fbpx
Wikipedia

2013 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

The 2013 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 68 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament that determined the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I men's basketball national champion for the 2012-13 season. The 75th annual edition of the tournament (dating to 1939) began on March 19, 2013, and concluded with the championship game on April 8, at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta.

2013 NCAA Division I
men's basketball tournament
Season2012–13
Teams68
Finals siteGeorgia Dome
Atlanta, Georgia
ChampionsLouisville Cardinals (Vacated)
(3rd title, 3rd title game, 10th Final Four)
Runner-upMichigan Wolverines (6th title game,
7th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachRick Pitino* [a] (2nd title)
MOPLuke Hancock (Louisville)

The Final Four consisted of Louisville, Wichita State (second appearance), Syracuse (first appearance since their 2003 national championship), and Michigan, returning for the first time since the Fab Five's second appearance in 1993 (later vacated). By winning the West Region, Wichita State became the first #9 seed and first Missouri Valley Conference (MVC) team to reach the Final Four since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985. The last #9 seed to reach the Final Four was Penn, and the last MVC team to do so was Indiana State, both in 1979. Louisville defeated Michigan in the championship game by a final score of 82–76, winning their first national title since 1986. On February 20, 2018, the NCAA vacated Louisville's entire tournament run, including its national title, due to a 2015 sex scandal.[4]

The tournament featured several notable upsets. For the first time since 1991, at least one team seeded #9 through #15 won at least once in the tournament. The most notable was Florida Gulf Coast University of the Atlantic Sun Conference, who made their tournament debut in only their second year of Division I eligibility. They upset Georgetown and San Diego State in their first two games, becoming the first #15 seed to advance to the regional semifinals (where they were defeated by Florida). For the first time since 2010, a #14 seed won as Harvard defeated New Mexico in the West Region. The same region saw #13 La Salle, who won in the opening round, defeat #4 Kansas State and #12 Mississippi defeat #5 Wisconsin. In addition to that, the region's top seed, Gonzaga, was defeated in the round of 32 by eventual region winner Wichita State, who defeated La Salle in the Sweet Sixteen.

Two other teams also earned their first ever NCAA Tournament victory: Ivy League champion Harvard and Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) champion North Carolina A&T. Another school, Liberty, won the Big South tournament to become the second 20-loss team to make the field, after Coppin State did that in 2008.

Tournament procedure edit

A total of 68 teams entered the 2013 tournament. A total of 32 automatic bids are awarded to each program that won a conference tournament. The remaining 36 bids are issued "at-large", with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The Selection Committee also seeds the entire field from 1 to 68.

Eight teams—the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams—played in the First Four (the successor to what had been popularly known as "play-in games" through the 2010 tournament). The winners of these games advanced to the main tournament bracket.

Schedule and venues edit

 
Auburn Hills
Lexington
Salt Lake City
San Jose
Austin
Dayton
Kansas City
Philadelphia
class=notpageimage|
2013 first and second rounds (green)
 
Washington, D.C.
Los Angeles
Indianapolis
Arlington
Atlanta
class=notpageimage|
2013 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2013 tournament:[5][6][7]

First Four

First and Second rounds

Regional semifinals and Finals

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Atlanta hosted the Final Four for the sixth time, having previously hosted in 2007. As of 2024, this is the most recent Final Four to be held in Atlanta (The 2020 edition, which was to be held in Atlanta, was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic).

Qualified teams edit

Automatic qualifiers edit

The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2013 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
America East Albany 3rd 2007
Atlantic 10 Saint Louis 8th 2012
ACC Miami 6th 2008
Atlantic Sun Florida Gulf Coast 1st Never
Big 12 Kansas 42nd 2012
Big East Louisville 39th[a] 2012
Big Sky Montana 10th 2012
Big South Liberty 3rd 2004
Big Ten Ohio State 29th 2012
Big West Pacific 9th 2006
Colonial James Madison 5th 1994
C-USA Memphis 25th 2012
Horizon Valparaiso 8th 2004
Ivy League Harvard 3rd 2012
MAAC Iona 10th 2012
MAC Akron 4th 2011
MEAC North Carolina A&T 10th 1995
Missouri Valley Creighton 18th 2012
Mountain West New Mexico 14th 2012
Northeast Long Island 6th 2012
Ohio Valley Belmont 6th 2012
Pac-12 Oregon 11th 2008
Patriot Bucknell 6th 2011
SEC Ole Miss 7th 2002
Southern Davidson 12th 2012
Southland Northwestern State 3rd 2006
SWAC Southern 8th 2006
Summit South Dakota State 2nd 2012
Sun Belt Western Kentucky 23rd 2012
West Coast Gonzaga 16th 2012
WAC New Mexico State 20th 2012

Tournament seeds edit

South Regional – Arlington, Texas
Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
#1 Kansas Big 12 29–5 Bill Self Automatic 2
#2 Georgetown Big East 25–6 John Thompson III At-large 7
#3 Florida SEC 26–7 Billy Donovan At-large 10
#4 Michigan Big Ten 26–7 John Beilein At-large 13
#5 VCU Atlantic 10 26–8 Shaka Smart At-large 20
#6 UCLA Pac-12 25–9 Ben Howland At-large 24
#7 San Diego State Mountain West 22–10 Steve Fisher At-large 26
#8 North Carolina ACC 24–10 Roy Williams At-large 29
#9 Villanova Big East 20–13 Jay Wright At-large 38
#10 Oklahoma Big 12 20–11 Lon Krueger At-large 40
#11 Minnesota Big Ten 20–12 Tubby Smith At-large 41
#12 Akron MAC 26–6 Keith Dambrot Automatic 51
#13 South Dakota State Summit 25–9 Scott Nagy Automatic 53
#14 Northwestern State Southland 23–8 Mike McConathy Automatic 57
#15 Florida Gulf Coast Atlantic Sun 24–10 Andy Enfield Automatic 59
#16 Western Kentucky Sun Belt 20–15 Ray Harper Automatic 63
West Regional – Los Angeles, California
Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
#1 Gonzaga West Coast 31–2 Mark Few Automatic 4
#2 Ohio State Big Ten 26–7 Thad Matta Automatic 8
#3 New Mexico Mountain West 29–5 Steve Alford Automatic 9
#4 Kansas State Big 12 27–7 Bruce Weber At-large 14
#5 Wisconsin Big Ten 23–11 Bo Ryan At-large 19
#6 Arizona Pac-12 25–7 Sean Miller At-large 21
#7 Notre Dame Big East 25–9 Mike Brey At-large 27
#8 Pittsburgh Big East 24–8 Jamie Dixon At-large 31
#9 Wichita State Missouri Valley 26–8 Gregg Marshall At-large 35
#10 Iowa State Big 12 22–11 Fred Hoiberg At-large 39
#11 Belmont Ohio Valley 26–6 Rick Byrd Automatic 44
#12 Ole Miss SEC 26–8 Andy Kennedy Automatic 47
#13* Boise State Mountain West 21–10 Leon Rice At-large 45
La Salle Atlantic 10 21–9 Dr. John Giannini At-large 49
#14 Harvard Ivy 19–9 Tommy Amaker Automatic 58
#15 Iona MAAC 20–13 Tim Cluess Automatic 61
#16 Southern SWAC 23–9 Roman Banks Automatic 64
East Regional – Washington, D.C.
Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
#1 Indiana Big Ten 27–6 Tom Crean At-large 3
#2 Miami ACC 27–6 Jim Larranaga Automatic 5
#3 Marquette Big East 23–8 Buzz Williams At-large 12
#4 Syracuse Big East 26–9 Jim Boeheim At-large 16
#5 UNLV Mountain West 25–9 Dave Rice At-large 18
#6 Butler Atlantic 10 26–8 Brad Stevens At-large 22
#7 Illinois Big Ten 22–12 John Groce At-large 28
#8 NC State ACC 24–10 Mark Gottfried At-large 32
#9 Temple Atlantic 10 23–9 Fran Dunphy At-large 34
#10 Colorado Pac-12 21–11 Tad Boyle At-large 36
#11 Bucknell Patriot 28–5 Dave Paulsen Automatic 48
#12 California Pac-12 20–11 Mike Montgomery At-large 42
#13 Montana Big Sky 25–7 Wayne Tinkle Automatic 54
#14 Davidson Southern 26–7 Bob McKillop Automatic 55
#15 Pacific Big West 22–12 Bob Thomason Automatic 60
#16* James Madison CAA 20–14 Matt Brady Automatic 66
Long Island Northeast 20–13 Jack Perri Automatic 65
Midwest Regional – Indianapolis, Indiana
Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank
#1 Louisville Big East 29–5 Rick Pitino Automatic 1
#2 Duke ACC 27–5 Mike Krzyzewski At-large 6
#3 Michigan State Big Ten 25–8 Tom Izzo At-large 11
#4 Saint Louis Atlantic 10 27–6 Jim Crews Automatic 15
#5 Oklahoma State Big 12 24–8 Travis Ford At-large 17
#6 Memphis C-USA 30–4 Josh Pastner Automatic 23
#7 Creighton Missouri Valley 27–7 Greg McDermott Automatic 25
#8 Colorado State Mountain West 25–8 Larry Eustachy At-large 30
#9 Missouri SEC 23–10 Frank Haith At-large 33
#10 Cincinnati Big East 22–11 Mick Cronin At-large 37
#11* Middle Tennessee Sun Belt 28–5 Kermit Davis At-large 50
Saint Mary's (CA) West Coast 27–6 Randy Bennett At-large 46
#12 Oregon Pac-12 26–8 Dana Altman Automatic 43
#13 New Mexico State WAC 24–10 Marvin Menzies Automatic 52
#14 Valparaiso Horizon 26–7 Bryce Drew Automatic 56
#15 Albany America East 24–10 Will Brown Automatic 62
#16* Liberty Big South 15–20 Dale Layer Automatic 68
North Carolina A&T MEAC 19–16 Cy Alexander Automatic 67

