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*April 1, 2000 *April 1, 2000
**] (M1) 53, ] (W8) 41 **] (M1) 53, ] (W8) 41
*:In the first half it appeared that the cinderella run of the ] had a great chance of continuing. Wisconsin's slow down offense, smothering defense tempo held the game to a ] 19-17 lead. However, the only number one seed left in the tournament opened the second half with a 13-2 run, including 10 points from senior ]. After the run, Michigan State coasted home against Wisconsin's limited offense. *:In the first half it appeared that the cinderella run of the ] had a great chance of continuing. Wisconsin's slow down offense, smothering defense tempo held the game to a ] 19-17 lead. However, the only number one seed left in the tournament opened the second half with a 15-2 run, including 10 points from senior ]. After the run, Michigan State coasted home against Wisconsin's limited offense.
**] (E5) 71, ] (S8) 59 **] (E5) 71, ] (S8) 59
*:Despite being behind 18-3 to start the game and trailing at halftime, the ] took control of the early minutes of the second half, and managed to sneak ahead 48-42 with 15:44 to play. However, the ] answered back with a 9-0 run to give them the lead for good. The Gators held the Tar Heels to just six points over a 9 1/2 minute span to put them in great shape. Foul trouble ultimately doomed the Tar Heels, and the Gators advanced to their first ever National Championship game. *:Despite being behind 18-3 to start the game and trailing at halftime, the ] took control of the early minutes of the second half, and managed to sneak ahead 48-42 with 15:44 to play. However, the ] answered back with a 9-0 run to give them the lead for good. The Gators held the Tar Heels to just six points over a 9 1/2 minute span to put them in great shape. Foul trouble ultimately doomed the Tar Heels, and the Gators advanced to their first ever National Championship game.

Revision as of 15:51, 25 March 2007

File:Final Four 2000.gif

The 2000 NCAA Men's Division I 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 16, 2000, and ended with the championship game on April 3 in Indianapolis, Indiana. A total of 63 games were played.

Michigan State, coached by Tom Izzo, won the national title with a 89-76 victory in the final game over Florida, coached by Billy Donovan. Mateen Cleaves of Michigan State was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player. The surprise teams of the tournament were Wisconsin and North Carolina which made the Final Four despite being 8 seeds.

Locations

Region Site Other Locations
East Syracuse, New York Buffalo, New York, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Midwest Auburn Hills, Michigan Cleveland, Ohio, Minneapolis, Minnesota
South Austin, Texas Birmingham, Alabama, Nashville, Tennessee
West Albuquerque, New Mexico Salt Lake City, Utah, Tucson, Arizona
Finals Indianapolis, Indiana

