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Big East men's basketball tournament

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American collegiate basketball championship
Big East Men's Basketball Tournament
Conference basketball championship
SportCollege basketball
ConferenceBig East Conference
Number of teams11
FormatSingle-elimination tournament
Current stadiumMadison Square Garden
Current locationNew York City
Played1980–present
Last contest2025
Current championSt. John's Red Storm
Most championshipsUConn Huskies,Georgetown Hoyas (8)
Official websiteBigEast.org
Host stadiums
Providence Civic Center (1980)
Carrier Dome (1981)
Hartford Civic Center (1982)
Madison Square Garden (1983–present)
Host locations
Providence, Rhode Island (1980)
Syracuse, New York (1981)
Hartford, Connecticut (1982)
New York City (1983–present)

TheBig East Men's Basketball Tournament is the championship tournament of theBig East Conference in men'sbasketball. The winner receives the conference'sautomatic bid to theNCAA tournament.

As part of the 2013 deal in which seven schools left theoriginal Big East Conference of 1979–2013 to form a new Big East Conference and the original conference became theAmerican Athletic Conference, the new Big East received the rights to the conference tournament.

Venue

[edit]

Since 1983, the tournament has been held inMadison Square Garden inNew York City. As such, the tournament is the longest-running conference tournament at any one site in all ofcollege basketball. Madison Square Garden has a contract with the Big East Conference to host the tournament through 2028.[1]

Notable events

[edit]

The 2009 tournament featured asix-overtime game in the quarterfinals between theConnecticut Huskies and theSyracuse Orange, in which Syracuse prevailed, 127–117. The game, the second-longest inNCAA history, started on the evening of March 12 and ended nearly four hours later in the early morning of March 13.[2]

In 2011,Connecticut, led byKemba Walker, became the first and only team in the Big East tournament ever to win five games in five consecutive days to win the championship.

On March 12, 2020, the 2020 tournament was cancelled during halftime of the first quarterfinal game due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[3] The conference received an insurance payout of $10.5 million as a result of the tournament's cancellation.[4]

In 2021,Georgetown won four games in four days as an underdog in each contest, to win its record eighth title. Georgetown became the first eighth-seeded team to win the championship, andPatrick Ewing became the first person to win the championship as both a player and a head coach.

In 2024,UConn won the championship for the eighth time, tying it with Georgetown for the most titles.

Only three players have achieved multipleMost Valuable Player honors:Georgetown'sPatrick Ewing (1984–1985),Louisville'sPeyton Siva (2012–2013), andVillanova'sJosh Hart (2015, 2017).

Seeding

[edit]

From 1980 through 2000, all Big East member schools qualified for the Big East tournament. The Big East limited participation to 12 schools from 2001 to 2008, but since 2009, all member schools again have qualified for the tournament. The conference has based tournament seeding strictly on conference record and tiebreakers except between 1996 and 1998 and between 2001 and 2003; during those years, the conference used a divisional structure which also affected seeding.

1980–1995

[edit]

In 1980, with seven member schools, the #2 through #7 seeds played in an opening quarterfinal round and the #1 seed received a bye until the semifinal round. In 1981, the conference expanded to eight teams, and in 1981 and 1982, all eight teams began play in a quarterfinal round. After the conference expanded again, to nine teams, the #8 and #9 seeds played in a single first-round game and schools seeded #7 or higher received a bye into the quarterfinal round; adopted in 1983, this format persisted through the 1991 tournament. After the Big East expanded to 10 teams, the 1992 tournament had two first-round games for the #7 through #10 seeds, teams seeded #6 or higher getting a bye into the quarterfinal round. This format continued through the 1995 tournament.

1996–2000

[edit]

For the 1995–96 Big East Conference men's basketball season, the Big East expanded to 13 teams and adopted a divisional structure, with teams divided between the Big East 6 Division and the Big East 7 Division. The expansion resulted in a new tournament format in which the #4 through #13 seeds played in the first round and only the #1 through #3 seeds received byes into the quarterfinals. This format lasted through the 2000 tournament.

