UTEP head coaching job.[177] The Bulldogs tabbed San Diego State assistant coach Hutson as his replacement on April 5.[178]
Georgia Mark Fox Tom Crean Georgia fired Fox on March 10 after nine seasons, in which the team went 163–133 overall, but had made the NCAA tournament just twice in his tenure.[179] The Bulldogs hired ESPN analyst and former Indiana and Marquette head coach Crean on March 15.[180]
High Point Scott Cherry Tubby Smith Cherry and the university mutually agreed to part ways on March 7 after nine seasons, finishing with 146 wins and the program's winningest coach in the Division I era.[181] On March 27, longtime college basketball coach and former High Point player Tubby Smith was named head coach of the Panthers.[182]
Incarnate Word Ken Burmeister Carson Cunningham Incarnate Word's Athletic Director announced on March 6 that Burmeister would not return next season, finishing with a 202–138 overall record in 12 seasons at the school.[183] The Cardinals went to the NAIA for their next hire, naming Carroll College's Cunningham as the new head coach on March 22.[184]
La Salle John Giannini Ashley Howard La Salle parted ways with Giannini on March 23 after 14 seasons, finishing with 212 wins overall but only making the NCAA tournament once during his tenure as head coach.[185] On April 10, Villanova assistant coach Howard, who previously served as assistant coach with the Explorers from 2004 to 2008, was hired for the head coaching job.[186]
Little Rock Wes Flanigan Darrell Walker Little Rock fired Flanagan on March 9 after two seasons, finishing 22–42 overall, including a school record 25 losses this season.[187] On March 28, the Trojans hired former NBA player Darrell Walker, who spent the last two seasons as head coach at Division II Clark Atlanta University.[188]
Longwood Jayson Gee Griff Aldrich Gee was fired on March 2 after five seasons at Longwood, finishing 42–120 overall and never finishing higher than eighth place in Big South Conference play.[189] On March 22, UMBC recruiting director Aldrich was named head coach of the Lancers.[190]
Louisville Rick Pitino David Padgett Chris Mack Pitino, who was initially placed on unpaid administrative leave in September, was fired on October 16 after 16 seasons at Louisville amid revelations of his possible involvement in the NCAA corruption scandal. Louisville elevated assistant Padgett, but initially signed him only for the 2017–18 season.[17] The Cardinals announced on March 21 that Padgett was not being retained.[191] On March 27, Louisville hired Xavier head coach Chris Mack for the job.[192]
Loyola (Maryland) G.G. Smith Tavaras Hardy Smith resigned from Loyola on March 8 after five seasons, finishing with a record of 56–98 overall.[193] On March 28, Georgia Tech assistant coach Hardy was hired by the Greyhounds for the head coaching position.[194]
Maine Bob Walsh Richard Barron Walsh resigned on March 5 after four seasons at Maine, choosing not to seek a contract extension. The Black Bears lost 100 overall games during Walsh's tenure with the team. Within hours, the school hired Barron, who had been working with the Maine athletic department after recovering from medical issues that forced him to take leave from coaching the Black Bears women's team in January 2017.[195]
Marist Mike Maker John Dunne Maker was fired on March 5 after four seasons at Marist, which saw the Red Foxes go 28–97 during his tenure.[196] On April 3, Marist hired MAAC rival Saint Peter's head coach Dunne for the same position.[197]
Maryland Eastern Shore Bobby Collins Clifford Reed Jason Crafton Collins' contract was not renewed on March 26, 2018, ending his 4-year tenure at Maryland Eastern Shore with a 49-82 overall record.[198] Assistant coach Reed served as the interim head coach of the Hawks for the 2018–19 season,[199] and after the season, the school hired Jason Crafton, assistant coach of the Philadelphia 76ers' NBA G League team Delaware Blue Coats and former head coach at Nyack College, on April 24, 2019.[200]
McNeese State Dave Simmons Heath Schroyer McNeese State parted ways with Simmons on March 4 after 12 seasons, finishing 155–211 overall with only two winning seasons and one postseason appearance.[201] BYU assistant coach Schroyer, who had previous head coaching experience with Portland State, Wyoming, and Tennessee-Martin, was named head coach of the Cowboys on March 15.[202]
