1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament explained

See also: 1993 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Championship Game.

Year:1993
Teams:64
Finalfourarena:Louisiana Superdome
Finalfourcity:New Orleans, Louisiana
Champions:North Carolina Tar Heels
Titlecount:3rd
Champgamecount:7th
Champffcount:11th
Runnerup:Michigan Wolverines (vacated)
Gamecount:5th
Runnerffcount:6th
Semifinal1:Kansas Jayhawks
Finalfourcount:10th
Semifinal2:Kentucky Wildcats
Finalfourcount2:10th
Coach:Dean Smith
Coachcount:2nd
Mop:Donald Williams
Mopteam:North Carolina
Attendance:715,246
Topscorer:Donald Williams
Topscorerteam:North Carolina
Points:118

The 1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 64 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 18, 1993, and ended with the championship game on April 5 in New Orleans, Louisiana. A total of 63 games were played.

North Carolina, coached by Dean Smith, won the national title with a 77–71 victory in the final game over Michigan, coached by Steve Fisher. Donald Williams of North Carolina was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. The most memorable play in the championship game came in the last seconds as Michigan's Chris Webber tried to call a timeout with his team down by 2 points when double-teamed by North Carolina. Michigan had already used all of its timeouts, so Webber's gaffe resulted in a technical foul. Michigan subsequently vacated its entire 1992–93 schedule, including its six NCAA Tournament games, after it emerged that Webber had received under-the-table payments from a booster.

In a game that featured two great individual battles (one between Bobby Hurley and Jason Kidd, and the other between Grant Hill and Lamond Murray), two-time defending champion Duke was upset in the second round by California.

This year's Final Four was the closest the tournament came to having all four top seeds advance to the semifinals until all four did advance in the 2008 tournament. Indiana was the only top seed not to make it out of its regional; it was defeated by the 2-seed Kansas, in the Midwest regional finals. This tournament is also notable for the uneven distribution of first-round upsets. While there were no upsets in the East, one 'minor' upset in the Midwest (9th seed Xavier defeated 8th seed New Orleans; Xavier was the betting favorite at all sports books in Las Vegas), and one 'medium' upset in the Southeast (11th seed Tulane beat 6th seed Kansas State), the West featured three remarkable upsets amongst the top 5 seeds, with a 12, a 13, and a 15-seed advancing to the second round in that region. At the time, 15-seed Santa Clara's victory over 2-seed Arizona was only the second such upset, and following the 2023 tournament, is one of only eleven times that a 15-seed defeated a 2-seed since the tournament field expanded to 64 teams (In 2018, UMBC became one of only two 16-seeds to defeat a 1-seed, ousting Virginia 74-54, with Fairleigh Dickinson's upset of Purdue occurring five years later.).

In this tournament, the Louisiana Superdome was the only site in which the game clock counted down in whole seconds, not tenths of seconds, in the final minute of each period.

Schedule and venues

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1993 tournament:

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Teams

There were 30 automatic bids awarded to the tournament - of these, 27 were given to the winners of their conference's tournament, while three were awarded to the team with the best regular-season record in their conference (Big Ten, Ivy League and Pac-10).

Two conferences, the Great Midwest Conference and Trans America Athletic Conference,[1] did not receive automatic bids to the tournament.

Two conference champions made their first NCAA tournament appearances: Tennessee State (Ohio Valley) and Wright State (Mid-Continent).

Automatic qualifiers

Automatic qualifiers
ConferenceTeamAppearanceLast bid
ACCGeorgia Tech10th1992
Atlantic 10UMass3rd1992
Big EastSeton Hall5th1992
Big EightMissouri14th1992
Big SkyBoise State3rd1988
Big SouthCoastal Carolina2nd1991
Big TenIndiana22nd1992
Big WestLong Beach State3rd1977
CAAEast Carolina2nd1972
Ivy LeaguePenn14th1987
MAACManhattan3rd1958
MACBall State5th1988
MCCEvansville4th1992
MEACCoppin State2nd1990
MetroLouisville23rd1992
Mid-ContinentWright State1st
Missouri ValleySouthern Illinois2nd1977
NACDelaware2nd1992
NECRider2nd1984
Ohio ValleyTennessee State1st
Pac-10Arizona12th1992
PatriotHoly Cross3rd1980
SECKentucky34th1992
SouthernChattanooga5th1988
SouthlandNortheast Louisiana6th1992
Sun BeltWestern Kentucky13th1987
SWACSouthern6th1989
SWCTexas Tech9th1986
WACNew Mexico5th1991
West CoastSanta Clara9th1987

