Great Lakes Valley Conference men's basketball tournament explained

Great Lakes Valley Conference men's basketball tournament
Optional Subheader:Conference basketball championship
Sport:Basketball
Conference:Great Lakes Valley Conference
Format:Single-elimination tournament
Years:1998–present
Current Champion:William Jewell (1st)
Most Championships:Bellarmine (5), Kentucky Wesleyan (5)
Website:GLVC men's basketball

The Great Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC) men's basketball tournament is the annual men's basketball championship tournament for the Great Lakes Valley Conference. The tournament was established in 1998, twenty years after the conference was founded in 1978. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records.[1]

The tournament bracket has included as few as seven teams and as many as fifteen. The most common format has featured eight teams competing at the same predesignated neutral site as the GLVC women's basketball tournament. In 1998, 2008, 2009, and 2021, the quarterfinals were played on campus sites and the final four was held on the home court of the highest seed surviving the quarterfinals.

The tournament winner is conference champion and receives the GLVC's automatic bid to the NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament.

Former members Kentucky Wesleyan and Bellarmine have won the most tournaments, with five apiece.

Results

YearChampionsScoreRunner-upSite
1998Kentucky Wesleyan94–81Southern IndianaSportscenter (Owensboro, KY)
1999Kentucky Wesleyan95–84Southern IndianaRoberts Stadium (Evansville, IN)
2000Kentucky Wesleyan90–88Southern Indiana
2001Kentucky Wesleyan91–74Southern Indiana
2002Lewis77–65Kentucky Wesleyan
2003Northern Kentucky58–55Lewis
2004Kentucky Wesleyan72–71 (OT)Lewis
2005Southern Indiana79–49Northern Kentucky
2006Saint Joseph's68–67Quincy
2007Southern Indiana63–61Northern Kentucky
2008Drury89–87 (OT)LewisWeiser Gym, Drury University (Springfield, MO)
2009Northern Kentucky69–47BellarminePAC Arena, University of Southern Indiana (Evansville, IN)
2010Bellarmine79–69Kentucky WesleyanThe Recreation and Athletic Center,
University of Illinois - Springfield (Springfield, IL)
2011Bellarmine87–81 OT)Southern IndianaMoloney Arena, Maryville University (Town and Country, MO)
2012Southern Indiana60–56Northern KentuckyPrairie Capital Convention Center (Springfield, IL)
2013Drury71–65Southern IndianaFord Center (Evansville, IN)
2014Southern Indiana86–73Bellarmine
2015Drury77–70BellarmineFamily Arena (St. Charles, MO)
2016Lewis80–71Wisconsin–Parkside
2017Bellarmine74–61LewisFord Center (Evansville, IN)
2018Bellarmine75–61Truman StateVadalabene Center (Edwardsville, IL)
2019Bellarmine65-48Drury
2020Truman State53–52Missouri–St. Louis
2021Lewis76–71DruryMark Twain Building, University of Missouri - St. Louis (St. Louis, MO)
2022Missouri–St. Louis66–56IndianapolisVadalabene Center (Edwardsville, IL)
- align=center2023McKendree62–51Missouri-St. LouisHyland Performance Arena (St. Charles, MO)
2024William Jewell83-65Lewis

Championship records

SchoolFinals RecordFinals Appearancesclass=unsortable Championship Years
Kentucky Wesleyan5–271998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2004
Bellarmine5–382010, 2011, 2017, 2018, 2019
Southern Indiana4–6102005, 2007, 2012, 2014
Lewis3–582002, 2016, 2021
Drury3–252008, 2013, 2015
Northern Kentucky2–352003, 2009
Missouri–St. Louis1–232022
Truman State1–122020
McKendree1–012023
William Jewell1–012024
Saint Joseph's1–012006
Indianapolis0–11
Quincy0–11
Wisconsin–Parkside0–11

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: GLVC Men's Basketball Archive . Year-by-year records. GLVC . 2017. April 4, 2017.