*See First Four.


Bracket edit

Unless otherwise noted, all times listed are Eastern Daylight Time (UTC−04)

First Four – Dayton, Ohio edit

The First Four games involved eight teams: the four overall lowest-ranked teams, and the four lowest-ranked at-large teams.

March 19 – Midwest Region
   
11 Middle Tennessee 54
11 Saint Mary's 67
March 19 – Midwest Region
   
16 Liberty 72
16 North Carolina A&T 73
March 20 – West Region
   
13 Boise State 71
13 La Salle 80
March 20 – East Region
   
16 James Madison 68
16 Long Island 55

Midwest Regional – Indianapolis, Indiana edit

First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 29
Regional finals
Elite 8
March 31
            
1 Louisville 79
16 North Carolina A&T 48
1 Louisville 82
Lexington – Thu/Sat
8 Colorado State 56
8 Colorado State 84
9 Missouri 72
1 Louisville 77
12 Oregon 69
5 Oklahoma State 55
12 Oregon 68
12 Oregon 74
San Jose – Thu/Sat
4 Saint Louis 57
4 Saint Louis 64
13 New Mexico State 44
1 Louisville 85
2 Duke 63
6 Memphis 54
11 Saint Mary's 52
6 Memphis 48
Auburn Hills – Thu/Sat
3 Michigan State 70
3 Michigan State 65
14 Valparaiso 54
3 Michigan State 61
2 Duke 71
7 Creighton 67
10 Cincinnati 63
7 Creighton 50
Philadelphia – Fri/Sun
2 Duke 66
2 Duke 73
15 Albany 61

Midwest Regional all-tournament team edit

Regional all-tournament team: Seth Curry, Duke; Gorgui Dieng, Louisville; Mason Plumlee, Duke; Peyton Siva, Louisville[8]

Regional most outstanding player: Russ Smith, Louisville[9][a]

West Regional – Los Angeles, California edit

First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 28
Regional finals
Elite 8
March 30
            
1 Gonzaga 64
16 Southern 58
1 Gonzaga 70
Salt Lake City – Thu/Sat
9 Wichita State 76
8 Pittsburgh 55
9 Wichita State 73
9 Wichita State 72
13 La Salle 58
5 Wisconsin 46
12 Ole Miss 57
12 Ole Miss 74
Kansas City – Fri/Sun
13 La Salle 76
4 Kansas State 61
13 La Salle 63
9 Wichita State 70
2 Ohio State 66
6 Arizona 81
11 Belmont 64
6 Arizona 74
Salt Lake City – Thu/Sat
14 Harvard 51
3 New Mexico 62
14 Harvard 68
6 Arizona 70
2 Ohio State 73
7 Notre Dame 58
10 Iowa State 76
10 Iowa State 75
Dayton – Fri/Sun
2 Ohio State 78
2 Ohio State 95
15 Iona 70

West Regional all-tournament team edit

Regional all-tournament team: Carl Hall, Wichita State; Mark Lyons, Arizona; LaQuinton Ross, Ohio State; Deshaun Thomas, Ohio State[10]

Regional most outstanding player: Malcolm Armstead, Wichita State[11]

South Regional – Arlington, Texas edit

First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 29
Regional finals
Elite 8
March 31
            
1 Kansas 64
16 Western Kentucky 57
1 Kansas 70
Kansas City – Fri/Sun
8 North Carolina 58
8 North Carolina 78
9 Villanova 71
1 Kansas 85
4 Michigan 87OT
5 VCU 88
12 Akron 42
5 VCU 53
Auburn Hills – Thu/Sat
4 Michigan 78
4 Michigan 71
13 South Dakota State 56
4 Michigan 79
3 Florida 59
6 UCLA 63
11 Minnesota 83
11 Minnesota 64
Austin – Fri/Sun
3 Florida 78
3 Florida 79
14 Northwestern State 47
3 Florida 62
15 Florida Gulf Coast 50
7 San Diego State 70
10 Oklahoma 55
7 San Diego State 71
Philadelphia – Fri/Sun
15 Florida Gulf Coast 81
2 Georgetown 68
15 Florida Gulf Coast 78

South Regional all-tournament team edit

Regional all-tournament team: Mitch McGary, Michigan; Ben McLemore, Kansas; Mike Rosario, Florida; Nik Stauskas, Michigan[12]

Regional most outstanding player: Trey Burke, Michigan[13]

East Regional – Washington, D.C. edit

First round
Round of 64
March 21–22
Second round
Round of 32
March 23–24
Regional semifinals
Sweet 16
March 28
Regional finals
Elite 8
March 30
            
1 Indiana 83
16 James Madison 62
1 Indiana 58
Dayton – Fri/Sun
9 Temple 52
8 NC State 72
9 Temple 76
1 Indiana 50
4 Syracuse 61
5 UNLV 61
12 California 64
12 California 60
San Jose – Thu/Sat
4 Syracuse 66
4 Syracuse 81
13 Montana 34
4 Syracuse 55
3 Marquette 39
6 Butler 68
11 Bucknell 56
6 Butler 72
Lexington – Thu/Sat
3 Marquette 74
3 Marquette 59
14 Davidson 58
3 Marquette 71
2 Miami (FL) 61
7 Illinois 57
10 Colorado 49
7 Illinois 59
Austin – Fri/Sun
2 Miami (FL) 63
2 Miami (FL) 78
15 Pacific 49

East Regional all-tournament team edit

Regional all-tournament team: Vander Blue, Marquette; C. J. Fair, Syracuse; Davante Gardner, Marquette; James Southerland, Syracuse[14][15]

Regional most outstanding player: Michael Carter-Williams, Syracuse[16]

Final Four – Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia edit

During the Final Four round, the champion of the top overall top seed's region was to play against the champion of the fourth-ranked top seed's region, and the champion of the second overall top seed's region was to play against the champion of the third-ranked top seed's region.[17] Louisville (placed in the Midwest Regional) was selected as the top overall seed, and Gonzaga (in the West Regional) was named as the final top seed.[18] Thus, the Midwest champion played the West Champion in one semifinal game, and the South Champion faced the East Champion in the other semifinal game.