Tournament seeds

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East Regional – Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, New Jersey
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1North CarolinaACC28–4At-Large
2CincinnatiGreat Midwest24–4At-Large
3UMassAtlantic 1023–6Automatic
4ArkansasSEC20–8At-Large
5St. John'sBig East18–10At-Large
6VirginiaACC19–9At-Large
7New Mexico State (vacated)Big West25–7At-Large
8Rhode IslandAtlantic 1018–10At-Large
9PurdueBig Ten18–9At-Large
10NebraskaBig Eight20–10At-Large
11ManhattanMAAC23–6Automatic
12Texas TechSouthwest18–11Automatic
13Holy CrossPatriot23–6Automatic
14PennIvy League22–4Automatic
15Coppin StateMEAC22–7Automatic
16East CarolinaCAA13–16Automatic
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Southeast Regional – Charlotte Coliseum, Charlotte, North Carolina
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1KentuckySEC26–3Automatic
2Seton HallBig East27–6Automatic
3Florida StateACC22–9At-Large
4IowaBig Ten22–8At-Large
5Wake ForestACC19–8At-Large
6Kansas StateBig Eight19–10At-Large
7Western KentuckySun Belt24–5Automatic
8UtahWAC23–6At-Large
9PittsburghBig East17–10At-Large
10Memphis StateGreat Midwest20–11At-Large
11TulaneMetro21–8At-Large
12ChattanoogaSouthern26–6Automatic
13Northeast LouisianaSouthland26–4Automatic
14EvansvilleMCC23–6Automatic
15Tennessee StateOhio Valley19–9Automatic
16RiderNortheast19–10Automatic
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Midwest Regional – St. Louis Arena, St. Louis, Missouri
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1IndianaBig Ten28–3Automatic
2KansasBig Eight25–6At-Large
3DukeACC23–7At-Large
4LouisvilleMetro20–8Automatic
5Oklahoma StateBig Eight19–8At-Large
6CaliforniaPac-1019–8At-Large
7BYUWAC24–8At-Large
8New OrleansSun Belt26–3At-Large
9XavierMCC23–5At-Large
10SMUSouthwest20–7At-Large
11LSUSEC22–10At-Large
12MarquetteGreat Midwest20–7At-Large
13DelawareNAC22–7Automatic
14Southern IllinoisMissouri Valley23–9Automatic
15Ball StateMAC26–7Automatic
16Wright StateMid-Continent20–9Automatic
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West Regional – Kingdome, Seattle, Washington
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1Michigan (vacated)Big Ten26–4At-Large
2ArizonaPac-1024–3Automatic
3VanderbiltSEC26–5At-Large
4Georgia TechACC19–10Automatic
5New MexicoWAC24–6Automatic
6IllinoisBig Ten18–12At-Large
7TempleAtlantic 1017–12At-Large
8Iowa StateBig Eight20–10At-Large
9UCLAPac-1021–10At-Large
10MissouriBig Eight19–13Automatic
11Long Beach StateBig West22–9Automatic
12George WashingtonAtlantic 1021–9At-Large
13SouthernSWAC20–9Automatic
14Boise StateBig Sky21–7Automatic
15Santa ClaraWest Coast18–11Automatic
16Coastal CarolinaBig South22–9Automatic

Bracket

Game summaries

National Championship

See main article: article and 1993 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship Game.

  1. — Michigan's entire 1992–93 schedule results were vacated, on November 7, 2002, as part of the settlement of the University of Michigan basketball scandal. Unlike forfeiture, a vacated game does not result in the other school being credited with a win, only with Michigan removing the wins from its own record.

Announcers

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: TAAC LOSES BID TO MARCH MADNESS . . September 2, 1992 . May 23, 2023.