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Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball

The Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball program is the intercollegiate men's basketball program of the University of Kansas. The program is classified in the NCAA's Division I and the team competes in the Big 12 Conference. Kansas is considered one of the most prestigious college basketball programs in the country with six overall national championships (4 NCAA Tournament National Championships and 2 Helms National Championships), as well being runner-up six times and having the most conference titles in the nation. Kansas from 2005 through 2018, won 14 consecutive regular season conference championships, an NCAA record. The Jayhawks also own the NCAA record for most consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances with an active streak of 32 consecutive appearances. They were also, along with Dartmouth, the first team to appear in multiple NCAA Tournaments after making their second appearance in the 1942 tournament. The Jayhawks had been ranked in the AP poll for 231 consecutive polls, a streak that had stretched from the poll released on February 2, 2009, poll through the poll released on February 8, 2021, which is the longest streak in AP poll history. Of the 24 seasons the Big 12 conference has been in existence, Kansas has won at least a share of 19 regular-season conference titles.

Kansas Jayhawks
UniversityUniversity of Kansas
First season1898–99
All-time record2,385–885 (.729)
Athletic directorTravis Goff
Head coachBill Self (20th season)
ConferenceBig 12
LocationLawrence, Kansas
ArenaAllen Fieldhouse
(Capacity: 16,300)
NicknameJayhawks
ColorsCrimson and blue[1]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
Pre-tournament Helms champions
1922, 1923
NCAA tournament champions
1952, 1988, 2008, 2022
NCAA tournament runner-up
1940, 1953, 1957, 1991, 2003, 2012
NCAA tournament Final Four
1940, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1971, 1974, 1986, 1988, 1991, 1993, 2002, 2003, 2008, 2012, 2018, 2022
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1952, 1953, 1957, 1960, 1966, 1971, 1974, 1986, 1988, 1991, 1993, 1996, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2022
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1953, 1957, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1974, 1981, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2022
NCAA tournament round of 32
1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023
NCAA tournament appearances
1940, 1942, 1952, 1953, 1957, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1978, 1981, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2021, 2022, 2023
Conference tournament champions
1981, 1984, 1986, 1992, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2016, 2018, 2022
Conference regular season champions
1908, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1914, 1915, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1946, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1957, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1978, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2023
Conference division season champions
1908, 1909, 1910, 1912, 1913, 1914

The Jayhawks' first coach was the inventor of basketball, James Naismith. Naismith, ironically, is the only coach in Kansas basketball history with a losing record. The Kansas basketball program has produced many notable professional players, including Clyde Lovellette, Wilt Chamberlain, Jo Jo White, Danny Manning, Raef LaFrentz, Paul Pierce, Nick Collison, Kirk Hinrich, Mario Chalmers, Andrew Wiggins, and Joel Embiid. Politician Bob Dole also played basketball at Kansas.[2] Former players that have gone on to be coaches include Phog Allen, Adolph Rupp, Dean Smith, Dutch Lonborg, and former assistants to go on to be notable coaches include John Calipari, Gregg Popovich, and Bill Self. Mark Turgeon, Jerod Haase, Danny Manning, and Tad Boyle are all former players and assistant coaches that became head coaches. Allen founded the National Association of Basketball Coaches and, with Lonborg, was an early proponent of the NCAA tournament.[3][4] Four different Jayhawk head coaches are in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as coaches, Phog Allen, Larry Brown, Roy Williams, and current head coach Bill Self. Three different Division I basketball arenas have been named after former Kansas players, the Dean Smith Center named after Dean Smith at North Carolina, Rupp Arena named after Adolph Rupp at Kentucky, and the Jayhawks’ own arena Allen Fieldhouse named after Phog Allen.

In 2008, ESPN ranked Kansas second on a list of the most prestigious programs of the modern college basketball era.[5] Kansas currently has the longest streak of consecutive NCAA tournament appearances of all-time (32),[6] the longest current streak of consecutive NCAA winning seasons (39), the most winning seasons in Division I history (104), the most non-losing seasons (.500 or better) in NCAA history (106), the most conference championships in Division I history (63), the most consecutive regular-season conference titles in Division I (14), the most First-Team All-Americans in Division I history (24), and the most First-Team All-American selections in Division I history (31). As of the last complete season, the program ranks third in Division I all-time winning percentage (.723) and first in Division I all-time wins (2,357).

Since the opening of Allen Fieldhouse, the Jayhawks’ home arena, in 1955, the Jayhawks have earned a well established home court advantage. Allen Fieldhouse is often considered one of the best home court advantages in college basketball.[7][8][9][10] As of 2022, the Jayhawks have won over 87 percent of their games in the 67-year history of Allen Fieldhouse, losing just 110 games. Under current head coach Bill Self, the Jayhawks have had three home court winning streaks over 30 games and two over 50 games. In addition to Allen Fieldhouse, the Jayhawks frequently play games at the nearby T-Mobile Center (formerly Sprint Center) in Kansas City, Missouri. These games, while technically a neutral site, are officially considered home games when not part of a tournament, the only exception being their games at the arena during their six-game series with rival Missouri.

History

Kansas ranks first all-time in NCAA Division I wins with 2,357 wins (as of the last complete season), against 877 losses (.729 all time winning %, third all-time). This record includes a 765–110 (.874) mark at historic Allen Fieldhouse. The Jayhawks are first in NCAA history with 98 winning seasons, and tied for first in NCAA history with 101 non-losing (.500 or better) seasons with Kentucky. Kansas is tied for the fewest head coaches (8) of any program that has played since the 19th century, yet has reached the Final Four under more head coaches (6) than any other program in the nation. Every head coach at Kansas since the inception of the NCAA Tournament has led the program to the Final Four. Kansas has had four head coaches inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame, more than any other program in the nation. A perennial conference powerhouse, Kansas leads Division I all-time in regular season conference titles with 62 in 113 years of conference play (the MVIAA Conference was created in 1907) through the 2019–20 regular season. The Jayhawks have won a record 20 conference titles and a record 11 conference tournament titles in the 24 years of the Big 12's existence. The program also owns the best Big 12 records in both those areas with a 412–102 record in conference play and a 46–12 record in tournament play. The Jayhawks won their 2,000th game in school history when they defeated Texas Tech in the 2009–2010 season, joining the University of Kentucky and the University of North Carolina as the only schools to boast such an achievement at that time.[11]

James Naismith era (1898–1907)

 
The 1899 University of Kansas basketball team, with Dr. James Naismith at the back right

The men's basketball program officially began in 1898, following the arrival of Dr. James Naismith to the school, just six years after Naismith had written the sport's first official rules. Naismith was initially hired to be a chapel director and physical education instructor, but became the head basketball coach.[12]

The Jayhawks played their first game on February 3, 1899, against the Kansas City YMCA, a game they lost 5–16. They would win their first game a week later on February 10 in a 31–6 victory over the Topeka YMCA. Their first intercollegiate game was played on March 23 against Haskell, a school about two miles southeast of the southeastern edge of the University of Kansas. They would finish their first season 7–4.

During the programs early years, the majority of the university's basketball games were played against nearby YMCA teams, with YMCAs across the nation having played an integral part in the birth of basketball. Other common opponents were Haskell and William Jewell. Under Naismith, the team began their rivalries with Kansas State, later deemed the Sunflower Showdown and Missouri, later deemed the Border War (officially changed to Border Showdown in 2004).[13] Naismith was, ironically, the only coach in the program's history to have a losing record (55–60).

Including his years as coach, Naismith served as the athletic director and a faculty member at Kansas for a total of almost 40 years before retiring in 1937. Naismith died in 1939, and his remains are buried in Lawrence, Kansas. The basketball court in Allen Fieldhouse is named James Naismith Court. Beyond inventing the game, his next greatest basketball legacy may be his coaching tree, whose two trunks are the well-known Phog Allen and Kansas native John McLendon. (McLendon attended KU in the 1930s when Allen was head coach. Although McLendon tried out for the team, he never played for Allen. Naismith mentored McLendon from his arrival at Kansas through degree completion and beyond.)

On December 10, 2010, the David Booth family purchased Dr. James Naismith's 13 Original Rules of the game at a Sotheby's auction in New York City for the sum of $4.3 million. They brought the founding document of basketball back to KU's Lawrence campus, where it is currently housed at the DeBruce Center.[14]

Phog Allen/William O. Hamilton era (1907–1956)

In 1907, Kansas hired one of Naismith's players, Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen as head coach. Naismith provided Allen with a now infamous piece of wisdom: "You can't coach basketball; you just play it."[15] Allen would set out to prove the adage wrong and through success and an unrivaled coaching tree has become known as the "Father of Basketball Coaching", having passed on his knowledge of the game to some of the most well-respected names in the history of college basketball, including National Basketball Hall of Fame coaches Adolph Rupp, Dean Smith, Dutch Lonborg and Ralph Miller (all except Lonborg were born and raised in Kansas). Allen coached the team from 1907 to 1909, but William O. Hamilton coached from 1909 to 1919, with Allen taking over again in 1919. The team went 125–59 and won five conference championships under Hamilton's direction.

Allen coached KU for 39 seasons and amassed a record of 590–219, with two retroactively-awarded Helms Foundation national titles and one NCAA Tournament championship in 1952. Numerous basketball greats would play at Kansas during Allen's era, including Dean Smith, Adolph Rupp, Dutch Lonborg, and Ralph Miller (all future Hall of Fame coaches), Paul Endacott, Bill Johnson, and Clyde Lovellette (Hall of Fame players), two-time Olympic Gold Medalist Bill Hougland, and even former United States Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole.

In 1952, the Jayhawks won the national title with an 80–63 victory in the final game over St. John's, coached by Frank McGuire. Clyde Lovellette of Kansas was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, and is still the only player to lead the nation in scoring and lead his team to a national title in the same year. This tournament was the first to have a true "Final Four" format. Seven members of the championship team represented the United States in the 1952 Summer Olympics and brought home a gold medal for the national basketball team.[16] This was especially poignant for Allen, as he had been the driving force for having basketball added to the Olympics in 1936. Allen was forced to retire when he turned 70 in 1956, because he was getting too "old". Allen had recruited legendary Wilt Chamberlain to Kansas, but would not get to coach him because freshmen were not eligible to play varsity basketball in 1956.

Dick Harp era (1956–1964)

 
Wilt Chamberlain was one of the top centers to ever play for the Jayhawks.

Following Allen's retirement, the Jayhawks hired former KU player and assistant, Dick Harp. Under Harp the Jayhawks went 121–82 with two conference titles and two NCAA tournament berths.

Wilt Chamberlain played his varsity years under Harp, making his job a rather easy one for the first two seasons. In his first varsity game, Chamberlain scored 52 points and grabbed 31 rebounds, breaking both all-time college records in an 87–69 win against Northwestern. In 1957, he led the Jayhawks to the championship game against North Carolina, coached by Frank McGuire, whom they had defeated in the 1952 title game when McGuire was at St. John's. McGuire triple-teamed Chamberlain and, as a result, KU was defeated 54–53 in triple overtime. The game is considered one of the greatest in NCAA history[by whom?]. Chamberlain continued to average 30+ points per game until leaving KU early to play professionally with the Harlem Globetrotters.

Ted Owens era (1964–1983)

Ted Owens took over for Harp in 1964, and would go 348–128 during his tenure, eventually winning six Big Eight Conference titles.

The team advanced to NCAA postseason play seven times under Owens. The 1971 team went 27–3 and advanced to the Final Four before losing to UCLA. In 1974 the team went 23–7 and again advanced to the Final Four before losing to Marquette.

During this era the program produced All-Americans such as Jo Jo White, Walt Wesley, Bud Stallworth, Darnell Valentine, and Dave Robisch.

After 19 years of coaching at University of Kansas, Owens was fired following the 1982–83 season after the Jayhawks posted back-to-back losing seasons.

Larry Brown era (1983–1988)

 
Brown helped lead Kansas to the school's second-ever NCAA Tournament championship in 1988.

In 1983, Larry Brown headed to the University of Kansas, after coaching in the NBA. Under Brown, Kansas finished first in the Big Eight in 1986, and second in 1984, 1985, and 1987. In 1988, Kansas got off to a 12–8 start, including 1–4 in the Big 8. The Jayhawks' 55-game homecourt winning streak in Allen Fieldhouse was snapped with a loss to rival Kansas State, and they would also lose two more home games to Duke and Oklahoma. Behind the high-scoring of Danny Manning, KU finished 21–11 at the end of the season and entered the NCAA tournament as a #6 seed. Two early upsets allowed them to face lower seeds, gain momentum, and advance. The Jayhawks would ultimately go on to face the three teams who had given them their three home losses that season. They defeated rival Kansas State in the Elite 8, then defeated Duke in the Final 4, and won the national championship, defeating favored conference rival Oklahoma 83–79 in the final. The 11 losses Kansas accrued in 1988 are more than any other national champion have before or since. The win garnered the team the nickname "Danny and the Miracles". Earlier, near the start of the tournament, Dick Vitale had been asked about Kansas' chances and commented "If Kansas wins, I'll kiss the Jayhawk on the floor of Allen Fieldhouse." Eventually, he did make good on his promise.

During Brown's tenure, Kansas had five NCAA Tournament appearances, which included two second round appearances, one Sweet 16 appearance, two trips to the Final Four and the national championship. He also compiled a 135–44 (.754) overall record. Brown left under a cloud, as NCAA sanctions and a postseason probation were levied against Kansas following Brown's departure in the 1988–1989 season as a result of recruiting violations that took place during Brown's tenure. The major violation was a plane ticket home for potential transfer Vincent Askew to see his sick grandmother.[17] Prior to the investigation, Askew had already decided not to transfer to Kansas.

Roy Williams era (1988–2003)

Shortly following Brown's departure, Kansas hired then North Carolina assistant Roy Williams as head coach.

