2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
The 2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November with the 2K Sports Classic and ended with the Final Four in Arlington, Texas April 5–7. It was tipped off by the 2013 Champions Classic on November 12, 2013.
2013–14 NCAA Division I men's basketball season | |
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Preseason AP No. 1 | Kentucky |
Regular season | November 8, 2013 – March 16, 2014 |
NCAA Tournament | 2014 |
Tournament dates | March 18 – April 7, 2014 |
National Championship | AT&T Stadium Arlington, Texas |
NCAA Champions | UConn |
Other champions | Minnesota (NIT), Siena (CBI), Murray State (CIT) |
Player of the Year (Naismith, Wooden) | Doug McDermott, Creighton |
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]
- Arkansas–Pine Bluff (pending review)
- FIU
- Grambling State
- Mississippi Valley State (pending review)
- New Orleans
- Southern (pending review)
- 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
- Oakland guard Travis Bader,[10] Devon Saddler of Delaware,[11] Anthony Ireland of Loyola Marymount,[12] USC Upstate forward Torrey Craig,[13] Bryant forward Alex Francis,[14] Cincinnati guard Sean Kilpatrick,[15] Nevada guard Deonte Burton,[16] Iowa State guard DeAndre Kane,[17] Buffalo forward Javon McCrea[18] and North Dakota swingman Troy Huff[19] each passed the 2,000 point mark for their careers.
- November 19 – Wisconsin junior forward Frank Kaminsky broke the school's single-game scoring record. Kaminsky scored 43 points in a win over North Dakota. The previous record of 42 points was held by Ken Barnes and Michael Finley.[20]
- December 14 – Aaron Craft broke Ohio State's career assist record (previously held by Jamar Butler) in a game against North Dakota State.[21]
- December 18 – Texas Southern's Aaric Murray scored 48 points against Temple in the Liacouras Center, setting records for the most points scored against Temple by one player as well as a new arena record.[22]
- January 25 – Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski records his 900th career win at the school, becoming just the second Division I men's coach to achieve 900+ wins at one university (Jim Boeheim at Syracuse was the first; both were preceded in the women's game by Pat Summitt at Tennessee).[23]
- Vermont forward Brian Voelkel became the first player in NCAA Division I history to record at least 1,000 career rebounds and 600 career assists.[24]
- February 1 – Syracuse defeats Duke 91-89 in overtime before a record-setting crowd of 35,446, the largest basketball crowd in the Carrier Dome's history and an all-time NCAA record for an on-campus game.
- February 2 – Oakland's Travis Bader surpassed JJ Redick for the most NCAA Division I career three-point field goals made.[25] Redick's 457 made three-pointers record had stood since 2007.[25] He finished his career with 504.[26]
- February 8 – Melvin Ejim of Iowa State scores a Big 12-record 48 points in an 84–69 win over TCU, surpassing Michael Beasley and Denis Clemente, both of Kansas State, who had 44 points in 2008 and 2009, respectively.[27]
- February 10 – SMU enters the Associated Press Top 25 poll for the first time since the next-to-last poll of 1984–85, a span of 30 seasons.[28]
- February 21 – Oakland's Travis Bader eclipsed Keydren Clark's career three-point attempts record of 1,192, which was set in 2006, almost three weeks after setting the new career three-pointers made mark.[29] He finished his career with 1,246.[26]
- March 1 – In his final college game, LIU Brooklyn point guard Jason Brickman became only the fourth men's player in Division I history to collect 1,000 career assists, finishing with 1,009. He also became only the second Division I men's player to average double figures in points and assists in the same season, after Avery Johnson of Southern in 1987–88.[30]
- March 8 – Doug McDermott of Creighton became just the eighth Division I men's player to surpass 3,000 career points.[31] He scored a career-high 45 points against Providence on Creighton's senior night to give him 3,011 at the time.[31] He finished his career with 3,150, the fifth-most ever.[32]
- March 9:
- Wichita State beats Indiana State 83–69 in the final of the Missouri Valley Conference tournament in St. Louis, becoming the first Division I men's team to enter the NCAA tournament unbeaten since UNLV in 1991.[33]
- Coastal Carolina, led by head coach Cliff Ellis, beats Winthrop 76–61 in the final of the Big South Conference tournament. With the win, Ellis became just the 10th head coach to take four different schools to the NCAA tournament (he previously took South Alabama, Clemson, and Auburn).[34]
- March 19 – East Carolina guard Akeem Richmond finished his career with 416 made three-pointers, good for sixth all-time in Division I history.[35]
Conference membership changes
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:
- The original Big East Conference split into football-sponsoring and non-football conferences. The non-football league now operates as the newly chartered Big East Conference, while the football-sponsoring league operates under the old charter as the renamed American Athletic Conference (The American).
