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2010 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

The 2010 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 65 schools playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball as a culmination of the 2009–10 basketball season. It began on March 16, 2010, and concluded with the championship game on April 5 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. It was the first Final Four at Lucas Oil Stadium; the RCA Dome and Market Square Arena hosted past Final Fours when the event was held in Indianapolis.

2010 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Teams65
Finals siteLucas Oil Stadium
Indianapolis
ChampionsDuke Blue Devils (4th title, 10th title game,
15th Final Four)
Runner-upButler Bulldogs (1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachMike Krzyzewski (4th title)
MOPKyle Singler (Duke)

The Final Four consisted of Duke, making their first appearance since 2004, West Virginia, who were making their second appearance and first since 1959, Butler, considered the host school and making their first ever appearance, and Michigan State, the national runner-up from 2009 appearing in the Final Four for the sixth time under head coach Tom Izzo.

When Duke and Butler played each other in the tournament final, it was the first title game between private universities in 25 years (Villanova and Georgetown met in 1985), and the fifth such match-up in history (1942, 1954, and 1955 having been the other years).

Duke defeated Butler 61–59 in the championship game as Gordon Hayward's last second desperation shot clanged off the rim. It was Duke's first national championship since 2001 and fourth overall.

Entering the tournament, the top four seeds were Kansas, Duke, Kentucky, and Syracuse. Kansas entered the Tournament as the overall No. 1 seed but was defeated in the opening weekend by Northern Iowa, the No. 9 seed in the Midwest region. Northern Iowa was one of four teams seeded lower than No. 8 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen, joining the East Region's No. 11 seed Washington, No. 12 seed Cornell and the South Region's No. 10 seed Saint Mary's.

For the first time since 2006, a No. 14 seed advanced out of the first round as Ohio defeated Georgetown. The No. 13 seed in the West Region, Murray State, defeated No. 4-seeded Vanderbilt, marking the second consecutive appearance for the Commodores where they lost as a No. 4 seed. Murray State very nearly upset Butler in their next game, losing by two points.

One of the more exciting games of the tournament was played at the West Regional in Salt Lake City, as No. 6 Xavier took No. 2 Kansas State to two overtimes before falling 101–96. Jordan Crawford hit a three-pointer with seconds remaining in the first overtime period to force a second.

Tournament procedure

A total of 65 teams were selected for the tournament. Thirty one of the teams earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. The automatic bid of the Ivy League, which does not conduct a postseason tournament, went to Cornell, its regular season champion. The remaining 34 teams were granted at-large bids, which were extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.

Two teams played an opening-round game, popularly called the play-in game; the winner of that game advanced to the main draw of the tournament and played a top seed in one of the regionals. The 2010 game was played on March 16 at University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, Ohio, as it has been since its inception in 2001.

All 64 teams were seeded 1 to 16 within their regions; the winner of the play-in game automatically received a 16 seed. The Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 65. UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero took over as chair of the Division I Men's Basketball Committee.[1]

Defending champion North Carolina did not qualify for the Tournament, while two schools made their first post-season appearance: Southern Conference champion Wofford and SWAC champion Arkansas-Pine Bluff. Conference USA champion Houston made its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 18 years.[2]

Schedule and venues

 
Providence
New Orleans
Oklahoma City
San Jose
Buffalo
Jacksonville
Milwaukee
Spokane
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2010 subregionals—Green 18/20 March—Orange 19/21 March
 
Syracuse
Salt Lake City
St. Louis
Houston
Indianapolis
class=notpageimage|
2010 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 2010 tournament:[3]

Opening Round

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and Finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Qualifying teams

 

Automatic bids

The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2010 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).

Conference School Appearance Last bid
ACC Duke 34th 2009
America East Vermont 4th 2005
Atlantic 10 Temple 28th 2009
Atlantic Sun East Tennessee State 9th 2009
Big 12 Kansas 39th 2009
Big East West Virginia 23rd 2009
Big Sky Montana 8th 2006
Big South Winthrop 9th 2008
Big Ten Ohio State 26th 2009
Big West UC Santa Barbara 4th 2002
Colonial Old Dominion 10th 2007
C-USA Houston 19th 1992
Horizon Butler 10th 2009
Ivy League Cornell 5th 2009
MAAC Siena 6th 2009
MAC Ohio 13th 2005
MEAC Morgan State 2nd 2009
Missouri Valley Northern Iowa 6th 2009
Mountain West San Diego State 6th 2006
Northeast Robert Morris 7th 2009
Ohio Valley Murray State 14th 2006
Pac-10 Washington 15th 2009
Patriot Lehigh 4th 2004
SEC Kentucky 50th 2008
Southern Wofford 1st Never
Southland Sam Houston State 2nd 2003
Summit Oakland 2nd 2005
Sun Belt North Texas 3rd 2007
SWAC Arkansas–Pine Bluff 1st Never
WAC New Mexico State 18th 2007
West Coast Saint Mary's 6th 2008

Listed by region and seeding

East Regional – Syracuse
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Kentucky SEC 32–2 Automatic
2 West Virginia Big East 27–6 Automatic
3 New Mexico Mountain West 29–4 At-large
4 Wisconsin Big Ten 23–8 At-large
5 Temple Atlantic 10 29–5 Automatic
6 Marquette Big East 22–11 At-large
7 Clemson ACC 21–10 At-large
8 Texas Big 12 24–9 At-large
9 Wake Forest ACC 19–10 At-large
10 Missouri Big 12 22–10 At-large
11 Washington Pac-10 24–9 Automatic
12 Cornell Ivy League 27–4 Automatic
13 Wofford Southern 26–8 Automatic
14 Montana Big Sky 22–9 Automatic
15 Morgan State MEAC 27–9 Automatic
16 East Tennessee State Atlantic Sun 20–14 Automatic
Midwest Regional – St. Louis
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Kansas Big 12 32–2 Automatic
2 Ohio State Big Ten 27–7 Automatic
3 Georgetown Big East 23–10 At-large
4 Maryland ACC 23–8 At-large
5 Michigan State Big Ten 24–8 At-large
6 Tennessee SEC 25–8 At-large
7 Oklahoma State Big 12 22–10 At-large
8 UNLV Mountain West 25–8 At-large
9 Northern Iowa Missouri Valley 28–4 Automatic
10 Georgia Tech ACC 22–12 At-large
11 San Diego State Mountain West 25–8 Automatic
12 New Mexico State WAC 22–11 Automatic
13 Houston C-USA 19–15 Automatic
14 Ohio Mid-American 21–14 Automatic
15 UC Santa Barbara Big West 20–9 Automatic
16 Lehigh Patriot 22–10 Automatic
South Regional – Houston
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Duke ACC 29–5 Automatic
2 Villanova Big East 24–7 At-large
3 Baylor Big 12 25–7 At-large
4 Purdue Big Ten 27–5 At-large
5 Texas A&M Big 12 23–9 At-large
6 Notre Dame Big East 23–11 At-large
7 Richmond Atlantic 10 26–8 At-large
8 California Pac-10 23–10 At-large
9 Louisville Big East 20–12 At-large
10 Saint Mary's West Coast 26–5 Automatic
11 Old Dominion CAA 26–8 Automatic
12 Utah State WAC 27–7 At-large
13 Siena MAAC 27–6 Automatic
14 Sam Houston State Southland 25–7 Automatic
15 Robert Morris Northeast 23–11 Automatic
16 Arkansas–Pine Bluff SWAC 17–15 Automatic
Winthrop Big South 19–13 Automatic
West Regional – Salt Lake City
Seed School Conference Record Berth type
1 Syracuse Big East 28–4 At-large
2 Kansas State Big 12 26–7 At-large
3 Pittsburgh Big East 24–8 At-large
4 Vanderbilt SEC 24–8 At-large
5 Butler Horizon 28–4 Automatic
6 Xavier Atlantic 10 24–8 At-large
7 BYU Mountain West 29–5 At-large
8 Gonzaga West Coast 26–6 At-large
9 Florida State ACC 22–9 At-large
10 Florida SEC 21–12 At-large
11 Minnesota Big Ten 21–13 At-large
12 UTEP C-USA 26–6 At-large
13 Murray State Ohio Valley 30–4 Automatic
14 Oakland Summit 26–8 Automatic
15 North Texas Sun Belt 24–8 Automatic
16 Vermont America East 25–9 Automatic

Bracket

Results to date [4]

* – Denotes overtime period

All times in U.S. EDT.

Opening Round Game – Dayton, Ohio

Winner advanced as 16th seed in South Regional vs. (1) Duke.

Opening Round Game
March 16
   
16a Arkansas-Pine Bluff 61
16b Winthrop 44

Midwest Regional – St. Louis, Missouri

First round
March 18–19
Second round
March 20–21
Regional semifinals
March 26
Regional finals
March 28
            
1 Kansas 90
16 Lehigh 74
1 Kansas 67
Oklahoma City - Thu/Sat
9 Northern Iowa 69
8 UNLV 66
9 Northern Iowa 69
9 Northern Iowa 52
5 Michigan State 59
5 Michigan State 70
12 New Mexico State 67
5 Michigan State 85
Spokane - Fri/Sun
4 Maryland 83
4 Maryland 89
13 Houston 77
5 Michigan State 70
6 Tennessee 69
6 Tennessee 62
11 San Diego State 59
6 Tennessee 83
Providence - Thu/Sat
14 Ohio 68
3 Georgetown 83
14 Ohio 97
6 Tennessee 76
2 Ohio State 73
7 Oklahoma State 59
10 Georgia Tech 64
10 Georgia Tech 66
Milwaukee - Fri/Sun
2 Ohio State 75
2 Ohio State 68
15 UC Santa Barbara 51

West Regional – Salt Lake City, Utah

First round
March 18–19
Second round
March 20–21
Regional semifinals
March 25
Regional finals
March 27
            
1 Syracuse 79
16 Vermont 56
1 Syracuse 87
Buffalo - Fri/Sun
8 Gonzaga 65
8 Gonzaga 67
9 Florida State 60
1 Syracuse 59
5 Butler 63
5 Butler 77
12 UTEP 59
5 Butler 54
San Jose - Thu/Sat
13 Murray State 52
4 Vanderbilt 65
13 Murray State 66
5 Butler 63
2 Kansas State 56
6 Xavier 65
11 Minnesota 54
6 Xavier 71
Milwaukee - Fri/Sun
3 Pittsburgh 68
3 Pittsburgh 89
14 Oakland 66
6 Xavier 96
2 Kansas State 101**
7 BYU 99**
10 Florida 92
7 BYU 72
Oklahoma City - Thu/Sat
2 Kansas State 84
2 Kansas State 82
15 North Texas 62

East Regional – Syracuse, New York

First round
March 18–19
Second round
March 20–21
Regional semifinals
March 25
Regional finals
March 27
            
1 Kentucky 100
16 East Tennessee State 71
1 Kentucky 90
New Orleans - Thu/Sat
9 Wake Forest 60
8 Texas 80
9 Wake Forest 81*
1 Kentucky 62
12 Cornell 45
5 Temple 65
12 Cornell 78
12 Cornell 87
Jacksonville - Fri/Sun
4 Wisconsin 69
4 Wisconsin 53
13 Wofford 49
1 Kentucky 66
2 West Virginia 73
6 Marquette 78
11 Washington 80
11 Washington 82
San Jose - Thu/Sat
3 New Mexico 64
3 New Mexico 62
14 Montana 57
11 Washington 56
2 West Virginia 69
7 Clemson 78
10 Missouri 86
10 Missouri 59
Buffalo - Fri/Sun
2 West Virginia 68
2 West Virginia 77
15 Morgan State 50

South Regional – Houston, Texas

First round
March 18–19
Second round
March 20–21
Regional semifinals
March 26
Regional finals
March 28
            