From 1988 to 2003, under the direction of Williams, the Jayhawks had a record of 418–101, a .805 winning percentage. Williams' Kansas teams averaged 27.8 wins per season. Except for his first season at Kansas (when the team was on probation), all of Williams' teams made the NCAA tournament. On Roy's first KU team Patrick Richey, Adonis Jordan and Richard Scott could not visit campus because of recruiting violations by Larry Brown, so they committed sight unseen. From 1990 to 1999 Kansas compiled a 286–60 record, giving them both the most wins and best winning percentage of any team in that decade.[18] From 1994 to 1998, the Jayhawks won 62 consecutive home games at Allen Fieldhouse, which was the longest such streak in the NCAA at the time. The seniors of 1998 (Raef LaFrentz, Billy Thomas, and C.B. McGrath) went 58–0 at home during their KU careers.

Kansas won nine regular-season conference championships over Williams' last 13 years. In seven years of Big 12 Conference play, his teams went 94–18, capturing the regular-season title in 1997, 1998, 2002 and 2003 and the postseason tournament crown in 1997, 1998 and 1999. In 2001–02, KU became the first, and so far only, team to go undefeated (16–0) in Big 12 play. From 1995 to 1998, Kansas was a combined 123–17 – an average of 30.8 wins per season. Williams' teams went 201–17 (.922) in Allen Fieldhouse, and won 62 consecutive games in Allen from February 1994 to December 1998. Kansas was a regular in the Associated Press Top 25 from 1991 to 1999, placing in the poll for 145 consecutive weeks. Williams' teams were ranked in the Top 10 in 194 AP polls from 1990.[19]

Kansas led the nation in field goal percentage and scoring in 2002 and in scoring margin in 2003, held opponents to the lowest field goal percentage in the country in 2001 (37.8 percent), and led the nation in winning percentage in 1997 and 2002. The team shot better than 50 percent from the floor for seven different seasons under Williams, and led the country in field goal percentage in 1990 (53.3) and 2002 (50.6). Williams' teams shot a combined 49.4 percent from the floor during his tenure. Williams-coached teams led the nation in assists in 2001 and 2002 and were seventh in the nation in 2003; scored 100 or more points 71 times (once every 13 games); averaged 82.7 points per game over his 15 seasons as coach; and averaged 90 or more points per game in two seasons (92.1 in 1990 and 90.9 in 2002).[19]

The Jayhawks were in the AP Top 25 in 242 of 268 weekly polls, reached the No. 1 ranking in the country in six different seasons, and reached at least No. 2 in the nation in 11 of William's 15 seasons as head coach at Kansas.

Under Williams, the team had several deep runs in the NCAA Tournament, making it to four Final Fours and appearing in the national championship game in both 1991 and 2003, losing both, to Duke and Syracuse respectively. Amidst the tournament successes, there were plenty of woes. The 1996–97 team was said by many to be one of the greatest teams in history, featuring future NBA players such as Paul Pierce, Jacque Vaughn, Raef LaFrentz, Greg Orstertag, and Scot Pollard. The team was upset in the Sweet Sixteen by the eventual champion, Arizona Wildcats.[20]

The Jayhawks advanced to the Final Four in 2002 & 2003. Following the national championship loss in 2003, Williams left Kansas and returned to coach at his alma mater, North Carolina.

Bill Self era (2003–present)

Bill Self was introduced as the new head coach for the 2003–04 season and in his first season at Kansas, Self inherited Williams' players and recruits, which often caused turmoil as the style of play differed between the two coaches. Nevertheless, Self led his new Kansas team to the Elite Eight at the NCAA tournament his first year.

KU in 2004–05 was led by seniors Wayne Simien, Keith Langford, Michael Lee, and Aaron Miles. They began the season ranked #1 and started off 20–1, but then they slumped and lost six of their final nine games, including a loss to Bucknell in the first round of the NCAA Tournament. The team finished 23–7 and settled for a Big 12 co-championship with Oklahoma.

 
Coach Bill Self (third from left) with his national champion 2007–08 squad

In 2005–06, little was expected of the freshman/sophomore-dominated Jayhawks, and they began the season 10–6, including 1–2 in the Big 12. Although they did post a 73–46 win over Kentucky, they also saw the end of their 31-game winning streak over rival Kansas State with a 59–55 loss at Allen Fieldhouse, and two nights later blew a seven-point lead in the final 45 seconds of regulation en route to an 89–86 overtime loss at Missouri. But afterward, the Jayhawks matured rapidly, winning 15 of their final 17 games and avenging the losses to both Kansas State and Missouri. KU played as the #2 seed in the Big 12 Tournament in Dallas, and avenged an earlier loss to Texas with an 80–68 victory over the Longhorns in the final to clinch the tournament championship and the highlight win of the season. KU was handed a #4 seed for the NCAA Tournament but stumbled again in the first round with a loss to the Bradley Braves.

In the 2006–07 season, Self led Kansas to the 2007 Big 12 regular-season championship with a 14–2 record, highlighted by beating the Kevin Durant-led Texas Longhorns in come-from-behind victories in the last game of the regular season and in the Big 12 Championship game. At the end of the regular season, Kansas stood at 27–4 and ranked #2 in the nation in both the AP and coaches' polls. Kansas received a number 1 seed in the NCAA tournament, but their tournament run ended in the Elite Eight with a loss to 2-seed UCLA.

In the 2007–08 season, Self's Kansas team began the season 20–0 until they suffered their first loss at rival Kansas State, their first loss at Kansas State since 1983. The 2008 Jayhawks won the Big 12 regular-season title and the Big 12 conference tourney. They received a number-one seeding in the NCAA tournament in the Midwest region. On March 30, 2008, Self led Kansas to a win in an Elite Eight game over upstart Davidson College. KU won by two, 59–57. The Jayhawks played overall number 1 tournament seed North Carolina in the semifinals, a team coached by former KU head man Roy Williams. The Jayhawks opened the game with a 40–12 run over the first 12½ minutes before finally defeating them 84–66. On April 7, 2008, the Jayhawks triumphed over a one-loss Memphis team to claim the national title. With only seconds on the clock, Sherron Collins drove the ball the length of the court and threaded a pass to Mario Chalmers, who connected on a deep three-pointer to force overtime. This shot would later come to be known as "Mario's Miracle" in a nod to 1988 championship nickname "Danny and the Miracles".[citation needed] Kansas then outplayed Memphis in the overtime to win the NCAA Championship game, 75–68. The Jayhawks finished the season with a 37–3 record, the winningest season in Kansas history.

 
Kansas fans celebrate in Downtown Lawrence, Kansas after the Jayhawks win the 2008 National Championship

In the 2008–09 season, despite losing seven of their top nine scorers and the entire starting line-up, the Jayhawks earned their 20th consecutive NCAA tournament bid after going 25–7 (14–2), winning the conference regular season title and extending their home winning streak to 41 straight at Allen Fieldhouse. On March 22, 2009, Kansas defeated Dayton, advancing to their 3rd consecutive Sweet 16 appearance. But the Jayhawks' season ended on March 27 when Michigan State came from behind in the final minute to defeat Kansas 67–62, ending their year at 27–8. Coach Self's record, after 6 seasons with the Jayhawks, was 169–40, an .809 percentage. After the season, Self was named National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press, CBS Sports' Chevrolet Award, USBWA (Henry Iba Award), and Sporting News.

On April 13, Sherron Collins and Cole Aldrich announced their intent to return for the 2009–10 season. On April 23, top high school recruit Xavier Henry made his commitment to play at Kansas in the fall, prompting ESPN to name the Jayhawks as "the team to beat in 2009–10." By the time the fall of 2009 arrived, Kansas was the unanimous preseason #1 team in all major publications[which?]. The Jayhawks finished the regular season with a 29–2 record and continue to hold the Division I record for the current consecutive home winning streak at 59 straight games in Allen Fieldhouse. Kansas passed 2,000 all-time wins in the 2009–10 season, only the third school to do so (finishing the season with a total of 2,003 all-time victories). They won the Big 12 tournament on March 13, clinching their 21st consecutive NCAA tournament appearance, an active NCAA record. However, despite being named the overall #1 seed in the tournament, the Jayhawks fell in the second round to #9-seeded Northern Iowa, finishing the season at 33–3.

Recruiting began immediately for the 2010–11 season, as Kansas landed the nation's top recruit Josh Selby in April. By September 2010, both The Sporting News and Athlon Sports had ranked Kansas in their pre-season outlook as #4 overall and, along with ESPN's Joe Lunardi, were projected to become a #1 seed again in the 2011 NCAA Tournament, which they would again earn. Blue Ribbon and the USA Today/ESPN coaches polls both placed Kansas at #7 in the pre-season poll. Josh Selby, became eligible and joined the Jayhawk line-up on December 18. On March 5, the Jayhawks beat Missouri 70–66 to clinch the Big 12 regular-season title for the 7th consecutive time and later went on to finish 29–2 during the regular season, ranked #2 in both the AP Poll and the USA Today/ESPN Coaches Poll. Bill Self was named Big 12 Coach of the Year and Marcus Morris was named Big 12 Player of the Year. The Jayhawks defeated 16 seed Boston University, 9 seed Illinois and 12 seed Richmond to reach their 3rd Elite Eight in the past 5 seasons before falling to 11 seed Virginia Commonwealth University in the quarterfinal game. During the season, Kansas moved past North Carolina as the 2nd winningest basketball program in history.

After being considered the top team but falling short in both of the previous two seasons, Kansas lost six of their top 8 scorers for the 2011–12 season. The Jayhawks had to rebuild after winning seven straight Big 12 titles. Prior to the season, the NCAA declared that three of the Jayhawks top recruits were ineligible for the season, which included games against perennial powerhouse programs such as Kentucky, Duke, Ohio State, and Georgetown. Despite 7 games against top 10 ranked opponents, Kansas finished the regular season 26–5, earned their 8th consecutive Big 12 title, and advanced to their 14th Final Four in school history. The Jayhawks faced another 2 seed, the Ohio State Buckeyes, in the National Semifinals, and came back from a 13-point first-half deficit to win the game, 64–62. They then faced the Kentucky Wildcats, who had beaten the Louisville Cardinals on the other side of the bracket, in the championship game. Kansas lost to the Wildcats, 67–59.

Kansas entered the 2012–13 season with eight straight Big 12 titles in tow. They ended the season having won 107 of their last 109 games at home. After scoring their ninth consecutive title and winning the Big 12 tournament championship by defeating rival Kansas State for the third time that season, KU set its sights on a sixth national title. They were seeded #1 in the South bracket, defeating Western Kentucky and North Carolina before losing in overtime to Michigan 87–85 in the Sweet 16.

With star freshmen Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid on the roster, Kansas entered the 2013–14 season as the #5 team in the country. They started off well with five straight wins, including a victory over Duke in the Champions' Classic. However, the team went 4–4 over its next eight games, including back-to-back losses to Colorado and Florida and an ugly home loss to San Diego State. The team recovered from this rough stretch and began Big 12 play with seven straight wins, ultimately finishing 14–4 to win its 10th consecutive Big 12 title. A back injury to Joel Embiid, however, left the Jayhawks vulnerable on their interior defense, and they fizzled out at season's end with four losses in their final seven games, including a loss to Iowa State in the Big 12 Tournament quarterfinals in Kansas City and an NCAA Tournament Round of 32 loss to Stanford to end the year. Kansas concluded the year 25–10, the first ten-loss season for Kansas since Roy Williams' 1999–2000 Jayhawks went 24–10.

After the exodus of Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid to the NBA draft, the Jayhawks reloaded with freshmen Kelly Oubre Jr. and Cliff Alexander, the Jayhawks looked poised for another Big 12 season title, which would be their 11th straight. After a loss in the Champions Classic to Kentucky, the Jayhawks finished 11–2 in the non-conference. In what many[who?] regarded as the toughest conference in the nation (Big 12) the Jayhawks won their 11th straight title outright with a record of 13–5, having lost a strong post presence in Cliff Alexander due to an investigation by the NCAA of improper benefits being given to Alexander. Evidence never clearly materialized, but Alexander was held out and played his last game as a Jayhawk at Kansas State, where they lost by 7. They then lost in the Big 12 Championship game to Iowa State 70–66, and had a final record going into the tournament of 26–8. The Jayhawks were given a 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament, where they ousted 15 seed New Mexico State by 19 points, but exited the tournament early at the hands of Wichita State by 13 points. Both Oubre Jr. and Alexander declared for the draft shortly after the conclusion of the NCAA tournament.

The 2015–16 Jayhawks, led by Perry Ellis and Frank Mason, won a 12th consecutive Big 12 title and won the Big 12 Tournament. Seeded #1 in the NCAA South Region, the Jayhawks reached the Elite Eight, where they stumbled against #2 seed Villanova, the eventual national champions.

In 2016–17, behind the leadership of national player of the year Frank Mason, the Jayhawks won a 13th consecutive Big 12 title, tying UCLA's record for most consecutive conference titles. Although the team made an early exit from the Big 12 Tournament with a quarterfinal loss to TCU, the Jayhawks got the #1 seed in the NCAA Midwest Region. They dominated UC-Davis, Michigan State, and Purdue in their first three games, but ran into a buzzsaw against Oregon in the Elite Eight.

The 2017–18 Jayhawks lost a number of players to graduation, the NBA Draft, and transfer; but appeared to be poised for another spectacular season. Star freshman Billy Preston was sidelined by an NCAA inquiry into the financial picture surrounding his car, and ultimately left the team to play professional basketball in Europe. Kansas won its first seven games before losing in Kansas City to Washington and at home to Arizona State. Kansas would lose a total of three home games during the season, the most for any Bill Self-coached Kansas team, and the most since losing three home games in the 1998–99 season. The season bottomed out in early February with a home loss to Oklahoma State and a 16-point loss at Baylor. But Kansas rallied to win a 14th straight Big 12 title, breaking UCLA's record. Then they defeated West Virginia to win the Big 12 Tournament. Seeded #1 in the NCAA Midwest Region, the Jayhawks defeated Penn, Seton Hall, Clemson, and Duke to reach Bill Self's third Final Four appearance and the program's 15th overall. However, they stumbled against Villanova for the second time in three years. As with their last outing, Villanova wound up as the college champions.

Kansas played in the 2015 World University Games in South Korea as the United States representatives in July 2015. The Jayhawks went undefeated in the World University Games, winning the championship to give the United States its first gold medal in World University Games men's basketball since 2005.[21] In August 2017, Self and the Jayhawks traveled to Italy to play four exhibition matches against local professional Italian teams.

