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.

Season headlines

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.
SchoolFormer conferenceNew conference
Abilene Christian WildcatsLone Star Southland
Boston University TerriersAmerica EastPatriot League
Butler BulldogsAtlantic 10Big East
Charleston CougarsSoConCAA
Charlotte 49ersAtlantic 10C-USA
Chicago State CougarsGreat WestWAC
Cincinnati BearcatsOriginal Big East
UConn HuskiesOriginal Big East
Creighton BluejaysMVCBig East
CSU Bakersfield RoadrunnersDivision I independentWAC
Denver PioneersWACThe Summit
DePaul Blue DemonsOriginal Big EastBig East
Florida Atlantic OwlsSun BeltC-USA
FIU PanthersSun BeltC-USA
George Mason PatriotsCAAAtlantic 10
Georgetown HoyasOriginal Big EastBig East
Georgia State PanthersCAASun Belt
Grand Canyon AntelopesPacWest WAC
C-USA
Houston Baptist HuskiesGreat WestSouthland
Incarnate Word CardinalsLone Star Southland
Louisiana Tech BulldogsWACC-USA
Louisville CardinalsOriginal Big East
Loyola Chicago RamblersHorizon LeagueMVC
Loyola GreyhoundsMAACPatriot League
Marquette Golden EaglesOriginal Big EastBig East
Memphis TigersC-USA
Middle Tennessee Blue RaidersSun BeltC-USA
Monmouth HawksNECMAAC
New Orleans PrivateersDivision I independentSouthland
NJIT HighlandersGreat WestDivision I independent
North Texas Mean GreenSun BeltC-USA
Notre Dame Fighting IrishOriginal Big EastACC
Oakland Golden GrizzliesThe SummitHorizon
Old Dominion MonarchsCAAC-USA
Pacific TigersBig WestWCC
Pittsburgh PanthersOriginal Big EastACC
Providence FriarsOriginal Big EastBig East
Quinnipiac BobcatsNECMAAC
Rutgers Scarlet KnightsOriginal Big East
Original Big EastBig East
San Jose State SpartansWACMWC
Seton Hall PiratesOriginal Big EastBig East
SMU MustangsC-USA
South Florida BullsOriginal Big East
Syracuse OrangeOriginal Big EastACC
Temple OwlsAtlantic 10
WACSun Belt
Texas State BobcatsWACSun Belt
UCF KnightsC-USA
UMass Lowell River HawksNE-10 America East
UMKC KangaroosThe SummitWAC
Utah State AggiesWACMWC
Utah Valley WolverinesGreat WestWAC
UTPA BroncsGreat WestWAC
UTSA RoadrunnersWACC-USA
Villanova WildcatsOriginal Big EastBig East
Xavier MusketeersAtlantic 10Big East

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

Pre-season polls

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

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

Postseason tournaments

NCAA Tournament

Final Four – AT&T Stadium

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.
DateWinnerScoreLoserRegionRound
March 20Harvard 61–57Cincinnati EastRound of 64
March 20North Dakota State 80–75 Oklahoma WestRound of 64
March 21Mercer 78–71Duke MidwestRound of 64
March 21Stephen F. Austin 77–75 VCU SouthRound of 64
March 22Dayton 55–53Syracuse SouthRound of 32
March 23Stanford 60–57Kansas SouthRound of 32
March 23Kentucky 78–76Wichita State MidwestRound 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.

College Basketball Invitational

The sixth College Basketball Invitational 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.

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.