1 Duke 73
16 Arkansas-Pine Bluff 44
1 Duke 68
Jacksonville - Fri/Sun
8 California 53
8 California 77
9 Louisville 62
1 Duke 70
4 Purdue 57
5 Texas A&M 69
12 Utah State 53
5 Texas A&M 61
Spokane - Fri/Sun
4 Purdue 63*
4 Purdue 72
13 Siena 64
1 Duke 78
3 Baylor 71
6 Notre Dame 50
11 Old Dominion 51
11 Old Dominion 68
New Orleans - Thu/Sat
3 Baylor 76
3 Baylor 68
14 Sam Houston State 59
3 Baylor 72
10 Saint Mary's 49
7 Richmond 71
10 Saint Mary's 80
10 Saint Mary's 75
Providence - Fri/Sun
2 Villanova 68
2 Villanova 73*
15 Robert Morris 70

Final Four - Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, Indiana

National semifinals
April 3
National Championship Game
April 5
      
M5 Michigan State 50
W5 Butler 52
W5 Butler 59
S1 Duke 61
E2 West Virginia 57
S1 Duke 78

Game summaries

Midwest Region

First round

The biggest upset of the first day came in Providence, Rhode Island, where 14th-seeded Ohio defeated third-seeded Georgetown in convincing fashion, 97–83, for their first Tournament win since 1983, when they ousted Illinois State in the first round of that Tournament. Armon Bassett scored 32 points for the Bobcats, who shot 57 percent from the field and made 13 of 23 3-pointers.[5][6] They advanced to face Tennessee, the sixth seed in the region. The Volunteers held off 11th seed San Diego State, 62–59, on head coach Bruce Pearl's 50th birthday. J. P. Prince and Melvin Goins scored 15 points each for Tennessee.[7]

In Oklahoma City, Ali Farokhmanesh drilled a three-pointer with 4.9 seconds remaining to lift ninth-seeded Northern Iowa over UNLV. It was the Panthers first Tournament win since 1990.[8] UNI advanced to face top-seeded Kansas. The top seed withheld an effort by Lehigh, trailing the 16th seed early in the game and leading by just six at halftime before pulling away midway in the second half for a 90–74 win.[9]

On the second day of play, 10th-seeded Georgia Tech failed to make a single field goal in the final 8:19 of play, but sank 13 free throws to hold off No. 7 Oklahoma State, 64–59, in Milwaukee. Gani Lawal led Georgia Tech with 14 points.[10] The Yellow Jackets advanced to play Ohio State, who defeated UC Santa Barbara 68–51. Buckeye star Evan Turner struggled from the field, shooting 2–13 and scoring nine points, and the Gauchos put up a fight playing from behind most of the game.[11]

Rounding out the Midwest bracket were Maryland and Michigan State in Spokane, Washington. The Terrapins beat Houston 89–77 behind a career-high 21 points and 17 rebounds from freshman Jordan Williams,[12] while the Spartans edged New Mexico State, 70–67. The end of the game included a controversial lane violation call on Aggies player Troy Gillenwater with 18.6 seconds left that allowed MSU to reshoot a missed free throw and extend its lead to 3.[13]

Second round

Northern Iowa stunned the nation by knocking off top overall seed Kansas, 69–67. Leading by just one in the final minute of play, Ali Farokhmanesh clinched the victory for the second time in as many games with a three-point basket that ESPN's Pat Forde called "the greatest early-round shot in NCAA tournament history."[14] The win was significant for several reasons: it marked the Panthers' first trip ever to the Sweet Sixteen, and was the first time in six years a No. 1 seed was eliminated in the round of 32. It was also the first time since 1962 that a team from the Missouri Valley Conference had defeated a top seed in the Tournament.[15] Meanwhile, Michigan State lost guard Kalin Lucas to a leg injury late in the first half of its game with Maryland. Michigan State extended its halftime lead of NINE to 16 in the second half before falling behind by one late after succumbing to Maryland's relentless pressure defense and some spectacular plays by Greivis Vásquez. But Korie Lucious kept MSU from losing the game, hitting a 3-pointer as time ran out to lift his team past the Terrapins, 85–83.[16] Lucas' injury proved to be a torn Achilles tendon, putting the junior out of action for up to six months.[17]

For the third time in four years, Tennessee made it to the regional semifinals with their 83–68 win over Ohio. J. P. Prince scored 18 points for the Volunteers, while Scotty Hopson added 17.[18] In Milwaukee, Ohio State's Evan Turner bounced back from his off-night in the first round, nearly recording a triple-double (24 points, 9 rebounds and 9 assists) as the Buckeyes downed Georgia Tech 75–66.[19]

Regional semifinals (Sweet Sixteen)

CBS
March 26
7:07 pm
Recap
(6) Tennessee Volunteers 76, (2) Ohio State Buckeyes 73
Scoring by half: 39–42, 37–31
Pts: W. Chism 22
Rebs: B. Williams 12
Asts: J. P. Prince 6
Pts: E. Turner 31
Rebs: E. Turner 7
Asts: D. Lighty, E. Turner 5
Edward Jones Dome
Attendance: 26,377
Referees: Mike Kitts, Bryan Kersey, Don Daily
CBS
March 26
9:43 pm
Recap
(9) Northern Iowa Panthers 52, (5) Michigan State Spartans 59
Scoring by half: 29–22, 23–37
Pts: A. Koch 13
Rebs: K. Ahelegbe, J. Eglseder 4
Asts: K. Ahelegbe 2
Pts: D. Summers 19
Rebs: D. Summers 7
Asts: D. Green, K. Lucious 4
Edward Jones Dome
Attendance: 26,377
Referees: Jeff Clark, Paul Janssen, Pat Adams

Regional final (Elite Eight)

CBS
March 28
2:20 pm
Recap
(6) Tennessee Volunteers 69, (5) Michigan State Spartans 70
Scoring by half: 41–39, 28–31
Pts: W. Chism 13
Rebs: B. Williams 9
Asts: J. P. Prince 5
Pts: D. Summers 21
Rebs: R. Morgan 10
Asts: K. Lucious 4
Edward Jones Dome
Attendance: 25,242
Referees: John Cahill, Pat Driscoll, Michael Stephens

Michigan State's Durrell Summers, after scoring 80 points on 54 field goal attempts, was named the region's Most Outstanding Player.[20]

West Region

First round

For the second time in three years, the Vanderbilt Commodores were victims of the upset, losing to Murray State on a Danero Thomas shot with time expiring, 66–65, in San Jose, California. Like 2008, when they lost to Siena, Vandy was seeded fourth against the Racers.[21] Murray State advanced to face fifth-seeded Butler, who defeated UTEP, 77–59, after trailing 33–27 at the half. Shelvin Mack led the Bulldogs with 25 points.[22]

Meanwhile, the Florida Gators rallied from a 13-point deficit in Oklahoma City to send their game with BYU to two overtimes. But Florida player Chandler Parsons missed chances to win the game at the end of regulation and the first overtime, and BYU's Jimmer Fredette sealed the 99–92 win with a pair of threes in the second overtime. Fredette finished with 37 points, the eighth time that year he'd scored over 30.[23] BYU's advanced to play Kansas State, who had little trouble with the North Texas Mean Green, winning 82–62.[24]

Five years after Vermont upset Syracuse, the two teams met again in the Big Dance, this time in Buffalo, New York. Unlike the 2005 game, however, Syracuse was able to shut down the Catamounts, winning 79–56. Five players scored in double digits for the Orange.[25] They advanced to play Gonzaga. The Bulldogs had an 18-point led against Florida State, but the Seminoles cut it to five with 2:21 remaining. The Zags survived FSU's comeback, however, by making 8 of 10 free throws down the stretch to seal a 67–60 win.[26]

The last two slots in the West went to Pittsburgh and Xavier. It was a close game between Pittsburgh and Oakland in Milwaukee until Grizzlies forward Derick Nelson received an elbow from Gary McGhee of the Panthers, opening a cut over his left eye that began spurting blood. Immediately after Nelson's departure, Pitt went on a 19–2 run. The Panthers held Oakland to 33 percent in their 89–66 victory.[27] As for Xavier, they beat Minnesota, 65–54. Jordan Crawford, the Xavier player who made national headlines the previous summer when he dunked on LeBron James during a training camp held by the Cleveland Cavaliers superstar,[28] scored 28 points for the Musketeers, 17 of those came in the second half.[29]

Second round

Murray State had another chance at an upset against Butler, but a 3-point play by Bulldog Ronald Nored dashed those hopes, along with Gordon Hayward deflecting a Racers pass. Butler won 54–52.[30] The Bulldogs' next opponent, top-seeded Syracuse, rolled over Gonzaga, 87–65, with Wes Johnson scoring a career best 31 points and pulling 14 rebounds.[31]

2 seed Kansas State fell behind to BYU early, trailing 10–0 to start the game. But the Wildcats would pull ahead with 4:21 to go in the first half and never relinquished the lead after that, advancing to the next round with an 84–72 win. K-State's Jacob Pullen had a career-high 34 points.[32] And third-seeded Pitt was eliminated by Xavier, 71–68. Jordan Crawford had 27 points for the Musketeers.[33]

Regional semifinals (Sweet Sixteen)

CBS
March 25
7:07 pm
Recap
(5) Butler Bulldogs 63, (1) Syracuse Orange 59
Scoring by half: 35–25, 28–34
Pts: G. Hayward 17
Rebs: M. Howard 7
Asts: S. Mack 5
Pts: W. Johnson 17
Rebs: R. Jackson, W. Johnson 9
Asts: S. Jardine 5
EnergySolutions Arena
Attendance: 17,254
Referees: Mark Whitehead, Randall McCall, Antinio Petty
CBS
March 25
9:37 pm
Recap
(6) Xavier Musketeers 96, (2) Kansas State Wildcats 101 (2OT)
Scoring by half: 32–31, 40–41 Overtime: 15–15, 9–14
Pts: J. Crawford 32
Rebs: J. Love 15
Asts: T. Holloway 6
Pts: J. Pullen 28
Rebs: C. Kelly 8
Asts: D. Clemente 5
EnergySolutions Arena
Attendance: 17,254
Referees: Mike Reed, Karl Hess, Tony Greene

In what Gregg Doyel of CBSSports.com called "one of the best games in the history of the Sweet 16", Kansas State downed Xavier, 101–96, in double overtime in Salt Lake City.[34] The Musketeers' Terrell Holloway made three free throws with 5 seconds remaining in regulation to pull Xavier even with the Wildcats. Down 3 again with the first overtime winding down, Jordan Crawford nailed a 35-foot shot to extend the game further. Jacob Pullen then hit a pair of threes in the second overtime to push K-State over the top.[35]

Syracuse became the second number-one seed to fall, as Butler claimed its first-ever trip to the Elite Eight. The 63–59 win brought the Bulldogs within one win of playing the Final Four in their home city. Trailing by four with 5:23 left, Butler held the Orange scoreless for nearly five minutes, while scoring 11 points of their own, including a 3-point shot by Willie Veasley that bounced high off the rim before hitting the backboard and eventually falling through the net. The win marked Butler's 23rd in a row.[36]

Regional final (Elite Eight)

CBS
March 27
4:30 pm
Recap
(5) Butler Bulldogs 63, (2) Kansas State Wildcats 56
Scoring by half: 27–20, 36–36
Pts: G. Hayward 22
Rebs: G. Hayward, S. Mack 8
Asts: R. Nored 5
Pts: D. Clemente 18
Rebs: D. Sutton 7
Asts: C. Kelly, M. Irving 2
EnergySolutions Arena
Attendance: 17,587
Referees: Verne Harris, Dick Cartmell, Jim Burr

The West All-Regional team was made of regional MVP Gordon Hayward and Shelvin Mack of Butler, Denis Clemente and Jacob Pullen of Kansas State, and Jordan Crawford of Xavier.[37]

East Region

First round

In New Orleans, Ishmael Smith scored a 17-foot jumper with 1.3 seconds left in overtime as Wake Forest defeated Texas, 81–80. The Longhorns, who had been ranked number one as recently as January, but fell to an 8 seed in the tournament, twice trailed by double digits before rallying, then held an eight-point lead before falling.[38] Wake Forest advanced to face top-seeded Kentucky, who breezed past East Tennessee State, 100–71.[39]