Shortly before the 2019–20 season began the NCAA announced they had major NCAA violations stemming from their involvement in the 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball corruption scandal putting their NCAA record consecutive tournament appearance streak in jeopardy.[22]

The Jayhawks finished the 2019–20 regular season 28–3 and were unanimously ranked number one in the final regular season AP poll. The Jayhawks went undefeated against unranked teams, and their three losses came to ranked teams. The Jayhawks were a favorite to win the NCAA Tournament, but the tournament was cancelled on March 12, 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The following season, the Jayhawks struggled early in the conference schedule. After eight games, they had a 4–4 conference record. At one point during conference play, they lost five of seven games which included a 3-game losing streak, a rarity under Self. They would finish the regular season the season winning seven of their last eight games, including a 71–58 defeat of number 2 ranked Baylor, who was undefeated going into the game. Kansas withdrew from the Big 12 tournament after a player tested positive for COVID-19. They qualified for the tournament, extending their NCAA record to 31 consecutive tournaments. They defeated Eastern Washington in the first round. The following round, they were beaten by USC 51–85, their worst NCAA Tournament loss in school history and one of the worst defeats in program history.

On April 2, 2021, Kansas signed Self to a lifetime contract. The contract will automatically add an extra year to every year he coaches until he retires or dies.[23]

The 2021–22 team earned a number 1 seed in the 2022 NCAA tournament. They defeated Providence in the tournament to become the winningest program in the nation.[24] They defeated Villanova in the Final Four. The Jayhawks defeated North Carolina 72–69 in the national championship game to win Self's second championship, and the team's fourth NCAA championship. In the championship game, they completed a 16-point comeback, including being down 40–25 at halftime, the largest in NCAA championship history.[25]

Conference affiliations

Kansas has been affiliated with the following conferences:

Conference Years Reason left
Independent 1898–1907 Joined MVIAA
Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association* 1907–1928 Conference dissolved
Big Six/Seven/Eight Conference 1929–1995 Conference dissolved
Big 12 Conference 1996–present N/A

*While there is an active conference with the name Missouri Valley, it is officially and legally a separate entity from the MVIAA.

Rank in notable areas

Category Rank Stat
All-Time Wins 1st 2,385
All-Time Win % 3rd .729
Regular Season Conference championships 1st 64
Consecutive Reg. season Conf. Championships 1st 14
NCAA Tournament Titles 7th 4
NCAA Title Game Appearances 5th 10
NCAA Final Four Appearances 5th 16
NCAA Elite Eight Appearances 3rd 25
NCAA Sweet 16 Appearances 4th 32
NCAA Tournament Appearances 3rd 51
Consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances 1st 33*
NCAA Tournament No. 1 Seeds 2nd 16
NCAA Tournament Games played 3rd 165
NCAA Tournament Wins 4th 116
NCAA Tournament Win % T-6th .662
Weeks Ranked as AP No. 1[26] 5th 65
Weeks Ranked as AP No. 2[27] 2nd 102
Weeks Ranked in AP Top 5[28] 4th 359
Weeks Ranked in AP Top 10[29] 4th 558
Weeks Ranked in AP Poll[30] 4th 764
Appearances in Final AP Poll[31] 4th 44
Consecutive Weeks Ranked in AP Poll[32] 1st 231
Seasons with 35 Wins or More 3rd 4
Seasons with 30 Wins or More T–2nd 14
Seasons with 25 Wins or More 3rd 34
Seasons with 20 Wins or More 5th 49
Seasons with a Winning Record 1st 99
Seasons with a Non-Losing Record 1st 102
Consecutive seasons with 30 Wins[33] 1st 4
Consecutive seasons with 25 Wins[33] 1st 13
Consecutive seasons with 20 Wins[33] 1st 34*[34]
Consensus First Team All-American Selections 1st 30
Consensus First Team All-American Players 1st 23
Academic All-American Selections 2nd 15
Academic All-American Players 1st 11

* Active streak.
Current Official NCAA Records and Awards data.[35]

Notable games

  • On February 3, 1899, the Jayhawks, coached by James Naismith played their first game in program history. They played the Kansas City YMCA in a game the Jayhawks lost 5–16.
  • The first victory in program history came on February 10, 1899. The Jayhawks defeated the Topeka YMCA 31–6.
  • On January 25, 1907, the Jayhawks played Kansas State for the first time beginning the rivalry that would become known as the Sunflower Showdown, a nod to the state flower of Kansas and one of the state's nicknames, the Sunflower State. The Jayhawks won 54–49.
  • The Jayhawks bitter rivalry with Missouri began on March 11, 1907, a game the Jayhawks lost 31–34. The rivalry would eventually become known as the Border War.
  • On March 22, 1940, the Jayhawks played their first ever NCAA Tournament game. They defeated Rice 50–44 in Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Missouri. The Jayhawks would defeat USC the following day to make their first national championship game appearance, but lost to Indiana 42–60.
  • On March 26, 1952, the Jayhawks defeated St. John's (NY) 80–63 to win their first NCAA Tournament National Championship Championship in program history.
  • On March 1, 1955, Kansas played their first ever game at Allen Fieldhouse. The arena was named after Phog Allen, who was still their coach at the time. They won the game against rival Kansas State, 77–67.
  • In the NCAA title game in 1957, Wilt Chamberlain and Kansas were defeated by the North Carolina Tar Heels 54–53 in triple overtime in what many[who?] consider to be the greatest NCAA Championship game ever played. Chamberlain was later named the NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player, the second to win the award and be a part of the losing team (Kansas’ B.H. Born won the award in 1953).[36]
  • In the 1966 Midwest Regional Finals, Kansas, the favored team to face Kentucky, played Texas Western. Texas Western got a controversial double overtime victory, 81–80. The would-be winning shot, a 35-footer, at the buzzer was made by All-American Jo Jo White at the end of the first overtime, but White was called for stepping on the sideline. The game was featuredin the 2006 film Glory Road which is based on that season's Texas Western National Championship team.
  • On April 4, 1988, in the 50th NCAA Tournament National Championship game, Kansas defeated the heavily favored Oklahoma Sooners 83–79 to win its second NCAA Men's Basketball championship. Led by senior forward and Player of the Year Danny Manning, Kevin Pritchard, Milt Newton, Chris Piper and a roster of players who came to be known as "The Miracles" raced the Sooners to a 50–50 halftime tie that had the referees shaking their heads and smiling as they left the court. Upon their return for the second half, Larry Brown convinced his Jayhawks that now that they proved they could run with the Sooners, they needed to slow the game down and take the Sooners out of their fast break offense. The Sooners built a 5-point second half lead until the Kansas defense finally clamped down. The Jayhawks, led by Manning (31 points, 18 rebounds, 5 steals, 2 blocked shots), caught up with them around the 11 minute mark. The rest of the game was neck and neck, until Manning finally sealed the victory from the free throw line.[37]
  • On December 9, 1989, AP #2 Kansas beat Kentucky 150–95 in Allen Fieldhouse.[38] The 150 points scored by the Jayhawks set the school record for most points scored in a game, and the team's 80 first-half points set the record for most points scored in a half.
  • On January 27, 2003, Kansas defeated Texas 90–87 at Allen Fieldhouse behind a 24-point, 23-rebound performance by Nick Collison. Upon Collison fouling out of the game, his effort moved longtime ESPN college basketball analyst Dick Vitale to give him a standing ovation, only the second time Vitale had ever done so. (the first being for David Robinson)[39] Both Kansas and Texas would make the Final Four that year.
  • On April 7, 2008, in the 2008 National Championship game, the Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Memphis Tigers 75–68 in a come from behind overtime victory to become the 2008 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament Champions. Mario Chalmers made a three-point shot with 2.1 seconds remaining, bringing the Jayhawks all the way back from a 60–51 deficit with two minutes remaining. The Jayhawks went 4–4 from the field, including 2–2 from 3-point range, and also went 2–2 from the line in the final 2 minutes. The Jayhawks then continued their hot flurry by going 4–6 from the field in OT and 4–4 from the line, outscoring the Tigers 12–5 in overtime to capture their third NCAA title, and fifth overall, including the retroactively awarded Helms Foundation Championships for the 1922 and 1923 seasons. Chalmers finished with 18 points, 3 rebounds, 3 assists, and 4 steals, and was chosen the Most Outstanding Player at the Final Four, the fifth Jayhawk all-time to be selected Final Four MOP.
  • On January 15, 2011, Kansas celebrated its 69th consecutive home win (over Nebraska), the longest such Division I record since 1992 and the longest home winning streak in KU's history. (The streak ended on January 22, 2011, with a loss at home to the Texas Longhorns.)
  • On February 25, 2012, the Jayhawks played their final conference game against their longtime rival, the Missouri Tigers. The Kansas Jayhawks came back from a 19-point deficit in the second half to take the team to an 87–86 overtime win against the Tigers. The volume level inside the arena was a sustained 120 dB, with a high point of 127 dB when Thomas Robinson blocked Phil Pressey's shot at the end of regulation to preserve the tie.
  • On January 4, 2016, the Jayhawks, who were ranked 1st in the AP poll and 2nd in the coaches poll, played Oklahoma, who was ranked 2nd in the AP poll and 1st in the coaches poll. The game was back and forth the last few minutes of regulation. The game eventually went to 3 overtimes, and KU won 109–106. Kansas forward Perry Ellis scored 27 points and got 13 rebounds while Oklahoma guard Buddy Hield scored 46 points. The game was the first time in Big 12 history that a conference game featured the number 1 ranked team and the number 2 ranked team.
  • On February 27, 2016, the Jayhawks won their 12th consecutive Big 12 regular season championship with a 67–58 win at home against Texas Tech. Kansas is one regular season conference championship behind UCLA's record of 13 straight.[40]
  • On February 24, 2018, the Jayhawks won their 14th consecutive Big 12 regular season championship with a 74–72 win at Texas Tech. With this win, Kansas broke the NCAA record for most consecutive league championships (previously held by UCLA with 13).[41]
  • On March 25, 2018, the Jayhawks played Duke in the 2018 NCAA tournament in the Elite Eight. The game featured two of the top college basketball programs in the nation with a Hall of Fame coach on both sidelines with Bill Self and Mike Krzyzewski. The game was a back and forth game that had 18 lead changes and 11 ties. Senior guard Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk made a 3 pointer with 25.7 seconds left to tie the game at 72. Duke guard Grayson Allen missed the potential game winning shot as time expired and the game went into overtime. Kansas guard Malik Newman scored all 13 of the Jayhawks points in overtime to help them win 85–81 earning KU their first Final Four trip since 2012.[42]
  • After defeating Providence in the 2022 NCAA tournament, Kansas passed Kentucky to be the winningest program in the nation.[43]
  • When the Jayhawks defeated North Carolina in the 2022 National Championship game, they completed the largest comeback in National Championship game history. They were down by as much as 16 points in the first half and were down 25–40 at halftime and won 72–69.[44]

Coaches

Despite having a program for over 120 years, the Jayhawks have only had 8 head coaches. Four of their coaches have been inducted to the Hall of Fame as a coach. The longest tenured coach was Phog Allen at 39 seasons, while the shortest tenured coach was Larry Brown, who coached for 5 seasons. Allen also has the most wins in Kansas basketball history with 590. The next closest coach is current head coach Bill Self, who has won over 500 games. Ted Owens is the only coach in program history to have been fired. Allen and Harp are the only Jayhawk coaches to have also played at the school. Self had his first coaching job as an assistant under Brown at Kansas.

Of programs who have been around for at least 100 years, Kansas has had the fewest coaches, yet they have been led to the Final Four by more coaches than any other program. Every coach that has coached Kansas since the inception of the NCAA Tournament in 1939 has led the team to a Final Four. Phog Allen, Dick Harp, Ted Owens, Larry Brown, Roy Williams, and Bill Self have all led Kansas to NCAA Final Four appearances. Of those coaches, Allen, Brown, and Bill Self have led the Jayhawks to NCAA Championships (in 1952, 1988, 2008, and 2022 respectively). In addition to an NCAA Tournament National Championship, Allen won two retroactively awarded Helms Athletic Foundation National Championships for the 1922 and 1923 seasons. Allen and Self are the only coaches to win multiple National Championships of any kind, while Self is the only one to win multiple NCAA Tournament National Championships.

While officially only having had eight coaches in program history, the Jayhawks also had three interim coaches who are not considered an official part of the coaching history. In 1919, Karl Schlademan coached, and won, the first game of the season before relinquishing the coaching position to Allen in order to concentrate on his duties as head track coach. In 1947, Howard Engleman coached 14 games (going 8–6) after Allen was ordered to take a rest following the 13th game of the season. Engleman's record is not listed in this table as he was never officially a head coach at the university.[45] Assistant coach Norm Roberts served as acting head coach for the beginning of the 2022–23 season while Bill Self served a 4-game suspension for alleged recruiting violations.[46] He served as the acting head coach again for Kansas in the Big 12 and NCAA Tournaments while Bill Self was away from the team following a heart procedure. Each of these coaches have every one of their wins counted in their career records in the NCAA record books. The only exception is Roberts, who only has 4 wins early in the season counted, instead the 4 wins and 2 losses in the postseason; those 4 wins and 2 losses are counted in Self's career coaching record.

