1980–81 NCAA Division I men's basketball season








































The 1980–81 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 28, 1980, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1981 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament Championship Game on March 30, 1981, at The Spectrum in Philadelphia. The Indiana Hoosiers won their fourth NCAA national championship with a 63–50 victory over the North Carolina Tar Heels.




Contents






  • 1 Rule Changes


  • 2 Season headlines


  • 3 Season outlook


    • 3.1 Pre-season polls




  • 4 Regular season


    • 4.1 Conference winners and tournaments


    • 4.2 Statistical leaders




  • 5 Post-Season Tournaments


    • 5.1 NCAA Tournament


      • 5.1.1 Final Four




    • 5.2 National Invitation Tournament


      • 5.2.1 NIT Semifinals and Final






  • 6 Awards


    • 6.1 Consensus All-American teams


    • 6.2 Major player of the year awards


    • 6.3 Major coach of the year awards


    • 6.4 Other major awards




  • 7 References





Rule Changes



  • On free throw attempts, players can now enter the free-throw lane after the foul shooter releases the ball. Previously, players had to wait until the ball touched either the rim or backboard before entering the lane.

  • The time allotted to replace a disqualified (fouled out) player was reduced from 60 to 30 seconds.

  • Starting in the 1981–82 season, the national third-place game was abolished.

  • Conferences were allowed to experiment with the three-point shot in conference games only. The Southern Conference was the first to use the shot in their conference games, adopting a distance of 22 feet.



Season headlines



  • After a nearly even first half, the Indiana Hoosiers pulled away from the North Carolina Tar Heels to clinch the school's fourth National championship, 63–50 in Philadelphia. The win marked Hoosiers coach Bob Knight's second championship and marked UNC coach Dean Smith's sixth trip to the Final Four without a championship. Indiana was led by a dominant second half by sophomore Isiah Thomas.[1]

  • There was some question as to if the March 30th championship game would be postponed or cancelled as President Ronald Reagan was shot in an assassination attempt by John Hinckley, Jr.. Once it was confirmed that President Reagan would survive, the game was played as scheduled.[2]


  • Oregon State senior Steve Johnson set an NCAA record for season field goal percentage with a .746 mark. Johnson would also graduate with the NCAA career field goal percentage record (.678)[3]


  • Nolan Richardson led Tulsa to a 15-game improvement over the previous year in his first year at the helm. The Golden Hurricane went 26–7 and won the NIT. Richardson came to Tulsa fresh off of a 1980 NJCAA Championship and brought four of his former Western Texas College starters to Tulsa, including Paul Pressey.[4]

  • The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference played its first season as a member of NCAA's Division I.



Season outlook



Pre-season polls


The top 20 from the AP and UPI polls during the pre-season.[5]




























































































Associated Press
Ranking
Team
1

Kentucky (30)
2

DePaul (18)
3

Louisville (2)
4

Maryland (2)
5

Indiana (2)
6

UCLA (2)
7

Oregon State (1)
8

Virginia (1)
9

Ohio State (1)
10

Notre Dame
11

Missouri
12

Louisiana State
13

North Carolina
14

Iowa
15

Texas A&M
16

Georgetown
17

St. John's
18

Brigham Young
19

Syracuse
20

Arkansas

























































































UPI Coaches
Ranking
Team
1

Kentucky
2

DePaul
3

Louisville
4

Indiana
5

Maryland
6

Oregon State
7

Virginia
8

UCLA
9

Ohio State
10

Missouri
11

North Carolina
12

Notre Dame
13

Louisiana State
14

Texas A&M
15

Iowa
16

Georgetown
17

Brigham Young
18

Kansas State
19

St. John's
20

Arizona State



Regular season



Conference winners and tournaments





























































































































































































































Conference
Regular
Season Winner[6]

Conference
Player of the Year
Conference
Tournament
Tournament
Venue (City)
Tournament
Winner
Atlantic Coast Conference Virginia
Ralph Sampson, Virginia[7]
1981 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament
Capital Centre
(Landover, Maryland)

