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2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

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2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
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The 2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 8, 2013 and ended with the 2014 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, whose Final Four was played at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on April 5, 2014, followed by the national championship game on April 7.

Quick facts –14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, Preseason AP No. 1 ...
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Season headlines

  • June 11 – The NCAA releases its annual Academic Progress Rate report. Three Division I men's basketball programs will be ineligible for postseason play in 2013–14; three others are ineligible pending appeals and NCAA review of data. The penalized programs are:[1]
  • November 4 – The Associated Press preseason All-America team is released. Oklahoma State guard Marcus Smart was the only unanimous choice, gaining all 65 votes. He was joined by Doug McDermott of Creighton (63 votes), Louisville guard Russ Smith (52), Kansas freshman Andrew Wiggins (42) and Michigan forward Mitch McGary (34).[2]
  • November 12 – Freshmen and transfers are eligible for the preseason Wooden Award watch list for the first time in the trophy's history. Nine freshmen made the 50-member list, including three each from Kentucky (Andrew Harrison, Julius Randle and James Young) and Kansas (Andrew Wiggins, Wayne Selden, Jr. and Joel Embiid). Jabari Parker of Duke, Aaron Gordon of Arizona and Noah Vonleh of Indiana were the other three freshmen named.[3]
  • February 27 – Shortly after the end of Utah Valley's 66–61 home win over New Mexico State in a battle between the WAC co-leaders, NMSU guard K.C. Ross-Miller throws a basketball at Utah Valley's Holton Hunsaker (son of UVU head coach Dick Hunsaker), hitting him in the leg.[4] The incident triggers a brawl between players and fans who had stormed the court,[4] with video later showing that at least one NMSU player threw a punch, and another had to be forcibly pulled from the melee by staff.[5] The next day, the WAC suspends two NMSU players—Ross-Miller for two games and Renaldo Dixon for one—for their involvement in the brawl.[5] In addition, UVU announces that it was reviewing tapes of the incident to determine whether to take further action against its own students and fans who were involved.[5]
  • March 26 – South Florida, which had reached an agreement in principle with Manhattan coach Steve Masiello to fill that school's head coaching vacancy, rescinds the agreement after it discovers that Masiello lied on his résumé about graduating from the University of Kentucky. A UK spokesperson confirmed that Masiello attended for four years but did not receive a degree.[6]
  • April 7 – Manhattan announces that it will retain Masiello as head coach, contingent on him earning his bachelor's degree from UK. At the time, he was about 10 credit hours short of a degree, and was expected to complete the needed courses during the summer term.[7] UK announced on May 29 that Masiello had completed the required coursework and would receive his degree in August.[8]
  • April 9 – UMass sophomore guard Derrick Gordon becomes the first active Division I men's college player to come out as gay.[9]

Milestones and records

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Conference membership changes

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The 2013–14 season saw the largest wave of membership changes resulting from a major realignment of NCAA Division I conferences. The cycle began in 2010 with the Big Ten and the then-Pac-10 publicly announcing their intentions to expand. The fallout from these conferences' moves later affected a majority of D-I conferences. The most significant developments this season were:

In addition, four schools began the transition up from Division II starting this season. These schools were ineligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play until completing their D-I transitions in 2017.

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The 2013–14 season was also the last for several other teams in their current conferences:

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New arenas

Major rule changes

  • Expanded the use of video review as follows:
    • Shot-clock violations and who caused the ball to go out-of-bounds in the final 2:00 of regulation or overtime.
    • Determine if a field goal is worth two points or three in the final 4:00 of regulation or in the entire overtime period. Any other such review must wait until the next media time-out (16:00, 12:00 and 8:00 as well as the final 4:00 of the first half).
  • Change the block/charge rule to not permit a defender from sliding in front of an offensive player at the last second to draw a charge. The defender must be in position when the offensive player begins his upward flight with the ball.
  • Increasing emphasis on hand-checking or extended arms on defense.
  • Permit the use of video review to determine if an elbow delivered above the shoulders of an opponent warrants a flagrant-1 or -2 foul (as was previously the case), a player control foul, or no call.

[36]

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Season outlook

Pre-season polls

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

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Regular season

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Early-season tournaments

A number of early-season tournaments took place in November and December 2013.

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*Although these tournaments included more teams, only the number listed played for the championship.

Conferences

Conference winners and tournaments

Thirty-one conference seasons concluded with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that won their regular-season titles were given the number one seed in their respective conference tournaments. Conference tournament winners received an automatic bid to the 2014 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The Ivy League was the only NCAA Division I conference that did not hold a conference tournament, instead sending its regular-season champion to the NCAA tournament.

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Conference standings

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Division I independents

One school played as a Division I independent.[89]

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Informal championships

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Villanova finished with a 4–0 record in head-to-head competition among the Philadelphia Big 5.

Statistical leaders

Source for additional stats categories

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Postseason tournaments

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NCAA tournament

Final Four – AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas

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AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas, hosted the NCAA men's Final Four.
National Semifinals
April 5, 2014
National Championship Game
April 7, 2014
      
S1 Florida 53
E7 UConn 63
E7 UConn 60
MW8 Kentucky 54
W2 Wisconsin 73
MW8 Kentucky 74

Tournament upsets

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

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National Invitation tournament

After the NCAA tournament field is announced, the NCAA invited 32 teams to participate in the National Invitation Tournament. The tournament began on March 18, 2014 with all games prior to the semifinals played on campus sites. The semifinals and final were respectively held on April 1 and 3 at the traditional site of Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Semifinals
April 1, 2014
Championship game
April 3, 2014
      
1 SMU 65
3 Clemson 59
1 SMU 63
1 Minnesota 65
1 Minnesota 67OT
1 Florida State 64

College Basketball Invitational

The sixth College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament began on March 18, 2014 and will end with a best-of-three final scheduled for March 31, April 2, and April 5; the final went the full three games. This tournament featured 16 teams who were left out of the NCAA tournament and NIT.

Semifinals
March 26, 2014
Championship Series
March 31, April 2 and 5, 2014
      
Illinois State 49
Siena 61
Siena 61 75 81
Fresno State 57 89 68
Old Dominion 64
Fresno State 71

CollegeInsider.com Postseason tournament

The fifth CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament was held beginning March 17, 2014 and ending with a championship game on April 3, 2014. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA tournament and NIT. 32 teams participated in this tournament.

Semifinals
April 1, 2014
Championship
April 3, 2014
      
Yale 75
VMI 62
Yale 57
Murray State 65
Pacific 75
Murray State 98
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Award winners

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Consensus All-American teams

The following players are recognized as the 2014 Consensus All-Americans:

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Nick Johnson
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Major player of the year awards

Major freshman of the year awards

Major coach of the year awards

Other major awards

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Coaching changes

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A number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.

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References

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