Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball
Northwestern Wildcats | |||
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| |||
University | Northwestern University | ||
All-time record | 1092–1521–1 (.418) | ||
Head coach | Chris Collins (8th season) | ||
Conference | Big Ten | ||
Location | Evanston, Illinois | ||
Arena | Welsh-Ryan Arena (Capacity: 7,500) | ||
Nickname | Wildcats | ||
Student section | Wildside | ||
Colors | Purple and white[1] | ||
Uniforms | |||
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Pre-tournament Premo-Porretta Champions | |||
1931 | |||
Pre-tournament Helms Champions | |||
1931 | |||
NCAA Tournament Round of 32 | |||
2017 | |||
NCAA Tournament Appearances | |||
2017 | |||
Conference regular season champions | |||
1931, 1933 |
The Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball team is an NCAA Division I college basketball team representing Northwestern University in the Big Ten Conference. Men's basketball was introduced at Northwestern in 1901.[2] As of 2020 the team is coached by Chris Collins. The Wildcats have advanced to the NCAA Tournament once, in 2017, after being the only longstanding member of a Power Five conference to have never made the tournament.[3] The Wildcats have won two Big Ten conference championships (1931 and 1933).
History[]
Although Northwestern had great success in the early part of the 20th century, it has spent most of the time since World War II in the bottom half of the Big Ten. The Wildcats were retroactively selected as the 1930–31 national champion by both the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll,[4] and have won only one other conference title, in 1933. It has only finished above fourth place twice since World War II, and did not have a winning record in conference play from 1968 until 2017. During that time, only the 2003–04 team even managed a .500 conference record. On March 1, 2017, the Wildcats won their 10th conference game (a 67–65 win over Michigan) to clinch their first winning Big Ten record in almost half a century. That season also saw the Wildcats make their first NCAA Tournament in school history, winning their first NCAA tournament game 68–66 against Vanderbilt.[5] The Wildcats have also appeared in the National Invitation Tournament seven times (1983, 1994, 1999, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012).
The very first NCAA tournament championship was held at Northwestern in March 1939.[6][7] Until making their first NCAA Tournament in 2017, Northwestern had been one of five original NCAA Division I schools and the only school from a power conference to have never played an NCAA Tournament game.[8][9][10] Northwestern won their first Tournament game, defeating Vanderbilt 68–66.[11] The Wildcats lost in the Second Round to No. 1-seeded Gonzaga.[12]
Coaching history[]
Coach | Years | Record | Conference Record | Conference Titles |
Tom Holland | 1904–1905 | 2–2 | 0–0 | |
Louis Gillesby | 1906–1910 | 4–28 | 1–13 | |
Stuart Templeton | 1910–1911 | 3–15 | 1–12 | |
Charles Hammett | 1911–1912 | 4–9 | 0–8 | |
Dennis Grady | 1912–1914 | 25–10 | 13–7 | |
Fred Murphy | 1914–1917 | 28–24 | 16–18 | |
Norman Elliott | 1917–1918, 1919–1920 | 10–11 | 7–9 | |
Tom Robinson | 1918–1919 | 6–6 | 6–4 | |
Ray Elder | 1920–1921 | 2–12 | 1–11 | |
Dana Evans | 1921–1922 | 7–11 | 3–9 | |
Maury Kent | 1922–1927 | 19–62 | 11–49 | |
Arthur Lonborg | 1927–1950 | 236–203–1 | 138–141 | 2 |
Harold Olsen | 1950–1952 | 19–25 | 11–17 | |
Waldo Fisher | 1952–1957 | 35–75 | 21–53 | |
William Rohr | 1957–1963 | 66–70 | 39–45 | |
Larry Glass | 1963–1969 | 61–71 | 33–45 | |
Brad Snyder | 1969–1973 | 30–71 | 16–46 | |
Tex Winter | 1973–1978 | 42–89 | 25–61 | |
Rich Falk | 1978–1986 | 77–144 | 32–112 | |
Bill Foster | 1986–1993 | 54–141 | 13–113 | |
Ricky Byrdsong | 1993–1997 | 34–78 | 10–62 | |
Kevin O’Neill | 1997–2000 | 30–56 | 19–39 | |
Bill Carmody | 2000–2013 | 192–210 | 70–150 | |
Chris Collins | 2013–present | 118–134 | 49–100 | |
Totals | 1104-1557-1 | 535-1054 | 2 |
Sources:[13]
Postseason[]
NCAA Division I tournament results[]
The Wildcats have appeared in the NCAA Tournament once. Their record is 1–1.
