1978 NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament




















1978 NCAA Division I
Basketball Tournament
Teams32
Finals site
The Checkerdome
St. Louis, Missouri
Champions
Kentucky Wildcats (5th title, 7th title game,
8th Final Four)
Runner-up
Duke Blue Devils (2nd title game,
4th Final Four)
Semifinalists

  • Arkansas Razorbacks (3rd Final Four)


  • Notre Dame Fighting Irish (1st Final Four)

Winning coach
Joe B. Hall (1st title)
MOP
Jack Givens (Kentucky)
Attendance227,149
Top scorer
Mike Gminski Duke
(109 points)


NCAA Division I Men's Tournaments
«1977

1979»

The 1978 NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament involved 32 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 11, 1978, and ended with the championship game on March 27 in St. Louis, Missouri. A total of 32 games were played, including a national third place game.


The process of seeding the bracket was first used in this tournament. Sixteen conference winners with automatic bids were seeded 1 through 4 in each region. At-large teams were seeded 1 through 4 in each region separately. There were in fact only 11 true at-large teams in the field, as the remaining 5 teams were conference winners with automatic bids who were seeded as "at-large."[1] The practice of distinguishing between automatic and at-large teams was ended after the tournament, and the expanded field of 40 was simply seeded from 1 to 10 in the 1979 tournament.


Kentucky, coached by Joe B. Hall, won the national title with a 94–88 victory in the final game over Duke, coached by Bill E. Foster. Jack Givens of Kentucky was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.


The biggest upset of the tournament took place in the first round, when little-heralded Miami (Ohio) defeated defending champion Marquette 84-81 in overtime. The victory was even sweeter for Miami Redskins (now RedHawks) fans as former Marquette coach Al McGuire had earlier strongly criticized the NCAA for potentially matching Marquette against Kentucky in the second round, with Marquette being given a first-round opponent in Miami that was supposedly not even worthy of providing an adequate tune-up game.


Unranked Cal State Fullerton (CSUF) pulled off two upsets, first over 4th ranked New Mexico (coached by Norm Ellenberger and led by Michael Cooper) and then over top-10 San Francisco (featuring Bill Cartwright). The loss was especially painful for New Mexico as the regional semifinals and finals were held on the Lobos' home court in Albuquerque. CSUF then almost upset Arkansas in the West Regional final, losing by 3 points. In each of the three games, the Titans overcame second-half double-digit deficits. In the Arkansas game, they cut a big deficit to 1 and had the ball with 14 seconds left. But Arkansas' Jim Counce stole the ball from Keith Anderson (many observers felt Anderson was fouled) and drove down to hit a clinching layup.


In the Mideast regional final, Kentucky knocked off top-seeded Michigan State, led by freshman Earvin "Magic" Johnson. This was the only time in a 4-year period (that included his senior year in high school, 2 years of college, and his rookie NBA season) that Magic's team did not win its final game of the playoffs and hence the championship.


The Final Four semifinal games and the National Championship game in St. Louis Arena (a.k.a. The Checkerdome) were not played on the Arena's official floor. Water damage to it forced the NCAA to borrow the floor from Indiana University's Assembly Hall.




Contents





  • 1 Locations


  • 2 Teams


  • 3 Bracket

    • 3.1 East region


    • 3.2 Midwest region


    • 3.3 Mideast region


    • 3.4 West region


    • 3.5 Final Four


    • 3.6 Game summaries

      • 3.6.1 Final Four


      • 3.6.2 Championship




  • 4 See also

    • 4.1 References





Locations




1978 NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament is located in the US

Charlotte

Charlotte



Philadelphia

Philadelphia



Tulsa

Tulsa



Knoxville

Knoxville



Wichita

Wichita



Indianapolis

Indianapolis



Eugene

Eugene



Tempe

Tempe




1978 sites for first and second round games




1978 NCAA Division I Basketball Tournament is located in the US

Providence

Providence



Dayton

Dayton



Lawrence

Lawrence



Albuquerque

Albuquerque



St. Louis

St. Louis




1978 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)





























