Memphis Tubby Smith Penny Hardaway Smith was fired on March 14 after two seasons amid a week of speculation that Memphis was seeking to hire Penny Hardaway, a former Tigers and NBA star. Although Smith went 40–26 overall and 21–13 this season, he struggled with recruiting and failed to make the NCAA tournament in either season.[203] Hardaway was officially introduced as the new coach on March 20.[204]
Middle Tennessee Kermit Davis Nick McDevitt Davis left Middle Tennessee after 16 seasons for the Ole Miss head coaching job on March 19, after officially being named head coach on March 15.[205] UNC Asheville head coach McDevitt was hired as head coach by the Blue Raiders on March 24.[206]
Missouri State Paul Lusk Dana Ford Lusk was fired on March 3 after seven seasons at Missouri State, finishing 106–121 overall, including an 18–15 overall record and 7–11 in conference play after the Bears were picked as the preseason favorite to win the MVC regular-season title.[207] On March 21, the school hired Tennessee State head coach Ford for the job.[208]
Mount St. Mary's Jamion Christian Dan Engelstad Christian left his alma mater on May 2 after six seasons for the Siena job.[209] On May 9, the school hired former Mountaineer assistant coach Englestad from Division III Southern Vermont as Christian's replacement.[210]
Nicholls State Richie Riley Austin Claunch Riley left Nicholls on March 15 after two seasons for the South Alabama head coaching job.[211] Assistant coach Claunch was promoted to head coach of the Colonels on March 29.[212]
Ole Miss Andy Kennedy Tony Madlock Kermit Davis It was initially announced on February 12 that Kennedy, the program's winningest head coach, would part ways with Ole Miss at the end of the season after 12 years at the school.[213] However, on February 19, Kennedy announced that he would depart immediately, with assistant Madlock taking over on an interim basis for the rest of the season.[214] The Rebels hired Middle Tennessee head coach Davis on March 15, and officially introduced him on March 19 after the Blue Raiders second round loss to Louisville in the NIT.[205]
Pepperdine Marty Wilson Lorenzo Romar Pepperdine announced on February 13 that Wilson would not return as head coach of his alma mater, effective at the end of the season.[215] He finished at Pepperdine with a seven-year record of 88–129 (91–139 when including his 3–10 record as interim head coach in 1995–96). Arizona associate head coach Romar, who previously served as head coach of the Waves from 1996 to 1999, was named head coach on March 12, and was formally introduced after Arizona was upset by Buffalo in the NCAA tournament.[216]
Pittsburgh Kevin Stallings Jeff Capel After two disastrous seasons, including going winless in ACC play this season, Pitt fired Stallings on March 8.[217] On March 27, Duke associate head coach and former VCU/Oklahoma head coach Capel was hired by the Panthers for the job.[218]
Rhode Island Dan Hurley David Cox Hurley left Rhode Island after six seasons to take the UConn head coaching job on March 22.[219] On April 4, top assistant Cox was promoted to head coach of the Rams.[220]
Saint Peter's John Dunne Shaheen Holloway Dunne left Saint Peter's after 12 seasons for the head coaching job at MAAC rival Marist on April 3.[197] The Peacocks stayed local for their new hire, announcing Seton Hall assistant Holloway as the new head coach on April 11.[221]
San Diego Lamont Smith Sam Scholl Smith resigned from his alma mater on March 8 after three seasons. He had been placed on administrative leave by the university following a February 25 domestic violence arrest and had the charges dropped hours before announcing his resignation.[222] Assistant coach Scholl, who coached the Toreros in the WCC tournament, was named interim head coach of the team during the CIT tournament,[223] and had the interim tag removed at the end of the season.[224]
Siena Jimmy Patsos Jamion Christian Patsos resigned on April 13 after five seasons at Siena and a 77–92 overall record, including an 8–24 finish this season. Despite this, he had the apparent confidence of the school's athletic director, but an ongoing internal investigation into the program revealed multiple issues, with allegations ranging from abusive conduct to financial improprieties.[225] Mount St. Mary's head coach Christian was hired by the Saints for the job on May 2.[209]
South Alabama Matthew Graves Richie Riley South Alabama fired Graves on March 8 after five seasons, finishing 65–96 overall with no postseason appearances.[226] Nicholls State head coach Richie Riley was hired by the Jaguars for the head coaching job on March 15.[211]