A basket by Quincy Pondexter with 1.7 seconds remaining helped the Washington Huskies past Marquette, 80–78, in San Jose. Washington had trailed by 15 with over 13 minutes to go in the second half.[40] The Huskies advanced to face New Mexico, who beat the Montana Grizzlies, 62–57. Roman Martinez scored 19 points for the Lobos, while Darington Hobson had 11 points, 11 rebounds and six assists despite playing with a sprained left wrist.[41]

Ivy League champion Cornell joined the parade of double-digit seeds advancing to the second round with a dominating performance over Temple, 78–65, in Jacksonville, Florida. Louis Dale, Ryan Wittman and Jeff Foote, all seniors for the Big Red, scored 21, 20 and 16 points respectively, and Cornell shot 56 percent from the field overall, making 8 of their first 10 shots and shooting 68 percent in the first half. It was the first tournament win in Big Red history.[42] The Wisconsin Badgers, who Cornell drew next, managed to avoid getting upset itself, beating Wofford in a low-scoring affair, 53–49. A pair of free throws from Jon Leuer with 4.2 seconds on the clock sealed the win for Badgers. Leuer had 20 points on the day.[43]

One year after reaching the Elite Eight, 10th-seeded Missouri knocked off No. 7 Clemson, 86–78, in Buffalo. The Missouri Tigers' defense forced 20 turnovers and stole the ball 15 times in the win, while Kim English and Keith Ramsey had 20 points each offensively.[44] Mizzou advanced to play West Virginia, who started its opening round game trailing Morgan State, 12–3. But the 2 seed hit 8 of its next 11 shots to take the lead for good en route to a 77–50 win.[45]

Second round

Washington looked nothing like the No. 11 seed in the East, dismantling third-seeded New Mexico, 82–64. With 18 points from Quincy Pondexter and 15 from Isaiah Thomas and Matthew Bryan-Amaning each, the Huskies played their uptempo style to a 12-point lead at halftime that grew to 23 midway through the second half. Washington made the Sweet 16 for the third time since 2005.[46] West Virginia reached the Sweet 16 after beating Missouri, 68–59. Da'Sean Butler had 28 points for the Mountaineers, while the Tigers were plagued by poor shooting from the field and at the line.[47]

It was another blowout for the Kentucky Wildcats as they beat Wake Forest, 90–60. Four players scored in double figures for UK as they built an early cushion, then padded it to 31 points by the second half.[48] The Wildcats became the next hurdle in Cornell's Cinderella season, which continued with an 87–69 pasting of No. 4 Wisconsin. Thanks to 26 points from Louis Dale, another 24 from Ryan Wittman, and a 61 percent shooting effort overall—the highest percentage ever allowed by the Badgers in Bo Ryan's nine-year tenure in Madison[49]—the Big Red became the first team from the Ivy League to reach the round of 16 in more than 30 years.[50]

Regional semifinals (Sweet Sixteen)

CBS
March 25
7:27 pm
Recap
(11) Washington Huskies 56, (2) West Virginia Mountaineers 69
Scoring by half: 29–27, 27–42
Pts: J. Holiday 14
Rebs: M. Bryan-Amaning, J. Holiday 8
Asts: I. Thomas 4
Pts: K. Jones 18
Rebs: K. Jones 8
Asts: D. Ebanks 5
Carrier Dome
Attendance: 22,271
Referees: Tom Eades, Mike Eades, Brian Dorsey
CBS
March 25
10:06 pm
Recap
(12) Cornell Big Red 45, (1) Kentucky Wildcats 62
Scoring by half: 16–32, 29–30
Pts: L. Dale 17
Rebs: J. Foote 6
Asts: 3 players with 2
Pts: D. Cousins 16
Rebs: P. Patterson 12
Asts: J. Wall 8
Carrier Dome
Attendance: 22,271
Referees: Mike Sanzere, James Breeding, John Higgins

The clock struck midnight for 12 seed Cornell and 11 seed Washington. Kentucky put an end to the Big Red's Cinderella run with a 62–45 win in Syracuse, New York. The game started promising for Cornell, as they took a 10–2 lead to the delight of the partisan-Big Red crowd. But a talented Wildcats squad spoiled the party after that with 16 points from DeMarcus Cousins, 12 rebounds from Patrick Patterson and 8 assists from John Wall.[51] West Virginia's 69–56 defeat of the Huskies set up the only 1 vs. 2 regional final in the tournament. The Mountaineers' Da'Sean Butler led all scorers with 18 points, as West Virginia recorded its 30th win, the most in school history.[52]

Regional final (Elite Eight)

CBS
March 27
7:05 pm
Recap
(2) West Virginia Mountaineers 73, (1) Kentucky Wildcats 66
Scoring by half: 28–26, 45–40
Pts: D. Butler 18
Rebs: K. Jones 8
Asts: J. Flowers, W. Smith 4
Pts: J. Wall 19
Rebs: P. Patterson 13
Asts: J. Wall 5
Carrier Dome
Attendance: 22,497
Referees: Jamie Luckie, Ted Valentine, Curtis Shaw

South Region

First round

Second-seeded Villanova survived a scare in Providence, needing overtime to beat Robert Morris, 73–70. Scottie Reynolds was kept from the starting lineup for undisclosed reasons (Coach Jay Wright said he wanted to make a "teaching point"), and even though he scored 20 points, he only made 2 of 15 shots from the field. Mezie Nwigwe had a chance to send the game to a second overtime for the Colonials, but missed a 3-pointer as time ran out.[53] Villanova plays Saint Mary's of California in the second round. The Gaels beat Richmond, 80–71, advancing for the first time in over 50 years.[54]

Contributing to the Big East Conference's woes on day one of the tournament was Notre Dame's 51–50 loss to Old Dominion in New Orleans. The Fighting Irish opened the second half with a 30–22 lead before the Monarchs went on a 9–0 run to take the lead. The game remained close until the end, when Notre Dame's Carleton Scott attempted a 3-point basket that ended up rattling around the rim before falling out. A putback from Luke Harangody at the buzzer was not enough for the Irish.[55] Old Dominion advanced to face Baylor in the round of 32. In a close game with Sam Houston State, the Bears used an 8–0 run in the final minutes to take the 68–59 victory.[56]

Arkansas-Pine Bluff won the play-in game on March 16, 2010, by beating Winthrop, 61–44. But they proved to be no match for the No. 1-seed Duke Blue Devils, who blew the Golden Lions out, 73–44, in Jacksonville. Kyle Singler had 22 points and 10 rebounds for Duke, who led 39–20 at the break.[57] Duke advanced to face California in the second round. The Golden Bears rode a rollercoaster with Louisville, leading the Cardinals by 18 before having their lead cut to 6, then pulling back out to a 14-point advantage before Louisville brought it back to within 4. But Cal ended the game with a 15–4 run to win, 77–62.[58]

Finally, in Spokane, the fourth-seeded Purdue Boilermakers had a go of it with upset specialist Siena, trailing the Saints 32–29 at halftime before racing to a 14-point lead to open the second half. Siena would pull within 3 with just over a minute remaining, but Purdue held on for the 72–64 win, spoiling the predictions of some fans and even President Barack Obama that Siena would make the Boilers their latest victim.[59] They advanced to play Texas A&M, who defeated Utah State, 69–53, behind 19 points from freshman Khris Middleton.[60]

Second round

After barely beating Robert Morris in the first round, Villanova could not withstand the Gael storm from St. Mary's. Omar Samhan scored 32 points and grabbed seven rebounds as the No. 10 seed took down Nova, 75–68. Afterwards, Samhan called the game his "best win ever." Wildcat Scottie Reynolds remained in his funk to end the season, netting just 8 points.[61] Trailing by as many as 14 in the first half and 38–28 at halftime, Old Dominion went on a 9–0 run against Baylor at the start of the second half, then took the lead, 49–47, on free throws from Kent Bazemore. But Baylor would close the door on the upset bid with an 8–1 run to end the game, winning 76–68. The Bears' LaceDarius Dunn led all scorers with 26 points, while 7-foot center Josh Lomers had eight rebounds to go with his career high 14 points.[62]

Chris Kramer's layup with 4.2 seconds left in overtime gave Purdue a 63–61 win over Texas A&M. Kramer finished with 17 points as the Boilermakers came back from a 7-point deficit at halftime.[63] They advanced to face Duke in the Sweet 16. The Blue Devils beat California, 68–53, behind 20 points from Nolan Smith, 17 points from Kyle Singler and 14 points and 13 rebounds from Brian Zoubek. This was the 19th time under head coach Mike Krzyzewski Duke reached the round of 16.[64]

Regional semifinals (Sweet Sixteen)

CBS
March 26
7:27 pm
Recap
(10) Saint Mary's Gaels 49, (3) Baylor Bears 72
Scoring by half: 17–46, 32–26
Pts: B. Allen 16
Rebs: O. Samhan 9
Asts: M. Dellavedova 7
Pts: L. Dunn 23
Rebs: E. Udoh 11
Asts: 3 players with 3
Reliant Stadium
Attendance: 45,505
Referees: Leslie Jones, Mike Wood, Roger Ayers
CBS
March 26
9:53 pm
Recap
(4) Purdue Boilermakers 57, (1) Duke Blue Devils 70
Scoring by half: 23–24, 34–46
Pts: J. Johnson 23
Rebs: J. Johnson 5
Asts: L. Jackson, K. Grant 4
Pts: K. Singler 24
Rebs: B. Zoubek 14
Asts: J. Scheyer, N. Smith 4
Reliant Stadium
Attendance: 45,505
Referees: Doug Shows, Ed Corbett, Joe Lindsay

Regional final (Elite Eight)

CBS
March 28
5:05 pm ET
Recap
(3) Baylor Bears 71, (1) Duke Blue Devils 78
Scoring by half: 35–32, 36–46
Pts: L. Dunn 22
Rebs: E. Udoh 10
Asts: E. Udoh 6
Pts: N. Smith 29
Rebs: B. Zoubek, L. Thomas 9
Asts: K. Singler, J. Scheyer 4
Reliant Stadium
Attendance: 47,492
Referees: Scott Thornley, Mike Stuart, Doug Sirmons

Duke defeated Baylor 78–71, in front of a practically home crowd for Baylor in Houston, Texas. Nolan Smith was named game MVP with 29 points, while Lance Thomas also had a career high 8 offensive rebounds.

Final four

CBS
April 3
6:07 pm
Recap
(W5) Butler Bulldogs 52, (M5) Michigan State Spartans 50
Scoring by half: 28–28, 24–22
Pts: G. Hayward 19
Rebs: G. Hayward 9
Asts: R. Nored and S. Vanzant 2
Pts: D. Summers 14
Rebs: D. Summers 10
Asts: K. Lucious 4
Lucas Oil Stadium
Attendance: 71,298
Referees: Leslie Jones, Jamie Luckie, Mike Stuart
CBS
April 3
9:14 pm
Recap
(E2) West Virginia Mountaineers 57, (S1) Duke Blue Devils 78
Scoring by half: 31–39, 26–39
Pts: W. Smith 12
Rebs: W. Smith, K. Jones 5
Asts: W. Smith 4
Pts: J. Scheyer 23
Rebs: B. Zoubek 10
Asts: J. Scheyer, N. Smith 6
Lucas Oil Stadium
Attendance: 71,298
Referees: Randall McCall, Curtis Shaw, John Higgins

On April 3, 2010, Butler Bulldogs, playing in their hometown, faced off against the Michigan State Spartans. In a tough, physical game, the Bulldogs, despite going more than 11 minutes without a field goal, were able to hang on after forcing Michigan State into 16 turnovers and holding the Spartans to zero fast-break points. The Bulldogs also out-rebounded Michigan State on the offensive glass, 11 to 8. With the victory, Butler became the fourth team in NCAA tournament history to hold its first five opponents under 60 points.