Wichita State surprised the college basketball world by reaching the Final Four from the West region. They lost to Louisville in the first semifinal game, 72–68. Michigan defeated Syracuse 61–56 in the second semifinal.[19]

On February 20, 2018, NCAA took away from Louisville the 2013 winning title and allowed them to pay the fines.

National Semifinals
Final Four
Saturday, April 6
National Championship Game
Monday, April 8
      
MW1 Louisville 72
W9 Wichita State 68
MW1 Louisville 82
S4 Michigan 76
S4 Michigan 61
E4 Syracuse 56

Final Four all-tournament team edit

Final Four all-tournament team: Spike Albrecht, Michigan; Trey Burke, Michigan; Mitch McGary, Michigan; Cleanthony Early, Wichita State; Peyton Siva, Louisville;[a] Luke Hancock, Louisville;[a] Chane Behanan, Louisville;[a]

Final Four most outstanding player: Luke Hancock, Louisville (the first non-starter to earn this title) [20][a]

Game summaries edit

Elite Eight edit

Final Four edit

CBS
April 6
6:09 pm EDT
Recap
W#9 Wichita State Shockers 68, MW#1 Louisville Cardinals 72
Scoring by half: 26–25, 42–47
Pts: C. Early, 24
Rebs: C. Early, 10
Asts: M. Armstead, 7
Pts: R. Smith, 21
Rebs: C. Behanan, 9
Asts: R. Smith, 3
Georgia Dome – Atlanta, GA
Referees: Karl Hess, Terry Wymer, Les Jones
CBS
April 6
9:21 pm EDT
Recap
E#4 Syracuse Orange 56, S#4 Michigan Wolverines 61
Scoring by half: 25–36, 31–25
Pts: C. Fair, 22
Rebs: J. Grant, 7
Asts: B. Triche, 8
Pts: Hardaway Jr., 13
Rebs: M. McGary, 12
Asts: M. McGary, 6
Georgia Dome – Atlanta, GA
Attendance: 75,350
Referees: Mark Whitehead, Doug Sirmons, Randy Mccall

National Championship edit

CBS
April 8
9:23pm EDT
Recap
S#4 Michigan Wolverines 76, MW#1 Louisville Cardinals 82
Scoring by half: 38–37, 38–45
Pts: Burke, 24
Rebs: McGary, 6
Asts: Hardaway Jr., 4
Pts: Hancock, 22
Rebs: Behanan, 12
Asts: Dieng, 6
Georgia Dome – Atlanta, GA
Attendance: 74,326
Referees: John Cahill, John Higgins, Tony Greene

Louisville defeated Michigan 82–76 in the championship game. The win gave Louisville its first championship since 1986, and third overall.[21] It became the eighth school to win at least three championships [21] until vacated by the NCAA on February 20, 2018, due to a 2015 sex scandal.[4]

Head coach Rick Pitino became the first coach to win an NCAA championship with two different schools.[22][a] Michigan fell to 1–5 all time in championship games (including two losses vacated because of sanctions against the university).[21]

Michigan's Trey Burke scored seven quick points to get Michigan out to a 7–3 lead, but also picked up two quick fouls and sat during much of the first half.[22] With Burke on the bench, Michigan got a spark from freshman Spike Albrecht, a minor role player during the regular season. Albrecht hit four straight 3-pointers en route to a 17-point first half performance, easily surpassing his previous single game best of 7.[22] Louisville trailed Michigan 35–23 late in the first half, before going on a run fueled by four straight three-pointers by Luke Hancock.[22] At halftime, Michigan led 38–37.[22]

The second half featured several lead changes before Louisville pushed the margin to 10 on a three-pointer by Hancock with 3:20 remaining in the game. Michigan fought back, closing the gap to four points in the last minute, but ran out of time in its comeback effort.[22]

Hancock hit all five three-point shots he attempted in the game and led Louisville with 22 points, while teammate Peyton Siva scored 18 and had a game high 4 steals.[21][22] Chane Behanan pulled down 12 rebounds to go with 15 points. Burke led Michigan with 24 points.[22] Russ Smith, Louisville's leading scorer on the season, struggled in the game, shooting 3-for-16.[21] Hancock was named as the game's most outstanding player.[22]

Record by conference edit

Conference Bids Record Win % R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NC
Big East 8 13–7 .650 8 3 3 3 2 1 1
Big Ten 7 14–7 .667 7 6 4 2 1 1
MVC 2 5–2 .714 2 2 1 1 1
ACC 4 6–4 .600 4 3 2 1
SEC 3 4–3 .571 3 2 1 1
Pac-12 5 5–5 .500 5 3 2
Atlantic Sun 1 2–1 .667 1 1 1
Atlantic 10 5 7–5 .583 5 5 1
Big 12 5 3–5 .375 5 2 1
Mountain West 5 2–5 .286 4 2
WCC 2 2–2 .500 2 1
Ivy 1 1–1 .500 1 1
C-USA 1 1–1 .500 1 1
CAA 1 1–1 .500 1
MEAC 1 1–1 .500 1

Other events surrounding the tournament edit

On May 10, 2012, the NCAA announced that as part of the celebration of the 75th Division I tournament, it would hold all three of its men's basketball championship games in Atlanta. The finals of the Division II and Division III tournaments were held at Philips Arena on April 7, the day between the Division I semifinals and final.[23] In addition, Atlanta-based tournament broadcaster TBS announced that Conan O'Brien would tape his Conan talk show at The Tabernacle, located a few blocks from the Georgia Dome and Philips Arena, in the week leading up to the Final Four. March Madness studio analyst Charles Barkley and Dick Vitale were among the guests who appeared.[24]

Media edit

U.S. television edit

The year 2013 marked the third year of a 14-year partnership between CBS and Turner cable networks TBS, TNT and truTV to cover the entire tournament under the NCAA March Madness banner. CBS aired the Final Four and championship rounds for the 32nd consecutive year.[25][26] The tournament was considered a ratings success. Tournament games averaged 10.7 million viewers, and the championship game garnered an average of 23.4 million viewers and a peak viewership of 27.1 million.

Studio hosts edit

  • Greg Gumbel (New York City and Atlanta) – second round, third round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Ernie Johnson Jr. (New York City and Atlanta) – First Four, second round, third round and Regional Semi-Finals
  • Matt Winer (Atlanta) – First Four, second round and third round

Studio analysts edit

  • Greg Anthony (New York City and Atlanta) – First Four, second round, third round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Charles Barkley (New York City and Atlanta) – First Four, second round, third round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Rex Chapman (Atlanta) – First Four and Second Round
  • Seth Davis (Atlanta) – First Four, second round, third round and Regional Semi-Finals
  • Jamie Dixon (Atlanta) – third round
  • Doug Gottlieb (New York City and Atlanta) – Regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Kenny Smith (New York City and Atlanta) – second round, third round, regionals, Final Four and national championship game
  • Steve Smith (Atlanta) – First Four, second round, third round and regional semi-finals
  • Jay Wright (Atlanta) – Regional semi-finals

Commentary teams edit

Radio edit

Dial Global Sports (formerly Westwood One) and SiriusXM have live broadcasts of all 67 games.[27][28]