RoundRegionSiteVenueHost
First Round
East

Charlotte, North Carolina

Charlotte Coliseum

UNC Charlotte
East

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The Palestra

Pennsylvania/Temple
Mideast

Indianapolis, Indiana

Market Square Arena

Butler/IUPUI
Mideast

Knoxville, Tennessee

Stokely Athletic Center

Tennessee
Midwest

Tulsa, Oklahoma

Mabee Center

Oral Roberts/Tulsa
Midwest

Wichita, Kansas

Levitt Arena

Wichita State
West

Eugene, Oregon

McArthur Court

Oregon
West

Tempe, Arizona

ASU Activity Center

Arizona State
Regionals
East

Providence, Rhode Island

Providence Civic Center

Providence College
Mideast

Dayton, Ohio

University of Dayton Arena

Dayton
Midwest

Lawrence, Kansas

Allen Fieldhouse

Kansas
West

Albuquerque, New Mexico

University Arena ("The Pit")

New Mexico
Final Four

St. Louis, Missouri

The Checkerdome

Missouri Valley Conference/St. Louis University

For the second time in six years, St. Louis was chosen as the host city for the Final Four, the eighth city to host multiple times. There were no new host cities for the first time since 1950, but one new venue, Market Square Arena, marking the first time since 1940 that the tournament returned to Indianapolis, now a common site of Final Fours. The tournament did mark the last time it would be held at McArthur Court, as it has not returned to Eugene since. It was also the last time the regionals would be held in historic Allen Fieldhouse, something it did eight times.



Teams









































































































































































































































RegionSeedTeamCoachFinishedFinal OpponentScore
East
East1QDukeBill E. FosterRunner UpKentuckyL 94–88
East3QFurmanJoe WilliamsRound of 32IndianaL 63–62
East1LIndianaBob KnightSweet SixteenVillanovaL 61–60
East4LLa SallePaul WestheadRound of 32VillanovaL 103–97
East4QPennBob WeinhauerSweet SixteenDukeL 84–80
East3LRhode IslandJack KraftRound of 32DukeL 63–62
East2LSt. BonaventureJim SatalinRound of 32PennL 92–83
East2QVillanovaRollie MassiminoRegional Runner-upDukeL 90–72
Mideast
Mideast4LFlorida StateHugh DurhamRound of 32KentuckyL 85–76
Mideast2QKentuckyJoe B. HallChampionDukeW 94–88
Mideast1LMarquetteHank RaymondsRound of 32Miami (OH)L 84–81
Mideast3QMiami (OH)Darrell HedricSweet SixteenKentuckyL 91–69
Mideast1QMichigan StateJud HeathcoteRegional Runner-upKentuckyL 52–49
Mideast3LProvidenceDave GavittRound of 32Michigan StateL 77–63
Mideast2LSyracuseJim BoeheimRound of 32Western KentuckyL 87–86
Mideast4QWestern KentuckyJim RichardsSweet SixteenMichigan StateL 90–69
Midwest
Midwest3QCreightonTom ApkeRound of 32DePaulL 80–78
Midwest1LDePaulRay MeyerRegional Runner-upNotre DameL 84–64
Midwest4QHoustonGuy LewisRound of 32Notre DameL 100–77
Midwest2QLouisvilleDenny CrumSweet SixteenDePaulL 90–89
Midwest1QMissouriNorm StewartRound of 32UtahL 86–79
Midwest2LNotre DameDigger PhelpsFourth PlaceArkansasL 71–69
Midwest4LSt. John'sLou CarneseccaRound of 32LouisvilleL 76–68
Midwest3LUtahJerry PimmSweet SixteenNotre DameL 69–56
West
West2LArkansasEddie SuttonThird PlaceNotre DameW 71–69
West4LCal State FullertonBob DyeRegional Runner-upArkansasL 61–58
West3LKansasTed OwensRound of 32UCLAL 83–76
West2QNew MexicoNorm EllenbergerRound of 32Cal State FullertonL 90–85
West1LNorth CarolinaDean SmithRound of 32San FranciscoL 68–64
West3QSan FranciscoBob GaillardSweet SixteenCal State FullertonL 75–72
West1QUCLAGary CunninghamSweet SixteenArkansasL 74–70
West4QWeber StateNeil McCarthyRound of 32ArkansasL 73–52


