NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament
Current season, competition or edition: 2022 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament | |
Sport | Basketball |
---|---|
Founded | 1975 |
No. of teams | 64 |
Country | NCAA Division III (USA) |
Most recent champion(s) | Wisconsin-Oshkosh (2019; 1st title) |
TV partner(s) | CBS Sports Network |
Official website | NCAA.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 had been held annually from 1975 through 2019, but has not been played since then 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. Since 2017, the tournament has been a 64-team single-elimination tournament, with teams advancing from four regionals 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]
Wisconsin–Oshkosh is the most recent national champion.
Qualification[]
From 2020–21, a total of 64 bids were intended to be available for the tournament:
- 44 automatic bids, awarded to the champions of all Division III conferences.
- 20 at-large bids.
Changes from the 2020 tournament, ultimately canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, are:
- The American Collegiate Athletic Association merged into the Capital Athletic Conference to form the Coast to Coast Athletic Conference.
- The Atlantic East Conference, which began play in 2018–19 with seven members that all sponsor men's basketball, will receive its first automatic bid in the 2022 tournament, assuming that it is held.
Conference tournaments[]
Schools in italics are, as of the current 2021–22 basketball season, no longer members of that specific conference.
Conference | Tournament | Most titles | Current champion (2022) |
---|---|---|---|
Allegheny Mountain | Tournament | Medaille & Penn State Behrend (6) | Medaille (6th) |
American Rivers | Tournament | Buena Vista (7) | Dubuque (4th) |
American Southwest | Tournament | Mississippi College (5) | Mary Hardin–Baylor (3rd) |
Atlantic East | Tournament | Gwynedd Mercy and Wesley (DE) (1) | Neumann (1st) |
Centennial | Tournament | Franklin & Marshall (8) | Johns Hopkins |
CUNYAC | Tournament | Staten Island (15) | Baruch (4th) |
Coast to Coast (C2C) | Tournament | Catholic (7) | Christopher Newport (4th) |
CCIW | Tournament | Augustana (6) | Elmhurst (2nd) |
Colonial States | Tournament | Cabrini (13) | Wilson (PA) (1st) |
Commonwealth Coast | Tournament | Endicott (7) | Nichols (5th) |
Empire 8 | Tournament | St. John Fisher (7) | Nazareth (4th) |
Great Northeast | Tournament | Albertus Magnus (8) | Saint Joseph (CT) (2nd) |
Heartland | Tournament | Franklin & Hanover (6) | Franklin (6th) |
Landmark | Tournament | Scranton (7) | Susquehanna (2nd) |
Liberty | Tournament | Skidmore (5) | Vassar (1st) |
Little East | Tournament | UMass Dartmouth (12) | Keene State (5th) |
MASCAC | Tournament | Salem State (18) | Westfield State (3rd) |
Michigan | Tournament | Hope (13) | Hope (13th) |
MAC Commonwealth | Tournaments | Scranton (16) | Hood (1st) |
MAC Freedom | Stevens (2nd) | ||
Midwest | Tournament | Ripon (8) | Cornell College (2nd) |
Minnesota | Tournament | St. Thomas (9) | Saint John's (4th) |
NECC | Tournament | Elms (4) | Mitchell (3rd) |
NESCAC | Tournament | Amherst (8) | Wesleyan (2nd) |
NEWMAC | Tournament | MIT (6) | WPI (4th) |
NJAC | Tournament | Stockton (6) | Stockton (6th) |
North Atlantic | Championship | Husson (7) | Husson (8th) |
NCAC | Tournament | Wooster (16th) | Wabash (1st) |
NACC | Tournament | Aurora (5) | Marian (2nd) |
Northwest | Tournament | Whitworth (14) | Whitworth (14th) |
Ohio | Tournament | Wittenberg (14) | Marietta (5th) |
ODAC | Tournament | Hampden–Sydney and Roanoke (10) | Randolph–Macon (9th) |
Presidents | Tournament | Bethany (6) | Washington & Jefferson (1st) |
Skyline | Tournament | Farmingdale State (5) | Yeshiva (3rd) |
SLIAC | Tournament | Blackburn, Westminster (MO), and Fontbonne (5) | Blackburn (5th) |
SAA | Tournament | Berry and Centre (KY) (3) | Berry (3rd) |
SCIAC | Tournament | Claremont–Mudd–Scripps (6) | Pomona–Pitzer (4th) |