On April 3, 2010, Duke, the #1 seed from the South and West Virginia Mountaineers, the #2 seed from the East, squared off in the second of the Final Four games. Duke showed its full potential in the game, hitting 52.7 percent of its shots (and 52 percent of its three-pointers) while shredding West Virginia's 1-3-1 zone trap. Duke led 39–31 at the half and maintained its red-hot shooting in the second half. The highlight of the game came when Nolan Smith missed a contested, fast-break layup, but Kyle Singler and Miles Plumlee combined to slam home the rebound to give Duke a 14-point lead. Plumlee was credited with the dunk. Kyle Singler scored 21 points for the Blue Devils and Nolan Smith added 19 points and six assists. With the victory, Duke advanced to its 10th NCAA Championship game.

National championship

CBS
April 5
9:21 pm
Box score
(W5) Butler Bulldogs 59, (S1) Duke Blue Devils 61
Scoring by half: 32–33, 27–28
Pts: G. Hayward, S. Mack 12
Rebs: G. Hayward 8
Asts: W. Veasley 3
Pts: K. Singler 19
Rebs: B. Zoubek 10
Asts: J. Scheyer 5
Lucas Oil Stadium
Attendance: 70,930
Referees: John Cahill, Tom Eades, Ted Valentine
 
Running score of the championship game

On April 5, 2010, Butler and Duke faced off in what The New York Times called "the most eagerly awaited championship game in years".[65] Butler became the first team to play in the championship game in its home city since UCLA in 1968.

Duke jumped out to a quick 6–1 lead to start the game, but Butler rallied back, taking a 12–11 lead at the 12:28 mark of the first half. At the under eight-minute TV timeout, Butler held a 20–18 lead. After the timeout, Duke went on an 8–0 run to take a 26–20 lead. Butler coach Brad Stevens then called a timeout. With starters Matt Howard and Ronald Nored on the bench in foul trouble, backup center Avery Jukes came up big for Butler. Jukes hit two three-pointers and a made tip-in en route to 10 first half points, tying his single-game season high. At half time, Duke's lead stood at 33–32.[66]

The second half was played very closely, with neither team taking a lead larger than two points until a Brian Zoubek layup put Duke up 47–43 with 12:27 remaining. Butler stayed close, keeping within 5 points the rest of the way. With 3:16 to play, Duke took a 60–55 lead on two made free throws by Nolan Smith. Butler missed its next shot, but forced a missed shot and turned Duke over after an offensive rebound. Matt Howard made a layup for Butler to make it a 60–57 game with 1:44 remaining. Smith missed a layup for Duke and Howard got another layup after collecting an offensive rebound on a missed three-pointer by Shelvin Mack. Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski then called a time out. Kyle Singler missed an open jump shot with 36 seconds remaining, giving Butler a chance to take the lead. Butler was unable to initiate their offense and Stevens called a timeout to set up a play. They were then forced to call their last timeout when they were unable to get the ball in-bounds. Gordon Hayward then missed a short fade-away jumper. Zoubek came down with the rebound, forcing Butler to foul with 3.6 seconds remaining. Zoubek made the first foul shot and then intentionally missed the second, knowing Butler had no timeouts remaining. Hayward was forced to throw up a desperation shot from half court. The ball bounced off the backboard and then the rim.[66] According to analysis by ESPN, Hayward's aim was off by three inches, or less than one degree, on the x-axis.[67] Because a made three-point shot would have resulted in a loss for Duke, some pundits criticized Krzyzewski for his decision to have Zoubek miss the second free throw intentionally.[citation needed] Other pundits, however, ran various analyses that indicated that it was statistically the correct call.[68]

The 61–59 victory earned Krzyzewski his fourth national championship crown, his second in ten years.[66] The game was the most watched finale in more than 10 years, pulling in average of 23.9 million viewers in the United States.[69] Kyle Singler earned Most Outstanding Player honors with 19 points and eight rebounds.

Record by conference

 
Lucas Oil Stadium during Final Four weekend
Conference # of Bids Record Win % R32 S16 E8 F4 CG
Big East 8 8–8 .500 4 2 1 1
Big 12 7 9–7 .563 5 2 2
ACC 6 9–5 .643 4 1 1 1 1
Big Ten 5 9–5 .643 4 3 1 1
Mountain West 4 2–4 .333 2
SEC 4 6–4 .600 2 2 2
Atlantic 10 3 2–3 .400 1 1
C–USA 2 0–2 .000
Pac-10 2 3–2 .600 2 1
WAC 2 0–2 .000
WCC 2 3–2 .600 2 1
Colonial 1 1–1 .500 1
Horizon 1 5–1 .833 1 1 1 1 1
Ivy 1 2–1 .667 1 1
MAC 1 1–1 .500 1
MVC 1 2–1 .667 1 1
Ohio Valley 1 1–1 .500 1
SWAC 1 1–1** .500
One and done teams* 13 0–13 .000

*The America East, Atlantic Sun, Big Sky, Big South, Big West, MAAC, MEAC, Northeast, Patriot, Southern, Southland, Summit, and Sun Belt conferences went 0–1.

**Arkansas-Pine Bluff won the Opening Round game.

The columns R32, S16, E8, F4, and CG respectively stand for the Round of 32, Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight, Final Four, and championship Game. The number in each field represents an appearance in that round by a team from that conference.

Media

Television

For the 29th consecutive year, CBS Sports again televised a majority of the event, with the exception of the opening round game, which was televised by ESPN, and first-round games played in the late afternoon, which CBS College Sports Network aired so CBS affiliates could break for local and network news.[70] The championship game scored a Nielsen rating of 16.0.

In addition to the main CBS affiliates, many stations opened digital subchannels for additional coverage. Also, on these four occasions, CBS opened the coverage to additional channels to settle conflicts:

  • On March 26, during the regional semifinals, South Bend, Indiana affiliate WSBT-TV aired the Purdue-Duke telecast, while its digital subchannel, independent station SBT2, carried Michigan State vs. Northern Iowa. Part of the South Bend market (including the city of Benton Harbor) is located within the state of Michigan.
  • On March 25, also within the Sweet 16, the game between Xavier and Kansas State was seen on WKRC-TV and the game between Kentucky and Cornell was seen on WKRC-DT2, also known as "The CW Cincinnati", at the same time. Xavier is located in the city of Cincinnati, while much of the Cincinnati DMA is located within the state of Kentucky. The fan and alumni bases for the University of Kentucky are substantial in the Cincinnati area, and the Wildcats play occasional home games at U.S. Bank Arena.
  • On March 19, the first-round game between Clemson and Missouri was shown on WSPA-TV while the game between Wofford and Wisconsin was on WYCW at the same time. Both Clemson and Wofford are located in the upstate area of South Carolina.
  • On March 18, the first-round game between North Texas and Kansas State was seen on KTVT, while at the same time Baylor vs. Sam Houston State was shown on KTXA. UNT is in the Dallas/Fort Worth media market (Denton, Texas); Waco, Texas, where Baylor is located, is in a separate DMA. However, some DFW stations are available via cable TV in Waco, and it is believed that more alumni of BU live in the Metroplex than anywhere else.[citation needed] (For similar reasons, KTVT agreed to air the late-afternoon Texas A&M vs. Utah State game on 3/19 after earlier planning not to do so.)[citation needed]

WSPA and WYCW are in a duopoly owned by Media General, and KTVT and KTXA are in a duopoly owned by CBS Corporation.

Radio

Westwood One again broadcast the tournament.

Opening round game

First and second rounds

Regionals

  • Ian Eagle and P. J. Carlesimo – East Regional at Syracuse, New York
  • Kevin Harlan and John Thompson – Midwest Regional at St. Louis, Missouri
  • Kevin Kugler and Pete Gillen – South Regional at Houston, Texas
  • Ted Robinson and Bill Frieder – West Regional at Salt Lake City, Utah

Final four

  • Kevin Kugler, John Thompson and Bill Raftery – at Indianapolis, Indiana

John Tautges again served as host of the broadcasts.

Local radio

Date Teams Flagship station Play-by-play announcer Color analyst(s)
2010 Duke WDNC Bob Harris John Roth

International broadcasters

Broadcasters used the CBS feed unless stated otherwise.