First four edit

Second and third rounds edit

Regionals edit

  • Ian Eagle and John Thompson – East Regional at Washington, D.C.
  • Kevin Kugler and Pete Gillen – Midwest Regional at Indianapolis, Indiana
  • Brad Sham and Fran Fraschilla – South Regional at Arlington, Texas
  • Wayne Larrivee and Bill Frieder – West Regional at Los Angeles, California

Final Four edit

  • Kevin Kugler, John Thompson and Bill Raftery – Atlanta, Georgia

Local radio edit

International edit

ESPN International held broadcast rights to the tournament outside of the United States: it produced its own broadcasts of the semi-final and championship game, called by ESPN College Basketball personalities Brad Nessler (play-by-play), Dick Vitale (analyst for the final and one semi-final), and Jay Bilas (analyst for the other semi-final).[29] For the initial rounds, they use CBS/Turner coverage with an additional host to transition between games, with whiparound coverage similar to the CBS-only era. ESPN also has exclusive digital rights to the NCAA tournament outside of North America.[30]

Canada edit

In Canada, the TSN family of media outlets (including TSN2, RDS, and TSN Radio), which are part-owned by ESPN, own broadcast rights to the tournament. TSN produces separate studio coverage with Kate Beirness, Jack Armstrong, Dan Shulman and Sam Mitchell,[31] but simulcasts CBS/Turner game coverage for the first five rounds (and ESPN International coverage for the Final Four).

As in past years, TSN and TSN2 carry whiparound coverage (often in parallel) during the second, third and fourth rounds, in 2013 focusing when possible on games not being broadcast on CBS (as that network, but not the Turner channels, is also widely available in Canada).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h On February 20, 2018, the NCAA announced that Louisville will be forced to vacate wins and records from the 2011–12, 2012–13, 2013–14, and 2014–15 seasons.[1][2][3]

References edit

  1. ^ James, Emily (February 20, 2018). "Louisville men's basketball must vacate wins and pay fine". NCAA.org – The Official Site of the NCAA (Press release). Retrieved February 20, 2018.
  2. ^ "Louisville to vacate 2013 national title, take banner down after NCAA upholds penalties". CBSSports.com. February 20, 2018. Retrieved February 20, 2018.
  3. ^ Tracy, Marc (February 20, 2018). "Louisville Must Forfeit Basketball Championship over Sex Scandal". The New York Times. Retrieved April 16, 2018.
  4. ^ a b "NCAA denies Louisville's appeal, rules Cardinals must vacate 2013 national title". ESPN.com. February 20, 2018.
  5. ^ . www.ncaa.org. Archived from the original on December 3, 2009. Retrieved January 15, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. ^ "NCAA College Basketball News, Videos, Scores, Standings, Stats, Teams – FOX Sports on MSN". Msn.foxsports.com. Retrieved April 14, 2013.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ . NCAA.com. Archived from the original on February 21, 2018. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
  8. ^ . WHAS 11. Archived from the original on April 7, 2013.
  9. ^ "Louisville beats Duke 85–63 to reach Final Four". NCAA.
  10. ^ "Ross leaves no doubt: He's coming back". The Columbus Dispatch.
  11. ^ . Wichita State Shockers. Archived from the original on October 22, 2013. Retrieved March 31, 2013.
  12. ^ . Ann Arbor.com. Archived from the original on April 4, 2013.
  13. ^ "Michigan rolls into Final Four, beats Fla. 79–59". NCAA.
  14. ^ "Marquette outclassed by Syracuse in the Elite Eight". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  15. ^ "Syracuse vs. Marquette: Live Score, Highlights and Elite 8 Game Reaction". Bleacher Report.
  16. ^ "SYRACUSE HEADS TO THE FINAL FOUR!". Syracuse University Athletics.
  17. ^ "NCAA DIVISION I MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP – PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES FOR ESTABLISHING THE BRACKET" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved March 28, 2011. The committee will then place the four "top seed" teams ranked 1 through 4 in each of the four regions, then determine the Final Four semifinals pairings, making best effort to pair the top no. 1 rank's region against the fourth no. 1 rank's region and the second no. 1 rank's region against the third no. 1 rank's region.
  18. ^ . Business Week. Bloomberg News. March 17, 2013. Archived from the original on March 21, 2013. Retrieved March 17, 2013.
  19. ^ Tim Layden (April 8, 2013). "In uncertain times, Louisville-Michigan NCAA title game shines - March Madness 2013 - Tim Layden - SI.com". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
  20. ^ . KAKE. April 9, 2013. Archived from the original on September 27, 2013. Retrieved April 9, 2013.
  21. ^ a b c d e Paul Myerberg (April 4, 2013). "10 things you need to know about Louisville's win". USA Today. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Louisville beats Michigan 82–76 to win NCAA men's basketball championship". Fox News. Associated Press. April 9, 2013. Retrieved April 9, 2013.
  23. ^ (Press release). NCAA. May 10, 2012. Archived from the original on May 21, 2012. Retrieved May 11, 2012.
  24. ^ "CONAN Live From Atlanta @". Teamcoco.com. April 1, 2013. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
  25. ^ "CBS SPORTS AND TURNER SPORTS RETURN ALL-STAR LINEUP OF BROADCAST TEAMS FOR COVERAGE OF 2013 NCAA® DIVISION I MEN'S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP". CBS Sports. March 11, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  26. ^ "CBS Sports and Turner Sports Return All-Star Line-up of Broadcast Teams for Coverage of 2013 NCAA® Division I Men's Basketball Championship". Turner Sports. March 11, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  27. ^ . Dial Global Sports. March 4, 2013. Archived from the original on March 23, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  28. ^ . Dial Global Sports. Archived from the original on March 26, 2013. Retrieved March 12, 2013.
  29. ^ Humes, Michael (February 5, 2013). "Dick Vitale to Call NCAA Final Four Games". ESPN MediaZone. Retrieved March 23, 2013.
  30. ^ Berg, James (March 6, 2013). . Archived from the original on May 27, 2013. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  31. ^ The Sports Network (March 18, 2013). "TSN and TSN2 Got Game with Complete Live Coverage in Canada of NCAA® MARCH MADNESS®, Beginning March 21". Retrieved March 23, 2013.