- With The American adding four members in 2013 and three more in 2014, all from Conference USA (C-USA), the latter league responded by adding eight members in 2013, plus one more in 2014. Four of the 2013 C-USA arrivals came from the Sun Belt Conference, which itself added three schools in 2013 and two more in 2014.
- The Western Athletic Conference saw near-total replacement of its membership. Only three schools that had been members in the 2012–13 season—Idaho, New Mexico State, and Seattle—remained in the WAC for 2013–14, and Idaho left for the Big Sky Conference after this season. The WAC's attempts to replenish its membership led to the demise of the Great West Conference.
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.
The 2013–14 season was also the last for several other teams in their current conferences:
- Four schools would leave the Southern Conference (SoCon). Appalachian State and Georgia Southern left for the Sun Belt, Davidson for the Atlantic 10, and Elon for the CAA.
- Three schools would join the SoCon, with East Tennessee State and Mercer moving from the Atlantic Sun Conference and VMI leaving the Big South Conference. Both ETSU and VMI were former SoCon members, having respectively left the league in 2005 and 2003.
- East Carolina, Tulane, and Tulsa would all leave C-USA for The American.
- As noted above, Idaho would leave the WAC and return its non-football sports to the Big Sky Conference (after an 18-year absence).
- Louisville and Rutgers would spend only one season in The American; they respectively left for the ACC and Big Ten.
- Maryland would leave the ACC for the Big Ten.
- Oral Roberts would leave the Southland to return to its previous conference home of The Summit.
- Western Kentucky would leave the Sun Belt for C-USA.
New arenas
- The Nebraska Cornhuskers left their home since 1976, the on-campus Bob Devaney Sports Center, for the new Pinnacle Bank Arena in downtown Lincoln. The Cornhuskers played their first game in the arena on November 8 against the Florida Gulf Coast Eagles.
- The Towson Tigers also left a venue that they had occupied since 1976, the Towson Center. Unlike Nebraska, Towson is staying on campus in the new Tiger Arena.
- The four Division I newcomers all used existing on-campus venues:
- Abilene Christian – Moody Coliseum
- Grand Canyon – Grand Canyon University Arena
- Incarnate Word – McDermott Convocation Center
- UMass Lowell – The River Hawks' main basketball venue is Costello Athletic Center. Another on-campus venue, the Tsongas Center, normally home to the school's ice hockey team, is available for games requiring a larger capacity.
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.
Season outlook
Pre-season polls
The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.
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Regular season
A number of early-season tournaments will mark the beginning of the college basketball season.
Early-season tournaments
*Although these tournaments include more teams, only the number listed play for the championship.
Conference winners and tournaments
Thirty-one athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2014 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Ivy League does not have a conference tournament, instead giving their automatic invitation to their regular season champion.
Statistical leaders
Points per game | Rebounds per game | Assists per game | Steals per game | |||||||||||
Player | School | PPG | Player | School | RPG | Player | School | APG | Player | School | SPG | |||
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Doug McDermott | Creighton | 26.7 | Alan Williams | UC Santa Barbara | 11.5 | Jason Brickman | LIU Brooklyn | 10.0 | Brianté Weber | VCU | 3.46 | |||
Antoine Mason | Niagara | 25.6 | Jerrelle Benimon | Towson | 11.2 | Speedy Smith | Louisiana Tech | 7.9 | Duke Mondy | Oakland | 3.10 | |||
T. J. Warren | NC State | 24.9 | Joel Bolomboy | Weber State | 11.0 | Maurice Watson Jr. | Boston University | 7.1 | Marcus Smart | Oklahoma St. | 2.87 | |||
Billy Baron | Canisius | 24.1 | Chad Posthumus | Morehead St. | 10.9 | Chaz Williams | UMass | 6.9 | Tevin Hammond | Arkansas–Pine Bluff | 2.68 | |||
Patrick Miller | Tennessee St. | 23.7 | Roscoe Smith | UNLV | 10.9 | Lucas Woodhouse | Longwood | 6.7 | Fuquan Edwin | Seton Hall | 2.66 |
Blocked shots per game | Field goal percentage | Three-point field goal percentage | Free throw percentage | |||||||||||
Player | School | BPG | Player | School | FG% | Player | School | 3FG% | Player | School | FT% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jordan Bachynski | Arizona St. | 4.03 | Jarvis Williams | Murray State | 64.8 | Micah Mason | Duquesne | 56.0 | Johnny Dee | San Diego | 94.5 | |||
Khem Birch | UNLV | 3.76 | Marshall Bjorklund | North Dakota St. | 62.9 | Devante Wallace | High Point | 49.1 | Travis Bader | Oakland | 94.3 | |||
Rhamel Brown | Manhattan | 3.64 | Terrence Smith | NJIT | 62.9 | Melvin Johnson III | Arkansas St. | 47.8 | Brenton Williams | South Carolina | 93.0 | |||
D. J. Cunningham | UNC Asheville | 3.63 | Zeek Woodley | Northwestern St. | 61.7 | Dylan Garrity | Sacramento St. | 47.2 | Neil Watson | Southern Miss | 91.8 | |||
Sim Bhullar | New Mexico St. | 3.37 | Jameel Warney | Stony Brook | 61.6 | Ethan Wragge | Creighton | 47.0 | Josh Greene | Cal St. Northridge | 91.4 |
Conference standings
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Postseason tournaments
NCAA tournament
Final Four – AT&T Stadium
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.