North Carolina
Big East Conference Boston College
John Bagley, Boston College[8]
1981 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament
Carrier Dome
(Syracuse, New York)

Syracuse
Big Eight Conference Missouri
Andre Smith, Nebraska[9]
1981 Big Eight Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Kemper Arena
(Kansas City, Missouri)
(Semifinals and Finals)

Kansas
Big Sky Conference Idaho
Brian Kellerman, Idaho[10]
1981 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Kibbie Dome
(Moscow, Idaho)

Idaho
Big Ten Conference Indiana None Selected No Tournament
East Coast Conference
American (East)
Lafayette & Rider (West)

Len Hatzenbeller, Drexel
1981 East Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
The Palestra
(Philadelphia)

St. Joseph's

Eastern Athletic Association (Eastern 8)

Duquesne & Rhode Island

Earl Belcher, St. Bonaventure[11]
1981 Eastern 8 Men's Basketball Tournament
Civic Arena
(Pittsburgh)

Pittsburgh

Eastern College Athletic
Conference (ECAC)
Division I ECAC members
played as independents
during the regular season
(see note)

1981 ECAC Metro Region Tournament

Nassau Coliseum
(Uniondale, New York)

LIU-Brooklyn

1981 ECAC South Region Tournament

Hampton Coliseum
(Hampton, Virginia)

James Madison
ECAC North Northeastern
Mike Ferrara, Colgate[12]
1981 ECAC North Men's Basketball Tournament
Cabot Center
(Boston)

Northeastern
Ivy League Princeton
Larry Lawrence, Dartmouth[13]
No Tournament
Metro Conference Louisville
David Burns, Saint Louis & Derek Smith, Louisville
1981 Metro Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Freedom Hall
(Louisville, Kentucky)

Louisville
Mid-American Conference
Ball State, Northern Illinois, Toledo, W. Michigan & Bowling Green

Harvey Knuckles, Toledo[14]
1981 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Crisler Arena
(Ann Arbor, Michigan)

Ball State
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference North Carolina A&T
James Ratiff, Howard
1981 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Winston–Salem Memorial Coliseum
(Winston-Salem, North Carolina)

Howard[15]
Midwestern City Conference Xavier
Darius Clemons, Loyola (IL) & Rubin Jackson, Oklahoma City[16]
1981 Midwestern City Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Final at Riverfront Coliseum
(Cincinnati)

Oklahoma City
Missouri Valley Conference Wichita State
Lewis Lloyd, Drake[17]
1981 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Levitt Arena
(Wichita, Kansas)

Creighton
Ohio Valley Conference Western Kentucky
Jerry Beck, Middle Tennessee St.[18]
1981 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
E. A. Diddle Arena
(Bowling Green, Kentucky)

Western Kentucky
Pacific-10 Conference Oregon State
Steve Johnson, Oregon State[19]
No Tournament
Pacific Coast Athletic Association Fresno State
Kevin Magee, UC Irvine[20]
1981 PCAA Men's Basketball Tournament
Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, California)

Fresno State
Southeastern Conference LSU
Dominique Wilkins, Georgia[21]
1981 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament
Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex
(Birmingham, Alabama)

Mississippi
Southern Conference
Appalachian State, Davidson & UT-Chattanooga

Charles Payton, Appalachian State[22]
1981 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Roanoke Civic Center
(Roanoke, Virginia)

UT-Chattanooga
Southland Conference Lamar
Mike Olliver, Lamar[23]
1981 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
McDonald Gym
(Beaumont, Texas) (Semifinals and finals)

Lamar
Southwest Conference Arkansas
Rob Williams, Houston
1981 SWC Men's Basketball Tournament
HemisFair Arena
(San Antonio, Texas)

Houston
Southwestern Athletic Conference
Alcorn State & Southern-BR
1981 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament
LSU Assembly Center
(Baton Rouge, Louisiana)