See also

References

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2010, ncaa, division, basketball, tournament, involved, schools, playing, single, elimination, tournament, determine, national, champion, ncaa, division, college, basketball, culmination, 2009, basketball, season, began, march, 2010, concluded, with, champions. The 2010 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament involved 65 schools playing in a single elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men s NCAA Division I college basketball as a culmination of the 2009 10 basketball season It began on March 16 2010 and concluded with the championship game on April 5 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis It was the first Final Four at Lucas Oil Stadium the RCA Dome and Market Square Arena hosted past Final Fours when the event was held in Indianapolis 2010 NCAA Division Imen s basketball tournamentTeams65Finals siteLucas Oil StadiumIndianapolisChampionsDuke Blue Devils 4th title 10th title game 15th Final Four Runner upButler Bulldogs 1st title game 1st Final Four SemifinalistsWest Virginia Mountaineers 2nd Final Four Michigan State Spartans 8th Final Four Winning coachMike Krzyzewski 4th title MOPKyle Singler Duke NCAA Division I men s tournaments 2009 2011 The Final Four consisted of Duke making their first appearance since 2004 West Virginia who were making their second appearance and first since 1959 Butler considered the host school and making their first ever appearance and Michigan State the national runner up from 2009 appearing in the Final Four for the sixth time under head coach Tom Izzo When Duke and Butler played each other in the tournament final it was the first title game between private universities in 25 years Villanova and Georgetown met in 1985 and the fifth such match up in history 1942 1954 and 1955 having been the other years Duke defeated Butler 61 59 in the championship game as Gordon Hayward s last second desperation shot clanged off the rim It was Duke s first national championship since 2001 and fourth overall Entering the tournament the top four seeds were Kansas Duke Kentucky and Syracuse Kansas entered the Tournament as the overall No 1 seed but was defeated in the opening weekend by Northern Iowa the No 9 seed in the Midwest region Northern Iowa was one of four teams seeded lower than No 8 to advance to the Sweet Sixteen joining the East Region s No 11 seed Washington No 12 seed Cornell and the South Region s No 10 seed Saint Mary s For the first time since 2006 a No 14 seed advanced out of the first round as Ohio defeated Georgetown The No 13 seed in the West Region Murray State defeated No 4 seeded Vanderbilt marking the second consecutive appearance for the Commodores where they lost as a No 4 seed Murray State very nearly upset Butler in their next game losing by two points One of the more exciting games of the tournament was played at the West Regional in Salt Lake City as No 6 Xavier took No 2 Kansas State to two overtimes before falling 101 96 Jordan Crawford hit a three pointer with seconds remaining in the first overtime period to force a second Contents 1 Tournament procedure 2 Schedule and venues 3 Qualifying teams 3 1 Automatic bids 3 2 Listed by region and seeding 4 Bracket 4 1 Opening Round Game Dayton Ohio 4 2 Midwest Regional St Louis Missouri 4 3 West Regional Salt Lake City Utah 4 4 East Regional Syracuse New York 4 5 South Regional Houston Texas 4 6 Final Four Lucas Oil Stadium Indianapolis Indiana 5 Game summaries 5 1 Midwest Region 5 1 1 First round 5 1 2 Second round 5 1 3 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen 5 1 4 Regional final Elite Eight 5 2 West Region 5 2 1 First round 5 2 2 Second round 5 2 3 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen 5 2 4 Regional final Elite Eight 5 3 East Region 5 3 1 First round 5 3 2 Second round 5 3 3 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen 5 3 4 Regional final Elite Eight 5 4 South Region 5 4 1 First round 5 4 2 Second round 5 4 3 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen 5 4 4 Regional final Elite Eight 5 5 Final four 5 6 National championship 6 Record by conference 7 Media 7 1 Television 7 2 Radio 7 2 1 Opening round game 7 2 2 First and second rounds 7 2 3 Regionals 7 2 4 Final four 7 2 5 Local radio 7 3 International broadcasters 8 See also 9 ReferencesTournament procedure EditFurther information NCAA Men s Division I Basketball Championship Format history A total of 65 teams were selected for the tournament Thirty one of the teams earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments The automatic bid of the Ivy League which does not conduct a postseason tournament went to Cornell its regular season champion The remaining 34 teams were granted at large bids which were extended by the NCAA Selection Committee Two teams played an opening round game popularly called the play in game the winner of that game advanced to the main draw of the tournament and played a top seed in one of the regionals The 2010 game was played on March 16 at University of Dayton Arena in Dayton Ohio as it has been since its inception in 2001 All 64 teams were seeded 1 to 16 within their regions the winner of the play in game automatically received a 16 seed The Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 65 UCLA athletic director Dan Guerrero took over as chair of the Division I Men s Basketball Committee 1 Defending champion North Carolina did not qualify for the Tournament while two schools made their first post season appearance Southern Conference champion Wofford and SWAC champion Arkansas Pine Bluff Conference USA champion Houston made its first NCAA Tournament appearance in 18 years 2 Schedule and venues Edit Providence New Orleans Oklahoma City San Jose Buffalo Jacksonville Milwaukee Spokaneclass notpageimage 2010 subregionals Green 18 20 March Orange 19 21 March Syracuse Salt Lake City St Louis Houston Indianapolisclass notpageimage 2010 Regionals blue and Final Four red The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 2010 tournament 3 Opening Round March 16 University of Dayton Arena Dayton Ohio Host University of Dayton First and Second Rounds March 18 and 20 Dunkin Donuts Center Providence Rhode Island Hosts Big East Conference and Providence College New Orleans Arena New Orleans Louisiana Host Tulane University Ford Center Oklahoma City Oklahoma Host Big 12 Conference HP Pavilion at San Jose San Jose California Host San Jose State University March 19 and 21 HSBC Arena Buffalo New York Hosts Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Canisius College and Niagara University Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena Jacksonville Florida Host Jacksonville University Bradley Center Milwaukee Wisconsin Host Marquette University Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane Washington Host Washington State University Regional semifinals and Finals Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight March 25 and 27 East Regional Carrier Dome Syracuse New York Host Syracuse University West Regional EnergySolutions Arena Salt Lake City Utah Host University of Utah March 26 and 28 Midwest Regional Edward Jones Dome St Louis Missouri Host Missouri Valley Conference South Regional Reliant Stadium Houston Texas Hosts University of Houston and Rice University National semifinals and championship Final Four and championship April 3 and 5 Lucas Oil Stadium Indianapolis Indiana Hosts Horizon League and Butler University Qualifying teams Edit Further information 2010 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament qualifying teams Automatic bids Edit The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2010 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference s tournament except for the Ivy League whose regular season champion received the automatic bid Conference School Appearance Last bidACC Duke 34th 2009America East Vermont 4th 2005Atlantic 10 Temple 28th 2009Atlantic Sun East Tennessee State 9th 2009Big 12 Kansas 39th 2009Big East West Virginia 23rd 2009Big Sky Montana 8th 2006Big South Winthrop 9th 2008Big Ten Ohio State 26th 2009Big West UC Santa Barbara 4th 2002Colonial Old Dominion 10th 2007C USA Houston 19th 1992Horizon Butler 10th 2009Ivy League Cornell 5th 2009MAAC Siena 6th 2009MAC Ohio 13th 2005MEAC Morgan State 2nd 2009Missouri Valley Northern Iowa 6th 2009Mountain West San Diego State 6th 2006Northeast Robert Morris 7th 2009Ohio Valley Murray State 14th 2006Pac 10 Washington 15th 2009Patriot Lehigh 4th 2004SEC Kentucky 50th 2008Southern Wofford 1st NeverSouthland Sam Houston State 2nd 2003Summit Oakland 2nd 2005Sun Belt North Texas 3rd 2007SWAC Arkansas Pine Bluff 1st NeverWAC New Mexico State 18th 2007West Coast Saint Mary s 6th 2008Listed by region and seeding Edit East Regional SyracuseSeed School Conference Record Berth type1 Kentucky SEC 32 2 Automatic2 West Virginia Big East 27 6 Automatic3 New Mexico Mountain West 29 4 At large4 Wisconsin Big Ten 23 8 At large5 Temple Atlantic 10 29 5 Automatic6 Marquette Big East 22 11 At large7 Clemson ACC 21 10 At large8 Texas Big 12 24 9 At large9 Wake Forest ACC 19 10 At large10 Missouri Big 12 22 10 At large11 Washington Pac 10 24 9 Automatic12 Cornell Ivy League 27 4 Automatic13 Wofford Southern 26 8 Automatic14 Montana Big Sky 22 9 Automatic15 Morgan State MEAC 27 9 Automatic16 East Tennessee State Atlantic Sun 20 14 Automatic Midwest Regional St LouisSeed School Conference Record Berth type1 Kansas Big 12 32 2 Automatic2 Ohio State Big Ten 27 7 Automatic3 Georgetown Big East 23 10 At large4 Maryland ACC 23 8 At large5 Michigan State Big Ten 24 8 At large6 Tennessee SEC 25 8 At large7 Oklahoma State Big 12 22 10 At large8 UNLV Mountain West 25 8 At large9 Northern Iowa Missouri Valley 28 4 Automatic10 Georgia Tech ACC 22 12 At large11 San Diego State Mountain West 25 8 Automatic12 New Mexico State WAC 22 11 Automatic13 Houston C USA 19 15 Automatic14 Ohio Mid American 21 14 Automatic15 UC Santa Barbara Big West 20 9 Automatic16 Lehigh Patriot 22 10 AutomaticSouth Regional HoustonSeed School Conference Record Berth type1 Duke ACC 29 5 Automatic2 Villanova Big East 24 7 At large3 Baylor Big 12 25 7 At large4 Purdue Big Ten 27 5 At large5 Texas A amp M Big 12 23 9 At large6 Notre Dame Big East 23 11 At large7 Richmond Atlantic 10 26 8 At large8 California Pac 10 23 10 At large9 Louisville Big East 20 12 At large10 Saint Mary s West Coast 26 5 Automatic11 Old Dominion CAA 26 8 Automatic12 Utah State WAC 27 7 At large13 Siena MAAC 27 6 Automatic14 Sam Houston State Southland 25 7 Automatic15 Robert Morris Northeast 23 11 Automatic16 Arkansas Pine Bluff SWAC 17 15 AutomaticWinthrop Big South 19 13 Automatic West Regional Salt Lake CitySeed School Conference Record Berth type1 Syracuse Big East 28 4 At large2 Kansas State Big 12 26 7 At large3 Pittsburgh Big East 24 8 At large4 Vanderbilt SEC 24 8 At large5 Butler Horizon 28 4 Automatic6 Xavier Atlantic 10 24 8 At large7 BYU Mountain West 29 5 At large8 Gonzaga West Coast 26 6 At large9 Florida State ACC 22 9 At large10 Florida SEC 21 12 At large11 Minnesota Big Ten 21 13 At large12 UTEP C USA 26 6 At large13 Murray State Ohio Valley 30 4 Automatic14 Oakland Summit 26 8 Automatic15 North Texas Sun Belt 24 8 Automatic16 Vermont America East 25 9 AutomaticBracket EditResults to date 4 Denotes overtime periodAll times in U S EDT Opening Round Game Dayton Ohio Edit Winner advanced as 16th seed in South Regional vs 1 Duke Opening Round GameMarch 16 16aArkansas Pine Bluff6116bWinthrop44Midwest Regional St Louis Missouri Edit First roundMarch 18 19Second roundMarch 20 21Regional semifinalsMarch 26Regional finalsMarch 28 1Kansas9016Lehigh741Kansas67Oklahoma City Thu Sat9Northern Iowa698UNLV669Northern Iowa699Northern Iowa525Michigan State595Michigan State7012New Mexico State675Michigan State85Spokane Fri Sun4Maryland834Maryland8913Houston775Michigan State706Tennessee696Tennessee6211San Diego State596Tennessee83Providence Thu Sat14Ohio683Georgetown8314Ohio976Tennessee762Ohio State737Oklahoma State5910Georgia Tech6410Georgia Tech66Milwaukee Fri Sun2Ohio State752Ohio State6815UC Santa Barbara51West Regional Salt Lake City Utah Edit First roundMarch 18 19Second roundMarch 20 21Regional semifinalsMarch 25Regional finalsMarch 27 1Syracuse7916Vermont561Syracuse87Buffalo Fri Sun8Gonzaga658Gonzaga679Florida State601Syracuse595Butler635Butler7712UTEP595Butler54San Jose Thu Sat13Murray State524Vanderbilt6513Murray State665Butler632Kansas State566Xavier6511Minnesota546Xavier71Milwaukee Fri Sun3Pittsburgh683Pittsburgh8914Oakland666Xavier962Kansas State101 7BYU99 10Florida927BYU72Oklahoma City Thu Sat2Kansas State842Kansas State8215North Texas62East Regional Syracuse New York Edit First roundMarch 18 19Second roundMarch 20 21Regional semifinalsMarch 25Regional finalsMarch 27 1Kentucky10016East Tennessee State711Kentucky90New Orleans Thu Sat9Wake Forest608Texas809Wake Forest81 1Kentucky6212Cornell455Temple6512Cornell7812Cornell87Jacksonville Fri Sun4Wisconsin694Wisconsin5313Wofford491Kentucky662West Virginia736Marquette7811Washington8011Washington82San Jose Thu Sat3New Mexico643New Mexico6214Montana5711Washington562West Virginia697Clemson7810Missouri8610Missouri59Buffalo Fri Sun2West Virginia682West Virginia7715Morgan State50South Regional Houston Texas Edit First roundMarch 18 19Second roundMarch 20 21Regional semifinalsMarch 26Regional finalsMarch 28 1Duke7316Arkansas Pine