Date | Winner | Score | Loser | Region | Round |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 20 | Harvard (12) | 61–57 | Cincinnati (5) | East | Round of 64 |
March 20 | North Dakota State (12) | 80–75 (OT) | Oklahoma (5) | West | Round of 64 |
March 21 | Mercer (14) | 78–71 | Duke (3) | Midwest | Round of 64 |
March 21 | Stephen F. Austin (12) | 77–75 (OT) | VCU (5) | South | Round of 64 |
March 22 | Dayton (11) | 55–53 | Syracuse (3) | South | Round of 32 |
March 23 | Stanford (10) | 60–57 | Kansas (2) | South | Round of 32 |
March 23 | Kentucky (8) | 78–76 | Wichita State (1) | Midwest | Round of 32 |
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 |
Award winners
Consensus All-American teams
The following players are recognized as the 2014 Consensus All-Americans:
Player | Position | Class | Team |
---|---|---|---|
Nick Johnson | SG | Junior | Arizona |
Doug McDermott | SF | Senior | Creighton |
Shabazz Napier | PG | Senior | UConn |
Jabari Parker | PF | Freshman | Duke |
Russ Smith | PG/SG | Senior | Louisville |
Player | Position | Class | Team |
---|---|---|---|
Cleanthony Early | F | Senior | Wichita State |
C. J. Fair | SF | Senior | Syracuse |
Sean Kilpatrick | SG | Senior | Cincinnati |
Nik Stauskas | SF | Sophomore | Michigan |
T. J. Warren | SF | Sophomore | NC State |
Andrew Wiggins | SF | Freshman | Kansas |
Major player of the year awards
- Wooden Award: Doug McDermott, Creighton[89]
- Naismith Award: Doug McDermott, Creighton[90]
- Associated Press Player of the Year: Doug McDermott, Creighton [91]
- NABC Player of the Year: Doug McDermott, Creighton[92]
- Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Doug McDermott, Creighton[93]
- Sporting News Player of the Year: Doug McDermott, Creighton[94]
Major freshman of the year awards
- Wayman Tisdale Award (USBWA): Jabari Parker, Duke[95]
- Sporting News Freshman of the Year:
Major coach of the year awards
- Associated Press Coach of the Year: Gregg Marshall, Wichita State[91]
- Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Gregg Marshall, Wichita State[96]
- NABC Coach of the Year: Gregg Marshall, Wichita State[97]
- Naismith College Coach of the Year: Gregg Marshall, Wichita State[98]
- Sporting News Coach of the Year: Gregg Marshall, Wichita State[99]
Other major awards
- Bob Cousy Award (Best point guard): Shabazz Napier, UConn
- Pete Newell Big Man Award (Best big man): Patric Young, Florida[100]
- NABC Defensive Player of the Year: Aaron Craft, Ohio State[100]
- Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best senior 6'0"/1.83 m or shorter): Russ Smith, Louisville[101]
- Senior CLASS Award (top senior): Doug McDermott, Creighton[102]
- Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): James Bell, Villanova[103]
- Haggerty Award (Top player in New York City metro area): D'Angelo Harrison, St. John's[104]
- Ben Jobe Award (Top minority coach): Willis Wilson, Texas A&M Corpus Christi
- Hugh Durham Award (Top mid-major coach): Tony Jasick, IPFW
- Jim Phelan Award (Top head coach): Tim Miles, Nebraska
- Lefty Driesell Award (Top defensive player): Elfrid Payton, Louisiana–Lafayette
- Lou Henson Award (Top mid-major player): Langston Hall, Mercer
- Lute Olson Award (Top non-freshman or transfer player): Doug McDermott, Creighton[105]
- Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award (Coach with moral character): Brian Wardle, Green Bay
- Academic All-American of the Year (Top scholar-athlete): Aaron Craft, Ohio State[106]
- Elite 89 Award (Top GPA among upperclass players at Final Four): Sam Malone, Kentucky.[107]
Coaching changes
A number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.