2013, ncaa, division, basketball, tournament, involved, teams, playing, single, elimination, tournament, that, determined, national, collegiate, athletic, association, ncaa, division, basketball, national, champion, 2012, season, 75th, annual, edition, tournam. The 2013 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament involved 68 teams playing in a single elimination tournament that determined the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division I men s basketball national champion for the 2012 13 season The 75th annual edition of the tournament dating to 1939 began on March 19 2013 and concluded with the championship game on April 8 at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta 2013 NCAA Division Imen s basketball tournamentSeason2012 13Teams68Finals siteGeorgia DomeAtlanta GeorgiaChampionsLouisville Cardinals Vacated 3rd title 3rd title game 10th Final Four Runner upMichigan Wolverines 6th title game 7th Final Four SemifinalistsSyracuse Orange 5th Final Four Wichita State Shockers 2nd Final Four Winning coachRick Pitino a 2nd title MOPLuke Hancock Louisville NCAA Division I men s tournaments 2012 2014 The Final Four consisted of Louisville Wichita State second appearance Syracuse first appearance since their 2003 national championship and Michigan returning for the first time since the Fab Five s second appearance in 1993 later vacated By winning the West Region Wichita State became the first 9 seed and first Missouri Valley Conference MVC team to reach the Final Four since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985 The last 9 seed to reach the Final Four was Penn and the last MVC team to do so was Indiana State both in 1979 Louisville defeated Michigan in the championship game by a final score of 82 76 winning their first national title since 1986 On February 20 2018 the NCAA vacated Louisville s entire tournament run including its national title due to a 2015 sex scandal 4 The tournament featured several notable upsets For the first time since 1991 at least one team seeded 9 through 15 won at least once in the tournament The most notable was Florida Gulf Coast University of the Atlantic Sun Conference who made their tournament debut in only their second year of Division I eligibility They upset Georgetown and San Diego State in their first two games becoming the first 15 seed to advance to the regional semifinals where they were defeated by Florida For the first time since 2010 a 14 seed won as Harvard defeated New Mexico in the West Region The same region saw 13 La Salle who won in the opening round defeat 4 Kansas State and 12 Mississippi defeat 5 Wisconsin In addition to that the region s top seed Gonzaga was defeated in the round of 32 by eventual region winner Wichita State who defeated La Salle in the Sweet Sixteen Two other teams also earned their first ever NCAA Tournament victory Ivy League champion Harvard and Mid Eastern Athletic Conference MEAC champion North Carolina A amp T Another school Liberty won the Big South tournament to become the second 20 loss team to make the field after Coppin State did that in 2008 Contents 1 Tournament procedure 2 Schedule and venues 3 Qualified teams 3 1 Automatic qualifiers 3 2 Tournament seeds 4 Bracket 4 1 First Four Dayton Ohio 4 2 Midwest Regional Indianapolis Indiana 4 2 1 Midwest Regional all tournament team 4 3 West Regional Los Angeles California 4 3 1 West Regional all tournament team 4 4 South Regional Arlington Texas 4 4 1 South Regional all tournament team 4 5 East Regional Washington D C 4 5 1 East Regional all tournament team 4 6 Final Four Georgia Dome Atlanta Georgia 4 6 1 Final Four all tournament team 5 Game summaries 5 1 Elite Eight 5 2 Final Four 5 3 National Championship 6 Record by conference 7 Other events surrounding the tournament 8 Media 8 1 U S television 8 1 1 Studio hosts 8 1 2 Studio analysts 8 1 3 Commentary teams 8 2 Radio 8 2 1 First four 8 2 2 Second and third rounds 8 2 3 Regionals 8 2 4 Final Four 8 3 Local radio 8 4 International 8 4 1 Canada 9 See also 10 Notes 11 ReferencesTournament procedure editA total of 68 teams entered the 2013 tournament A total of 32 automatic bids are awarded to each program that won a conference tournament The remaining 36 bids are issued at large with selections extended by the NCAA Selection Committee The Selection Committee also seeds the entire field from 1 to 68 Eight teams the four lowest seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest seeded at large teams played in the First Four the successor to what had been popularly known as play in games through the 2010 tournament The winners of these games advanced to the main tournament bracket Schedule and venues edit nbsp nbsp Auburn Hills nbsp Lexington nbsp Salt Lake City nbsp San Jose nbsp Austin nbsp Dayton nbsp Kansas City nbsp Philadelphiaclass notpageimage 2013 first and second rounds green nbsp nbsp Washington D C nbsp Los Angeles nbsp Indianapolis nbsp Arlington nbsp Atlantaclass notpageimage 2013 Regionals blue and Final Four red The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2013 tournament 5 6 7 First Four March 19 and 20 University of Dayton Arena Dayton Ohio Host University of Dayton First and Second rounds March 21 and 23 The Palace of Auburn Hills Auburn Hills Michigan Host Oakland University Rupp Arena Lexington Kentucky Host University of Kentucky EnergySolutions Arena Salt Lake City Utah Host University of Utah HP Pavilion San Jose California Host West Coast Conference March 22 and 24 University of Dayton Arena Dayton Ohio Host University of Dayton Frank Erwin Center Austin Texas Host University of Texas at Austin Sprint Center Kansas City Missouri Host Missouri Valley Conference Wells Fargo Center Philadelphia Pennsylvania Host Temple University Regional semifinals and Finals March 28 and 30 East Regional Verizon Center Washington D C Host Georgetown University West Regional Staples Center Los Angeles California Host Pepperdine University March 29 and 31 Midwest Regional Lucas Oil Stadium Indianapolis Indiana Hosts IUPUI Horizon League South Regional Cowboys Stadium Arlington Texas Host Big 12 Conference National semifinals and championship Final Four and championship April 6 and 8 Georgia Dome Atlanta Georgia Host Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta hosted the Final Four for the sixth time having previously hosted in 2007 As of 2024 this is the most recent Final Four to be held in Atlanta The 2020 edition which was to be held in Atlanta was canceled due to the COVID 19 pandemic Qualified teams editFurther information 2013 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament qualifying teams Automatic qualifiers edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2013 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 bidAmerica East Albany 3rd 2007Atlantic 10 Saint Louis 8th 2012ACC Miami 6th 2008Atlantic Sun Florida Gulf Coast 1st NeverBig 12 Kansas 42nd 2012Big East Louisville 39th a 2012Big Sky Montana 10th 2012Big South Liberty 3rd 2004Big Ten Ohio State 29th 2012Big West Pacific 9th 2006Colonial James Madison 5th 1994C USA Memphis 25th 2012Horizon Valparaiso 8th 2004Ivy League Harvard 3rd 2012MAAC Iona 10th 2012MAC Akron 4th 2011MEAC North Carolina A amp T 10th 1995Missouri Valley Creighton 18th 2012Mountain West New Mexico 14th 2012Northeast Long Island 6th 2012Ohio Valley Belmont 6th 2012Pac 12 Oregon 11th 2008Patriot Bucknell 6th 2011SEC Ole Miss 7th 2002Southern Davidson 12th 2012Southland Northwestern State 3rd 2006SWAC Southern 8th 2006Summit South Dakota State 2nd 2012Sun Belt Western Kentucky 23rd 2012West Coast Gonzaga 16th 2012WAC New Mexico State 20th 2012Tournament seeds edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message South Regional Arlington TexasSeed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank 1 Kansas Big 12 29 5 Bill Self Automatic 2 2 Georgetown Big East 25 6 John Thompson III At large 7 3 Florida SEC 26 7 Billy Donovan At large 10 4 