Award winners

Consensus All-American teams

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

Major player of the year awards

A number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.
TeamFormer
coach
Interim
coach
New
coach
Reason
Appalachian StateJason CapelJim FoxCapel's expiring four-year contract was not renewed after he went 53–70 in his time at Appalachian State. Appalachian State hired Davidson assistant Fox.
AuburnTony BarbeeBruce PearlBarbee was fired after going 48–75 overall and 18–50 in the SEC in four seasons. 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.
Boston CollegeSteve DonahueJim ChristianDonahue was fired after posting an 8–24 record, his third straight losing season at BC.
Bowling GreenLouis OrrChris JansOrr was fired after posting 13–19 and 12–20 records in the last two seasons, finishing with a 101–121 record after seven seasons. Wichita State assistant Jans was hired as his replacement.
CaliforniaMike MontgomeryCuonzo MartinMontgomery 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
Central ArkansasCorliss WilliamsonClarence FinleyRuss Pennell
College of CharlestonDoug WojcikEarl GrantWojcik was fired on August 5, 2014 after allegations of verbal abuse towards players surfaced
Coppin StateFang MitchellMichael Grant
Delaware StateGreg JacksonKeith Walker
Florida A&MClemon JohnsonByron Samuels
Florida AtlanticMike JarvisMichael CurryJarvis 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
Grambling StateJoseph PriceShawn Walker
HawaiiGib ArnoldBenjy TaylorArnold was fired mere weeks before the 2014–15 season following an NCAA investigation that also saw the dismissal of assistant Brandyn Akana.
HoustonJames DickeyKelvin SampsonDickey resigned after four seasons and a 64–62 overall record, citing family reasons. 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.
IPFWTony JasickJon Coffman
IUPUITodd HowardJason GardnerHoward was fired after back-to-back seasons of 6–26 records and having gone 2–28 in conference games during that span.
JacksonvilleCliff WarrenTony Jasick
LamarPat KnightTic PriceKnight was fired during his third season after posting a 29–62 record.
Loyola MarymountMax GoodMike DunlapGood was fired after five seasons, ending with injury-riddled 11–23 and 13–19 seasons. LMU hired Mike Dunlap, a former Charlotte Bobcats head coach and former assistant with several college teams.
MaineTed WoodwardBob Walsh
MaristJeff BowerMike MakerBower 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.
MarquetteBuzz WilliamsSteve WojciechowskiWilliams left Marquette to take the Virginia Tech job. The Golden Eagles hired Duke assistant Wojciechowski.
MarshallTom HerrionDan D'AntoniHerrion, 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. Marshall hired former NBA assistant D'Antoni, older brother of former Marshall great and then-current Los Angeles Lakers head coach Mike D'Antoni.
Maryland Eastern ShoreFrankie AllenBobby Collins
MissouriFrank HaithKim AndersonHaith left Missouri for the Tulsa job.
MontanaWayne TinkleTravis DeCuireTinkle left for the Oregon State job. 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.
Montana StateBrad HuseBrian Fish
North Dakota StateSaul PhillipsDavid RichmanPhillips left to take the Ohio job.
OhioJim ChristianSaul PhillipsChristian left to take the Boston College job.
Oregon StateCraig RobinsonWayne TinkleRobinson, 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.
RiceBen BraunMike RhoadesBraun 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. Rice hired VCU assistant Mike Rhoades.
SamfordBennie SeltzerScott PadgettSeltzer 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. Two days after reports of the firing, top assistant Padgett was promoted.
South DakotaJoey JamesCraig SmithJames was not retained after one season as the interim head coach. South Dakota finished 12–18. South Dakota hired former Nebraska assistant Smith.
Southeastern LouisianaJim YarbroughJay Ladner
South FloridaStan HeathOrlando AntiguaHeath 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. South Florida hired Kentucky assistant Orlando Antigua.
Southern MissDonnie TyndallDoc SadlerTyndall left to take the Tennessee job.
TennesseeCuonzo MartinDonnie TyndallMartin left to take the California job.
Tennessee–MartinJason JamesHeath SchroyerJames was fired during his fifth season after posting a 37–117 record.
Tennessee StateTravis WilliamsDana Ford
TulsaDanny ManningFrank HaithManning left for the Wake Forest job.
UNC WilmingtonBuzz PetersonKevin KeattsPeterson was fired at the end of his fourth season after posting a 42–82 record, ending with a last-place CAA finish this season. UNCW hired Louisville assistant Keatts.
Virginia TechJames JohnsonBuzz WilliamsAfter 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.
Wake ForestJeff BzdelikDanny ManningBzdelik 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.
Washington StateKen BoneErnie KentAfter 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.
Western IllinoisJim MolinariBilly Wright