Bracket


* – Denotes overtime period



East region






















































































































Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
         
1Q

Duke

63
3L
Rhode Island
62
1Q

Duke

84

4Q
Penn
80
4Q

Penn

92
2L
St. Bonaventure
83
1Q

Duke

90

2Q
Villanova
72
1L

Indiana

63
3Q
Furman
62
1L
Indiana
60

2Q

Villanova

61
2Q

Villanova

103
4L
La Salle
97


Midwest region






















































































































Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
         
3L

Utah

86
1Q
Missouri
79**
3L
Utah
56

2L

Notre Dame

69
2L

Notre Dame

100
4Q
Houston
77
2L

Notre Dame

84

1L
DePaul
64
1L

DePaul

80
3Q
Creighton
78
1L

DePaul

90

2Q
Louisville
89**
2Q

Louisville

76
4L
St. John's
68


Mideast region






















































































































Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
         
1Q

Michigan State

77
3L
Providence
63
1Q

Michigan State

90

4Q
Western Kentucky
69
4Q

Western Kentucky

87
2L
Syracuse
86*
1Q
Michigan State
49

2Q

Kentucky

52
3Q

Miami (OH)

84
1L
Marquette
81*
3Q
Miami (OH)
69

2Q

Kentucky

91
2Q

Kentucky

85
4L
Florida State
76


West region






















































































































Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
         
1Q

UCLA

83
3L
Kansas
76
1Q
UCLA
70

2L

Arkansas

74
2L

Arkansas

73
4Q
Weber State
52
2L

Arkansas

61

4L
Cal State Fullerton
58
3Q

San Francisco

68
1L
North Carolina
64
3Q
San Francisco
72

4L

Cal State Fullerton

75
4L

Cal State Fullerton

90
2Q
New Mexico
85


Final Four































































 
National Semifinals
 
 
National Championship Game
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
E1Q

Duke

90
 


 
MW2L
Notre Dame
86
 
 
 
 
 
E1Q
Duke
88
 
 
 
ME2Q

Kentucky

94
 
ME2Q

Kentucky

64
 
 
 
W2L
Arkansas
59
 

National Third Place Game
 

MW2L
Notre Dame
69
 

W2L

Arkansas

71

Q = automatic qualifier bid
L = at-large bid (including 5 automatic bids seeded with at-large teams)



Game summaries



Final Four




March 25


Box/Recap




Arkansas 59, Kentucky 64

Scoring by half: 30–32, 29–32

Pts: Brewer 16
Rebs: Delph 8
Asts: Counce 2

Pts: Givens 23
Rebs: Givens 9
Asts: Shidler 4



Attendance: 18,721





March 25


Box/Recap





Duke 90, Notre Dame 86

Scoring by half: 43–29, 47–57

Pts: Gminski 29
Rebs: Banks 12
Asts: Spanarkel/Bender 5

Pts: Williams 16
Rebs: Laimbeer 10
Asts: Branning 5



Attendance: 18,721




Championship





March 27


Box/Recap




Duke 88, Kentucky 94

Scoring by half: 38-45, 50-49

Pts: Banks 22
Rebs: Gminski 12

Pts: Givens 41
Rebs: Robey 11



Attendance: 18,721




See also


  • 1978 NCAA Division II Basketball Tournament

  • 1978 NCAA Division III Basketball Tournament

  • 1978 National Invitation Tournament

  • 1978 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 1978 National Women's Invitation Tournament


References




  1. ^ Washington Post – March 6, 1978











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