Michigan Big Ten 26 7 John Beilein At large 13 5 VCU Atlantic 10 26 8 Shaka Smart At large 20 6 UCLA Pac 12 25 9 Ben Howland At large 24 7 San Diego State Mountain West 22 10 Steve Fisher At large 26 8 North Carolina ACC 24 10 Roy Williams At large 29 9 Villanova Big East 20 13 Jay Wright At large 38 10 Oklahoma Big 12 20 11 Lon Krueger At large 40 11 Minnesota Big Ten 20 12 Tubby Smith At large 41 12 Akron MAC 26 6 Keith Dambrot Automatic 51 13 South Dakota State Summit 25 9 Scott Nagy Automatic 53 14 Northwestern State Southland 23 8 Mike McConathy Automatic 57 15 Florida Gulf Coast Atlantic Sun 24 10 Andy Enfield Automatic 59 16 Western Kentucky Sun Belt 20 15 Ray Harper Automatic 63West Regional Los Angeles CaliforniaSeed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank 1 Gonzaga West Coast 31 2 Mark Few Automatic 4 2 Ohio State Big Ten 26 7 Thad Matta Automatic 8 3 New Mexico Mountain West 29 5 Steve Alford Automatic 9 4 Kansas State Big 12 27 7 Bruce Weber At large 14 5 Wisconsin Big Ten 23 11 Bo Ryan At large 19 6 Arizona Pac 12 25 7 Sean Miller At large 21 7 Notre Dame Big East 25 9 Mike Brey At large 27 8 Pittsburgh Big East 24 8 Jamie Dixon At large 31 9 Wichita State Missouri Valley 26 8 Gregg Marshall At large 35 10 Iowa State Big 12 22 11 Fred Hoiberg At large 39 11 Belmont Ohio Valley 26 6 Rick Byrd Automatic 44 12 Ole Miss SEC 26 8 Andy Kennedy Automatic 47 13 Boise State Mountain West 21 10 Leon Rice At large 45La Salle Atlantic 10 21 9 Dr John Giannini At large 49 14 Harvard Ivy 19 9 Tommy Amaker Automatic 58 15 Iona MAAC 20 13 Tim Cluess Automatic 61 16 Southern SWAC 23 9 Roman Banks Automatic 64East Regional Washington D C Seed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank 1 Indiana Big Ten 27 6 Tom Crean At large 3 2 Miami ACC 27 6 Jim Larranaga Automatic 5 3 Marquette Big East 23 8 Buzz Williams At large 12 4 Syracuse Big East 26 9 Jim Boeheim At large 16 5 UNLV Mountain West 25 9 Dave Rice At large 18 6 Butler Atlantic 10 26 8 Brad Stevens At large 22 7 Illinois Big Ten 22 12 John Groce At large 28 8 NC State ACC 24 10 Mark Gottfried At large 32 9 Temple Atlantic 10 23 9 Fran Dunphy At large 34 10 Colorado Pac 12 21 11 Tad Boyle At large 36 11 Bucknell Patriot 28 5 Dave Paulsen Automatic 48 12 California Pac 12 20 11 Mike Montgomery At large 42 13 Montana Big Sky 25 7 Wayne Tinkle Automatic 54 14 Davidson Southern 26 7 Bob McKillop Automatic 55 15 Pacific Big West 22 12 Bob Thomason Automatic 60 16 James Madison CAA 20 14 Matt Brady Automatic 66Long Island Northeast 20 13 Jack Perri Automatic 65Midwest Regional Indianapolis IndianaSeed School Conference Record Coach Berth type Overall rank 1 Louisville Big East 29 5 Rick Pitino Automatic 1 2 Duke ACC 27 5 Mike Krzyzewski At large 6 3 Michigan State Big Ten 25 8 Tom Izzo At large 11 4 Saint Louis Atlantic 10 27 6 Jim Crews Automatic 15 5 Oklahoma State Big 12 24 8 Travis Ford At large 17 6 Memphis C USA 30 4 Josh Pastner Automatic 23 7 Creighton Missouri Valley 27 7 Greg McDermott Automatic 25 8 Colorado State Mountain West 25 8 Larry Eustachy At large 30 9 Missouri SEC 23 10 Frank Haith At large 33 10 Cincinnati Big East 22 11 Mick Cronin At large 37 11 Middle Tennessee Sun Belt 28 5 Kermit Davis At large 50Saint Mary s CA West Coast 27 6 Randy Bennett At large 46 12 Oregon Pac 12 26 8 Dana Altman Automatic 43 13 New Mexico State WAC 24 10 Marvin Menzies Automatic 52 14 Valparaiso Horizon 26 7 Bryce Drew Automatic 56 15 Albany America East 24 10 Will Brown Automatic 62 16 Liberty Big South 15 20 Dale Layer Automatic 68North Carolina A amp T MEAC 19 16 Cy Alexander Automatic 67 See First Four Bracket editUnless otherwise noted all times listed are Eastern Daylight Time UTC 04 First Four Dayton Ohio edit The First Four games involved eight teams the four overall lowest ranked teams and the four lowest ranked at large teams March 19 Midwest Region 11Middle Tennessee5411Saint Mary s67 March 19 Midwest Region 16Liberty7216North Carolina A amp T73 March 20 West Region 13Boise State7113La Salle80 March 20 East Region 16James Madison6816Long Island55 Midwest Regional Indianapolis Indiana edit First roundRound of 64March 21 22Second roundRound of 32March 23 24Regional semifinalsSweet 16March 29Regional finalsElite 8March 31 1Louisville7916North Carolina A amp T481Louisville82Lexington Thu Sat8Colorado State568Colorado State849Missouri721Louisville7712Oregon695Oklahoma State5512Oregon6812Oregon74San Jose Thu Sat4Saint Louis574Saint Louis6413New Mexico State441Louisville852Duke636Memphis5411Saint Mary s526Memphis48Auburn Hills Thu Sat3Michigan State703Michigan State6514Valparaiso543Michigan State612Duke717Creighton6710Cincinnati637Creighton50Philadelphia Fri Sun2Duke662Duke7315Albany61Midwest Regional all tournament team edit Regional all tournament team Seth Curry Duke Gorgui Dieng Louisville Mason Plumlee Duke Peyton Siva Louisville 8 Regional most outstanding player Russ Smith Louisville 9 a West Regional Los Angeles California edit First roundRound of 64March 21 22Second roundRound of 32March 23 24Regional semifinalsSweet 16March 28Regional finalsElite 8March 30 1Gonzaga6416Southern581Gonzaga70Salt Lake City Thu Sat9Wichita State768Pittsburgh559Wichita State739Wichita State7213La Salle585Wisconsin4612Ole Miss5712Ole Miss74Kansas City Fri Sun13La Salle764Kansas State6113La Salle639Wichita State702Ohio State666Arizona8111Belmont646Arizona74Salt Lake City Thu Sat14Harvard513New Mexico6214Harvard686Arizona702Ohio State737Notre Dame5810Iowa State7610Iowa State75Dayton Fri Sun2Ohio State782Ohio State9515Iona70West Regional all tournament team edit Regional all tournament team Carl Hall Wichita State Mark Lyons Arizona LaQuinton Ross Ohio State Deshaun Thomas Ohio State 10 Regional most outstanding player Malcolm Armstead Wichita State 11 South Regional Arlington Texas edit First roundRound of 64March 21 22Second roundRound of 32March 23 24Regional semifinalsSweet 16March 29Regional finalsElite 8March 31 1Kansas6416Western Kentucky571Kansas70Kansas City Fri Sun8North Carolina588North Carolina789Villanova711Kansas854Michigan87OT5VCU8812Akron425VCU53Auburn Hills Thu Sat4Michigan784Michigan7113South Dakota State564Michigan793Florida596UCLA6311Minnesota8311Minnesota64Austin Fri Sun3Florida783Florida7914Northwestern State473Florida6215Florida Gulf Coast507San Diego State7010Oklahoma557San Diego State71Philadelphia Fri Sun15Florida Gulf Coast812Georgetown6815Florida Gulf Coast78South Regional all tournament team edit Regional all tournament team Mitch McGary Michigan Ben McLemore Kansas Mike Rosario Florida Nik Stauskas Michigan 12 Regional most outstanding player Trey Burke Michigan 13 East Regional Washington D C edit First roundRound of 64March 21 22Second roundRound of 32March 23 24Regional semifinalsSweet 16March 28Regional finalsElite 8March 30 1Indiana8316James Madison621Indiana58Dayton Fri Sun9Temple528NC State729Temple761Indiana504Syracuse615UNLV6112California6412California60San Jose Thu Sat4Syracuse664Syracuse8113Montana344Syracuse553Marquette396Butler6811Bucknell566Butler72Lexington Thu Sat3Marquette743Marquette5914Davidson583Marquette712Miami FL 617Illinois5710Colorado497Illinois59Austin Fri Sun2Miami FL 632Miami FL 7815Pacific49East Regional all tournament team edit Regional all tournament team Vander Blue Marquette C J Fair Syracuse Davante Gardner Marquette James Southerland Syracuse 14 15 Regional most outstanding player Michael Carter Williams Syracuse 16 Final Four Georgia Dome Atlanta Georgia edit During the Final Four round the champion of the top overall top seed s region was to play against the champion of the fourth ranked top seed s region and the champion of the second overall top seed s region was to play against the champion of the third ranked top seed s region 17 Louisville placed in the Midwest Regional was selected as the top overall seed and Gonzaga in the West Regional was named as the final top seed 18 Thus the Midwest champion played the West Champion in one semifinal