Year | Seed | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | No. 8 | First Round Second Round |
No. 9 Vanderbilt No. 1 Gonzaga |
W 68–66 L 73–79 |
NIT results[]
The Wildcats have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) seven times. Their combined record is 5–7.
Year | Round | Opponent | Result |
---|---|---|---|
1983 | First Round Second Round |
Notre Dame DePaul |
W 71–57 L 63–65 |
1994 | First Round Second Round |
DePaul Xavier |
W 69–68 L 79–83 |
1999 | First Round | DePaul | L 64–69 |
2009 | First Round | Tulsa | L 59–68 |
2010 | First Round | Rhode Island | L 64–76 |
2011 | First Round Second Round Quarterfinals |
Milwaukee Boston College Washington State |
W 70–61 W 85–67 L 66–69 OT |
2012 | First Round Second Round |
Akron Washington |
W 76–74 L 55–76 |
Notable players[]
All-time statistical leaders[]
Career leaders[]
- Points Scored: John Shurna (2,038, 2008-2012)
- Assists: Bryant McIntosh (541, 2014–2018)
- Rebounds: Evan Eschmeyer (995, 1995–1999)
- Steals: Pat Baldwin (272, 1990–1994)
- Blocks: Alexandru Olah (169, 2013–2016)
Single-season Leaders[]
- Points Scored: John Shurna (661, 2012)
- Assists: Bryant McIntosh (213, 2016)
- Rebounds: Jim Pitts (321, 1966)
- Steals: Pat Baldwin (90, 1991)
- Blocks: Jim Pitts (123, 1966)
Single-game leaders[]
- Points Scored: Rich Falk (49, 1964)
- Assists: Bryant McIntosh (16, 2018)
- Rebounds: Jim Pitts (29, 1965)
- Steals: Nate Carter (9, 2011)
- Blocks: Jim Pitts (10, 1966)
Source for all statistical leaders:[14]
All-Americans[]
Player | Year(s) | Team(s) |
---|---|---|
Joe Reiff | 1931 | Consensus First Team – Helms (1st), College Humor (1st) |
1932 | College Humor (3rd) | |
1933 | Consensus First Team – Helms (1st), College Humor (1st) | |
Otto Graham | 1943 | Consensus Second Team – Converse (3rd), Sporting News (1st) |
1944 | Consensus First Team – Helms (1st), Converse (2nd), Pic (1st), Sporting News (1st) | |
Max Morris | 1945 | Consensus Second Team – Helms (1st), Converse (3rd), Argosy (3rd), Sporting News (3rd) |
1946 | Consensus First Team – Helms (1st), Converse (1st), True (2nd), Sporting News (1st) | |
Ray Ragelis | 1951 | Look (3rd) |
Frank Ehmann | 1955 | Look (1st) |
Joe Ruklick | 1959 | AP (3rd), NABC (3rd) |
Jim Burns | 1967 | AP (3rd), NABC (3rd) |
Evan Eschmeyer | 1999 | Consensus Second Team – AP (2nd), USBWA (2nd), NABC (2nd), Sporting News (2nd) |
Source:[15]
References[]
- ^ "Northwestern University's Guide to Using Marks, Colors, Trademarks, and Logos" (PDF). September 21, 2016. Retrieved November 11, 2016.
- ^ "Northwestern University History 1900–1949". Archived from the original on 2008-04-24. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ Martin, Jill. "At long last, Northwestern reaches NCAAs". CNN. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ ESPN, ed. (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. New York, NY: ESPN Books. p. 541. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
- ^ "Vanderbilt vs. Northwestern - Game Summary - March 16, 2017 - ESPN". ESPN.com.
- ^ "Eugene Register-Guard - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
- ^ "Youngstown Vindicator - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
- ^ "NCAA tournament's un-Fab Five are 0-for-75". espn.com.
- ^ "Longest droughts: schools that have never made the NCAA tournament". thesportsarsenal.com. 20 February 2010.
- ^ Feinstein, John (15 February 2016). "When it comes to NCAA tournament, Northwestern hasn't had a shot" – via www.washingtonpost.com.
- ^ "Scene from Northwestern's first-ever NCAA tourney win". SI.com. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "2017 March Madness: NCAA admits huge missed call in Gonzaga-Northwestern". CBSSports.com. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ "Year-by-Year Summary" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ "Individual Records" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-06-18.
- ^ "Individual Records" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-06-18.
External links[]
- Northwestern Wildcats men's basketball