During the existence of the Big East 6 and Big East 7 divisions, seeding criteria also changed, with the winners of each division receiving the #1 and #2 seeds regardless of record, the second-place team with the best record receiving the #3 seed, and the rest of the schools receiving the #4 through #13 seeds based on conference record and tiebreakers. After the 1998 tournament, the Big East scrapped the divisions and returned to a unitary conference structure, and tournament seeding again was based strictly on conference record and tiebreakers in 1999 and 2000.

2001–2003

[edit]
Jeff Green of theGeorgetown Hoyas attempts to pass during the 2007 Big East Championship game against thePitt Panthers.

From 2001 through 2003, when the Big East again was divided into two divisions — an East and a West Division, each of seven teams — teams were seeded #1 through #6 by division. The third- through sixth-place finishers in each division (a total of eight teams) received the #3 through #6 seeds in each division and played in the first round, with the #3 East seed playing the #6 West seed, the #4 East seed playing the #5 West seed, the #5 East seed playing the #4 West seed, and the #6 East seed playing the #3 West seed. The first- and second-place finishers in each division (a total of four teams) received the #1 and #2 divisional seeds and a bye into the quarterfinal round. Two teams — the seventh-place finishers in each division, after the application of any necessary tiebreaking criteria — did not qualify for the tournament.

2004–2008

[edit]

In 2004, after the Big East again eliminated its division structure, its 14 schools again were seeded based on conference record and tiebreakers. The teams which finished below 12th place did not qualify for the tournament. The #5 through #12 seeds played in the first round, and the #1 through #4 seeds received byes into the quarterfinal round.

In 2005 the conference's membership dropped to 12 schools, and St. John's was ineligible for the tournament due to sanctions imposed on its program. The other 11 teams were seeded based on conference record and tiebreakers, and the #6 though #11 seeds played in the first round, while the #1 through #5 seeds received byes into the quarterfinal round.

The Big East's membership stood at 16 schools from 2006 through 2008. During these years, seeding returned to its 2004 format: Only the teams which finished 12th or higher in the conference after the application as necessary of tiebreaking criteria qualified for the tournament, the #5 through #12 seeds played in the first round, and the #1 through #4 seeds received byes into the quarterfinal round.[1]

2009–2013

[edit]

In 2009, the conference returned to a tournament format that included all member schools (16 from 2009 to 2012, and 14 in 2013). From 2009 through 2012, the teams seeded #9 through #16 played first-round games, teams seeded #5 through #8 received a bye to the second round, and the top four teams received a double-bye to the quarterfinals.[5] The final Big East tournament held by theoriginal Big East Conference, which took place in 2013, saw only 14 teams compete—West Virginia had left the Big East for theBig 12 Conference after the2011–12 season, and Connecticut was barred from the tournament due to an NCAA postseason ban foracademic reasons. In that tournament, the teams seeded #11 through #14 played in the first round, with byes remaining the same as in the 2009–2012 period.

Throughout the 2009–2013 period, all member schools participating in the tournament were seeded in the tournament based on their conference records. Ties were broken using a set of tiebreaker rules, with the first two tiebreakers being head-to-head record and common record against the next-best conference team.[6]

2014–present

[edit]

During the offseason in 2013,seven schools left the original Big East Conference of 1979–2013 and joined three other schools in forming a new Big East Conference, the old conference becoming theAmerican Athletic Conference (marketed as "The American"). The new Big East Conference took over control of the Big East tournament atMadison Square Garden. From 2014 (the first tournament held after the formation of the new Big East) through 2019 all 10 member schools took part in the tournament, with tiebreakers similar to those used prior to the formation of the new conference employed as needed. The #7 through #10 seeds played in two first-round games, and all schools seeded #6 or higher received a bye into the quarterfinal round. The 2020 tournament would have followed the same format if it had not been canceled after the first round due to the covid-19 pandemic.

In 2021, after the Big East expanded to 11 teams with Connecticut's move to the Big East from the American Athletic Conference, the Big East tournament adopted an 11-team format in which the #6 through #11 seeds play in three first-round games and teams seeded #5 or higher receive a bye into the quarterfinal round.