Years Duration of head coaching career at Kansas
Record Number of career games won-lost at Kansas
Percent Percentage of games won at Kansas
Inducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a coach
Number Years Coach Record Percent Reason left Notes
1 1898–1907 James Naismith 55–60 .478 Retired • Inventor of the game of Basketball
• Only Coach in Kansas Basketball history with a losing record
2 1907–1909, 1919–1956 Phog Allen 590–219 .729 Retired* • Known as the "Father Of Basketball Coaching" for his innovations of the modern game and for the legendary coaches who played under him
• Created the NABC (National Association of Basketball Coaches)
• Successfully lobbied to make the game of basketball an Olympic sport
• Helped to create the modern NCAA tournament, which began in 1939
• 1 NCAA Championship, 2 Helms Championships
• 3 National Championship game appearances
• 3 Final Fours
• 24 Conference regular season Championships
3 1909–1919 W. O. Hamilton 125–59 .679 Resigned • 5 Conference regular season Championships
1919 Karl Schlademan 1–0 1.000 Interim Coached a single game before resigning and allowing Phog Allen to take over.
1946–1947 Howard Engleman 8–6 .571 Interim Coached 14 games while Phog Allen was on a medical leave.
4 1956–1964 Dick Harp 121–82 .596 Resigned • 1 National Championship game appearance
• 1 Final Four
• 2 Conference regular season Championships
5 1964–1983 Ted Owens 348–182 .657 Fired • 2 Final Fours
• 6 Conference regular season Championships
• 1 Conference tournament Championship
• 1978 Basketball Weekly Coach of the Year
6 1983–1988 Larry Brown 135–44 .754 Accepted position with the San Antonio Spurs • 1 NCAA Championship
• 2 Final Fours
• 1 Conference regular season Championship
• 2 Conference tournament Championships
• 1988 Naismith College Coach of the Year
7 1988–2003 Roy Williams 418–101 .805 Accepted position at North Carolina • 2 National Championship game appearances
• 4 Final Fours
• 9 Conference regular season Championships
• 4 Conference tournament Championships
• 1990 Henry Iba Award Coach of the Year
• 1992 AP Coach of the Year
• 1997 Naismith College Coach of the Year
8 2003–present Bill Self 580–132 .815† Still active • 2 NCAA Championships
• 3 National Championship game appearances
• 4 Final Fours
• 14 Consecutive Conference regular season Championships
• 17 Conference regular season Championships
• 9 Conference tournament Championships
• 2009 Henry Iba Award Coach of the Year, AP Coach of the Year, CBS/Chevrolet Coach of the Year, Sporting News Coach of the Year
• 2012 Naismith College Coach of the Year, Sporting News Coach of the Year, Adolph Rupp Cup
• 2006, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2017, 2018 Big 12 Conference Men's Basketball Coach of the Year
• 2016 AP Coach of the Year
2022–2023 Norm Roberts 4–0 1.000 Acting Coached first 4 games of 2022–2023 season while Bill Self served a suspension for recruiting violations. Also coached Kansas in the Big 12 Tournament and NCAA Tournament following a heart procedure on Self, however, Self received credit for those six games in the NCAA record books.
Total thru 2022–23[47] 2,385–885 .729 N/A

*Allen was forced to retire prior to the 1956–57 season due to a University of Kansas policy that required university employees to retire at the age of 70; he turned 70 in November of 1955.[48]†Naismith is inducted in the Hall of Fame as the inventor of the game, not as a coach.

Updated March 20, 2023

Facilities

Snow Hall (1898–1907)

Before 1907 the Jayhawks played in various venues, ranging from the basement of the original Snow Hall (even though the ceiling was only 14 feet high) to the skating rink at the local YMCA. Although a current campus building bears the same name, the original Snow Hall was demolished in 1934.[49]

Robinson Gymnasium (1907–1927)

Robinson Gym was the first athletic building on the KU campus and featured a 2,500-seat auditorium used for basketball purposes. The building was demolished in 1967.[50]

Hoch Auditorium (1927–1955)

Hoch Auditorium was a 3,500 seat multi-purpose arena in Lawrence, Kansas. It opened in 1927. It was home to the University of Kansas Jayhawks basketball teams until Allen Fieldhouse opened in 1955.

Many of Hoch's nicknames during the basketball years were "Horrible Hoch" and "The House of Horrors." Such nicknames were in reference to the difficulty opposing teams had in dealing with the tight area surrounding the court and the curved walls and decorative lattice work directly behind the backboards. The curvature of the walls made the backboards appear to be moving causing opponents to miss free throws.

On June 15, 1991, Hoch Auditorium was struck by lightning. The auditorium and stage area were completely destroyed. Only the limestone facade and lobby area were spared. When reconstruction of the building was complete, the rear half of the building was named Budig Hall, for then KU Chancellor Gene Budig. The name on the facade was altered to reflect the presence of three large auditorium-style lecture halls within the building: Hoch Auditoria.

Former KU Basketball Facilities
 
Snow Hall
 
Robinson Gymnasium
 
The remaining facade of what was Hoch Auditorium

Allen Fieldhouse (1955–present)

 
The 2006–07 men's basketball team plays against OSU at Allen Fieldhouse.

Allen Fieldhouse was dedicated on March 1, 1955, when the Jayhawks defeated in-state rival, Kansas State 77–67.

Since February 20, 1994, the Jayhawks have lost only 14 regular season games in Allen Fieldhouse, a 263–14 record (.951). Since February 3, 2007, the Jayhawks have gone 227–9 (.962) at Allen Fieldhouse, as of April 17, 2021, one of the best home record in all of basketball.

Allen Fieldhouse is also notorious for its noise level as well. On November 4, 2010, ESPN The Magazine named Allen Fieldhouse the loudest college basketball arena in the country, reaching sustained decibel levels over 120.[51] On February 13, 2017, in a game against Big 12 opponent West Virginia, fans at Allen Fieldhouse broke the Guinness World Record for loudest crowd roar at an indoor sporting event with a roar of 130.4 decibels, which had been set by Kentucky on January 28 against Kansas.[52]

In the DeBruce Center at the northeast corner of the building is the original document of the Dr. Naismith's Original 13 Rules Of Basketball, purchased at auction by the Booth family for $4.3 million on December 10, 2010.[53]

Kansas won 69 consecutive games at the Fieldhouse between February 3, 2007, and January 17, 2011, until Texas ended the longest streak in NCAA Division I since 1992 with a 74–63 win against Kansas on January 22, 2011. This streak broke Kansas' previous school record of 62, which lasted from February 26, 1994, through December 18, 1998 (during which time, the Jayhawks, along with the remaining members of the Big Eight Conference merged with the remaining members of the Southwest Conference to become charter members of the Big 12 Conference). The Jayhawks also completed a 55-game streak between February 22, 1984, through January 30, 1988, which is a Big 8 record.

Home game traditions

Before the start of every Jayhawks home game, after the singing of "The Star-Spangled Banner", it is a tradition to sing the alma mater, "Crimson and the Blue". While singing the alma mater, it is tradition for the students in attendance to put an arm over the shoulders of their neighbors and slowly sway side to side, lifting their arms over their heads as the last line of the song is sung. The song is concluded by the Rock Chalk Chant.

Post-game, the band will play a rendition of the Kansas state song "Home on the Range", which the crowd will stand up for similar to the national anthem.

After singing The Star-Spangled Banner, while the opposing team is being introduced, members of the student section take out a copy of the student-run newspaper, The University Daily Kansan, and wave the paper in front of their faces, pretending to be reading it in an effort to show lack of interest in the opposing team. After the opponents are introduced, a short video is shown, detailing the history and the accomplishments of Kansas basketball. As the Jayhawks are introduced, the students rip up their newspapers and throw the confetti pieces of paper in the air as celebration. Whatever confetti remains is typically thrown in the air after the first basket made by the Jayhawks.

If an opposing player fouls out of the game, the fans will "wave the wheat", waving their arms back and forth, as a sarcastic good-bye to the disqualified player, to the tune of "You Didn't Have Your Wheaties", from a series of 1970s television commercials promoting Wheaties breakfast cereal. The same waving motion to the tune of "A Hot Time in the Old Town" follows a Jayhawk victory.

If the Jayhawks are leading comfortably near the end of the game, the crowd begins a slow version of the Rock Chalk Chant, which has become the signature tradition of Allen Fieldhouse. The chant can also occasionally be heard at neutral sites, such as arenas for the NCAA tournament and the nearby T-Mobile Center on the Missouri side of Kansas City which during the regular season serves as an alternate home arena.

Fans and students will also line up early for Late Night In The Phog, which is the first practice of the season. The practice is viewable to the public and includes skits with past players as the hosts.

Year-by-year Results

Rivalries

Kansas State

The Jayhawks longest played rivalry is with cross-state rival Kansas State. The Jayhawks lead the series 203–94. The Jayhawks have dominated the series since 1984 holding a record of 86–12 in that time frame. K-State has not led the all-time series since 1922. The schools have met annually since 1912 and first played in 1907. Kansas leads in Lawrence 93–35, in Manhattan 81–48, and on neutral courts 29–11. The Largest K-State victory was by 27 points, 96–69, on January 20, 1979. The largest Kansas win was 45 points, 90–45, on March 10, 1955. K-State longest win streak was 5 games, which they achieved twice, from 1972 to 1974 and 1982–83. The longest winning streak from Kansas was 31 games from 1994 to 2005.[54]

Missouri

The Jayhawks main rival has been Missouri for many years. The two teams first played in 1907. The two teams played every year until Missouri left the Big 12 for the SEC. The schools renewed the rivalry beginning in the 2021–22 season. The Jayhawks won the first game in the renewal of the rivalry 102–65.[55] KU leads the all-time series 174–94. The Jayhawks largest victory was 47 points, 96–49, on December 28, 1977. Missouri's largest victory was 30 points, 99–69, on January 17, 1976. The Jayhawks longest winning streak was 14 games from 1910 to 1913. Missouri's longest winning streak was 9 from 1920 to 1922.

Wichita State

While not officially a rivalry, the Jayhawks have played cross-state opponent Wichita State 15 times. The teams most recently met in the 2015 NCAA tournament in the round of 32. Wichita State won that game 79–65. The teams haven't met in the regular season since KU defeated Wichita State 103–54 on January 6, 1993. However, the teams have a game scheduled for the 2023–24 season. Kansas leads the all-time series 12–3. The Jayhawks largest victory was the aforementioned 49 point victory in 1993. The Shockers largest victory was the 14-point victory in the 2015 NCAA Tournament mentioned already. Wichita State has never won consecutive games against Kansas. The Jayhawks won five times in a row from 1989 to 1993. Wichita State won both games between the schools in the NCAA Tournament.

Post-season results

Regular season conference championships

The Jayhawks have won 63 conference championships since their inception, including an NCAA record 14 consecutive from 2005 through 2018. The Jayhawks have belonged to the Big 12 Conference since it formed before the 1996–97 season. Before that, the Jayhawks have belonged to the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association from the 1907–08 to 1927–28 seasons, the Big Six Conference from 1928–29 to 1946–47, the Big Seven Conference from 1947–48 to 1957–58, the Big Eight Conference from 1958 to 1959 up until the end of the 1995–96 season. The Big Six and Big Seven conferences were actually the more often used names of the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association, which existed under that official name until 1964, when it was changed to the Big Eight.[56]

Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association (13)

  • 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, 1914, 1915, 1922, 1923, 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927

Big 6/7/8 Conference (30)

  • 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1936, 1937, 1938, 1940, 1941, 1942, 1943, 1946, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1957, 1960, 1966, 1967, 1971, 1974, 1975, 1978, 1986, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996

Big 12 Conference (21)

  • 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2023

Conference tournament championships

The Big Eight Conference did not regularly have a post-season tournament until after the 1977 season. Prior to that teams usually played in the Big Eight (before that, Big Seven) Holiday Tournament in December. The Holiday tournament ended after the 1979 season.

Big Seven/Big Eight Holiday Tournament (13)

  • 1951, 1953, 1956, 1957, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1968, 1970, 1974, 1977, 1978

Big Eight Conference (4)

  • 1981, 1984, 1986, 1992

Big 12 Conference (12)

NCAA Tournament seeding history

The NCAA started seeding teams with the 1978 tournament, with the seeding format used today beginning in 1979. The Jayhawks were seeded for the first time in their 1981 tournament appearance. There was no tournament in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Years → '81 '84 '85 '86 '87 '88 '90 '91 '92 '93 '94 '95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03
Seeds→ 7 5 3 1 5 6 2 3 1 2 4 1 2 1* 1 6 8 4 1 2
Years → '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '15 '16 '17 '18 '19 '21 '22 '23
Seeds→ 4 3 4 1 1 3 1* 1 2 1 2 2 1* 1 1 4 3 1 1

* Indicates overall number one seed.

#

Indicates NCAA championship.

Final Four history

Men's NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player

*Did not play on a championship team

National Championships

The Jayhawks have been awarded a combined 6 Championships, two Helms Championships and four NCAA Tournament National Championships. The Helms titles were awarded retroactively by the Helms Athletic Foundation in 1943. Some schools do not claim Helms championships, Kansas, however, does claim them and has a banner hanging for both in Allen Fieldhouse, along with their legitimate NCAA Tournament championships.[57]

Helms Athletic Foundation Championships

Head Coach: Phog Allen
Record: 16-2
Head Coach: Phog Allen
Record: 17-1

NCAA Tournament National Championships

1952

The Jayhawks 1951-52 team won the schools first NCAA Tournament Championship. They were coached by Phog Allen and finished the season with a 28–3 record.

1952 NCAA Tournament Results
Round Opponent Score
First Round TCU 68–64
Second Round St. Louis 74–55
Final Four Santa Clara 74–55
Championship St. John's 80–63
1988

The 1987-88 team won the Jayhawks second NCAA Tournament championship. The Jayhawks were coached by Larry Brown. They finished the season 27–11, which is the lowest winning percentage (.710) and most losses of any team to win the national championship.[58] The team remains the only championship team of the Jayhawks that did not win the regular season conference championship or the conference tournament championship.

1988 NCAA Tournament Results
Round Opponent Score
First Round No. 11 Xavier 85–72
Second Round No. 14 Murray State 61–58
Sweet Sixteen No. 7 Vanderbilt 77–64
Elite Eight No. 4 Kansas State 71–58
Final Four No. 2 Duke 66–59
Championship No. 1 Oklahoma 83–79
2008
 
The banner in Allen Fieldhouse for the 2008 National Championship

The 2007-08 team won the Jayhawks third NCAA Tournament Championship. They were coached by Bill Self and finished the season with a 37–3 record, which is a school record for wins in a season.

2008 NCAA Tournament Results
Round Opponent Score
First Round No. 16 Portland State 85–61
Second Round No. 8 UNLV 75–56
Sweet Sixteen No. 12 Villanova 72–57
Elite Eight No. 10 Davidson 59–57
Final Four No. 1 North Carolina 84–66
Championship No. 1 Memphis 75–68OT
2022

The 2021-22 team won the Jayhawks fourth NCAA Tournament Championship, which is their most recent championship. They were coached by Bill Self and finished the season with a 34–6 record. The Jayhawks tournament run in 2022 is the only one since teams began being seeded that they did not play a single number 1 seed in the Final Four and National Championship game.