Southern-BR
Sun Belt Conference
VCU, South Alabama & UAB

Ed Rains, South Alabama[24]
1981 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Jacksonville Memorial Coliseum
(Jacksonville, Florida)

VCU
Trans America Athletic Conference Houston Baptist
Benton Wade, Mercer[25]
1981 TAAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Hirsch Coliseum
(Shreveport, Louisiana)

Mercer
West Coast Athletic Conference
Pepperdine &
San Francisco

Quintin Dailey, San Francisco[26]
No Tournament
Western Athletic Conference
Utah & Wyoming

Danny Ainge, BYU[27]
No Tournament

Note: From 1975 to 1982, the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), a loosely organized sports federation of Northeastern colleges and universities, organized Division I ECAC regional tournaments for those of its members that were independents in basketball. Each 1981 tournament winner received an automatic bid to the 1981 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament in the same way that the tournament champions of conventional athletic conferences did. The ECAC North was a separate, conventional conference.[28]



Statistical leaders


















































































































Points Per Game Rebounds Per Game Field Goal Percentage
Free Throw Percentage
Player School PPG Player School RPG Player School FG% Player School FT%
Zam Fredrick S. Carolina 28.9 Darryl Watson Miss. Valley St. 14.0 Steve Johnson Oregon St. 74.6 Dave Hidahl Portland St. 92.7
Mike Ferrara Colgate 28.6 Wayne Sappleton Loyola (IL) 13.4 Kevin Magee UC Irvine 67.1 Jack Moore Nebraska 92.2
Kevin Magee UC Irvine 27.5 Michael Cage San Diego St. 13.1 Orlando Woolridge Notre Dame 65.0 Steve Bontrager Oral Roberts 90.1
Lewis Lloyd Drake 26.3 Kevin Magee UC Irvine 12.5 Buck Williams Maryland 64.7 Jim Stack Northwestern 90.0
Rob Williams Houston 25.0 LaSalle Thompson Texas 12.3 Thomas Best Lafayette 64.3 John Leonard Manhattan 89.1


Post-Season Tournaments



NCAA Tournament



Indiana won its fourth NCAA title with a 63–50 win over North Carolina and coach Dean Smith. Precocious sophomore Isiah Thomas was named Final Four Most Outstanding Player in a title game delayed due to the shooting of President Ronald Reagan.



Final Four


Played at The Spectrum in Philadelphia


















































































National Semifinals
National Finals
           
E1

Virginia
65
W2

North Carolina
78
W2
North Carolina
50

ME3

Indiana
63
ME3

Indiana
67
MW1

LSU
49

  • Third Place – Virginia 78, LSU 74


National Invitation Tournament



Coach Nolan Richardson led Tulsa to the NIT Championship in his first year as a division I head coach – an 86–84 win over Syracuse. The Golden Hurricane's Greg Stewart was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.



NIT Semifinals and Final


Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City


















































































Semifinals
Finals
           
 

Syracuse
70
 

Purdue
63
 
Syracuse
84

 