Tournament results

[edit]
YearChampionScoreRunner-upTournament MVPLocation
1980Georgetown87–81SyracuseCraig Shelton,GeorgetownProvidence Civic Center (Providence, Rhode Island)
1981Syracuse83–80VillanovaLeo Rautins,SyracuseCarrier Dome (Syracuse, New York)
1982Georgetown72–54VillanovaEric Floyd,GeorgetownHartford Civic Center (Hartford, Connecticut)
1983St. John's85–77Boston CollegeChris Mullin,St. John'sMadison Square Garden (New York City)
1984Georgetown82–71SyracusePatrick Ewing,Georgetown
1985Georgetown92–80St. John'sPatrick Ewing,Georgetown
1986St. John's70–69SyracuseDwayne Washington,Syracuse
1987Georgetown69–59SyracuseReggie Williams,Georgetown
1988Syracuse85–68VillanovaSherman Douglas,Syracuse
1989Georgetown88–79SyracuseCharles Smith,Georgetown
1990Connecticut78–75SyracuseChris Smith,UConn
1991Seton Hall74–62GeorgetownOliver Taylor,Seton Hall
1992Syracuse56–54GeorgetownAlonzo Mourning,Georgetown
1993Seton Hall103–70SyracuseTerry Dehere,Seton Hall
1994Providence74–64GeorgetownMichael Smith,Providence
1995Villanova94–78ConnecticutKerry Kittles,Villanova
1996Connecticut75–74GeorgetownVictor Page,Georgetown
1997Boston College70–58VillanovaScoonie Penn,Boston College
1998Connecticut69–64SyracuseKhalid El-Amin,UConn
1999Connecticut82–63St. John'sKevin Freeman,UConn
2000St. John's80–70ConnecticutBootsy Thornton,St. John's
2001Boston College79–57PittsburghTroy Bell,Boston College
2002Connecticut74–65*PittsburghCaron Butler,UConn
2003Pittsburgh74–56ConnecticutJulius Page,Pittsburgh
2004Connecticut61–58PittsburghBen Gordon,UConn
2005Syracuse68–59West VirginiaHakim Warrick,Syracuse
2006Syracuse65–61PittsburghGerry McNamara,Syracuse
2007Georgetown65–42PittsburghJeff Green,Georgetown
2008Pittsburgh74–65GeorgetownSam Young,Pittsburgh
2009Louisville76–66SyracuseJonny Flynn,Syracuse
2010West Virginia60–58GeorgetownDa'Sean Butler,West Virginia
2011Connecticut69–66LouisvilleKemba Walker,UConn
2012Louisville50–44CincinnatiPeyton Siva,Louisville
2013Louisville78–61SyracusePeyton Siva,Louisville
2014Providence65–58CreightonBryce Cotton,Providence
2015Villanova69–52XavierJosh Hart,Villanova
2016Seton Hall69–67VillanovaIsaiah Whitehead,Seton Hall
2017Villanova74–60CreightonJosh Hart,Villanova
2018Villanova76–66*ProvidenceMikal Bridges,Villanova
2019Villanova74–72Seton HallPhil Booth,Villanova
2020Canceled after first round due to theCOVID-19 pandemic
2021Georgetown73–48CreightonDante Harris,Georgetown
2022Villanova54–48CreightonCollin Gillespie,Villanova
2023Marquette65–51XavierTyler Kolek,Marquette
2024UConn73–57MarquetteTristen Newton,UConn
2025St. John's82–66CreightonRJ Luis Jr.,St. John's

Championships by school

[edit]
SchoolChampionshipsChampionship Years
Georgetown
8
1980, 1982, 1984, 1985, 1987, 1989, 2007, 2021
UConn
8
1990, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2004, 2011, 2024
Villanova
6
1995, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2022
Syracuse
5
1981, 1988, 1992, 2005, 2006
St. John's
4
1983, 1986, 2000, 2025
Louisville
3
2009, 2012, 2013
Seton Hall
3
1991, 1993, 2016
Boston College
2
1997, 2001
Pittsburgh
2
2003, 2008
Providence
2
1994, 2014
West Virginia
1
2010
Marquette
1
2023
Butler
0
Cincinnati
0
Creighton
0
DePaul
0
Miami
0
Notre Dame
0
Rutgers
0
South Florida
0
Virginia Tech
0
Xavier
0

NOTES:Italics indicate school is no longer a member of the Big East Conference.