2022 NCAA Tournament Results
Round Opponent Score
First Round No. 16 Texas Southern 83–56
Second Round No. 9 Creighton 79–72
Sweet Sixteen No. 4 Providence 66–61
Elite Eight No. 10 Miami (FL) 76–50
Final Four No. 2 Villanova 81–65
Championship No. 8 North Carolina 72–69

Complete NCAA tournament results

The Jayhawks have appeared in the NCAA tournament 51 times. Their combined record is 116–49. Their largest victory in a tournament game was a 58-point (110–52) victory over Prairie View A&M in 1998, which is also the Jayhawks tournament record for most points scored in a tournament game. Their largest defeat in a tournament game was a 34-point defeat (51–85) against USC in 2021, which was also their lowest point in the NCAA tournament total since the introduction of the shot clock in the 1985–86 season. They have been eliminated in the first round only six times since the beginning of the tournament, only two of those times have been since the tournament expanded to 64 teams. The Jayhawks have played in 11 overtime games in the NCAA Tournament and have a 6–5 record. Two of their overtime games went into multiple overtimes, those was their 3 overtime game against North Carolina in the 1957 National Championship game and their double overtime loss to Texas Western in the 1966 Elite Eight. The loss to Texas Western was featured in the 2006 film Glory Road.

Only four times in program history has Kansas failed to win a single game in the tournament and only twice since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985.

Like most schools, Kansas rarely plays conference opponents in the tournament. The 1988 tournament was the only time they've ever played conference opponents. In that tournament they defeated rival Kansas State in the Elite 8 and Oklahoma in the national championship game.

Appearances are grouped by the number of teams in the bracket. Round names are based on what round names were at the time of the tournament, not the present names. The term "Elite eight" began in 1956, "Final four" began in 1975, and "Sweet Sixteen" began in 1988.

Eight team tournament
Year Round Opponent Result
1940 First round
Semifinals
National Championship
Rice
USC
Indiana
W 50–44
W 43–42
L 42–60
1942 First roundt
Regional 3rd Place Game
Colorado
Rice
L 44–46
W 55–53
Sixteen to Thirty-two team tournament
Year Round Opponent Result
1952 First round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
National Championship
TCU
Saint Louis
Santa Clara
St. John's
W 68–64
W 74–55
W 74–55
W 80–63
1953 First round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
National Championship
Oklahoma City
Oklahoma A&M
Washington
Indiana
W 73–65
W 61–55
W 79–53
L 68–69
1957 First round
Elite eight
Semifinals
National Championship
SMU
Oklahoma City
San Francisco
North Carolina
W 73–65OT
W 81–61
W 80–56
L 53–543OT
1960 First round
Elite eight
Texas
Cincinnati
W 90–81
L 71–82
1966 First round
Elite eight
SMU
Texas Western
W 76–70
L 80–812OT
1967 First round
Regional 3rd Place
Houston
Louisville
L 53–66
W 70–68
1971 First round
Elite eight
Semifinals
National 3rd Place Game
Houston
Drake
UCLA
Western Kentucky
W 78–77
W 73–71
L 60–68
L 75–77
1974 First round
Elite eight
Semifinals
National 3rd Place Game
Creighton
Oral Roberts
Marquette
UCLA
W 55–54
W 93–90OT
L 51–64
L 61–78
1975 First Round Notre Dame L 71–77
1978 First Round UCLA L 76–83
Forty to Fifty-three teams
Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1981 No. 7 First Round
Second Round
Regional semifinal
No. 10 Ole Miss
No. 2 Arizona State
No. 6 Wichita State
W 69–66
W 88–71
L 65–66
1984 No. 5 First Round
Second Round
No. 12 Alcorn State
No. 4 Wake Forest
W 57–56
L 59–69
Sixty-four teams
Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1985 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
No. 14 Ohio
No. 11 Auburn
W 49–38
L 64–66
1986 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Regional semifinal
Elite Eight
Final Four
No. 16 North Carolina A&T
No. 9 Temple
No. 5 Michigan State
No. 6 NC State
No. 1 Duke
W 71–46
W 65–43
W 96–86OT
W 75–67
L 67–71
1987 No. 5 First Round
Second Round
Regional semifinal
No. 12 Houston
No. 13 SW Missouri State
No. 1 Georgetown
W 66–55
W 67–63
L 57–70
1988 No. 6 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
No. 11 Xavier
No. 14 Murray State
No. 7 Vanderbilt
No. 4 Kansas State
No. 2 Duke
No. 1 Oklahoma
W 85–72
W 61–58
W 77–64
W 71–58
W 66–59
W 83–79
1990 No. 2 First Round
Second Round
No. 15 Robert Morris
No. 7 UCLA
W 79–71
L 70–71
1991 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
No. 14 New Orleans
No. 6 Pittsburgh
No. 2 Indiana
No. 1 Arkansas
No. 1 North Carolina
No. 2 Duke
W 55–49
W 77–66
W 83–65
W 93–81
W 79–73
L 65–72
1992 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
No. 16 Howard
No. 9 UTEP
W 100–67
L 60–66
1993 No. 2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
No. 15 Ball State
No. 7 BYU
No. 6 California
No. 1 Indiana
No. 1 North Carolina
W 94–72
W 90–76
W 93–76
W 83–77
L 68–78
1994 No. 4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 13 UT Chattanooga
No. 5 Wake Forest
No. 1 Purdue
W 102–73
W 69–58
L 78–83
1995 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 16 Colgate
No. 8 Western Kentucky
No. 4 Virginia
W 82–68
W 75–70
L 58–67
1996 No. 2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 15 South Carolina State
No. 10 Santa Clara
No. 3 Arizona
No. 4 Syracuse
W 92–54
W 76–51
W 83–80
L 57–60
1997 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 16 Jackson State
No. 8 Purdue
No. 4 Arizona
W 78–64
W 75–61
L 82–85
1998 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
No. 16 Prairie View A&M
No. 8 Rhode Island
W 110–52
L 75–80
Sixty-five teams
Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1999 No. 6 First Round
Second Round
No. 11 Evansville
No. 3 Kentucky
W 95–74
L 88–92OT
2000 No. 8 First Round
Second Round
No. 9 DePaul
No. 1 Duke
W 81–77OT
L 64–69
2001 No. 4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 13 Cal State Northridge
No. 5 Syracuse
No. 1 Illinois
W 99–75
W 87–58
L 64–80
2002 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
No. 16 Holy Cross
No. 8 Stanford
No. 4 Illinois
No. 2 Oregon
No. 1 Maryland
W 70–59
W 86–63
W 73–69
W 104–86
L 88–97
2003 No. 2 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
No. 15 Utah State
No. 10 Arizona State
No. 3 Duke
No. 1 Arizona
No. 3 Marquette
No. 3 Syracuse
W 64–61
W 108–76
W 69–65
W 78–75
W 94–61
L 78–81
2004 No. 4 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 13 UIC
No. 12 Pacific
No. 9 UAB
No. 3 Georgia Tech
W 78–44
W 78–63
W 100–74
L 71–79OT
2005 No. 3 First Round No. 14 Bucknell L 63–64
2006 No. 4 First Round No. 13 Bradley L 73–77
2007 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 16 Niagara
No. 8 Kentucky
No. 4 Southern Illinois
No. 2 UCLA
W 107–67
W 88–76
W 61–58
L 55–68
2008 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
No. 16 Portland State
No. 8 UNLV
No. 12 Villanova
No. 10 Davidson
No. 1 North Carolina
No. 1 Memphis
W 85–61
W 75–56
W 72–57
W 59–57
W 84–66
W 75–68OT
2009 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 14 North Dakota State
No. 11 Dayton
No. 2 Michigan State
W 84–74
W 60–43
L 62–67
2010 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
No. 16 Lehigh
No. 9 Northern Iowa
W 90–74
L 67–69
First four era
Year Seed Round Opponent Result
2011* No. 1 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 16 Boston University
No. 9 Illinois
No. 12 Richmond
No. 11 VCU
W 72–53
W 73–59
W 77–57
L 61–71
2012* No. 2 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
No. 15 Detroit
No. 10 Purdue
No. 11 NC State
No. 1 North Carolina
No. 2 Ohio State
No. 1 Kentucky
W 65–50
W 63–60
W 60–57
W 80–67
W 64–62
L 59–67
2013* No. 1 Second Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
No. 16 Western Kentucky
No. 8 North Carolina
No. 4 Michigan
W 64–57
W 70–58
L 85–87OT
2014* No. 2 Second Round
Third Round
No. 15 Eastern Kentucky
No. 10 Stanford
W 80–69
L 57–60
2015* No. 2 Second Round
Third Round
No. 15 New Mexico State
No. 7 Wichita State
W 75–56
L 65–78
2016 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 16 Austin Peay
No. 9 Connecticut
No. 5 Maryland
No. 2 Villanova
W 105–79
W 73–61
W 79–63
L 59–64
2017 No. 1 First Round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
No. 16 UC Davis
No. 9 Michigan State
No. 4 Purdue
No. 3 Oregon
W 100–62
W 90–70
W 98–66
L 60–74
2018 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
No. 16 Penn
No. 8 Seton Hall
No. 5 Clemson
No. 2 Duke
No. 1 Villanova
W 76–60
W 83–79
W 80–76
W 85–81 OT
L 79–95
2019 No. 4 First Round
Second Round
No. 13 Northeastern
No. 5 Auburn
W 87–53
L 75–89
2020 No tournament due to COVID-19 pandemic
2021 No. 3 First Round
Second Round
No. 14 Eastern Washington
No. 6 USC
W 93–84
L 51–85
2022 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
No. 16 Texas Southern
No. 9 Creighton
No. 4 Providence
No. 10 Miami (FL)
No. 2 Villanova
No. 8 North Carolina
W 83–56
W 79–72
W 66–61
W 76–50
W 81–65
W 72–69
2023 No. 1 First Round
Second Round
No. 16 Howard
No. 8 Arkansas
W 96–68
L 71–72

*Following the introduction of the First Four round in 2011, the Round of 64 and Round of 32 were referred to as the Second Round and Third Round, respectively, from 2011 to 2015, then from 2016 moving forward, the Round 64 and Round of 32 will be called the First and Second rounds.

Record by round
Round Record
First Four N/A*
Round of 64 35–2
Round of 32 24–13
Sweet 16 26–7
Elite 8 17–9
Final Four 10–6
Regional
3rd place game†
2–0
3rd place game† 0–2
National Championship 4–6

*Since its inception in 2011, Kansas has not participated in the First Four
†Round no longer played

NIT results

The Jayhawks have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) two times. Their combined record is 3–2.

Year Round Opponent Result
1968 First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Final
Temple
Villanova
Saint Peter's
Dayton
W 82–76
W 55–49
W 58–46
L 48–61
1969 First Round Boston College L 62–78

Jayhawks of note

All-time scoring leaders

[59]

Rank Player Points Per game Years
1 Danny Manning 2,951 20.1 1985–88
2 Nick Collison 2,097 14.8 2000–03
3 Raef LaFrentz 2,066 15.8 1995–98
4 Clyde Lovellette 1,979 24.7 1950–52
5 Sherron Collins 1,888 13.2 2007–10
6 Frank Mason III 1,885 13.0 2014–17
7 Darnell Valentine 1,821 15.4 1978–81
8 Keith Langford 1,812 13.3 2002–05
9 Perry Ellis 1,798 12.5 2012–16
10 Paul Pierce 1,768 16.4 1996–98

All-Americans

Consensus first team

Kansas leads all NCAA teams with 32 consensus First Team All-American selections, 25 different players have received the honor.[60]

‡ indicates player has made at least 2000 points and 1000 rebounds in his college career.

Other first team selections

Academic All-Americans

† indicates Academic All-American of the Year

National Player of the Year awards

McDonald's All-Americans

The 49 McDonald's All-Americans listed below have played for Kansas.[68] An asterisk, "*", Indicates player did not finish his college career at Kansas. A cross, "†", indicates player did not begin his college career at Kansas. The 2015 game had the most future Jayhawks playing in the game with four, however, two players transferred to Kansas and one transferred out of Kansas. The 2022 game also had 4 players but one transferred to Kansas and one transferred out of Kansas.

1970–1999
2000–2019
2020–present

Jayhawk basketball players notable in other fields

Below are any former Jayhawks who are notable in other fields. Included are the years they played basketball at Kansas and what they are notable for.

Retired jerseys

KU only retires the jerseys, and not the numbers, of past basketball players. Eight players honored played on one of KU's 5 championship teams. Thirty-one players have had their jersey retired by Kansas. One former announcer, Max Falkenstien, is honored with the retired jerseys as well. His number 60 was chosen because that was the number of years he was the radio announcer for the Jayhawks. Charlie T. Black and Paul Endacott are the only two players with their jerseys retired to play on two championship teams. Four players from the 2008 Championship have their jersey retired, which is the most players honored to be on a roster in any single season in Kansas basketball history.[70]

Kansas Jayhawks retired jerseys
No. Player Position Career
0 Drew Gooden F 2000–02
4 Nick Collison F 2000–03
Sherron Collins 5 G 2006–10
5 Fred Pralle G 1936–38
Howard Engleman F 1939–41
7 Tusten Ackerman 2 C 1923–25
8 Charlie T. Black 1 2 G 1922–24
10 Charles B. Black F 1942–43, 1946–47
Kirk Hinrich G 2000–03
11 Jacque Vaughn G 1994–97
12 Paul Endacott 1 2 G 1921–23
13 Wilt Chamberlain C 1957–58
Walt Wesley C 1964–66
14 Darnell Valentine G 1978–81
15 Ray Evans G 1942–43, 1946–47
Jo Jo White G 1966–69
Bud Stallworth F 1970–72
Mario Chalmers 5 G 2006–08
16 Clyde Lovellette 3 C 1950–52
22 Marcus Morris F 2008–11
23 B.H. Born 3 C 1952–54
Wayne Simien F 2002–05
25 Danny Manning 4 F 1985–88
Brandon Rush 5 F 2005–08
26 Gale Gordon G 1925–27
32 Bill Bridges F 1959–61
34 Paul Pierce F 1995–98
36 Al Peterson C 1925–27
40 Dave Robisch F 1969–71
45 Raef LaFrentz F 1994–98
Cole Aldrich 5 C 2007–2010
60 Max Falkenstien Announcer 1945–2006
Notes
  • 1 Member of 1922 National Championship team
  • 2 Member of 1923 National Championship team
  • 3 Member of 1952 National Championship team
  • 4 Member of 1988 National Championship team
  • 5 Member of 2008 National Championship team

Jayhawks in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

Twenty members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame have been associated with the Kansas men's basketball team. This includes several players, Kansas head coaches, former Jayhawk players who have been inducted in other roles, and former assistant coaches.