Bluff441Duke68Jacksonville Fri Sun8California538California779Louisville621Duke704Purdue575Texas A amp M6912Utah State535Texas A amp M61Spokane Fri Sun4Purdue63 4Purdue7213Siena641Duke783Baylor716Notre Dame5011Old Dominion5111Old Dominion68New Orleans Thu Sat3Baylor763Baylor6814Sam Houston State593Baylor7210Saint Mary s497Richmond7110Saint Mary s8010Saint Mary s75Providence Fri Sun2Villanova682Villanova73 15Robert Morris70Final Four Lucas Oil Stadium Indianapolis Indiana Edit National semifinalsApril 3National Championship GameApril 5 M5Michigan State50W5Butler52W5Butler59S1Duke61E2West Virginia57S1Duke78Game summaries EditMidwest Region Edit First round Edit The biggest upset of the first day came in Providence Rhode Island where 14th seeded Ohio defeated third seeded Georgetown in convincing fashion 97 83 for their first Tournament win since 1983 when they ousted Illinois State in the first round of that Tournament Armon Bassett scored 32 points for the Bobcats who shot 57 percent from the field and made 13 of 23 3 pointers 5 6 They advanced to face Tennessee the sixth seed in the region The Volunteers held off 11th seed San Diego State 62 59 on head coach Bruce Pearl s 50th birthday J P Prince and Melvin Goins scored 15 points each for Tennessee 7 In Oklahoma City Ali Farokhmanesh drilled a three pointer with 4 9 seconds remaining to lift ninth seeded Northern Iowa over UNLV It was the Panthers first Tournament win since 1990 8 UNI advanced to face top seeded Kansas The top seed withheld an effort by Lehigh trailing the 16th seed early in the game and leading by just six at halftime before pulling away midway in the second half for a 90 74 win 9 On the second day of play 10th seeded Georgia Tech failed to make a single field goal in the final 8 19 of play but sank 13 free throws to hold off No 7 Oklahoma State 64 59 in Milwaukee Gani Lawal led Georgia Tech with 14 points 10 The Yellow Jackets advanced to play Ohio State who defeated UC Santa Barbara 68 51 Buckeye star Evan Turner struggled from the field shooting 2 13 and scoring nine points and the Gauchos put up a fight playing from behind most of the game 11 Rounding out the Midwest bracket were Maryland and Michigan State in Spokane Washington The Terrapins beat Houston 89 77 behind a career high 21 points and 17 rebounds from freshman Jordan Williams 12 while the Spartans edged New Mexico State 70 67 The end of the game included a controversial lane violation call on Aggies player Troy Gillenwater with 18 6 seconds left that allowed MSU to reshoot a missed free throw and extend its lead to 3 13 Second round Edit Northern Iowa stunned the nation by knocking off top overall seed Kansas 69 67 Leading by just one in the final minute of play Ali Farokhmanesh clinched the victory for the second time in as many games with a three point basket that ESPN s Pat Forde called the greatest early round shot in NCAA tournament history 14 The win was significant for several reasons it marked the Panthers first trip ever to the Sweet Sixteen and was the first time in six years a No 1 seed was eliminated in the round of 32 It was also the first time since 1962 that a team from the Missouri Valley Conference had defeated a top seed in the Tournament 15 Meanwhile Michigan State lost guard Kalin Lucas to a leg injury late in the first half of its game with Maryland Michigan State extended its halftime lead of NINE to 16 in the second half before falling behind by one late after succumbing to Maryland s relentless pressure defense and some spectacular plays by Greivis Vasquez But Korie Lucious kept MSU from losing the game hitting a 3 pointer as time ran out to lift his team past the Terrapins 85 83 16 Lucas injury proved to be a torn Achilles tendon putting the junior out of action for up to six months 17 For the third time in four years Tennessee made it to the regional semifinals with their 83 68 win over Ohio J P Prince scored 18 points for the Volunteers while Scotty Hopson added 17 18 In Milwaukee Ohio State s Evan Turner bounced back from his off night in the first round nearly recording a triple double 24 points 9 rebounds and 9 assists as the Buckeyes downed Georgia Tech 75 66 19 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen Edit CBSMarch 267 07 pmRecap 6 Tennessee Volunteers 76 2 Ohio State Buckeyes 73Scoring by half 39 42 37 31Pts W Chism 22Rebs B Williams 12Asts J P Prince 6 Pts E Turner 31Rebs E Turner 7Asts D Lighty E Turner 5Edward Jones DomeAttendance 26 377Referees Mike Kitts Bryan Kersey Don Daily CBSMarch 269 43 pmRecap 9 Northern Iowa Panthers 52 5 Michigan State Spartans 59Scoring by half 29 22 23 37Pts A Koch 13Rebs K Ahelegbe J Eglseder 4Asts K Ahelegbe 2 Pts D Summers 19Rebs D Summers 7Asts D Green K Lucious 4Edward Jones DomeAttendance 26 377Referees Jeff Clark Paul Janssen Pat Adams Regional final Elite Eight Edit CBSMarch 282 20 pmRecap 6 Tennessee Volunteers 69 5 Michigan State Spartans 70Scoring by half 41 39 28 31Pts W Chism 13Rebs B Williams 9Asts J P Prince 5 Pts D Summers 21Rebs R Morgan 10Asts K Lucious 4Edward Jones DomeAttendance 25 242Referees John Cahill Pat Driscoll Michael Stephens Michigan State s Durrell Summers after scoring 80 points on 54 field goal attempts was named the region s Most Outstanding Player 20 West Region Edit First round Edit For the second time in three years the Vanderbilt Commodores were victims of the upset losing to Murray State on a Danero Thomas shot with time expiring 66 65 in San Jose California Like 2008 when they lost to Siena Vandy was seeded fourth against the Racers 21 Murray State advanced to face fifth seeded Butler who defeated UTEP 77 59 after trailing 33 27 at the half Shelvin Mack led the Bulldogs with 25 points 22 Meanwhile the Florida Gators rallied from a 13 point deficit in Oklahoma City to send their game with BYU to two overtimes But Florida player Chandler Parsons missed chances to win the game at the end of regulation and the first overtime and BYU s Jimmer Fredette sealed the 99 92 win with a pair of threes in the second overtime Fredette finished with 37 points the eighth time that year he d scored over 30 23 BYU s advanced to play Kansas State who had little trouble with the North Texas Mean Green winning 82 62 24 Five years after Vermont upset Syracuse the two teams met again in the Big Dance this time in Buffalo New York Unlike the 2005 game however Syracuse was able to shut down the Catamounts winning 79 56 Five players scored in double digits for the Orange 25 They advanced to play Gonzaga The Bulldogs had an 18 point led against Florida State but the Seminoles cut it to five with 2 21 remaining The Zags survived FSU s comeback however by making 8 of 10 free throws down the stretch to seal a 67 60 win 26 The last two slots in the West went to Pittsburgh and Xavier It was a close game between Pittsburgh and Oakland in Milwaukee until Grizzlies forward Derick Nelson received an elbow from Gary McGhee of the Panthers opening a cut over his left eye that began spurting blood Immediately after Nelson s departure Pitt went on a 19 2 run The Panthers held Oakland to 33 percent in their 89 66 victory 27 As for Xavier they beat Minnesota 65 54 Jordan Crawford the Xavier player who made national headlines the previous summer when he dunked on LeBron James during a training camp held by the Cleveland Cavaliers superstar 28 scored 28 points for the Musketeers 17 of those came in the second half 29 Second round Edit Murray State had another chance at an upset against Butler but a 3 point play by Bulldog Ronald Nored dashed those hopes along with Gordon Hayward deflecting a Racers pass Butler won 54 52 30 The Bulldogs next opponent top seeded Syracuse rolled over Gonzaga 87 65 with Wes Johnson scoring a career best 31 points and pulling 14 rebounds 31 2 seed Kansas State fell behind to BYU early trailing 10 0 to start the game But the Wildcats would pull ahead with 4 21 to go in the first half and never relinquished the lead after that advancing to the next round with an 84 72 win K State s Jacob Pullen had a career high 34 points 32 And third seeded Pitt was eliminated by Xavier 71 68 Jordan Crawford had 27 points for the Musketeers 33 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen Edit CBSMarch 257 07 pmRecap 5 Butler Bulldogs 63 1 Syracuse Orange 59Scoring by half 35 25 28 34Pts G Hayward 17Rebs M Howard 7Asts S Mack 5 Pts W Johnson 17Rebs R Jackson W Johnson 9Asts S Jardine 5EnergySolutions ArenaAttendance 17 254Referees Mark Whitehead Randall McCall Antinio Petty CBSMarch 259 37 pmRecap 6 Xavier Musketeers 96 2 Kansas State Wildcats 101 2OT Scoring by half 32 31 40 41 Overtime 15 15 9 14Pts J Crawford 32Rebs J Love 15Asts T Holloway 6 Pts J Pullen 28Rebs C Kelly 8Asts D Clemente 5EnergySolutions ArenaAttendance 17 254Referees Mike Reed Karl Hess Tony Greene Tu Holloway In what Gregg Doyel of CBSSports com called one of the best games in the history of the Sweet 16 Kansas State downed Xavier 101 96 in double overtime in Salt Lake City 34 The Musketeers Terrell Holloway made three free throws with 5 seconds remaining in regulation to pull Xavier even with the Wildcats Down 3 again with the first overtime winding down Jordan Crawford nailed a 35 foot shot to extend the game further Jacob Pullen then hit a pair of threes in the second overtime to push K State over the top 35 Syracuse became the second number one seed to fall as Butler claimed its first ever trip to the Elite Eight The 63 59 win brought the Bulldogs within one win of playing the Final Four in their home city Trailing by four with 5 23 left Butler held the Orange scoreless for nearly five minutes while scoring 11 points of their own including a 3 point shot by Willie Veasley that bounced high off the rim before hitting the backboard and eventually falling through the net The win marked Butler s 23rd in a row 36 Regional final Elite Eight Edit CBSMarch 274 30 pmRecap 5 Butler Bulldogs 63 2 Kansas State Wildcats 56Scoring by half 27 20 36 36Pts G Hayward 22Rebs G Hayward S Mack 8Asts R Nored 5 Pts D Clemente 18Rebs D Sutton 7Asts C Kelly M Irving 2EnergySolutions ArenaAttendance 17 587Referees Verne Harris Dick Cartmell Jim Burr The West All Regional team was made of regional MVP Gordon Hayward and Shelvin Mack of Butler Denis Clemente and Jacob Pullen of Kansas State and Jordan Crawford of Xavier 37 East Region Edit First round Edit In New Orleans Ishmael Smith scored a 17 foot jumper with 1 3 seconds left in overtime as Wake Forest defeated Texas 81 80 The Longhorns who had been ranked number one as recently as January but fell to an 8 seed in the tournament twice trailed by double digits before rallying then held an eight point lead before falling 38 Wake Forest advanced to face top seeded Kentucky who breezed past East Tennessee State 100 71 39 A basket by Quincy Pondexter with 1 7 seconds remaining helped the Washington Huskies past Marquette 80 78 in San Jose Washington had trailed by 15 with over 13 minutes to go in the second half 40 The Huskies advanced to face New Mexico who beat the Montana Grizzlies 62 57 Roman Martinez scored 19 points for the Lobos while Darington Hobson had 11 points 11 rebounds and six assists despite playing with a sprained left wrist 41 Ivy League champion Cornell joined the parade of double digit seeds advancing to the second round with a dominating performance over Temple 78 65 in Jacksonville Florida Louis Dale Ryan Wittman and Jeff Foote all seniors for the Big Red scored 21 20 and 16 points respectively and Cornell shot 56 percent from the field overall making 8 of their first 10 shots and shooting 68 percent in the first half It was the first tournament win in Big Red history 42 The Wisconsin Badgers who Cornell drew next managed to avoid getting upset itself beating Wofford in a low scoring affair 53 49 A pair of free throws from Jon Leuer with 4 2 seconds on the clock sealed the win for Badgers Leuer had 20 points on the day 43 One year after reaching the Elite Eight 10th seeded Missouri knocked off No 7 Clemson 86 78 in Buffalo The Missouri Tigers defense forced 20 turnovers and stole the ball 15 times in the win while Kim English and Keith Ramsey had 20 points each offensively 44 Mizzou advanced to play West Virginia who started its opening round game trailing Morgan State 12 3 But the 2 seed hit 8 of its next 11 shots to take the lead for good en route to a 77 50 win 45 Second round Edit Washington looked nothing like the No 11 seed in the East dismantling third seeded New Mexico 82 64 With 18 points from Quincy Pondexter and 15 from Isaiah Thomas and Matthew Bryan Amaning each the Huskies played their uptempo style to a 12 point lead at halftime that grew to 23 midway through the second half Washington made the Sweet 16 for the third time since 2005 46 West Virginia reached the Sweet 16 after beating Missouri 68 59 Da Sean Butler had 28 points for the Mountaineers while the Tigers were plagued by poor shooting from the field and at the line 47 It was another blowout for the Kentucky Wildcats as they beat Wake Forest 90 60 Four players scored in double figures for UK as they built an early cushion then padded it to 31 points by the second half 48 The Wildcats became the next hurdle in Cornell s Cinderella season which continued with an 87 69 pasting of No 4 Wisconsin Thanks to 26 points from Louis Dale another 24 from Ryan Wittman and a 61 percent shooting effort overall the highest percentage ever allowed by the Badgers in Bo Ryan