SCAC | Tournament | Trinity (TX) (6) | St. Thomas (TX) (2nd) |
SUNYAC | Tournament | Buffalo State (15) | Oswego (5th) |
United East | Championship | Morrisville State (5) | Penn State Harrisburg (2nd) |
UAA | No tournament | ||
UMAC | Tournament | Northwestern–St. Paul (13) | Northwestern–St. Paul (13th) |
USA South | Tournament | Christopher Newport (15) | Averett (5th) |
WIAC | Tournament | Wisconsin–Stevens Point (9) | Wisconsin–Oshkosh (5th) |
Summary[]
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) | |||
1996 | Salem, Virginia | Rowan | 100–93 | Hope | Illinois Wesleyan Franklin & Marshall |
Terrence Stewart (Rowan) | ||
1997 | Illinois Wesleyan | 89–86 | Nebraska Wesleyan | Williams Alvernia |
Bryan Crabtree (Illinois Wesleyan) | |||
1998 | Wisconsin–Platteville (3) | 69–56 | Hope | Williams Wilkes |
Ben Hoffmann (Wisconsin–Platteville) | |||
1999 | Wisconsin–Platteville (4) | 76–75 (2OT) |
Hampden–Sydney | Connecticut College William Paterson |
Merrill Brunson (Wisconsin–Platteville) | |||
2000 | Calvin (2) | 79–74 | Wisconsin–Eau Claire | Salem State Franklin & Marshall |
Sherm Carstensen (Wisconsin-Eau Claire) | |||
2001 | Catholic | 76–62 | William Paterson | Illinois Wesleyan Ohio Northern |
Pat Maloney (Catholic) | |||
2002 | Otterbein | 102–83 | Elizabethtown | Carthage Rochester |
Jeff Gibbs (Otterbein) | |||
2003 | Williams | 67–65 | Gustavus Adolphus | Wooster Hampden–Sydney |
Benjamin Coffin (Williams) | |||
2004[5] | Wisconsin–Stevens Point | 84–82 | Williams | John Carroll Amherst |
Nick Bennett (Wisconsin–Stevens Point) | |||
2005 | Wisconsin–Stevens Point (2) | 73–49 | Rochester | Calvin York (PA) |
Jason Kalsow (Wisconsin–Stevens Point) | |||
2006 | Virginia Wesleyan | 59–56[6] | Wittenberg | Illinois Wesleyan Amherst |
Ton Ton Balenga (Virginia Wesleyan) | |||
2007 | Amherst | 80–67[7] | Virginia Wesleyan | Washington–St. Louis Wooster |
Andrew Olson (Amherst) | |||
2008 | Washington–St. Louis | 90–68 | Amherst | Hope Ursinus |
Troy Ruths (Washington–St. Louis) | |||
2009 | Washington–St. Louis (2) | 61–52[8] | Richard Stockton | Guilford Franklin & Marshall |
Sean Wallis (Washington–St. Louis) | |||
2010 | Wisconsin–Stevens Point (3) | 78–73[9] | Williams | Guilford Randolph–Macon |
Matt Moses (Wisconsin–Stevens Point) | |||
2011 | St. Thomas (MN) | 78–54[10] | Wooster | Middlebury Williams |
Tyler Nicolai (St. Thomas–MN) | |||
2012 | Wisconsin–Whitewater (3) | 63–60[11] | Cabrini | Illinois Wesleyan MIT |
Chris Davis (Wisconsin–Whitewater) | |||
2013 | Atlanta, Georgia[a] | Amherst (2) | 87–70[12] | Mary Hardin–Baylor | St. Thomas (MN) North Central (IL) |
Allen Williamson (Amherst) | ||
2014 | Salem, Virginia | Wisconsin–Whitewater (4) | 75–73[13] | Williams | Amherst Illinois Wesleyan |
K. J. Evans (Wisconsin–Whitewater) | ||
2015 | Wisconsin–Stevens Point (4) | 70–54 | Augustana (IL) | Babson Virginia Wesleyan |
Austin Ryf (Wisconsin–Stevens Point) | |||
2016 | St. Thomas (MN) (2) | 82–76 | Benedictine | Christopher Newport Amherst |
Taylor Montero (St. Thomas-MN) | |||
2017 | Babson | 79–78 | Augustana (IL) | Whitman Williams |
Joey Flannery (Babson) | |||
2018 | Nebraska Wesleyan | 78–72 | Wisconsin–Oshkosh | Ramapo Springfield |
Cooper Cook (Nebraska Wesleyan) | |||
2019 | Fort Wayne, Indiana | Wisconsin-Oshkosh | 96–82 | Swarthmore | Christopher Newport Wheaton (IL) |
Jack Flynn Wisconsin–Oshkosh | ||
2020 | Atlanta, Georgia[b] | Abandoned after second round due to the COVID-19 pandemic | ||||||
2021 | Fort Wayne, Indiana | Not held because insufficient number of Division III schools played a season because of pandemic. A bowl-game style championship was organised by top two teams in D3Sports.com polls Randolph-Macon defeated Trine, 69-55, on campus in Ashland, VA.[14] | ||||||
2022 |
- Notes
- ^ Only the championship game was played in Atlanta. The semifinals were played at the then-traditional site of the Salem Civic Center in Salem, Virginia.