Teams

Region Seed Team Coach Finished Final Opponent Score
East
East 1 Duke Mike Krzyzewski Sweet Sixteen 5 Florida L 87-78
East 2 Temple John Chaney Round of 32 10 Seton Hall L 67-65
East 3 Oklahoma State Eddie Sutton Elite Eight 5 Florida L 77-65
East 4 Illinois Lon Kruger Round of 32 5 Florida L 93-76
East 5 Florida Billy Donovan Runner Up 1 Michigan State L 89-76
East 6 Indiana Bob Knight Round of 64 11 Pepperdine L 77-57
East 7 Oregon Ernie Kent Round of 64 10 Seton Hall L 72-71
East 8 Kansas Roy Williams Round of 32 1 Duke L 69-64
East 9 DePaul Pat Kennedy Round of 64 8 Kansas L 81-77
East 10 Seton Hall Tommy Amaker Sweet Sixteen 3 Oklahoma State L 68-66
East 11 Pepperdine Jan van Breda Kolff Round of 32 3 Oklahoma State L 75-67
East 12 Butler Barry Collier Round of 64 5 Florida L 69-68
East 13 Penn Fran Dunphy Round of 64 4 Illinois L 68-58
East 14 Hofstra Jay Wright Round of 64 3 Oklahoma State L 86-66
East 15 Lafayette Fran O'Hanlon Round of 64 2 Temple L 73-47
East 16 Lamar Mike Deane Round of 64 1 Duke L 82-55
Midwest
Midwest 1 Michigan State Tom Izzo Champion 5 Florida W 89-76
Midwest 2 Iowa State Larry Eustachy Elite Eight 1 Michigan State L 75-64
Midwest 3 Maryland Gary Williams Round of 32 6 UCLA L 105-70
Midwest 4 Syracuse Jim Boeheim Sweet Sixteen 1 Michigan State L 75-58
Midwest 5 Kentucky Tubby Smith Round of 32 4 Syracuse L 52-50
Midwest 6 UCLA Steve Lavin Sweet Sixteen 2 Iowa State L 80-56
Midwest 7 Auburn Cliff Ellis Round of 32 2 Iowa State L 79-60
Midwest 8 Utah Rick Majerus Round of 32 1 Michigan State L 73-61
Midwest 9 Saint Louis Lorenzo Romar Round of 64 8 Utah L 48-45
Midwest 10 Creighton Dana Altman Round of 64 7 Auburn L 72-69
Midwest 11 Ball State Ray McCallum Round of 64 6 UCLA L 65-57
Midwest 12 St. Bonaventure Jim Baron Round of 64 5 Kentucky L 85-80
Midwest 13 Samford Jimmy Tillette Round of 64 4 Syracuse L 79-65
Midwest 14 Iona Jeff Ruland Round of 64 3 Maryland L 74-59
Midwest 15 Central Connecticut State Howie Dickenman Round of 64 2 Iowa State L 88-78
Midwest 16 Valparaiso Homer Drew Round of 64 1 Michigan State L 65-38
South
South 1 Stanford Mike Montgomery Round of 32 8 North Carolina L 60-53
South 2 Cincinnati Bob Huggins Round of 32 7 Tulsa L 69-61
South 3 Ohio State Jim(2) O'Brien Round of 32 6 Miami, Florida L 75-62
South 4 Tennessee Jerry Green Sweet Sixteen 8 North Carolina L 74-69
South 5 Connecticut Jim Calhoun Round of 32 4 Tennessee L 65-51
South 6 Miami, Florida Leonard Hamilton Sweet Sixteen 7 Tulsa L 80-71
South 7 Tulsa Bill Self Elite Eight 8 North Carolina L 59-55
South 8 North Carolina Bill Guthridge National Semifinals 5 Florida L 71-59
South 9 Missouri Quin Snyder Round of 64 8 North Carolina L 84-70
South 10 UNLV Bill Bayno Round of 64 7 Tulsa L 89-62
South 11 Arkansas Nolan Richardson Round of 64 6 Miami, Florida L 75-71
South 12 Utah State Stew Morrill Round of 64 5 Connecticut L 75-67
South 13 Louisiana-Lafayette Jessie Evans Round of 64 4 Tennessee L 63-58
South 14 Appalachian State Buzz Peterson Round of 64 3 Ohio State L 87-61
South 15 UNC-Wilmington Jerry Wainwright Round of 64 2 Cincinnati L 64-47
South 16 South Carolina State Cy Alexander Round of 64 1 Stanford L 84-65
West
West 1 Arizona Lute Olson Round of 32 8 Wisconsin L 66-59
West 2 St. John's Mike Jarvis Round of 32 10 Gonzaga L 82-76
West 3 Oklahoma Kelvin Sampson Round of 32 6 Purdue L 66-62
West 4 LSU John Brady Sweet Sixteen 8 Wisconsin L 61-48
West 5 Texas Rick Barnes Round of 32 4 LSU L 72-67
West 6 Purdue Gene Keady Elite Eight 8 Wisconsin L 64-60
West 7 Louisville Denny Crum Round of 64 10 Gonzaga L 77-66
West 8 Wisconsin Dick Bennett National Semifinals 1 Michigan State L 53-41
West 9 Fresno State Jerry Tarkanian Round of 64 8 Wisconsin L 66-56
West 10 Gonzaga Mark Few Sweet Sixteen 6 Purdue L 75-66
West 11 Dayton Oliver Purnell Round of 64 6 Purdue L 62-61
West 12 Indiana State Royce Waltman Round of 64 5 Texas L 77-61
West 13 Southeast Missouri State Gary Garner Round of 64 4 LSU L 64-61
West 14 Winthrop Gregg Marshall Round of 64 3 Oklahoma L 74-60
West 15 Northern Arizona Mike Adras Round of 64 2 St. John's L 61-56
West 16 Jackson State Andy Stoglin Round of 64 1 Arizona L 71-47

Bids by conference

Bids by Conference
Bids Conference(s)
6 Big Ten, Big 12, SEC
5 Big East
4 C-USA, Pac-10
3 ACC, Atlantic 10
2 Mountain West, Missouri Valley, WAC, WCC
1 19 others

Final Four

At RCA Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana

National Semifinals

  • April 1, 2000
    In the first half it appeared that the cinderella run of the Wisconsin Badgers had a great chance of continuing. Wisconsin's slow down offense, smothering defense tempo held the game to a Michigan State Spartans 19-17 lead. However, the only number one seed left in the tournament opened the second half with a 15-2 run, including 10 points from senior Morris Peterson. After the run, Michigan State coasted home against Wisconsin's limited offense.
    Despite being behind 18-3 to start the game and trailing at halftime, the North Carolina Tar Heels took control of the early minutes of the second half, and managed to sneak ahead 48-42 with 15:44 to play. However, the Florida Gators answered back with a 9-0 run to give them the lead for good. The Gators held the Tar Heels to just six points over a 9 1/2 minute span to put them in great shape. Foul trouble ultimately doomed the Tar Heels, and the Gators advanced to their first ever National Championship game.