s nine year tenure in Madison 49 the Big Red became the first team from the Ivy League to reach the round of 16 in more than 30 years 50 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen Edit CBSMarch 257 27 pmRecap 11 Washington Huskies 56 2 West Virginia Mountaineers 69Scoring by half 29 27 27 42Pts J Holiday 14Rebs M Bryan Amaning J Holiday 8Asts I Thomas 4 Pts K Jones 18Rebs K Jones 8Asts D Ebanks 5Carrier DomeAttendance 22 271Referees Tom Eades Mike Eades Brian Dorsey CBSMarch 2510 06 pmRecap 12 Cornell Big Red 45 1 Kentucky Wildcats 62Scoring by half 16 32 29 30Pts L Dale 17Rebs J Foote 6Asts 3 players with 2 Pts D Cousins 16Rebs P Patterson 12Asts J Wall 8Carrier DomeAttendance 22 271Referees Mike Sanzere James Breeding John Higgins The clock struck midnight for 12 seed Cornell and 11 seed Washington Kentucky put an end to the Big Red s Cinderella run with a 62 45 win in Syracuse New York The game started promising for Cornell as they took a 10 2 lead to the delight of the partisan Big Red crowd But a talented Wildcats squad spoiled the party after that with 16 points from DeMarcus Cousins 12 rebounds from Patrick Patterson and 8 assists from John Wall 51 West Virginia s 69 56 defeat of the Huskies set up the only 1 vs 2 regional final in the tournament The Mountaineers Da Sean Butler led all scorers with 18 points as West Virginia recorded its 30th win the most in school history 52 Regional final Elite Eight Edit CBSMarch 277 05 pmRecap 2 West Virginia Mountaineers 73 1 Kentucky Wildcats 66Scoring by half 28 26 45 40Pts D Butler 18Rebs K Jones 8Asts J Flowers W Smith 4 Pts J Wall 19Rebs P Patterson 13Asts J Wall 5Carrier DomeAttendance 22 497Referees Jamie Luckie Ted Valentine Curtis Shaw South Region Edit First round Edit Second seeded Villanova survived a scare in Providence needing overtime to beat Robert Morris 73 70 Scottie Reynolds was kept from the starting lineup for undisclosed reasons Coach Jay Wright said he wanted to make a teaching point and even though he scored 20 points he only made 2 of 15 shots from the field Mezie Nwigwe had a chance to send the game to a second overtime for the Colonials but missed a 3 pointer as time ran out 53 Villanova plays Saint Mary s of California in the second round The Gaels beat Richmond 80 71 advancing for the first time in over 50 years 54 Contributing to the Big East Conference s woes on day one of the tournament was Notre Dame s 51 50 loss to Old Dominion in New Orleans The Fighting Irish opened the second half with a 30 22 lead before the Monarchs went on a 9 0 run to take the lead The game remained close until the end when Notre Dame s Carleton Scott attempted a 3 point basket that ended up rattling around the rim before falling out A putback from Luke Harangody at the buzzer was not enough for the Irish 55 Old Dominion advanced to face Baylor in the round of 32 In a close game with Sam Houston State the Bears used an 8 0 run in the final minutes to take the 68 59 victory 56 Arkansas Pine Bluff won the play in game on March 16 2010 by beating Winthrop 61 44 But they proved to be no match for the No 1 seed Duke Blue Devils who blew the Golden Lions out 73 44 in Jacksonville Kyle Singler had 22 points and 10 rebounds for Duke who led 39 20 at the break 57 Duke advanced to face California in the second round The Golden Bears rode a rollercoaster with Louisville leading the Cardinals by 18 before having their lead cut to 6 then pulling back out to a 14 point advantage before Louisville brought it back to within 4 But Cal ended the game with a 15 4 run to win 77 62 58 Finally in Spokane the fourth seeded Purdue Boilermakers had a go of it with upset specialist Siena trailing the Saints 32 29 at halftime before racing to a 14 point lead to open the second half Siena would pull within 3 with just over a minute remaining but Purdue held on for the 72 64 win spoiling the predictions of some fans and even President Barack Obama that Siena would make the Boilers their latest victim 59 They advanced to play Texas A amp M who defeated Utah State 69 53 behind 19 points from freshman Khris Middleton 60 Second round Edit After barely beating Robert Morris in the first round Villanova could not withstand the Gael storm from St Mary s Omar Samhan scored 32 points and grabbed seven rebounds as the No 10 seed took down Nova 75 68 Afterwards Samhan called the game his best win ever Wildcat Scottie Reynolds remained in his funk to end the season netting just 8 points 61 Trailing by as many as 14 in the first half and 38 28 at halftime Old Dominion went on a 9 0 run against Baylor at the start of the second half then took the lead 49 47 on free throws from Kent Bazemore But Baylor would close the door on the upset bid with an 8 1 run to end the game winning 76 68 The Bears LaceDarius Dunn led all scorers with 26 points while 7 foot center Josh Lomers had eight rebounds to go with his career high 14 points 62 Chris Kramer s layup with 4 2 seconds left in overtime gave Purdue a 63 61 win over Texas A amp M Kramer finished with 17 points as the Boilermakers came back from a 7 point deficit at halftime 63 They advanced to face Duke in the Sweet 16 The Blue Devils beat California 68 53 behind 20 points from Nolan Smith 17 points from Kyle Singler and 14 points and 13 rebounds from Brian Zoubek This was the 19th time under head coach Mike Krzyzewski Duke reached the round of 16 64 Regional semifinals Sweet Sixteen Edit CBSMarch 267 27 pmRecap 10 Saint Mary s Gaels 49 3 Baylor Bears 72Scoring by half 17 46 32 26Pts B Allen 16Rebs O Samhan 9Asts M Dellavedova 7 Pts L Dunn 23Rebs E Udoh 11Asts 3 players with 3Reliant StadiumAttendance 45 505Referees Leslie Jones Mike Wood Roger Ayers CBSMarch 269 53 pmRecap 4 Purdue Boilermakers 57 1 Duke Blue Devils 70Scoring by half 23 24 34 46Pts J Johnson 23Rebs J Johnson 5Asts L Jackson K Grant 4 Pts K Singler 24Rebs B Zoubek 14Asts J Scheyer N Smith 4Reliant StadiumAttendance 45 505Referees Doug Shows Ed Corbett Joe Lindsay Regional final Elite Eight Edit CBSMarch 285 05 pm ETRecap 3 Baylor Bears 71 1 Duke Blue Devils 78Scoring by half 35 32 36 46Pts L Dunn 22Rebs E Udoh 10Asts E Udoh 6 Pts N Smith 29Rebs B Zoubek L Thomas 9Asts K Singler J Scheyer 4Reliant StadiumAttendance 47 492Referees Scott Thornley Mike Stuart Doug Sirmons Duke defeated Baylor 78 71 in front of a practically home crowd for Baylor in Houston Texas Nolan Smith was named game MVP with 29 points while Lance Thomas also had a career high 8 offensive rebounds Final four Edit See also 2009 10 Duke Blue Devils men s basketball team and 2009 10 Butler Bulldogs men s basketball team Final Four CBSApril 36 07 pmRecap W5 Butler Bulldogs 52 M5 Michigan State Spartans 50Scoring by half 28 28 24 22Pts G Hayward 19Rebs G Hayward 9Asts R Nored and S Vanzant 2 Pts D Summers 14Rebs D Summers 10Asts K Lucious 4Lucas Oil StadiumAttendance 71 298Referees Leslie Jones Jamie Luckie Mike Stuart CBSApril 39 14 pmRecap E2 West Virginia Mountaineers 57 S1 Duke Blue Devils 78Scoring by half 31 39 26 39Pts W Smith 12Rebs W Smith K Jones 5Asts W Smith 4 Pts J Scheyer 23Rebs B Zoubek 10Asts J Scheyer N Smith 6Lucas Oil StadiumAttendance 71 298Referees Randall McCall Curtis Shaw John Higgins On April 3 2010 Butler Bulldogs playing in their hometown faced off against the Michigan State Spartans In a tough physical game the Bulldogs despite going more than 11 minutes without a field goal were able to hang on after forcing Michigan State into 16 turnovers and holding the Spartans to zero fast break points The Bulldogs also out rebounded Michigan State on the offensive glass 11 to 8 With the victory Butler became the fourth team in NCAA tournament history to hold its first five opponents under 60 points On April 3 2010 Duke the 1 seed from the South and West Virginia Mountaineers the 2 seed from the East squared off in the second of the Final Four games Duke showed its full potential in the game hitting 52 7 percent of its shots and 52 percent of its three pointers while shredding West Virginia s 1 3 1 zone trap Duke led 39 31 at the half and maintained its red hot shooting in the second half The highlight of the game came when Nolan Smith missed a contested fast break layup but Kyle Singler and Miles Plumlee combined to slam home the rebound to give Duke a 14 point lead Plumlee was credited with the dunk Kyle Singler scored 21 points for the Blue Devils and Nolan Smith added 19 points and six assists With the victory Duke advanced to its 10th NCAA Championship game National championship Edit Main article 2010 NCAA Men s Division I Basketball Championship Game CBSApril 59 21 pmBox score W5 Butler Bulldogs 59 S1 Duke Blue Devils 61Scoring by half 32 33 27 28Pts G Hayward S Mack 12Rebs G Hayward 8Asts W Veasley 3 Pts K Singler 19Rebs B Zoubek 10Asts J Scheyer 5Lucas Oil StadiumAttendance 70 930Referees John Cahill Tom Eades Ted Valentine Running score of the championship game On April 5 2010 Butler and Duke faced off in what The New York Times called the most eagerly awaited championship game in years 65 Butler became the first team to play in the championship game in its home city since UCLA in 1968 Duke jumped out to a quick 6 1 lead to start the game but Butler rallied back taking a 12 11 lead at the 12 28 mark of the first half At the under eight minute TV timeout Butler held a 20 18 lead After the timeout Duke went on an 8 0 run to take a 26 20 lead Butler coach Brad Stevens then called a timeout With starters Matt Howard and Ronald Nored on the bench in foul trouble backup center Avery Jukes came up big for Butler Jukes hit two three pointers and a made tip in en route to 10 first half points tying his single game season high At half time Duke s lead stood at 33 32 66 The second half was played very closely with neither team taking a lead larger than two points until a Brian Zoubek layup put Duke up 47 43 with 12 27 remaining Butler stayed close keeping within 5 points the rest of the way With 3 16 to play Duke took a 60 55 lead on two made free throws by Nolan Smith Butler missed its next shot but forced a missed shot and turned Duke over after an offensive rebound Matt Howard made a layup for Butler to make it a 60 57 game with 1 44 remaining Smith missed a layup for Duke and Howard got another layup after collecting an offensive rebound on a missed three pointer by Shelvin Mack Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski then called a time out Kyle Singler missed an open jump shot with 36 seconds remaining giving Butler a chance to take the lead Butler was unable to initiate their offense and Stevens called a timeout to set up a play They were then forced to call their last timeout when they were unable to get the ball in bounds Gordon Hayward then missed a short fade away jumper Zoubek came down with the rebound forcing Butler to foul with 3 6 seconds remaining Zoubek made the first foul shot and then intentionally missed the second knowing Butler had no timeouts remaining Hayward was forced to throw up a desperation shot from half court The ball bounced off the backboard and then the rim 66 According to analysis by ESPN Hayward s aim was off by three inches or less than one degree on the x axis 67 Because a made three point shot would have resulted in a loss for Duke some pundits criticized Krzyzewski for his decision to have Zoubek miss the second free throw intentionally citation needed Other pundits however ran various analyses that indicated that it was statistically the correct call 68 The 61 59 victory earned Krzyzewski his fourth national championship crown his second in ten years 66 The game was the most watched finale in more than 10 years pulling in average of 23 9 million viewers in the United States 69 Kyle Singler earned Most Outstanding Player honors with 19 points and eight rebounds Record by conference Edit Lucas Oil Stadium during Final Four weekend Conference of Bids Record Win R32 S16 E8 F4 CGBig East 8 8 8 500 4 2 1 1 Big 12 7 9 7 563 5 2 2 ACC 6 9 5 643 4 1 1 1 1Big Ten 5 9 5 643 4 3 1 1 Mountain West 4 2 4 333 2 SEC 4 6 4 600 2 2 2 Atlantic 10 3 2 3 400 1 1 C USA 2 0 2 000 Pac 10 2 3 2 600 2 1 WAC 2 0 2 000 WCC 2 3 2 600 2 1 Colonial 1 1 1 500 1 Horizon 1 5 1 833 1 1 1 1 1Ivy 1 2 1 667 1 1 MAC 1 1 1 500 1 MVC 1 2 1 667 1 1 Ohio Valley 1 1 1 500 1 SWAC 1 1 1 500 One and done teams 13 0 13 000 The America East Atlantic Sun Big Sky Big South Big West MAAC MEAC Northeast Patriot Southern Southland Summit and Sun Belt conferences went 0 1 Arkansas Pine Bluff won the Opening Round game The columns R32 S16 E8 F4 and CG respectively stand for the Round of 32 Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four and championship Game The number in each field represents an appearance in that round by a team from that conference Media EditTelevision Edit For the 29th consecutive year CBS Sports again televised a majority of the event with the exception of the opening round game which was televised by ESPN and first round games played in the late afternoon which CBS College Sports Network aired so CBS affiliates could break for local and network news 70 The championship game scored a Nielsen rating of 16 0 Studio Greg Gumbel Greg Anthony and Seth Davis Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg and Tracy Wolfson as sideline reporter for the Final Four and NCAA Championship game First and Second Round at Jacksonville Florida South Regional at Houston Texas Final Four at Indianapolis Indiana Dick Enberg and Jay Bilas