NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament records
Champions, runners-up, and locations
Year
Champion
Runner-up
Venue and city
2000
Michigan State (2)
89
Florida
76
RCA Dome
Indianapolis, Indiana (4)
2001
Duke (3)
82
Arizona
72
Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome
Minneapolis, Minnesota (3)
2002
Maryland
64
Indiana
52
Georgia Dome
Atlanta, Georgia (2)
2003
Syracuse
81
Kansas
78
Louisiana Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana (4)
2004
UConn (2)
82
Georgia Tech
73
Alamodome
San Antonio, Texas (2)
2005
North Carolina (4)
75
Illinois
70
Edward Jones Dome
St. Louis, Missouri (3)
2006
Florida
73
UCLA
57
RCA Dome
Indianapolis, Indiana (5)
2007
Florida (2)
84
Ohio State
75
Georgia Dome
Atlanta, Georgia (3)
2008 †
Kansas (3)
75
Memphis *
68
Alamodome
San Antonio, Texas (3)
2009
North Carolina (5)
89
Michigan State
72
Ford Field
Detroit, Michigan
2010
Duke (4)
61
Butler
59
Lucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis, Indiana (6)
2011
UConn (3)
53
Butler
41
Reliant Stadium
Houston, Texas (2)
2012
Kentucky (8)
67
Kansas
59
Mercedes-Benz Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana (5)
2013
Louisville * (3)
82
Michigan
76
Georgia Dome
Atlanta, Georgia (4)
2014
UConn (4)
60
Kentucky
54
AT&T Stadium
Arlington, Texas
2015
Duke (5)
68
Wisconsin
63
Lucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis, Indiana (7)
2016
Villanova (2)
77
North Carolina
74
NRG Stadium
Houston, Texas (3)
2017
North Carolina (6)
71
Gonzaga
65
University of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, Arizona
2018
Villanova (3)
79
Michigan
62
Alamodome
San Antonio, Texas (4)
2019 †
Virginia
85
Texas Tech
77
U.S. Bank Stadium
Minneapolis, Minnesota (4)
2021
Baylor
86
Gonzaga
70
Lucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis, Indiana (8)
2022
Kansas (4)
72
North Carolina
69
Caesars Superdome
New Orleans, Louisiana (6)
2023
UConn (5)
76
San Diego State
59
NRG Stadium
Houston, Texas (4)
2024
UConn (6)
75
Purdue
60
University of Phoenix Stadium
Glendale, Arizona (2)
* Vacated by NCAA. † Overtime game. Multiple †'s indicate number of overtimes.
All-time coaching records
Active coaches in bold
Tournament Game Wins
Final Four appearances by coach
* Vacated by NCAA.
Multiple championship coaches
* Vacated by NCAA.
All-time team records
NCAA Championships
Rank
School
# and Coach(es)
1
UCLA
11 – John Wooden (10), Jim Harrick (1)
2
Kentucky
8 – Adolph Rupp (4), Joe B. Hall (1), Rick Pitino (1), Tubby Smith (1), John Calipari (1)
3
North Carolina
6 – Frank McGuire (1), Dean Smith (2), Roy Williams (3)
3
UConn
6 – Jim Calhoun (3), Kevin Ollie (1), Dan Hurley (2)
5
Duke
5 – Mike Krzyzewski
5
Indiana
5 – Branch McCracken (2), Bob Knight (3)
7
Kansas
4 – Phog Allen (1), Larry Brown (1), Bill Self (2)
8
Villanova
3 – Jay Wright (2), Rollie Massimino (1)
9
Louisville
2* – Denny Crum (2)
9
Cincinnati
2 – Ed Jucker
9
Florida
2 – Billy Donovan
9
Michigan State
2 – Jud Heathcote (1), Tom Izzo (1)
9
NC State
2 – Norm Sloan (1), Jim Valvano (1)
9
Oklahoma State
2 – Henry Iba
9
San Francisco
2 – Phil Woolpert
* Does not include appearances vacated by NCAA
NCAA Championship Game appearances
* Appearances vacated by NCAA not included
NCAA Tournament Final Four appearances
* Appearances vacated by NCAA not included
Consecutive NCAA Tournament Final Four appearances
NCAA Tournament appearances
* NCAA vacated 2–1 tournament record (1988) ^ NCAA vacated 5–2 tournament record (1980, 1999)
† NCAA vacated 4–4 tournament record (2005–06, 2011–12), but confirmed Syracuse can claim tournament appearances.[ 2] †† NCAA vacated 15–3 tournament record (2012–15) ††† NCAA vacated 4–1 tournament record (1971)
Consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances
Teams in bold denote an active streak as of the 2023 tournament
* NCAA vacated 1999 and 2008 appearances ^ NCAA vacated 1980 appearance
NCAA Tournament victories
* Denotes vacated records not included
Margin of 10 points: Oregon (1939), Kentucky (1949), San Francisco (1956), Ohio State (1960), UCLA (1967, 1970, 1973), Michigan State (1979, 2000), Indiana (1981), Duke (2001), North Carolina (2009), Villanova (2018), and UConn (2023) are teams to win every game in the tournament by 10 points or more on their way to a championship.