- ^ Only the championship game would have been played in Atlanta. The semifinals would have been played at Allen County War Memorial Coliseum in Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Locations[]
- Reading, Pennsylvania 1975–1976
- Rock Island, Illinois 1977–1981
- Grand Rapids, Michigan 1982–1988
- Springfield, Ohio 1989–1992
- Buffalo, New York 1993–1995
- Salem, Virginia 1996-2018 (semifinals only in 2013)
- Atlanta 2013 (championship game only)
- Fort Wayne, Indiana 2019, 2022–
Championships, by team[]
Schools in italics no longer compete in NCAA Division III.
School | Titles | Years |
---|---|---|
North Park | 5 | 1978, 1979, 1980, 1985, 1987 |
Wisconsin–Stevens Point | 4 | 2004, 2005, 2010, 2015 |
Wisconsin–Whitewater | 1984, 1989, 2012, 2014 | |
Wisconsin–Platteville | 1991, 1995, 1998, 1999 | |
St. Thomas (MN) | 2 | 2011, 2016 |
Amherst | 2007, 2013 | |
Calvin | 1992, 2000 | |
Potsdam State | 1981, 1986 | |
Scranton | 1976, 1983 | |
Washington (MO) | 2008, 2009 | |
Wisconsin-Oshkosh | 1 | 2019 |
Nebraska Wesleyan | 2018 | |
Babson | 2017 | |
Virginia Wesleyan | 2006 | |
Williams | 2003 | |
Otterbein | 2002 | |
Catholic | 2001 | |
Illinois Wesleyan | 1997 | |
Rowan | 1996 | |
Lebanon Valley | 1994 | |
Ohio Northern | 1993 | |
Rochester | 1990 | |
Ohio Wesleyan | 1988 | |
Wabash | 1982 | |
Wittenberg | 1977 | |
LeMoyne–Owen | 1975 |
Appearances, by team[]
- Programs with more than 20 appearances in the Division III tournament:
Bids | School | Conference | First Bid | Most Recent |
---|---|---|---|---|
29 | Wittenberg | NCAC | 1975 | 2019 |
28 | Scranton | Landmark | 1975 | 2017 |
28 | Wooster | NCAC | 1978 | 2019 |
27 | Hope | MIAA | 1982 | 2018 |
25 | Franklin & Marshall | Centennial | 1975 | 2018 |
25 | Illinois Wesleyan | CCIW | 1984 | 2018 |
25 | Salem State | MASCAC | 1980 | 2019 |
23 | Christopher Newport | C2C | 1986 | 2019 |
21 | Calvin | MIAA | 1980 | 2017 |
21 | Washington–St. Louis | UAA | 1987 | 2018 |
21 | Wisconsin–Whitewater | WIAC | 1983 | 2017 |
See also[]
- NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament
- NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament
- NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament
References[]
- ^ "Success paves way for 75th celebration" (Press release). NCAA. May 10, 2012. Archived from the original on May 21, 2012. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
- ^ "Preliminary round sites announced for 2014, 2015 NCAA tournaments". NCAA. December 16, 2012. Archived from the original on May 11, 2013. Retrieved January 24, 2013.
- ^ "Combined championships for NCAA basketball planned" (Press release). NCAA. April 24, 2019. Retrieved April 25, 2019.
- ^ "EDITORIAL: Randolph-Macon wins mythical national title". Fredricksburg.com. (Fredricksburg) Free Lance-Star.
- ^ Kalsow comes through for Pointers - Men's College Basketball - ESPN
- ^ Balenga leads Virginia Wesleyan to title - Men's College Basketball - ESPN
- ^ Amherst notches first D-III basketball championship - Men's College Basketball - ESPN
- ^ Washington University repeats as Division-III champion - ESPN
- ^ Wisconsin-Stevens Point Pointers rally to beat Williams College for DIII title - ESPN
- ^ St. Thomas pounds Wooster for NCAA Division III men's title - ESPN
- ^ Wisconsin-Whitewater wins D-III men's hoops crown - ESPN
- ^ 'Willy stuff' helps Amherst to Division III national title
- ^ "It's a family tradition at Whitewater; KJ Evans earns MOP, follows in uncle's footsteps". NCAA. NCAA.com. Retrieved April 10, 2014.
- ^ "Randolph-Macon runs out to win in showdown". D3Sports.com. Presto Sports. Retrieved 2021-09-26.
- ^ "Division III Men's Basketball Championship" (PDF). NCAA. NCAA.org. Retrieved March 19, 2017.[dead link]
- ^ "DIVISION III MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS RECORDS BOOK" (PDF). NCAA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 March 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2021.
External links[]
- NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament
- Recurring sporting events established in 1975