Players

Jayhawk Coaches

Below are Jayhawk head coaches in the Hall of Fame.

Former players not enshrined as a player or Kansas coach

The following former players are enshrined in the Hall of Fame but not as a player or as a coach at Kansas.

Others

The following are people associated with Kansas basketball in some way that are in the Hall of Fame for a reason not already mentioned.

  • James Naismith, head coach from 1898 to 1907, enshrined as inventor of the game, namesake for Hall of Fame
  • John Calipari, assistant at Kansas from 1982 to 1985, enshrined as a head coach, primarily a college coach but had a brief stint in the NBA.
  • Gregg Popovich, assistant at Kansas for 1986–87 season, enshrined as head coach in NBA.

Jayhawks in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame

There are multiple former Kansas players that have been enshrined in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame. Some former players have been enshrined as players, while some former players have been enshrined as coaches.

Coaches

Players

Former players inducted as coaches

Contributors

Olympians

Below are Jayhawks who represented their country in the Olympic Games as a player or coach. Thirteen Jayhawks have been chosen to represent their home country in the Olympics. Only Sasha Kaun represented a country other than the United States when he represented Russia in 2012. Kaun is the most recent Jayhawk to play in the olympics, while Danny Manning is the most recent Jayhawk to represent the United States. Ten played in the Olympics, two coached, and one was selected but didn't play due to a boycott, Darnell Valentine. The 1952 Olympic team featured 7 Jayhawk players and a coach. Two former Jayhawk basketball players have coached in the Olympics.

Year Player Medal
1952 Phog Allen (assistant coach)  
1952 Charlie Hoag  
1952 Bill Hougland  
1952 John Keller  
1952 Dean Kelley  
1952 Bob Kenney  
1952 Bill Lienhard  
1952 Clyde Lovellette  
1956 Bill Hougland  
1960 Allen Kelley  
1968 Jo Jo White  
1976 Dean Smith (head coach)  
1980 Darnell Valentine DNP
1988 Danny Manning  
2012 Sasha Kaun (Russia)  

Presidential Medal of Freedom

The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the highest civilian honor in the United States and is awarded by the president.

Player Years at Kansas Year given President Reason
Bob Dole 1941–1942 1997 Bill Clinton Lengthy political career
Dean Smith 1949–1953 2013 Barack Obama Charity work and accomplishments as North Carolina's men's basketball coach

Jayhawks in the NBA

The Jayhawks have multiple connections to the NBA. Below is a list of former players and coaches. People that are currently coaches or in management will show their current job, as well as how they are associated with Kansas basketball.

Current management

Coaches

Current players

Below is a list of former Jayhawk basketball on NBA rosters. Free agents should not be included on the list. Players with an asterisk are players that have been assigned to the G-League. In the offseason, players who were signed to a team's summer league roster should not be included.

Recently became a Free agent

This section is former Jayhawks that were on an NBA roster during the 2019-2020 NBA season but are not on an NBA roster. Any players on this list that are not on a roster by the start of the season should be moved to former players. Players listed below may be under contract in an international league, but are not under contract in the NBA or the G-League.


Former players

Below are former Jayhawks who spent three or more seasons in the NBA.

[71][72]

Draft history

  • 91 total NBA draft picks.[73]
  • 39 players drafted 30th or better. 38 if including territorial pick Wilt Chamberlain. (Equivalent to 1st round picks by modern draft standards.)
  • 23 players drafted 31–60th. (Equivalent to 2nd round picks by modern draft standards.)

Territorial Picks
From 1947 to 1965 the draft allowed teams not drawing fans to select a local player, in place of their first round pick.

Regular Draft

Year Round Pick Overall Player Team
1947 Ray Evans New York Knicks
1948 Otto Schnellbacher Providence Steamrollers
1952 1 9 9 Clyde Lovellette Minneapolis Lakers
1953 8 Dean Kelley Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons
1953 11 32 Gil Reich Boston Celtics
1954 3 4 22 B. H. Born Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons
1954 7 2 56 Allen Kelley Milwaukee Hawks
1957 6 8 48 Maury King Boston Celtics
1959 10 6 71 Ron Loneski St. Louis Hawks
1961 3 9 32 Bill Bridges Chicago Packers
1962 1 5 5 Wayne Hightower San Francisco Warriors
1963 4 2 28 Nolen Ellison Baltimore Bullets
1965 8 7 68 George Unseld Los Angeles Lakers
1966 1 6 6 Walt Wesley Cincinnati Royals
1966 13 3 103 Al Lopes Baltimore Bullets
1967 4 2 33 Ronald Franz Detroit Pistons
1968 9 8 114 Roger Bohnenstiel New York Knicks
1969 1 9 9 Jo Jo White Boston Celtics
1969 4 5 48 Dave Nash Chicago Bulls
1969 11 13 154 Bruce Sloan Philadelphia 76ers
1971 3 9 44 Dave Robisch Boston Celtics
1971 4 13 64 Walter Roger Brown Los Angeles Lakers
1971 13 12 207 Pierre Russell Milwaukee Bucks
1972 1 7 7 Bud Stallworth Seattle SuperSonics
1972 14 4 184 Aubrey Nash Baltimore Bullets
1975 7 2 110 Rick Suttle Los Angeles Lakers
1975 8 18 144 Roger Morningstar Boston Celtics
1976 1 16 16 Norm Cook Boston Celtics
1977 7 14 124 Herb Nobles Detroit Pistons
1978 5 11 99 Ken Koenigs Cleveland Cavaliers
1978 6 8 118 John Douglas New Orleans Jazz
1979 2 20 42 Paul Mokeski Houston Rockets
1980 10 12 211 Randy Carroll Phoenix Suns
1981 1 16 16 Darnell Valentine Portland Trail Blazers
1981 3 1 47 Art Housey Dallas Mavericks
1981 7 22 160 John Crawford Philadelphia 76ers
1982 2 5 28 Dave Magley Cleveland Cavaliers
1982 2 23 46 Tony Guy Boston Celtics
1984 4 10 80 Carl Henry Kansas City Kings
1984 9 1 185 Brian Martin Indiana Pacers
1984 9 15 199 Kelly Knight Utah Jazz
1986 2 2 26 Greg Dreiling Indiana Pacers
1986 2 18 42 Ron Kellogg Atlanta Hawks
1986 4 1 71 Calvin Thompson New York Knicks
1988 1 1 1 Danny Manning Los Angeles Clippers
1988 3 25 75 Archie Marshall San Antonio Spurs
1990 2 7 34 Kevin Pritchard Golden State Warriors
1991 1 26 26 Mark Randall Chicago Bulls
1993 1 16 16 Rex Walters New Jersey Nets
1993 2 15 42 Adonis Jordan Seattle SuperSonics
1994 2 11 38 Darrin Hancock Charlotte Hornets
1995 1 28 28 Greg Ostertag Utah Jazz
1997 1 19 19 Scot Pollard Detroit Pistons
1997 1 27 27 Jacque Vaughn Utah Jazz
1998 1 3 3 Raef LaFrentz Denver Nuggets
1998 1 10 10 Paul Pierce Boston Celtics
1999 2 16 45 Ryan Robertson Sacramento Kings
2001 2 14 45 Eric Chenowith New York Knicks
2002 1 4 4 Drew Gooden Memphis Grizzlies
2003 1 7 7 Kirk Hinrich Chicago Bulls
2003 1 12 12 Nick Collison Seattle SuperSonics
2005 1 29 29 Wayne Simien Miami Heat
2007 1 13 13 Julian Wright New Orleans Hornets
2008 1 13 13 Brandon Rush Portland Trail Blazers
2008 1 27 27 Darrell Arthur New Orleans Hornets
2008 2 4 34 Mario Chalmers Minnesota Timberwolves
2008 2 22 52 Darnell Jackson Miami Heat
2008 2 29 59 Sasha Kaun Seattle SuperSonics
2010 1 11 11 Cole Aldrich New Orleans Hornets
2010 1 12 12 Xavier Henry Memphis Grizzlies
2011 1 13 13 Markieff Morris Phoenix Suns
2011 1 14 14 Marcus Morris Houston Rockets
2011 2 19 49 Josh Selby Memphis Grizzlies
2012 1 5 5 Thomas Robinson Sacramento Kings
2012 2 11 41 Tyshawn Taylor Brooklyn Nets
2013 1 7 7 Ben McLemore Sacramento Kings
2013 2 9 39 Jeff Withey Portland Trail Blazers
2014 1 1 1 Andrew Wiggins Cleveland Cavaliers
2014 1 3 3 Joel Embiid Philadelphia 76ers
2015 1 15 15 Kelly Oubre Atlanta Hawks
2016 2 3 33 Cheick Diallo Los Angeles Clippers
2017 1 4 4 Josh Jackson Phoenix Suns
2017 2 4 34 Frank Mason III Sacramento Kings
2018 2 4 34 Devonte' Graham Atlanta Hawks
2018 2 17 47 Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk Los Angeles Lakers
2020 1 27 27 Udoka Azubuike Utah Jazz
2022 1 14 14 Ochai Agbaji Cleveland Cavaliers
2022 1 21 21 Christian Braun Denver Nuggets
2023 1 13 13 Gradey Dick Toronto Raptors
2023 2 21 51 Jalen Wilson Brooklyn Nets

NBA Award winners

Below are Jayhawks that have won an award in the NBA such as MVP, Rookie of the Year, etc. Not included are Jayhawks who made All-Star or All-NBA teams, or Jayhawks that have won All-Star game MVP, the dunk contest, or 3 point contest. Eleven times a Jayhawk has won a major award, six different Jayhawks have won awards. The only major award a Jayhawk has never won is Defensive Player of the Year. Wilt Chamberlain won an award six times during his career including four MVP Awards. Joel Embiid is the most recent winner of an award-winning league MVP for the 2022–23, the second Jayhawk to win that award along with Chamberlain who also won the award with the Philadelphia 76ers.

Season Player Team Award
1959–60 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia Warriors MVP
Rookie of the Year
1965–66 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia 76ers MVP
1966–67 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia 76ers MVP
1967–68 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia 76ers MVP
1971–72 Wilt Chamberlain Los Angeles Lakers NBA Finals MVP
1975–76 Jo Jo White Boston Celtics NBA Finals MVP
1997–98 Danny Manning Phoenix Suns Sixth Man of the Year
2007–08 Paul Pierce Boston Celtics NBA Finals MVP
2014–15 Andrew Wiggins Minnesota Timberwolves Rookie of the Year
2022–23 Joel Embiid Philadelphia 76ers MVP

Current Jayhawk college coaches

Division I Head Coaches – former players

Division I Head Coaches – former players and assistant coaches

Women's Division I Head Coaches

Division I assistants – former players

Jayhawks in the NBA G-League

Players

Below are former Jayhawks under contract with a G-League team but are not on a two-way contract with an NBA team.

NCAA records

Active streaks

  • 20+ win seasons: 34, since 1990
  • Consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances: 33, since 1990*
  • Most consecutive coaches leading team to Final Four: 6

As of the conclusion of the 2020–21 season
*No tournament was held in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, despite this, the NCAA still considered all consecutive tournament streaks active following the cancelation of the tournament.

Team

  • Largest unranked-to-ranked jump: From unranked to No. 4 after beating No. 1 (UNLV), No. 2 (LSU), and No. 25 (SJU) in the 1989 preseason NIT.[75]
  • Most wins over an opponent in a single calendar year: 5 (Over Nebraska in 1909 and Kansas State in 1935)
  • Consecutive regular season conference championships: 14, 2005 to 2018
  • Consecutive weeks ranked in AP poll: 231, February 2, 2009, to February 8, 2021
  • 25+ win seasons: 15, 2005–06 season to 2019–20 season

Individual

  • Career games scoring in double figures: 132, Danny Manning
  • Rebounds in first career game: 31, Wilt Chamberlain, vs. Northwestern, December 5, 1956
  • Most blocks in a single NCAA tournament: 31, Jeff Withey

Other

  • Most winning seasons: 101
  • Most non-losing seasons (.500 or better): 104
  • Most regular season conference championships: 61
  • Most Consensus first-team All-Americans: 23
  • Most Consensus first-team All-American selections: 30