Individual single-game records
61, Austin Carr , Notre Dame vs. Ohio , 1970
25, Austin Carr, Notre Dame vs. Ohio, 1970
44, Austin Carr, Notre Dame vs. Ohio, 1970
11, Jeff Fryer , Loyola Marymount vs. Michigan , 1990
Three-point field goal attempts
22, Jeff Fryer, Loyola Marymount vs. Arkansas , 1989
23, Bob Carney , Bradley vs. Colorado , 1954
23, Travis Mays , Texas vs. Georgia , 1990
27, Travis Mays, Texas vs. Georgia, 1990
27, David Robinson , Navy vs. Syracuse , 1986
34, Fred Cohen , Temple vs. Connecticut , 1956
19, Markquis Nowell , Kansas State vs. Michigan State , 2023
11, Shaquille O'Neal , LSU vs. BYU , 1992
8, Ty Lawson , North Carolina vs. Michigan State , 2009
8, Russ Smith , Louisville vs. North Carolina A&T , 2013
8, JD Notae , Arkansas vs. New Mexico State , 2022
Triple-doubles (see Final Four records section for other tournament triple-doubles)
The NCAA officially recorded assists for two seasons in the early 1950s, but discontinued the practice after the 1951–52 season, not resuming until the 1984–85 season. Steals and blocks were not officially added as NCAA statistics until the 1986–87 season. As a result, the NCAA only officially recognizes tournament triple-doubles recorded from 1987 onward.[ 3]
Gary Grant , Michigan — 24 points, 10 rebounds, 10 assists vs. North Carolina , East Regional second round, March 14, 1987 [ 4]
Shaquille O'Neal , LSU — 26 points, 13 rebounds, 11 blocks vs. BYU , West Regional first round, March 19, 1992 [ 5]
David Cain , St. John's — 12 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists vs. Texas Tech , East Regional first round, March 18, 1993 [ 6]
Andre Miller , Utah — 18 points, 14 rebounds, 13 assists vs. Arizona , West Regional Final, March 21, 1998 [ 5]
Dwyane Wade , Marquette — 29 points, 11 rebounds, 11 assists vs. Kentucky , Midwest Regional Final, March 29, 2003 [ 5]
Cole Aldrich , Kansas — 13 points, 20 rebounds, 10 blocks vs. Dayton , Midwest Regional Second Round, March 22, 2009
Draymond Green , Michigan State — 23 points, 11 rebounds, 10 assists vs. UCLA , Southeast Regional Second Round, March 18, 2011 [ 3]
Draymond Green, Michigan State — 24 points, 12 rebounds, 10 assists vs. LIU Brooklyn , West Regional Second Round, March 16, 2012 [ 7]
Ja Morant , Murray State — 17 points, 11 rebounds, 16 assists vs. Marquette , West Regional First Round, March 21, 2019 [ 8]
Team single-game records
All tournament games
Most total points scored, one tournament
571, UNLV, 1990
264, Loyola Marymount vs. Michigan , 1990
Most points by a single team
149, Loyola Marymount vs. Michigan , 1990
Fewest points for a single team
20, North Carolina vs. Pittsburgh , 1941
52, Iowa vs. Notre Dame , 1970
71, Marshall vs. Southwestern Louisiana , 1972 [ 9]
26, Kansas vs. Villanova , 2022
Three-point Field Goal Attempts
59, Purdue vs. Virginia , 2019
43, Arizona vs. Illinois , 2001
56, Arizona vs. Illinois , 2001
86, Notre Dame vs. Tennessee Tech , 1958
36, North Carolina vs. Loyola Marymount , 1988
15, Kentucky vs. Stony Brook , 2016
20, Louisville vs. North Carolina A&T , 2013
35, UCLA vs. Kansas , 2007
National Championship game
182, Kentucky vs. Duke , 1978
Most points by a single team
103, UNLV vs. Duke , 1990
Largest margin at halftime
21, North Carolina vs. Michigan State , 2009
Largest score at halftime
55, North Carolina vs. Michigan State , 2009
Largest margin of victory
30, UNLV vs. Duke , 1990
Final Four records
Final Four Single Game – Individual
58, Bill Bradley , Princeton vs. Wichita State , N3rd, 3-20-1965
22, Bill Bradley , Princeton vs. Wichita State , N3rd, 3-20-1965
42, Lennie Rosenbluth , North Carolina vs. Michigan State , NSF, 3-22-1957
10, Freddie Banks , UNLV vs. Indiana , NSF, 3-28-1987
27, Bill Russell , San Francisco vs. Iowa , CH, 3-23-1956
18, Mark Wade , UNLV vs. Indiana , NSF, 3-28-1987
7, Jeff Withey , Kansas vs. Ohio State , NSF, 3-31-2012
18, Ty Lawson , North Carolina vs. Michigan State , CH, 4-6-2009
8, Ty Lawson , North Carolina vs. Michigan State , CH, 4-6-2009
Final Four triple-doubles
The NCAA recognizes these achievements as unofficial triple-doubles. As noted earlier, assists, steals, and blocks were not kept on a national basis until well into the 1980s; the current array of national statistics did not fully take shape until the 1986–87 season.[ 3]
B.H. Born , Kansas vs. Indiana , CH, 3-18-1953: 26 pts., 15 rebs. & 13 blocked shots.[ 10]
Oscar Robertson , Cincinnati vs. Louisville , N3rd, 3-21-1959: 39 pts., 17 rebs. & 10 asts.
Magic Johnson , Michigan State vs. Penn , NSF, 3-24-1979: 29 pts., 10 rebs. & 10 asts.
Key to initials: NSF - National Semi-Final; N3rd – National Third-Place Game (Discontinued after 1981); CH – Championship Game.
References
External links