First and Second Round at New Orleans Louisiana East Regional at Syracuse New York Verne Lundquist and Bill Raftery First and Second Round at Providence Rhode Island Midwest Regional at St Louis Missouri Gus Johnson and Len Elmore First and Second Round at Buffalo New York West Regional at Salt Lake City Utah championship game on international broadcast Kevin Harlan and Dan Bonner First and Second Round at Oklahoma City Oklahoma Ian Eagle and Jim Spanarkel First and Second Round at Milwaukee Wisconsin Tim Brando and Mike Gminski First and Second Round at Spokane Washington Spero Dedes and Bob Wenzel First and Second Round at San Jose CaliforniaIn addition to the main CBS affiliates many stations opened digital subchannels for additional coverage Also on these four occasions CBS opened the coverage to additional channels to settle conflicts On March 26 during the regional semifinals South Bend Indiana affiliate WSBT TV aired the Purdue Duke telecast while its digital subchannel independent station SBT2 carried Michigan State vs Northern Iowa Part of the South Bend market including the city of Benton Harbor is located within the state of Michigan On March 25 also within the Sweet 16 the game between Xavier and Kansas State was seen on WKRC TV and the game between Kentucky and Cornell was seen on WKRC DT2 also known as The CW Cincinnati at the same time Xavier is located in the city of Cincinnati while much of the Cincinnati DMA is located within the state of Kentucky The fan and alumni bases for the University of Kentucky are substantial in the Cincinnati area and the Wildcats play occasional home games at U S Bank Arena On March 19 the first round game between Clemson and Missouri was shown on WSPA TV while the game between Wofford and Wisconsin was on WYCW at the same time Both Clemson and Wofford are located in the upstate area of South Carolina On March 18 the first round game between North Texas and Kansas State was seen on KTVT while at the same time Baylor vs Sam Houston State was shown on KTXA UNT is in the Dallas Fort Worth media market Denton Texas Waco Texas where Baylor is located is in a separate DMA However some DFW stations are available via cable TV in Waco and it is believed that more alumni of BU live in the Metroplex than anywhere else citation needed For similar reasons KTVT agreed to air the late afternoon Texas A amp M vs Utah State game on 3 19 after earlier planning not to do so citation needed WSPA and WYCW are in a duopoly owned by Media General and KTVT and KTXA are in a duopoly owned by CBS Corporation Radio Edit Westwood One again broadcast the tournament Opening round game Edit Dave Ryan and Dave Odom at Dayton OhioFirst and second rounds Edit Bob Papa and John Thompson First and Second Rounds at Providence Rhode Island Kevin Kugler and Will Perdue First and Second Rounds at New Orleans Louisiana Brad Sham and Reid Gettys First and Second Rounds at Oklahoma City Oklahoma Ted Robinson and Bill Frieder First and Second Rounds at San Jose California Mark Champion and Kyle Macy First and Second Rounds at Buffalo New York Gary Cohen and Kevin Grevey First and Second Rounds at Jacksonville Florida Wayne Larrivee and Pete Gillen First and Second Rounds at Milwaukee Wisconsin Dave Sims and P J Carlesimo First and Second Rounds at Spokane WashingtonRegionals Edit Ian Eagle and P J Carlesimo East Regional at Syracuse New York Kevin Harlan and John Thompson Midwest Regional at St Louis Missouri Kevin Kugler and Pete Gillen South Regional at Houston Texas Ted Robinson and Bill Frieder West Regional at Salt Lake City UtahFinal four Edit Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery at Indianapolis IndianaJohn Tautges again served as host of the broadcasts Local radio Edit Date Teams Flagship station Play by play announcer Color analyst s 2010 Duke WDNC Bob Harris John RothInternational broadcasters Edit Broadcasters used the CBS feed unless stated otherwise Philippines Live delayed on Basketball TV Australia Live delayed on ONE HD Canada SUN TV in Toronto simulcast CBS broadcasts The Score Television Network on cable combined CBS broadcasts with its own studio team and used the international feed for the championship game See also Edit2010 NCAA Division II men s basketball tournament 2010 NCAA Division III men s basketball tournament 2010 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament 2010 NCAA Division II women s basketball tournament 2010 NCAA Division III women s basketball tournament 2010 National Invitation Tournament 2010 Women s National Invitation Tournament 2010 NAIA Division I men s basketball tournament 2010 NAIA Division II men s basketball tournament 2010 NAIA Division I women s basketball tournament 2010 NAIA Division II women s basketball tournament 2010 College Basketball Invitational 2010 CollegeInsider com Postseason Tournament 2009 10 NCAA Division I men s basketball seasonReferences Edit NCAA News Smith to chair Division I Men s Basketball Committee permanent dead link June 30 2009 Campbell Steve March 13 2010 Cougars say Let s dance Houston Chronicle Archived from the original on 17 March 2010 Retrieved April 9 2010 2010 NCAA Division I Men s Basketball Championship 72nd Annual Media Information NCAA March 9 2010 NCAA com The Official Web Site of the NCAA Archived from the original on April 8 2010 Retrieved May 31 2009 Bobcats too hot for third seeded Hoyas to handle CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Georgetown vs Ohio CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Sixth seed Vols hold off San Diego State to play Ohio CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Farokhmanesh s clutch 3 pointer lifts ninth seed N Iowa past UNLV CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 After slow start top overall seed Kansas pulls away from Lehigh CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Tenth seeded Georgia Tech upsets No 7 Oklahoma State CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 No 2 OSU overcomes Turner s off night routs No 15 Santa Barbara CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 No 20 Maryland 89 Houston 77 CBS Sports Associated Press March 19 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Lucas career best output helps Spartans edge New Mexico State CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Forde Pat March 23 2010 Tourney s early winners and losers ESPN com Archived from the original on 27 March 2010 Retrieved March 24 2010 Consider this argument for why it should go down as the greatest early round shot in NCAA tournament history He Farokhmanesh chose greatness and the potential censure that would have come with a miss He made a completely voluntary decision to tee up a 3 with 30 seconds on the shot clock and 35 seconds in the game and his team holding a one point lead While on a personal seven shot miss streak With nobody there to rebound offensively And the biggest tourney upset in years hanging in the balance Panthers pounce blocking top seeded Jayhawks from Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Michigan State overcomes Lucas injury blown lead to edge Terps CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 Lucas sidelined for 4 6 months ESPN com March 23 2010 Retrieved March 24 2010 Volunteers bounce Bobcats advance to Sweet 16 again CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Turner nearly records triple double as Ohio State advances to Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 Perfectly flawed MSU finds its way back ESPN Retrieved March 29 2010 Thomas buzzer beater sends No 13 seed Murray State past Vandy CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Bulldogs rally past Miners stretch win streak to 21 CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Fredette scores 37 as Cougars survive Gators in double OT CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 K State rides defense to blowout win over No 15 North Texas CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Johnson leads charge as Syracuse cruises past Vermont CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Zags stave off Seminoles second half rally CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Slow start doesn t stop Pitt from eliminating Oakland CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Chase Chris July 8 2009 LeBron gets dunked on by Xavier player confiscates all video Rivals com Retrieved March 20 2010 Crawford surges in second half as Musketeers stop Gophers CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Late heroics help Butler hold off upset minded Murray State CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Johnson leads barrage as No 1 seed Syracuse wallops Gonzaga CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 Career night from Pullen lifts Kansas State into Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Crawford scores 27 to carry Xavier to Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 Doyel Gregg March 26 2010 Kansas State Xavier put on show for the ages CBS Sports Retrieved March 26 2010 K State survives Crawford Xavier in double OT to make Elite Eight CBS Sports March 26 2010 Retrieved March 26 2010 Butler downs No 1 seed Syracuse advances to school s first Elite Eight CBS Sports March 26 2010 Retrieved March 26 2010 Facer Dirk Butler s Gordon Hayward highlights regional Deseret News March 27 2010 Smith buries jumper to push Wake Forest past Texas in OT CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Bledsoe top seed Kentucky breeze through East Tennessee State CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Pondexter s late basket completes Washington s comeback CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Martinez Gary s late FTs help New Mexico hold off 14 seed Montana CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Cornell tops Temple to earn first tourney victory end Ivy skid CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Leuer Hughes help Wisconsin fight past Wofford into Round 2 CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Mizzou wins battle of Tigers keeps Clemson coach winless in tourney CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Mountaineers recover from slow start pounce on Morgan State CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 No 11 Huskies blow out No 3 Lobos reach Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 West Virginia strolls into Sweet 16 past cold shooting Mizzou CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 Kentucky shoves aside Wake Forest to hit Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Schlabach Mark March 21 2010 Recapping an entertaining weekend ESPN com Archived from the original on 3 April 2010 Retrieved March 25 2010 Dale Wittman power Cornell s upset over No 4 seed Wisconsin CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 No 1 Kentucky ends Cornell s run earns Elite Eight berth CBS Sports March 26 2010 Retrieved March 26 2010 Mountaineers bounce Huskies for trip to East Regional finals CBS Sports March 25 2010 Retrieved March 26 2010 Villanova survives No 15 seed Robert Morris upset bid in OT CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 St Mary s handles Richmond for first NCAA victory since 59 CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Monarchs reign over Fighting Irish in first round upset CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 Bears stop Bearkats for first NCAA tourney victory since 1950 CBS Sports March 18 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 No 1 seed Duke blows out Arkansas Pine Bluff CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 California pulls away from ninth seeded Louisville CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 No 4 seed Purdue turns back Siena upset bid with late stand CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Freshman Middleton helps Texas A amp M notch another first round win CBS Sports March 19 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 St Mary s takes advantage of slumping Nova reaches Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 Dunn Baylor down Old Dominion advance to Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 20 2010 Retrieved March 20 2010 No 4 Boilermakers bounce No 5 Aggies in OT head to Sweet 16 CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 Smith Duke move on after dispatching California CBS Sports March 21 2010 Retrieved March 21 2010 William C Rhoden April 4 2010 Once the Underdog Duke Is Now the Villain The New York Times Archived from the original on 9 April 2010 Retrieved April 4 2010 a b c Duke downs Butler to clinch fourth national title CBSSports com wire reports April 5 2010 Retrieved April 6 2010 Video Sport Science on Butler s last shot ESPN April 7 2010 Archived from the original on 9 April 2010 Retrieved April 7 2010 Chuck Allen April 12 2010 Duke vs Butler The Math Behind the Zoubek Free Throw Decision Bleacher Report Retrieved October 25 2010 Josef Adalian April 6 2010 Ratings NCAA Scores One Shining Moment for CBS The Wrap Archived from the original on 9 April 2010 Retrieved April 6 2010 2010 NCAA Tournament CBS TV Schedule Archived from the original on 22 February 2010 Retrieved 9 March 2010 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2010 NCAA Division I men 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1148513253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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