Championship Game

  • April 3, 2000
    Michigan State senior Mateen Cleaves limped his way to the Most Outstanding Player (MOP) of the 2000 NCAA Tournament. Cleaves sprained his ankle with 16:18 to play in the 2nd half, and this was after Florida had trimed Michigan State's double digit halftime lead to 50-44. Cleaves returned about four minutes later, and immediately helped lead the Spartans on a 16-6 run to put the game out of reach. The lone top-seed remaining would bring order to a tournament filled with upsets as they salted away the victory for the school's second ever National Championship (1979). Michigan State coach Tom Izzo earned his first ever title, leading his second straight final four appearance. Morris Peterson led the Spartans with 21 points.

Bracket

East region

First round Quarter-finals Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight
            
1 Duke 82
16 Lamar 55
1 Duke 69
8 Kansas 64
8 Kansas 81
9 DePaul 77*
1 Duke 78
5 Florida 87
5 Florida 69
12 Butler 68*
5 Florida 93
4 Illinois 76
4 Illinois 68
13 Pennsylvania 58
5 Florida 77
3 Oklahoma St. 65
6 Indiana 57
11 Pepperdine 77
11 Pepperdine 67
3 Oklahoma St 75
3 Oklahoma State 86
14 Hofstra 66
3 Oklahoma St. 68
10 Seton Hall 66
7 Oregon 71*
10 Seton Hall 72
10 Seton Hall 67
2 Temple 65*
2 Temple 73
15 Lafayette 47

South region

First round Quarter-finals Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight
            
1 Stanford 84
16 South Carolina St 65
1 Stanford 53
8 North Carolina 60
8 North Carolina 84
9 Missouri 70
8 North Carolina 74
4 Tennessee 69
5 Connecticut 75
12 Utah St 67
5 Connecticut 51
4 Tennessee 65
4 Tennessee 63
13 Louisiana-Lafayette 58
8 North Carolina 59
7 Tulsa 55
6 Miami-FL 75
11 Arkansas 71
6 Miami-FL 75
3 Ohio St 62
3 Ohio St 87
14 Appalachian St 61
6 Miami-FL 71
7 Tulsa 80
7 Tulsa 89
10 UNLV 62
7 Tulsa 69
2 Cincinnati 61
2 Cincinnati 64
15 UNC-Wilmington 47


Midwest region

First round Quarter-finals Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight
            
1 Michigan St 65
16 Valparaiso 38
1 Michigan St 73
8 Utah 61
8 Utah 48
9 St Louis 45
1 Michigan St 75
4 Syracuse 58
5 Kentucky 85
12 St. Bonaventure 80**
5 Kentucky 50
4 Syracuse 52
4 Syracuse 79
13 Samford 65
1 Michigan St 75
2 Iowa St 64
6 UCLA 65
11 Ball St 57
6 UCLA 105
3 Maryland 70
3 Maryland 74
14 Iona 59
6 UCLA 56
2 Iowa St 80
7 Auburn 72
10 Creighton 69
7 Auburn 60
2 Iowa St 79
2 Iowa St 88
15 Central Connecticut St 78

West region

First round Quarter-finals Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight
            
1 Arizona 71
16 Jackson St 47
1 Arizona 59
8 Wisconsin 66
8 Wisconsin 66
9 Fresno St 56
8 Wisconsin 61
4 LSU 48
5 Texas 77
12 Indiana St 61
5 Texas 67
4 LSU 72
4 LSU 64
13 Southeast Missouri St 61
8 Wisconsin 64
6 Purdue 60
6 Purdue 62
11 Dayton 61
6 Purdue 66
3 Oklahoma 62
3 Oklahoma 74
14 Winthrop 50
6 Purdue 75
10 Gonzaga 66
7 Louisville 66
10 Gonzaga 77
10 Gonzaga 82
2 St Johns 76
2 St Johns 78
15 Northern Arizona 56

Final Four

National Semifinals National Finals
      
5 Florida 71
8 North Carolina 59
5 Florida 76
1 Michigan State 89
1 Michigan State 53
8 Wisconsin 41

External links

NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament
Tournaments
Structure
Champions & awards
Media & culture
Records & statistics
See also: Division I Women's Tournament, Division II Tournament, Division III Tournament
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