UConn did not move to the new Big East Conference when it was founded in 2013. UConn remained behind in the old Big East Conference, which became theAmerican Athletic Conference in 2013, and therefore participated in theAmerican Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament from 2014 through 2020. UConn moved to the new Big East Conference in 2020 and resumed play in the Big East Tournament in 2021.

Current membersButler andDePaul have yet to make an appearance in the Big East Championship Game. Former membersMiami,Notre Dame,Rutgers,South Florida, andVirginia Tech did not appear in the championship game during their respective conference tenures.

Performance by team

[edit]

1980–2005 conference alignment

[edit]
Teams (# of titles)19801981198219831984198519861987198819891990199119921993199419951996199719981999200020012002200320042005
BE (44)(7)(8)(8)(9)(9)(9)(9)(9)(9)(9)(9)(9)(10)(10)(10)(10)(13)(13)(13)(13)(13)(12)(12)(12)(12)(11)
1Georgetown (8)CSFCQFCCSFCQFCSFFFQFFSFFSFQFQFSFQFQFQF1RQF
1UConn (8)SFQFQFQFQFQF1R1RQFQFCQFQFQFSFFC1RCCF1RCFCSF
3Villanova (6)FFSFSFSFSFQFFQFSFSFQF1RQFCSFFQFQFQFQFQF1RSFSF
4Syracuse (5)FCQFSFFSFFFCFFQFCFQFQFSFQFFSFQFSF1RSFQFC
5St. John's (4)SFQFSFCSFFCQFQF1RQFQFSFSFQF1R1R1RSFFC1RQFQFDNQDNQ
6Seton Hall (3)QFQFQFQF1R1RQFQFSFSFQFCSFCSF1RQF1R1RQFQFSF1RQF1R1R
7Boston College (2)QFQFSFFQFQFQFQFQFQF1R1RQFQFQFQFQFCQF1R1RCQFSFSFQF
7Pittsburgh (2)QFQFQFQFSFSFSFQFQF1RQF1RQF1RQF1R1R1RFFCFQF
7Providence (2)QFSFQF1RQFQFQFSF1RQFQFSF1RSFCSFQFSFQF1R1RQF1RQFQF1R
10West Virginia (1)1RQF1R1R1R1RDNQ1R1RF
11Miami (0)QF1R1RQFQFQF1RSFSF1RSF1RDNQ
11Notre Dame (0)1R1R1R1RQFQFSF1RQF1R
11Rutgers (0)1R1RSFQF1RDNQ1RDNQ1RQF
11Virginia Tech (0)DNQDNQDNQQF

NOTE: From 2001 through 2003, the teams which finished in last place in the East and West Divisions did not qualify for the tournament. In 2004, teams which finished below 12th place in the conference did not qualify for the tournament. In 2005, St. John's was ineligible for the tournament because of sanctions imposed on its program.

2006–2013 conference alignment

[edit]
Teams (# of titles)20062007200820092010201120122013
BE (44)(12)(12)(12)(16)(16)(16)(16)(14)
1Georgetown (8)SFCF1RF2RQFSF
1UConn (8)QF1RQFQF1RCQFDNQ
3Villanova (6)SFQFQFSFQF1R2RQF
4Syracuse (5)CQF1RFQFSFSFF
5St. John's (4)DNQ1RDNQ2R2RQF1R2R
6Louisville (3)1RSFQFC2RFCC
6Seton Hall (3)1RDNQ1R2R2R1R2R2R
8Pittsburgh (2)FFCQFQFQF2RQF
8Providence (2)DNQ1R1RQF1R1R1R2R
10West Virginia (1)QFQFSFSFC2R2R
11Cincinnati (0)1RDNQ1R1RQFQFFQF
12Notre Dame (0)1RSFQF2RSFSFSFSF
12Marquette (0)QFQFSFQFSFQFQFQF
12Rutgers (0)QFDNQDNQ1R1R2R1R2R
12South Florida (0)DNQDNQDNQ1R2R2RQF1R
12DePaul (0)DNQ1RDNQ2R1R1R1R1R