game and the South Champion faced the East Champion in the other semifinal game Wichita State surprised the college basketball world by reaching the Final Four from the West region They lost to Louisville in the first semifinal game 72 68 Michigan defeated Syracuse 61 56 in the second semifinal 19 On February 20 2018 NCAA took away from Louisville the 2013 winning title and allowed them to pay the fines National SemifinalsFinal FourSaturday April 6National Championship GameMonday April 8 MW1Louisville72W9Wichita State68MW1Louisville82S4Michigan76S4Michigan61E4Syracuse56Final Four all tournament team edit Final Four all tournament team Spike Albrecht Michigan Trey Burke Michigan Mitch McGary Michigan Cleanthony Early Wichita State Peyton Siva Louisville a Luke Hancock Louisville a Chane Behanan Louisville a Final Four most outstanding player Luke Hancock Louisville the first non starter to earn this title 20 a Game summaries editElite Eight edit Final Four edit CBSApril 66 09 pm EDTRecapW 9 Wichita State Shockers 68 MW 1 Louisville Cardinals 72Scoring by half 26 25 42 47Pts C Early 24Rebs C Early 10Asts M Armstead 7 Pts R Smith 21Rebs C Behanan 9Asts R Smith 3Georgia Dome Atlanta GAReferees Karl Hess Terry Wymer Les Jones CBSApril 69 21 pm EDTRecapE 4 Syracuse Orange 56 S 4 Michigan Wolverines 61Scoring by half 25 36 31 25Pts C Fair 22Rebs J Grant 7Asts B Triche 8 Pts Hardaway Jr 13Rebs M McGary 12Asts M McGary 6Georgia Dome Atlanta GAAttendance 75 350Referees Mark Whitehead Doug Sirmons Randy Mccall National Championship edit Main article 2013 NCAA Division I men s basketball championship game CBSApril 89 23pm EDTRecapS 4 Michigan Wolverines 76 MW 1 Louisville Cardinals 82Scoring by half 38 37 38 45Pts Burke 24Rebs McGary 6Asts Hardaway Jr 4 Pts Hancock 22Rebs Behanan 12Asts Dieng 6Georgia Dome Atlanta GAAttendance 74 326Referees John Cahill John Higgins Tony Greene Louisville defeated Michigan 82 76 in the championship game The win gave Louisville its first championship since 1986 and third overall 21 It became the eighth school to win at least three championships 21 until vacated by the NCAA on February 20 2018 due to a 2015 sex scandal 4 Head coach Rick Pitino became the first coach to win an NCAA championship with two different schools 22 a Michigan fell to 1 5 all time in championship games including two losses vacated because of sanctions against the university 21 Michigan s Trey Burke scored seven quick points to get Michigan out to a 7 3 lead but also picked up two quick fouls and sat during much of the first half 22 With Burke on the bench Michigan got a spark from freshman Spike Albrecht a minor role player during the regular season Albrecht hit four straight 3 pointers en route to a 17 point first half performance easily surpassing his previous single game best of 7 22 Louisville trailed Michigan 35 23 late in the first half before going on a run fueled by four straight three pointers by Luke Hancock 22 At halftime Michigan led 38 37 22 The second half featured several lead changes before Louisville pushed the margin to 10 on a three pointer by Hancock with 3 20 remaining in the game Michigan fought back closing the gap to four points in the last minute but ran out of time in its comeback effort 22 Hancock hit all five three point shots he attempted in the game and led Louisville with 22 points while teammate Peyton Siva scored 18 and had a game high 4 steals 21 22 Chane Behanan pulled down 12 rebounds to go with 15 points Burke led Michigan with 24 points 22 Russ Smith Louisville s leading scorer on the season struggled in the game shooting 3 for 16 21 Hancock was named as the game s most outstanding player 22 Record by conference editConference Bids Record Win R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG NCBig East 8 13 7 650 8 3 3 3 2 1 1Big Ten 7 14 7 667 7 6 4 2 1 1 MVC 2 5 2 714 2 2 1 1 1 ACC 4 6 4 600 4 3 2 1 SEC 3 4 3 571 3 2 1 1 Pac 12 5 5 5 500 5 3 2 Atlantic Sun 1 2 1 667 1 1 1 Atlantic 10 5 7 5 583 5 5 1 Big 12 5 3 5 375 5 2 1 Mountain West 5 2 5 286 4 2 WCC 2 2 2 500 2 1 Ivy 1 1 1 500 1 1 C USA 1 1 1 500 1 1 CAA 1 1 1 500 1 MEAC 1 1 1 500 1 The R64 R32 S16 E8 F4 CG and NC columns indicate how many teams from each conference were in the round of 64 second round round of 32 third round Sweet 16 Elite Eight Final Four championship game and national champion respectively The Big South and NEC each had one representative eliminated in the first round with a record of 0 1 The America East Conference Big Sky Big West Horizon League MAAC MAC OVC Patriot League Southern Conference Southland Conference Summit League SWAC and WAC each had one representative eliminated in the second round with a record of 0 1 The Sun Belt Conference had two representatives one eliminated in the first round and the other in the second round with a record of 0 2 Other events surrounding the tournament editOn May 10 2012 the NCAA announced that as part of the celebration of the 75th Division I tournament it would hold all three of its men s basketball championship games in Atlanta The finals of the Division II and Division III tournaments were held at Philips Arena on April 7 the day between the Division I semifinals and final 23 In addition Atlanta based tournament broadcaster TBS announced that Conan O Brien would tape his Conan talk show at The Tabernacle located a few blocks from the Georgia Dome and Philips Arena in the week leading up to the Final Four March Madness studio analyst Charles Barkley and Dick Vitale were among the guests who appeared 24 Media editU S television edit The year 2013 marked the third year of a 14 year partnership between CBS and Turner cable networks TBS TNT and truTV to cover the entire tournament under the NCAA March Madness banner CBS aired the Final Four and championship rounds for the 32nd consecutive year 25 26 The tournament was considered a ratings success Tournament games averaged 10 7 million viewers and the championship game garnered an average of 23 4 million viewers and a peak viewership of 27 1 million Studio hosts edit Greg Gumbel New York City and Atlanta second round third round regionals Final Four and national championship game Ernie Johnson Jr New York City and Atlanta First Four second round third round and Regional Semi Finals Matt Winer Atlanta First Four second round and third roundStudio analysts edit Greg Anthony New York City and Atlanta First Four second round third round regionals Final Four and national championship game Charles Barkley New York City and Atlanta First Four second round third round regionals Final Four and national championship game Rex Chapman Atlanta First Four and Second Round Seth Davis Atlanta First Four second round third round and Regional Semi Finals Jamie Dixon Atlanta third round Doug Gottlieb New York City and Atlanta Regionals Final Four and national championship game Kenny Smith New York City and Atlanta second round third round regionals Final Four and national championship game Steve Smith Atlanta First Four second round third round and regional semi finals Jay Wright Atlanta Regional semi finalsCommentary teams edit Jim Nantz Clark Kellogg Steve Kerr Tracy Wolfson First Four at Dayton Ohio Second and third round at Dayton Ohio Midwest Regional at Indianapolis Indiana Final Four at Atlanta GeorgiaKerr joined Nantz and Kellogg during the Final Four and national championship games Marv Albert Steve Kerr Craig Sager First Four at Dayton Ohio Second and third round at Kansas City Missouri South Regional at Arlington Texas Verne Lundquist Bill Raftery Rachel Nichols Second and third round at Auburn Hills Michigan East Regional at Washington D C Kevin Harlan Len Elmore Reggie Miller Lewis Johnson Second and third round at Philadelphia Pennsylvania West Regional at Los Angeles California Ian Eagle Jim Spanarkel Allie LaForce Second and third round at Lexington Kentucky Brian Anderson Dan Bonner Marty Snider Second and third round at San Jose California Tim Brando Mike Gminski