See also

References

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  2. ^ "Dole Institute to display letters between Phog Allen, Bob Dole". KU.edu. February 8, 2016.
  3. ^ . May 11, 2011. Archived from the original on May 11, 2011. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  4. ^ "Key Dates in NABC History". NABC. Retrieved October 27, 2013.
  5. ^ "The Prestige: The Top 10". July 28, 2008. Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  6. ^ "No. 1 seed Kansas earns NCAA-record 28th consecutive tournament appearance". KUAthletics.com. March 12, 2017.
  7. ^ "King's Court: Home sweet home". ESPN.com. January 16, 2013.
  8. ^ . AthlonSports.com. Archived from the original on September 30, 2019. Retrieved March 5, 2018.
  9. ^ "College basketball: 5 toughest active places to win at in college basketball". NCAA.com.
  10. ^ "College Basketball: 15 Arenas You Don't Want to Play in". BleacherReport.com.
  11. ^ "Jayhawks celebrate 2,000th victory". March 12, 2010. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on May 12, 2008. Retrieved September 5, 2008.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on July 4, 2008. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  14. ^ "The Rules | The DeBruce Center". Debrucecenter.ku.edu. November 4, 2016. Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on December 7, 2008. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  16. ^ "Good as gold / LJWorld.com". Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  17. ^ "Vincent Askew". Archived from the original on December 3, 2012. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  18. ^ "Division I Records" (PDF). Web1.ncaa.org. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  19. ^ a b . February 13, 2010. Archived from the original on February 13, 2010. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  20. ^ "Roy, ACC Have Mixed NCAA History As No. 1". Archived from the original on February 10, 2013. Retrieved August 3, 2017.
  21. ^ "KU-led team wins gold at World University Game". Sbnation.coms. July 13, 2015. Retrieved March 17, 2017.
  22. ^ "Kansas basketball hit with major NCAA violation charges stemming from FBI probe". CBSSports.com.
  23. ^ "Kansas Signs Coach Bill Self to Lifetime Contract". SI.com.
  24. ^ Schuster, Blake (March 25, 2022). "Kansas overtakes Kentucky in all-time wins". USA Today. Retrieved March 28, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  25. ^ Papillion, Jude (April 7, 2022). "Kansas completes biggest title game comeback ever to beat North Carolina • The Tulane Hullabaloo". The Tulane Hullabaloo. Retrieved April 7, 2022.
  26. ^ "Total AP Men's BB Poll Appearances Summary - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  27. ^ "Total AP Men's BB Poll Appearances Summary - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  28. ^ "Total AP Men's BB Poll Appearances Summary - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  29. ^ "Total AP Men's BB Poll Appearances Summary - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  30. ^ "Total AP Men's BB Poll Appearances Summary - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  31. ^ "Final AP Men's Basketball Poll Appearances Summary - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  32. ^ "AP Poll Consecutive Poll Appearance Streaks - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings". collegepollarchive.com. Retrieved April 13, 2018.
  33. ^ a b c "DIVISION I MEN'S BASKETBALL RECORDS" (PDF). Fs.ncaa.org. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
  34. ^ "Kansas Jayhawks Index". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved February 21, 2022.
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External links