NOTE: From 2006 through 2008, teams which finished below 12th place in the conference did not qualify for the tournament. In 2013, Connecticut did not qualify for the tournament because ofAcademic Progress Rate violations

Since 2014 realignment

[edit]
through 2025 tournament
Teams (# of titles)201420152016201720182019202020212022202320242025
BE (44)(10)(10)(10)(10)(10)(10)(10)(11)(11)(11)(11)(11)
1Georgetown (8)1RSFQF1R1RQF1RC1R1R1R1R
1UConn (8)SFSFSFCSF
3Villanova (6)QFCFCCCDNPQFCQFQFQF
4St. John's (4)QFQF1RQFQFQFQFCQFQFQFSFC
5Seton Hall (3)SF1RCSFQFFDNPSFQF1RQF1R
6Providence (2)CSFSFQFFQFDNP1RSFQFSF1R
7Marquette (1)QFQFQFQFQFSFDNP1RQFCFSF
8Creighton (0)FQFQFFQFQFDNPFFSFQFF
8Xavier (0)SFFSFSFSFSF1R1R1RFQFQF
8Butler (0)1RQFQFQFSF1RDNPQFQF1R1RQF
8DePaul (0)QF1R1R1R1R1RQFCQF1RQF1RQF

NOTE: The 2020 tournament was canceled during halftime of the first quarterfinal game due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. Georgetown lost its first-round game to St. John's and Xavier lost its first-round game to DePaul; Creighton and St. John's did not complete their quarterfinal game, and none of the other teams played their quarterfinal games.

Key

CChampion
FLost in Final
SFLost in Semifinals
QFLost in Quarterfinals
2RLost in Second Round
1RLost in First Round
QFCWon first round; quarterfinal cancelled
DNPDid not play (bye in first round; quarterfinal cancelled)
DNQDid not qualify for tournament
Not a conference member

Television coverage

[edit]

Before the new Big East Conference was founded during the offseason in 2013, the original Big East was the only conference to have every tournament game broadcast nationwide on theESPN family of networks, with every game from the second round forward broadcast onESPN itself. The first year the tournament was broadcast in 3D onESPN 3D was in 2011.

In 2014 and 2015,FS1 broadcast the entire Big East tournament.[7] From 2016 through 2023,Fox broadcast the championship game and FS1 aired the rest. In 2024, Fox broadcast one of the semifinal games and the championship game, and FS1 aired the rest. In 2025,Peacock televised the first five games (all three first-round games and the first two quarterfinals), FS1 aired the next two (the third and fourth quarterfinal games), and Fox broadcast the last three (both semifinal games and the championship game).

References

[edit]
  1. ^"BIG EAST, MSG Extend Partnership to Host BIG EAST Tournament".BIG EAST Conference. Retrieved13 March 2022.
  2. ^Thamel, Pete (March 13, 2009)."Syracuse Left Standing After Marathon Game".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 26, 2010.
  3. ^St. John's vs. Creighton Box Score — March 12, 2020 https://theathletic.com/ The Athletic Retrieved May 19, 2020
  4. ^Caron, Emily (December 2, 2020)."Big East recoups $10.5 million from men's basketball tournament insurance policy".Sportico. RetrievedDecember 29, 2020.
  5. ^"Big East tournament expands to 16 teams".United Press International. November 7, 2007.Archived from the original on 20 March 2008. Retrieved2008-03-12.
  6. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2010-11-20. Retrieved2011-02-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^"Check out the complete college basketball on FOX, FOX Sports 1, FOX Sports 2 and FSN TV schedule - College Basketball News | FOX Sports on MSN". Archived fromthe original on 2013-09-07. Retrieved2013-09-06.
Big East Conference men's basketball
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Conference challenges
Seasons
Big East Conference championships
NCAA men's college basketball tournaments
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Early season
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Early season
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postseason
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Division II
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