Otis Livingston Second and third round at Austin Texas Spero Dedes Doug Gottlieb Jaime Maggio Second and third round at Salt Lake City UtahRadio edit Dial Global Sports formerly Westwood One and SiriusXM have live broadcasts of all 67 games 27 28 First four edit Brad Sham and Kyle Macy at Dayton OhioSecond and third rounds edit Tom McCarthy and Kelly Tripucka Second and third round at Auburn Hills Michigan Kevin Kugler and Jamal Mashburn Second and third round at Lexington Kentucky Dave Sims and Kevin Grevey Second and third round at Salt Lake City Utah Ted Robinson and Bill Frieder Second and third round at San Jose California Gary Cohen and Pete Gillen Second and third round at Dayton Ohio Wayne Larrivee and Reid Gettys Second and third round at Austin Texas Kevin Calabro and Will Perdue Second and third round at Kansas City Missouri Scott Graham and John Thompson Second and third round at Philadelphia PennsylvaniaRegionals edit Ian Eagle and John Thompson East Regional at Washington D C Kevin Kugler and Pete Gillen Midwest Regional at Indianapolis Indiana Brad Sham and Fran Fraschilla South Regional at Arlington Texas Wayne Larrivee and Bill Frieder West Regional at Los Angeles CaliforniaFinal Four edit Kevin Kugler John Thompson and Bill Raftery Atlanta GeorgiaLocal radio edit Matt Shephard and David Merritt Michigan WWJ Detroit amp WWWW Ann Arbor Paul Rogers and Bob Valvano Louisville WHAS Louisville amp WWRW Lexington International edit ESPN International held broadcast rights to the tournament outside of the United States it produced its own broadcasts of the semi final and championship game called by ESPN College Basketball personalities Brad Nessler play by play Dick Vitale analyst for the final and one semi final and Jay Bilas analyst for the other semi final 29 For the initial rounds they use CBS Turner coverage with an additional host to transition between games with whiparound coverage similar to the CBS only era ESPN also has exclusive digital rights to the NCAA tournament outside of North America 30 Canada edit In Canada the TSN family of media outlets including TSN2 RDS and TSN Radio which are part owned by ESPN own broadcast rights to the tournament TSN produces separate studio coverage with Kate Beirness Jack Armstrong Dan Shulman and Sam Mitchell 31 but simulcasts CBS Turner game coverage for the first five rounds and ESPN International coverage for the Final Four As in past years TSN and TSN2 carry whiparound coverage often in parallel during the second third and fourth rounds in 2013 focusing when possible on games not being broadcast on CBS as that network but not the Turner channels is also widely available in Canada See also edit2013 NCAA Division II men s basketball tournament 2013 NCAA Division III men s basketball tournament 2013 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament 2013 NCAA Division II women s basketball tournament 2013 NCAA Division III women s basketball tournament 2013 National Invitation Tournament 2013 Women s National Invitation Tournament 2013 NAIA Division I men s basketball tournament 2013 NAIA Division II men s basketball tournament 2013 NAIA Division I women s basketball tournament 2013 NAIA Division II women s basketball tournament 2013 College Basketball Invitational 2013 CollegeInsider com Postseason TournamentNotes edit a b c d e f g h On February 20 2018 the NCAA announced that Louisville will be forced to vacate wins and records from the 2011 12 2012 13 2013 14 and 2014 15 seasons 1 2 3 References edit James Emily February 20 2018 Louisville men s basketball must vacate wins and pay fine NCAA org The Official Site of the NCAA Press release Retrieved February 20 2018 Louisville to vacate 2013 national title take banner down after NCAA upholds penalties CBSSports com February 20 2018 Retrieved February 20 2018 Tracy Marc February 20 2018 Louisville Must Forfeit Basketball Championship over Sex Scandal The New York Times Retrieved April 16 2018 a b NCAA denies Louisville s appeal rules Cardinals must vacate 2013 national title ESPN com February 20 2018 Archived copy www ncaa org Archived from the original on December 3 2009 Retrieved January 15 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link NCAA College Basketball News Videos Scores Standings Stats Teams FOX Sports on MSN Msn foxsports com Retrieved April 14 2013 permanent dead link First Four to remain in Dayton NCAA com Archived from the original on February 21 2018 Retrieved April 14 2013 Smith Siva Dieng make Midwest Regional All Tournament team WHAS 11 Archived from the original on April 7 2013 Louisville beats Duke 85 63 to reach Final Four NCAA Ross leaves no doubt He s coming back The Columbus Dispatch MBB Shockers Marching on to Atlanta Final Four Wichita State Shockers Archived from the original on October 22 2013 Retrieved March 31 2013 Michigan s Trey Burke named most outstanding player joined by Nik Stauskas Mitch McGary on all region team Ann Arbor com Archived from the original on April 4 2013 Michigan rolls into Final Four beats Fla 79 59 NCAA Marquette outclassed by Syracuse in the Elite Eight Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Syracuse vs Marquette Live Score Highlights and Elite 8 Game Reaction Bleacher Report SYRACUSE HEADS TO THE FINAL FOUR Syracuse University Athletics NCAA DIVISION I MEN S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES FOR ESTABLISHING THE BRACKET PDF NCAA Retrieved March 28 2011 The committee will then place the four top seed teams ranked 1 through 4 in each of the four regions then determine the Final Four semifinals pairings making best effort to pair the top no 1 rank s region against the fourth no 1 rank s region and the second no 1 rank s region against the third no 1 rank s region Gonzaga Louisville Kansas Indiana Get NCAA s No 1 Seeds Business Week Bloomberg News March 17 2013 Archived from the original on March 21 2013 Retrieved March 17 2013 Tim Layden April 8 2013 In uncertain times Louisville Michigan NCAA title game shines March Madness 2013 Tim Layden SI com Sports Illustrated Retrieved April 14 2013 WSU s Early Named To Final Four All Tournament Team KAKE April 9 2013 Archived from the original on September 27 2013 Retrieved April 9 2013 a b c d e Paul Myerberg April 4 2013 10 things you need to know about Louisville s win USA Today Retrieved April 4 2013 a b c d e f g h i Louisville beats Michigan 82 76 to win NCAA men s basketball championship Fox News Associated Press April 9 2013 Retrieved April 9 2013 Success paves way for 75th celebration Press release NCAA May 10 2012 Archived from the original on May 21 2012 Retrieved May 11 2012 CONAN Live From Atlanta Teamcoco com April 1 2013 Retrieved April 14 2013 CBS SPORTS AND TURNER SPORTS RETURN ALL STAR LINEUP OF BROADCAST TEAMS FOR COVERAGE OF 2013 NCAA DIVISION I MEN S BASKETBALL CHAMPIONSHIP CBS Sports March 11 2013 Retrieved March 12 2013 CBS Sports and Turner Sports Return All Star Line up of Broadcast Teams for Coverage of 2013 NCAA Division I Men s Basketball Championship Turner Sports March 11 2013 Retrieved March 12 2013 The 2013 NCAA basketball tournament on Dial Global Sports Dial Global Sports March 4 2013 Archived from the original on March 23 2013 Retrieved March 12 2013 NCAA Tournament Announcers Dial Global Sports Archived from the original on March 26 2013 Retrieved March 12 2013 Humes Michael February 5 2013 Dick Vitale to Call NCAA Final Four Games ESPN MediaZone Retrieved March 23 2013 Berg James March 6 2013 NCAA March Madness Basketball Tournament live on ESPN America and ESPN Player Archived from the original on May 27 2013 Retrieved March 29 2013 The Sports Network March 18 2013 TSN and TSN2 Got Game with Complete Live Coverage in Canada of NCAA MARCH MADNESS Beginning March 21 Retrieved March 23 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2013 NCAA Division I men 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1217999990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.