Team | Former coach |
Interim coach |
New coach |
Reason |
---|---|---|---|---|
Appalachian State | Jason Capel | Jim Fox | Capel's expiring four-year contract was not renewed after he went 53–70 in his time at Appalachian State.[108] Appalachian State hired Davidson assistant Fox.[109] | |
Auburn | Tony Barbee | Bruce Pearl | Barbee was fired after going 48–75 overall and 18–50 in the SEC in four seasons.[110] Auburn replaced him with ESPN analyst Pearl, who enjoyed major success as a head coach at Milwaukee and Tennessee before being fired in 2011 for lying to the NCAA about the recruitment of future Ohio State star Aaron Craft. When he was hired, Pearl was under a show-cause penalty that expired in August 2014.[111] | |
Boston College | Steve Donahue | Jim Christian | Donahue was fired after posting an 8–24 record, his third straight losing season at BC.[112] | |
Bowling Green | Louis Orr | Chris Jans | Orr was fired after posting 13–19 and 12–20 records in the last two seasons, finishing with a 101–121 record after seven seasons.[113] Wichita State assistant Jans was hired as his replacement.[114] | |
California | Mike Montgomery | Cuonzo Martin | Montgomery announced his retirement after six seasons at Cal. In 32 seasons as a collegiate head coach, Montgomery captured 677 career victories and exits the game as the 25th-winningest head men's basketball coach with at least 10 years of experience at the Division I level in NCAA history[115] | |
Central Arkansas | Corliss Williamson | Clarence Finley | Russ Pennell | |
College of Charleston | Doug Wojcik | Earl Grant | Wojcik was fired on August 5, 2014 after allegations of verbal abuse towards players surfaced[116] | |
Coppin State | Fang Mitchell | Michael Grant | ||
Delaware State | Greg Jackson | Keith Walker | ||
Florida A&M | Clemon Johnson | Byron Samuels | ||
Florida Atlantic | Mike Jarvis | Michael Curry | Jarvis and Florida Atlantic mutually agreed to part ways after five of the past six seasons resulted in losing records, including a 10–19 overall mark in 2013–14[117] | |
Grambling State | Joseph Price | Shawn Walker | ||
Hawaii | Gib Arnold | Benjy Taylor | Arnold was fired mere weeks before the 2014–15 season following an NCAA investigation that also saw the dismissal of assistant Brandyn Akana.[118] | |
Houston | James Dickey | Kelvin Sampson | Dickey resigned after four seasons and a 64–62 overall record, citing family reasons.[119] The Cougars hired Houston Rockets assistant Sampson, who returns to the college ranks after serving a five-year show-cause penalty for making impermissible cell phone calls to recruits during his previous two college jobs at Oklahoma and Indiana.[120] | |
IPFW | Tony Jasick | Jon Coffman | ||
IUPUI | Todd Howard | Jason Gardner[121] | Howard was fired after back-to-back seasons of 6–26 records and having gone 2–28 in conference games during that span.[122] | |
Jacksonville | Cliff Warren | Tony Jasick | ||
Lamar | Pat Knight | Tic Price | Knight was fired during his third season after posting a 29–62 record.[123] | |
Loyola Marymount | Max Good | Mike Dunlap | Good was fired after five seasons, ending with injury-riddled 11–23 and 13–19 seasons.[124] LMU hired Mike Dunlap, a former Charlotte Bobcats head coach and former assistant with several college teams.[125] | |
Maine | Ted Woodward | Bob Walsh | ||
Marist | Jeff Bower | Mike Maker | Bower left to become general manager of the Detroit Pistons. Marist went to the Division III ranks to hire Maker, fresh off leading Williams to that division's championship game.[126] | |
Marquette | Buzz Williams | Steve Wojciechowski | Williams left Marquette to take the Virginia Tech job.[127] The Golden Eagles hired Duke assistant Wojciechowski.[128] | |
Marshall | Tom Herrion | Dan D'Antoni | Herrion, who had coached at Marshall for four seasons, was bought out of the final two years of his contract. Marshall, which finished the season at 11–22, lost its top seven scorers from last season, notably DeAndre Kane, who transferred to Iowa State and became an All-Big 12 first-team selection.[129] Marshall hired former NBA assistant D'Antoni, older brother of former Marshall great and then-current Los Angeles Lakers head coach Mike D'Antoni.[130] | |