Tulsa
86
 

West Virginia
87
 

Tulsa
89

  • Third Place – Purdue 75, West Virginia 72


Awards



Consensus All-American teams












































Consensus First Team
Player
Position
Class
Team

Mark Aguirre
F
Junior

DePaul

Danny Ainge
G
Senior

Brigham Young

Steve Johnson
C
Senior

Oregon State

Ralph Sampson
C
Sophomore

Virginia

Isiah Thomas
G
Sophomore

Indiana


















































Consensus Second Team
Player
Position
Class
Team

Sam Bowie
C
Sophomore

Kentucky

Jeff Lamp
F
Senior

Virginia

Durand Macklin
F
Senior

LSU

Kelly Tripucka
F
Senior

Notre Dame

Danny Vranes
F
Senior

Utah

Al Wood
F
Senior

North Carolina


Major player of the year awards




  • Wooden Award: Danny Ainge, BYU


  • Naismith Award: Ralph Sampson, Virginia


  • Associated Press Player of the Year: Ralph Sampson, Virginia


  • UPI Player of the Year: Ralph Sampson, Virginia


  • NABC Player of the Year: Danny Ainge, BYU


  • Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Ralph Sampson, Virginia


  • Adolph Rupp Trophy: Ralph Sampson, Virginia


  • Sporting News Player of the Year: Mark Aguirre, DePaul



Major coach of the year awards




  • Associated Press Coach of the Year: Ralph Miller, Oregon State


  • Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Ralph Miller, Oregon State


  • NABC Coach of the Year: Jack Hartman, Kansas State & Ralph Miller, Oregon State


  • UPI Coach of the Year: Ralph Miller, Oregon State


  • CBS/Chevrolet Coach of the Year: Dale Brown, LSU


  • Sporting News Coach of the Year: Dale Brown, LSU



Other major awards




  • Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best player under 6'0): Terry Adolph, West Texas State


  • Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): John Pinone, Villanova


  • NIT/Haggerty Award (Top player in NYC): Gary Springer, Iona



References





  1. ^ "And A Little Child Led Them". Sports Illustrated. 1981-04-06. Retrieved 2010-08-07..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ What a night to be in Bloomington


  3. ^ "2008 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book" (PDF). (p. 22). NCAA. Retrieved 7 August 2010.


  4. ^ "This Court Transplant Took". Sports Illustrated. 1982-03-01. Retrieved 2010-08-07.


  5. ^ *ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. Random House. 2009. ISBN 0-345-51392-4.


  6. ^ "2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book – Conferences Section" (PDF). NCAA. 2009. Retrieved 2010-08-01.


  7. ^ 2008–09 ACC Men's Basketball Media Guide – Year by Year section, retrieved 2010-08-06


  8. ^ 2008–09 Big East Men's Basketball Media Guide – Awards section Archived 2009-02-04 at the Wayback Machine., Big East Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  9. ^ 2008–09 Big 12 Men's Basketball Media Guide – Awards section, Big 12 Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  10. ^ Men's Basketball Award Winners, Big Sky Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  11. ^ 2008–09 A-10 men's basketball media guide – Awards section, Atlantic 10 Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  12. ^ America East Men's Basketball Players of the Year, America East Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  13. ^ Men's Ivy League Outstanding performers Archived 2008-04-29 at the Wayback Machine., Ivy League, retrieved 2010-08-06


  14. ^ 2008–09 MAC Men's BAsketball Media Guide – Records Section, Mid-American Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  15. ^ 2008–09 MEAC men's basketball media guide, MEAC, retrieved 2010-08-06


  16. ^ 2008–09 Horizon League Men's Basketball Record Book, Horizon League, retrieved 2010-08-06


  17. ^ 2008–09 MVC Men's Basketball Media Guide – Honors Section[permanent dead link], Missouri Valley Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  18. ^ 2008–09 OVC men's basketball media guide, Ohio Valley Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  19. ^ 2008–09 Pacific-10 Men's Basketball Media Guide- Honors Section, Pacific-10 Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  20. ^ 2008–09 Big West Men's Basketball Media Guide Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine., Big West Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  21. ^ 2008–09 SEC Men's Basketball Record Book, Southeastern Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  22. ^ 2008–09 SoCon Men's Basketball Media Guide – Honors Section, Southern Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  23. ^ 2008–09 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Media Guide, Southland Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  24. ^ 2007–08 Sun Belt Men's Basketball Media Guide, Sun Belt Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  25. ^ Atlantic Sun men's basketball record book, Atlantic Sun Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  26. ^ 2008–09 WCC Men's Basketball Media Guide, West Coast Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  27. ^ 2009–10 WAC Men's Basketball Media Guide, Western Athletic Conference, retrieved 2010-08-06


  28. ^ Varsity Pride: ECAC Men's Basketball Tournaments










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