South Dakota Craig Smith Todd Lee Smith left South Dakota on March 26 after four seasons for the Utah State head coaching job.[227] South Dakota alum Todd Lee, who spent the past five seasons as associate head coach at Grand Canyon University under Dan Majerle, was hired by the Coyotes as Smith's replacement on April 4.[228]
Tennessee State Dana Ford Brian Collins Ford left Tennessee State on March 21 after four seasons for the Missouri State head coaching job.[208] On March 26, the Tigers brought Illinois State assistant coach Collins back to his hometown of Nashville, where he also played in college at Belmont, as the new head coach.[229]
Texas-Arlington Scott Cross Chris Ogden Considered to be one of the most controversial coaching changes of the off-season, Cross, UTA's all-time winningest head coach with 225 wins, was fired on March 26 after 12 seasons at his alma mater, with UTA's athletic director citing new leadership in the program as the reason for firing Cross.[230] Former Texas player Ogden, who spent the past two seasons as an assistant at Texas Tech, was hired by the Mavericks as Cross's replacement on April 6.[231]
Texas Southern Mike Davis Johnny Jones Davis left Texas Southern on June 13 after six seasons for the Detroit Mercy head coaching job.[164] On June 25, the Tigers hired Nevada associate head coach and former LSU/North Texas head coach Johnny Jones for the job.[232]
UConn Kevin Ollie Dan Hurley UConn dismissed Ollie on March 10 after six seasons, stating that it had "initiated disciplinary procedures" to formally fire him with cause. The school announced in January it was the subject of an NCAA investigation, with media reporting that the inquiry involved recruiting. Ollie, a former Huskies star and NBA journeyman, replaced Hall of Fame coach Jim Calhoun in 2012, and coached UConn to a national title in 2014, but the team failed to make the postseason for the second year in a row and finished 14–18 this season.[233] On March 22, UConn hired Rhode Island head coach Dan Hurley as the new head coach.[219]
UC Riverside Dennis Cutts Justin Bell David Patrick Cutts was fired on January 1 after a 50–85 record in five seasons at UCR, including a 5–9 start to the season. Associate head coach Bell was named interim head coach of the Highlanders for the remainder of the season.[234] TCU assistant coach Patrick was named the new head coach of UCR on March 14 and formally introduced after the Horned Frogs were eliminated from the NCAA tournament.[235]
UNC Asheville Nick McDevitt Mike Morrell McDevitt left his alma mater on March 24 after five seasons for the Middle Tennessee head coaching job.[206] UNCA announced Texas assistant Morrell as the new head coach of the Bulldogs on April 11.[236]
USC Upstate Kyle Perry Dave Dickerson Less than five months after being named full-time head coach, USC Upstate fired Perry on March 1, three days after the Spartans lost to Florida Gulf Coast in the first round of the ASUN tournament.[237] On March 30, USC Upstate hired former Tulane head coach Dickerson, who had been serving as a scout for the Utah Jazz.[238]
Utah State Tim Duryea Craig Smith Utah State fired Duryea on March 11 after three seasons and a 47–49 record.[239] On March 26, the Aggies hired South Dakota head coach Craig Smith for the same position.[227]
UTEP Tim Floyd Phil Johnson Rodney Terry The 63-year-old Floyd announced his retirement, effective immediately, after eight seasons at UTEP and 24 overall following the Miners loss to Lamar on November 27.[240] Floyd's longtime assistant Johnson was named interim head coach of the team the following day.[241] On March 12, the school hired Fresno State head coach Terry as the new head coach.[177]
Western Carolina Larry Hunter Mark Prosser It was announced on March 4 that Hunter was stepping down from Western Carolina after 13 seasons.[242] On March 27, Winthrop associate head coach Mark Prosser, son of the late former Xavier and Wake Forest head coach Skip Prosser, was hired as the new head coach of the Catamounts.[243] In a postscript to the story, Hunter died two months after his resignation on May 4 from a stroke he suffered earlier in the week.[244]
Xavier Chris Mack Travis Steele Mack left his alma mater on March 27 after nine seasons for the Louisville head coaching job.[192] On March 31, longtime Xavier assistant coach Steele was promoted to head coach of the Musketeers.[245]

See also

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