Maryland Eastern Shore | Frankie Allen | Bobby Collins | ||
Missouri | Frank Haith | Kim Anderson | Haith left Missouri for the Tulsa job.[131] | |
Montana | Wayne Tinkle | Travis DeCuire | Tinkle left for the Oregon State job.[132] Montana hired former Cal assistant DeCuire, a former Montana player who had been publicly endorsed by retiring Cal head coach Mike Montgomery as his successor before Cuonzo Martin was hired from Tennessee.[133] | |
Montana State | Brad Huse | Brian Fish | [134] | |
North Dakota State | Saul Phillips | David Richman | Phillips left to take the Ohio job.[135] | |
Ohio | Jim Christian | Saul Phillips | Christian left to take the Boston College job.[136] | |
Oregon State | Craig Robinson | Wayne Tinkle | Robinson, best known outside basketball as the older brother of First Lady Michelle Obama, was fired after six seasons in which the Beavers never made either the NCAA tournament or the NIT.[137] | |
Rice | Ben Braun | Mike Rhoades | Braun resigned after six seasons and an overall 63–128 record at Rice. The program was plagued by player transfers in his last few seasons, most notably that of Arsalan Kazemi to Oregon after the 2011–12 season.[138] Rice hired VCU assistant Mike Rhoades.[139] | |
Samford | Bennie Seltzer | Scott Padgett | Seltzer was fired after two seasons, finishing with a 24–31 overall record. Even more significantly, Seltzer had 14 players transfer out of the program during his tenure, including five of the team's six top scorers in the just-completed season.[140] Two days after reports of the firing, top assistant Padgett was promoted.[141] | |
South Dakota | Joey James | Craig Smith | James was not retained after one season as the interim head coach. South Dakota finished 12–18.[142] South Dakota hired former Nebraska assistant Smith.[143] | |
Southeastern Louisiana | Jim Yarbrough | Jay Ladner | ||
South Florida | Stan Heath | Orlando Antigua | Heath was fired two seasons into a six-year contract he signed after he led USF to the 2012 NCAA tournament. His success at USF did not continue, as the Bulls finished each of the last two seasons at 12–19 overall and 3–15 in league play.[144] South Florida hired Kentucky assistant Orlando Antigua.[145] | |
Southern Miss | Donnie Tyndall | Doc Sadler | Tyndall left to take the Tennessee job.[146] | |
Tennessee | Cuonzo Martin | Donnie Tyndall | Martin left to take the California job.[147] | |
Tennessee–Martin | Jason James | Heath Schroyer | James was fired during his fifth season after posting a 37–117 record.[148] | |
Tennessee State | Travis Williams | Dana Ford | ||
Tulsa | Danny Manning | Frank Haith | Manning left for the Wake Forest job.[149] | |
UNC Wilmington | Buzz Peterson | Kevin Keatts | Peterson was fired at the end of his fourth season after posting a 42–82 record, ending with a last-place CAA finish this season.[150] UNCW hired Louisville assistant Keatts.[151] | |
Virginia Tech | James Johnson | Buzz Williams | After a 9–22 season, Johnson was fired at the end of his second season as head coach. Johnson was unable to keep two key players in the program—Dorian Finney-Smith transferred to Florida immediately after Johnson was elevated from assistant, and Montrezl Harrell, who had originally committed to Tech, instead went to Louisville.[152] | |
Wake Forest | Jeff Bzdelik | Danny Manning | Bzdelik resigned after four seasons with records of 51–76 overall and 17–51 in ACC play. Like Ben Braun at Rice and Bennie Seltzer at Samford, Bzdelik was plagued by player transfers, with eight players transferring out during his tenure. Students responded by "rolling" trees in the campus quad with toilet paper, a Wake Forest tradition after big wins.[153] | |
Washington State | Ken Bone | Ernie Kent | After five years and an 80–86 record, Bone was fired with two years left on his contract; Washington State will pay him the remaining balance of his contract. Bone's final season saw the Cougars go 10–21 overall and 3–15 in the Pac-12 .[154] | |
Western Illinois | Jim Molinari | Billy Wright |
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