  • Official website  

kansas, jayhawks, basketball, program, intercollegiate, basketball, program, university, kansas, program, classified, ncaa, division, team, competes, conference, kansas, considered, most, prestigious, college, basketball, programs, country, with, overall, nati. The Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball program is the intercollegiate men s basketball program of the University of Kansas The program is classified in the NCAA s Division I and the team competes in the Big 12 Conference Kansas is considered one of the most prestigious college basketball programs in the country with six overall national championships 4 NCAA Tournament National Championships and 2 Helms National Championships as well being runner up six times and having the most conference titles in the nation Kansas from 2005 through 2018 won 14 consecutive regular season conference championships an NCAA record The Jayhawks also own the NCAA record for most consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances with an active streak of 32 consecutive appearances They were also along with Dartmouth the first team to appear in multiple NCAA Tournaments after making their second appearance in the 1942 tournament The Jayhawks had been ranked in the AP poll for 231 consecutive polls a streak that had stretched from the poll released on February 2 2009 poll through the poll released on February 8 2021 which is the longest streak in AP poll history Of the 24 seasons the Big 12 conference has been in existence Kansas has won at least a share of 19 regular season conference titles Kansas Jayhawks2023 24 Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball teamUniversityUniversity of KansasFirst season1898 99All time record2 385 885 729 Athletic directorTravis GoffHead coachBill Self 20th season ConferenceBig 12LocationLawrence KansasArenaAllen Fieldhouse Capacity 16 300 NicknameJayhawksColorsCrimson and blue 1 UniformsHome Away AlternatePre tournament Helms champions1922 1923NCAA tournament champions1952 1988 2008 2022NCAA tournament runner up1940 1953 1957 1991 2003 2012NCAA tournament Final Four1940 1952 1953 1957 1971 1974 1986 1988 1991 1993 2002 2003 2008 2012 2018 2022NCAA tournament Elite Eight1952 1953 1957 1960 1966 1971 1974 1986 1988 1991 1993 1996 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2011 2012 2016 2017 2018 2022NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1953 1957 1960 1966 1967 1971 1974 1981 1986 1987 1988 1991 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2011 2012 2013 2016 2017 2018 2022NCAA tournament round of 321985 1986 1987 1988 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2021 2022 2023NCAA tournament appearances1940 1942 1952 1953 1957 1960 1966 1967 1971 1974 1975 1978 1981 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2021 2022 2023Conference tournament champions1981 1984 1986 1992 1997 1998 1999 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2013 2016 2018 2022Conference regular season champions1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1914 1915 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1931 1932 1933 1934 1936 1937 1938 1940 1941 1942 1943 1946 1950 1952 1953 1954 1957 1960 1966 1967 1971 1974 1975 1978 1986 1991 1992 1993 1995 1996 1997 1998 2002 2003 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2020 2022 2023Conference division season champions1908 1909 1910 1912 1913 1914The Jayhawks first coach was the inventor of basketball James Naismith Naismith ironically is the only coach in Kansas basketball history with a losing record The Kansas basketball program has produced many notable professional players including Clyde Lovellette Wilt Chamberlain Jo Jo White Danny Manning Raef LaFrentz Paul Pierce Nick Collison Kirk Hinrich Mario Chalmers Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid Politician Bob Dole also played basketball at Kansas 2 Former players that have gone on to be coaches include Phog Allen Adolph Rupp Dean Smith Dutch Lonborg and former assistants to go on to be notable coaches include John Calipari Gregg Popovich and Bill Self Mark Turgeon Jerod Haase Danny Manning and Tad Boyle are all former players and assistant coaches that became head coaches Allen founded the National Association of Basketball Coaches and with Lonborg was an early proponent of the NCAA tournament 3 4 Four different Jayhawk head coaches are in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as coaches Phog Allen Larry Brown Roy Williams and current head coach Bill Self Three different Division I basketball arenas have been named after former Kansas players the Dean Smith Center named after Dean Smith at North Carolina Rupp Arena named after Adolph Rupp at Kentucky and the Jayhawks own arena Allen Fieldhouse named after Phog Allen In 2008 ESPN ranked Kansas second on a list of the most prestigious programs of the modern college basketball era 5 Kansas currently has the longest streak of consecutive NCAA tournament appearances of all time 32 6 the longest current streak of consecutive NCAA winning seasons 39 the most winning seasons in Division I history 104 the most non losing seasons 500 or better in NCAA history 106 the most conference championships in Division I history 63 the most consecutive regular season conference titles in Division I 14 the most First Team All Americans in Division I history 24 and the most First Team All American selections in Division I history 31 As of the last complete season the program ranks third in Division I all time winning percentage 723 and first in Division I all time wins 2 357 Since the opening of Allen Fieldhouse the Jayhawks home arena in 1955 the Jayhawks have earned a well established home court advantage Allen Fieldhouse is often considered one of the best home court advantages in college basketball 7 8 9 10 As of 2022 the Jayhawks have won over 87 percent of their games in the 67 year history of Allen Fieldhouse losing just 110 games Under current head coach Bill Self the Jayhawks have had three home court winning streaks over 30 games and two over 50 games In addition to Allen Fieldhouse the Jayhawks frequently play games at the nearby T Mobile Center formerly Sprint Center in Kansas City Missouri These games while technically a neutral site are officially considered home games when not part of a tournament the only exception being their games at the arena during their six game series with rival Missouri Contents 1 History 1 1 James Naismith era 1898 1907 1 2 Phog Allen William O Hamilton era 1907 1956 1 3 Dick Harp era 1956 1964 1 4 Ted Owens era 1964 1983 1 5 Larry Brown era 1983 1988 1 6 Roy Williams era 1988 2003 1 7 Bill Self era 2003 present 2 Conference affiliations 3 Rank in notable areas 4 Notable games 5 Coaches 6 Facilities 6 1 Snow Hall 1898 1907 6 2 Robinson Gymnasium 1907 1927 6 3 Hoch Auditorium 1927 1955 6 4 Allen Fieldhouse 1955 present 7 Home game traditions 8 Year by year Results 9 Rivalries 9 1 Kansas State 9 2 Missouri 9 3 Wichita State 10 Post season results 10 1 Regular season conference championships 10 2 Conference tournament championships 10 3 NCAA Tournament seeding history 10 4 Final Four history 10 5 Men s NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player 10 6 National Championships 10 6 1 Helms Athletic Foundation Championships 10 6 2 NCAA Tournament National Championships 10 6 2 1 1952 10 6 2 2 1988 10 6 2 3 2008 10 6 2 4 2022 10 7 Complete NCAA tournament results 10 8 NIT results 11 Jayhawks of note 11 1 All time scoring leaders 11 2 All Americans 11 2 1 Consensus first team 11 2 2 Other first team selections 11 3 Academic All Americans 11 4 National Player of the Year awards 11 5 McDonald s All Americans 11 6 Jayhawk basketball players notable in other fields 11 7 Retired jerseys 11 8 Jayhawks in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame 11 8 1 Players 11 8 2 Jayhawk Coaches 11 8 3 Former players not enshrined as a player or Kansas coach 11 8 4 Others 11 9 Jayhawks in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame 11 9 1 Coaches 11 9 2 Players 11 9 3 Former players inducted as coaches 11 9 4 Contributors 11 10 Olympians 11 11 Presidential Medal of Freedom 11 12 Jayhawks in the NBA 11 12 1 Current management 11 12 2 Coaches 11 12 3 Current players 11 12 4 Recently became a Free agent 11 12 5 Former players 11 12 6 Draft history 11 13 NBA Award winners 11 14 Current Jayhawk college coaches 11 15 Jayhawks in the NBA G League 11 15 1 Players 12 NCAA records 12 1 Active streaks 12 2 Team 12 3 Individual 12 4 Other 13 See also 14 References 15 External linksHistory EditKansas ranks first all time in NCAA Division I wins with 2 357 wins as of the last complete season against 877 losses 729 all time winning third all time This record includes a 765 110 874 mark at historic Allen Fieldhouse The Jayhawks are first in NCAA history with 98 winning seasons and tied for first in NCAA history with 101 non losing 500 or better seasons with Kentucky Kansas is tied for the fewest head coaches 8 of any program that has played since the 19th century yet has reached the Final Four under more head coaches 6 than any other program in the nation Every head coach at Kansas since the inception of the NCAA Tournament has led the program to the Final Four Kansas has had four head coaches inducted into the Naismith Hall of Fame more than any other program in the nation A perennial conference powerhouse Kansas leads Division I all time in regular season conference titles with 62 in 113 years of conference play the MVIAA Conference was created in 1907 through the 2019 20 regular season The Jayhawks have won a record 20 conference titles and a record 11 conference tournament titles in the 24 years of the Big 12 s existence The program also owns the best Big 12 records in both those areas with a 412 102 record in conference play and a 46 12 record in tournament play The Jayhawks won their 2 000th game in school history when they defeated Texas Tech in the 2009 2010 season joining the University of Kentucky and the University of North Carolina as the only schools to boast such an achievement at that time 11 James Naismith era 1898 1907 Edit The 1899 University of Kansas basketball team with Dr James Naismith at the back rightThe men s basketball program officially began in 1898 following the arrival of Dr James Naismith to the school just six years after Naismith had written the sport s first official rules Naismith was initially hired to be a chapel director and physical education instructor but became the head basketball coach 12 The Jayhawks played their first game on February 3 1899 against the Kansas City YMCA a game they lost 5 16 They would win their first game a week later on February 10 in a 31 6 victory over the Topeka YMCA Their first intercollegiate game was played on March 23 against Haskell a school about two miles southeast of the southeastern edge of the University of Kansas They would finish their first season 7 4 During the programs early years the majority of the university s basketball games were played against nearby YMCA teams with YMCAs across the nation having played an integral part in the birth of basketball Other common opponents were Haskell and William Jewell Under Naismith the team began their rivalries with Kansas State later deemed the Sunflower Showdown and Missouri later deemed the Border War officially changed to Border Showdown in 2004 13 Naismith was ironically the only coach in the program s history to have a losing record 55 60 Including his years as coach Naismith served as the athletic director and a faculty member at Kansas for a total of almost 40 years before retiring in 1937 Naismith died in 1939 and his remains are buried in Lawrence Kansas The basketball court in Allen Fieldhouse is named James Naismith Court Beyond inventing the game his next greatest basketball legacy may be his coaching tree whose two trunks are the well known Phog Allen and Kansas native John McLendon McLendon attended KU in the 1930s when Allen was head coach Although McLendon tried out for the team he never played for Allen Naismith mentored McLendon from his arrival at Kansas through degree completion and beyond On December 10 2010 the David Booth family purchased Dr James Naismith s 13 Original Rules of the game at a Sotheby s auction in New York City for the sum of 4 3 million They brought the founding document of basketball back to KU s Lawrence campus where it is currently housed at the DeBruce Center 14 Phog Allen William O Hamilton era 1907 1956 Edit In 1907 Kansas hired one of Naismith s players Dr Forrest C Phog Allen as head coach Naismith provided Allen with a now infamous piece of wisdom You can t coach basketball you just play it 15 Allen would set out to prove the adage wrong and through success and an unrivaled coaching tree has become known as the Father of Basketball Coaching having passed on his knowledge of the game to some of the most well respected names in the history of college basketball including National Basketball Hall of Fame coaches Adolph Rupp Dean Smith Dutch Lonborg and Ralph Miller all except Lonborg were born and raised in Kansas Allen coached the team from 1907 to 1909 but William O Hamilton coached from 1909 to 1919 with Allen taking over again in 1919 The team went 125 59 and won five conference championships under Hamilton s direction Allen coached KU for 39 seasons and amassed a record of 590 219 with two retroactively awarded Helms Foundation national titles and one NCAA Tournament championship in 1952 Numerous basketball greats would play at Kansas during Allen s era including Dean Smith Adolph Rupp Dutch Lonborg and Ralph Miller all future Hall of Fame coaches Paul Endacott Bill Johnson and Clyde Lovellette Hall of Fame players two time Olympic Gold Medalist Bill Hougland and even former United States Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole In 1952 the Jayhawks won the national title with an 80 63 victory in the final game over St John s coached by Frank McGuire Clyde Lovellette of Kansas was named the tournament s Most Outstanding Player and is still the only player to lead the nation in scoring and lead his team to a national title in the same year This tournament was the first to have a true Final Four format Seven members of the championship team represented the United States in the 1952 Summer Olympics and brought home a gold medal for the national basketball team 16 This was especially poignant for Allen as he had been the driving force for having basketball added to the Olympics in 1936 Allen was forced to retire when he turned 70 in 1956 because he was getting too old Allen had recruited legendary Wilt Chamberlain to Kansas but would not get to coach him because freshmen were not eligible to play varsity basketball in 1956 Dick Harp era 1956 1964 Edit Wilt Chamberlain was one of the top centers to ever play for the Jayhawks Following Allen s retirement the Jayhawks hired former KU player and assistant Dick Harp Under Harp the Jayhawks went 121 82 with two conference titles and two NCAA tournament berths Wilt Chamberlain played his varsity years under Harp making his job a rather easy one for the first two seasons In his first varsity game Chamberlain scored 52 points and grabbed 31 rebounds breaking both all time college records in an 87 69 win against Northwestern In 1957 he led the Jayhawks to the championship game against North Carolina coached by Frank McGuire whom they had defeated in the 1952 title game when McGuire was at St John s McGuire triple teamed Chamberlain and as a result KU was defeated 54 53 in triple overtime The game is considered one of the greatest in NCAA history by whom Chamberlain continued to average 30 points per game until leaving KU early to play professionally with the Harlem Globetrotters Ted Owens era 1964 1983 Edit Ted Owens took over for Harp in 1964 and would go 348 128 during his tenure eventually winning six Big Eight Conference titles The team advanced to NCAA postseason play seven times under Owens The 1971 team went 27 3 and advanced to the Final Four before losing to UCLA In 1974 the team went 23 7 and again advanced to the Final Four before losing to Marquette During this era the program produced All Americans such as Jo Jo White Walt Wesley Bud Stallworth Darnell Valentine and Dave Robisch After 19 years of coaching at University of Kansas Owens was fired following the 1982 83 season after the Jayhawks posted back to back losing seasons Larry Brown era 1983 1988 Edit Brown helped lead Kansas to the school s second ever NCAA Tournament championship in 1988 In 1983 Larry Brown headed to the University of Kansas after coaching in the NBA Under Brown Kansas finished first in the Big Eight in 1986 and second in 1984 1985 and 1987 In 1988 Kansas got off to a 12 8 start including 1 4 in the Big 8 The Jayhawks 55 game homecourt winning streak in Allen Fieldhouse was snapped with a loss to rival Kansas State and they would also lose two more home games to Duke and Oklahoma Behind the high scoring of Danny Manning KU finished 21 11 at the end of the season and entered the NCAA tournament as a 6 seed Two early upsets allowed them to face lower seeds gain momentum and advance The Jayhawks would ultimately go on to face the three teams who had given them their three home losses that season They defeated rival Kansas State in the Elite 8 then defeated Duke in the Final 4 and won the national championship defeating favored conference rival Oklahoma 83 79 in the final The 11 losses Kansas accrued in 1988 are more than any other national champion have before or since The win garnered the team the nickname Danny and the Miracles Earlier near the start of the tournament Dick Vitale had been asked about Kansas chances and commented If Kansas wins I ll kiss the Jayhawk on the floor of Allen Fieldhouse Eventually he did make good on his promise During Brown s tenure Kansas had five NCAA Tournament appearances which included two second round appearances one Sweet 16 appearance two trips to the Final Four and the national championship He also compiled a 135 44 754 overall record Brown left under a cloud as NCAA sanctions and a postseason probation were levied against Kansas following Brown s departure in the 1988 1989 season as a result of recruiting violations that took place during Brown s tenure The major violation was a plane ticket home for potential transfer Vincent Askew to see his sick grandmother 17 Prior to the investigation Askew had already decided not to transfer to Kansas Roy Williams era 1988 2003 Edit Shortly following Brown s departure Kansas hired then North Carolina assistant Roy Williams as head coach From 1988 to 2003 under the direction of Williams the Jayhawks had a record of 418 101 a 805 winning percentage Williams Kansas teams averaged 27 8 wins per season Except for his first season at Kansas when the team was on probation all of Williams teams made the NCAA tournament On Roy s first KU team Patrick Richey Adonis Jordan and Richard Scott could not visit campus because of recruiting violations by Larry Brown so they committed sight unseen From 1990 to 1999 Kansas compiled a 286 60 record giving them both the most wins and best winning percentage of any team in that decade 18 From 1994 to 1998 the Jayhawks won 62 consecutive home games at Allen Fieldhouse which was the longest such streak in the NCAA at the time The seniors of 1998 Raef LaFrentz Billy Thomas and C B McGrath went 58 0 at home during their KU careers Kansas won nine regular season conference championships over Williams last 13 years In seven years of Big 12 Conference play his teams went 94 18 capturing the regular season title in 1997 1998 2002 and 2003 and the postseason tournament crown in 1997 1998 and 1999 In 2001 02 KU became the first and so far only team to go undefeated 16 0 in Big 12 play From 1995 to 1998 Kansas was a combined 123 17 an average of 30 8 wins per season Williams teams went 201 17 922 in Allen Fieldhouse and won 62 consecutive games in Allen from February 1994 to December 1998 Kansas was a regular in the Associated Press Top 25 from 1991 to 1999 placing in the poll for 145 consecutive weeks Williams teams were ranked in the Top 10 in 194 AP polls from 1990 19 Kansas led the nation in field goal percentage and scoring in 2002 and in scoring margin in 2003 held opponents to the lowest field goal percentage in the country in 2001 37 8 percent and led the nation in winning percentage in 1997 and 2002 The team shot better than 50 percent from the floor for seven different seasons under Williams and led the country in field goal percentage in 1990 53 3 and 2002 50 6 Williams teams shot a combined 49 4 percent from the floor during his tenure Williams coached teams led the nation in assists in 2001 and 2002 and were seventh in the nation in 2003 scored 100 or more points 71 times once every 13 games averaged 82 7 points per game over his 15 seasons as coach and averaged 90 or more points per game in two seasons 92 1 in 1990 and 90 9 in 2002 19 The Jayhawks were in the AP Top 25 in 242 of 268 weekly polls reached the No 1 ranking in the country in six different seasons and reached at least No 2 in the nation in 11 of William s 15 seasons as head coach at Kansas Under Williams the team had several deep runs in the NCAA Tournament making it to four Final Fours and appearing in the national championship game in both 1991 and 2003 losing both to Duke and Syracuse respectively Amidst the tournament successes there were plenty of woes The 1996 97 team was said by many to be one of the greatest teams in history featuring future NBA players such as Paul Pierce Jacque Vaughn Raef LaFrentz Greg Orstertag and Scot Pollard The team was upset in the Sweet Sixteen by the eventual champion Arizona Wildcats 20 The Jayhawks advanced to the Final Four in 2002 amp 2003 Following the national championship loss in 2003 Williams left Kansas and returned to coach at his alma mater North Carolina Bill Self era 2003 present Edit Bill Self was introduced as the new head coach for the 2003 04 season and in his first season at Kansas Self inherited Williams players and recruits which often caused turmoil as the style of play differed between the two coaches Nevertheless Self led his new Kansas team to the Elite Eight at the NCAA tournament his first year KU in 2004 05 was led by seniors Wayne Simien Keith Langford Michael Lee and Aaron Miles They began the season ranked 1 and started off 20 1 but then they slumped and lost six of their final nine games including a loss to Bucknell in the first round of the NCAA Tournament The team finished 23 7 and settled for a Big 12 co championship with Oklahoma Coach Bill Self third from left with his national champion 2007 08 squadIn 2005 06 little was expected of the freshman sophomore dominated Jayhawks and they began the season 10 6 including 1 2 in the Big 12 Although they did post a 73 46 win over Kentucky they also saw the end of their 31 game winning streak over rival Kansas State with a 59 55 loss at Allen Fieldhouse and two nights later blew a seven point lead in the final 45 seconds of regulation en route to an 89 86 overtime loss at Missouri But afterward the Jayhawks matured rapidly winning 15 of their final 17 games and avenging the losses to both Kansas State and Missouri KU played as the 2 seed in the Big 12 Tournament in Dallas and avenged an earlier loss to Texas with an 80 68 victory over the Longhorns in the final to clinch the tournament championship and the highlight win of the season KU was handed a 4 seed for the NCAA Tournament but stumbled again in the first round with a loss to the Bradley Braves In the 2006 07 season Self led Kansas to the 2007 Big 12 regular season championship with a 14 2 record highlighted by beating the Kevin Durant led Texas Longhorns in come from behind victories in the last game of the regular season and in the Big 12 Championship game At the end of the regular season Kansas stood at 27 4 and ranked 2 in the nation in both the AP and coaches polls Kansas received a number 1 seed in the NCAA tournament but their tournament run ended in the Elite Eight with a loss to 2 seed UCLA In the 2007 08 season Self s Kansas team began the season 20 0 until they suffered their first loss at rival Kansas State their first loss at Kansas State since 1983 The 2008 Jayhawks won the Big 12 regular season title and the Big 12 conference tourney They received a number one seeding in the NCAA tournament in the Midwest region On March 30 2008 Self led Kansas to a win in an Elite Eight game over upstart Davidson College KU won by two 59 57 The Jayhawks played overall number 1 tournament seed North Carolina in the semifinals a team coached by former KU head man Roy Williams The Jayhawks opened the game with a 40 12 run over the first 12 minutes before finally defeating them 84 66 On April 7 2008 the Jayhawks triumphed over a one loss Memphis team to claim the national title With only seconds on the clock Sherron Collins drove the ball the length of the court and threaded a pass to Mario Chalmers who connected on a deep three pointer to force overtime This shot would later come to be known as Mario s Miracle in a nod to 1988 championship nickname Danny and the Miracles citation needed Kansas then outplayed Memphis in the overtime to win the NCAA Championship game 75 68 The Jayhawks finished the season with a 37 3 record the winningest season in Kansas history Kansas fans celebrate in Downtown Lawrence Kansas after the Jayhawks win the 2008 National ChampionshipIn the 2008 09 season despite losing seven of their top nine scorers and the entire starting line up the Jayhawks earned their 20th consecutive NCAA tournament bid after going 25 7 14 2 winning the conference regular season title and extending their home winning streak to 41 straight at Allen Fieldhouse On March 22 2009 Kansas defeated Dayton advancing to their 3rd consecutive Sweet 16 appearance But the Jayhawks season ended on March 27 when Michigan State came from behind in the final minute to defeat Kansas 67 62 ending their year at 27 8 Coach Self s record after 6 seasons with the Jayhawks was 169 40 an 809 percentage After the season Self was named National Coach of the Year by the Associated Press CBS Sports Chevrolet Award USBWA Henry Iba Award and Sporting News On April 13 Sherron Collins and Cole Aldrich announced their intent to return for the 2009 10 season On April 23 top high school recruit Xavier Henry made his commitment to play at Kansas in the fall prompting ESPN to name the Jayhawks as the team to beat in 2009 10 By the time the fall of 2009 arrived Kansas was the unanimous preseason 1 team in all major publications which The Jayhawks finished the regular season with a 29 2 record and continue to hold the Division I record for the current consecutive home winning streak at 59 straight games in Allen Fieldhouse Kansas passed 2 000 all time wins in the 2009 10 season only the third school to do so finishing the season with a total of 2 003 all time victories They won the Big 12 tournament on March 13 clinching their 21st consecutive NCAA tournament appearance an active NCAA record However despite being named the overall 1 seed in the tournament the Jayhawks fell in the second round to 9 seeded Northern Iowa finishing the season at 33 3 Recruiting began immediately for the 2010 11 season as Kansas landed the nation s top recruit Josh Selby in April By September 2010 both The Sporting News and Athlon Sports had ranked Kansas in their pre season outlook as 4 overall and along with ESPN s Joe Lunardi were projected to become a 1 seed again in the 2011 NCAA Tournament which they would again earn Blue Ribbon and the USA Today ESPN coaches polls both placed Kansas at 7 in the pre season poll Josh Selby became eligible and joined the Jayhawk line up on December 18 On March 5 the Jayhawks beat Missouri 70 66 to clinch the Big 12 regular season title for the 7th consecutive time and later went on to finish 29 2 during the regular season ranked 2 in both the AP Poll and the USA Today ESPN Coaches Poll Bill Self was named Big 12 Coach of the Year and Marcus Morris was named Big 12 Player of the Year The Jayhawks defeated 16 seed Boston University 9 seed Illinois and 12 seed Richmond to reach their 3rd Elite Eight in the past 5 seasons before falling to 11 seed Virginia Commonwealth University in the quarterfinal game During the season Kansas moved past North Carolina as the 2nd winningest basketball program in history After being considered the top team but falling short in both of the previous two seasons Kansas lost six of their top 8 scorers for the 2011 12 season The Jayhawks had to rebuild after winning seven straight Big 12 titles Prior to the season the NCAA declared that three of the Jayhawks top recruits were ineligible for the season which included games against perennial powerhouse programs such as Kentucky Duke Ohio State and Georgetown Despite 7 games against top 10 ranked opponents Kansas finished the regular season 26 5 earned their 8th consecutive Big 12 title and advanced to their 14th Final Four in school history The Jayhawks faced another 2 seed the Ohio State Buckeyes in the National Semifinals and came back from a 13 point first half deficit to win the game 64 62 They then faced the Kentucky Wildcats who had beaten the Louisville Cardinals on the other side of the bracket in the championship game Kansas lost to the Wildcats 67 59 Kansas entered the 2012 13 season with eight straight Big 12 titles in tow They ended the season having won 107 of their last 109 games at home After scoring their ninth consecutive title and winning the Big 12 tournament championship by defeating rival Kansas State for the third time that season KU set its sights on a sixth national title They were seeded 1 in the South bracket defeating Western Kentucky and North Carolina before losing in overtime to Michigan 87 85 in the Sweet 16 With star freshmen Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid on the roster Kansas entered the 2013 14 season as the 5 team in the country They started off well with five straight wins including a victory over Duke in the Champions Classic However the team went 4 4 over its next eight games including back to back losses to Colorado and Florida and an ugly home loss to San Diego State The team recovered from this rough stretch and began Big 12 play with seven straight wins ultimately finishing 14 4 to win its 10th consecutive Big 12 title A back injury to Joel Embiid however left the Jayhawks vulnerable on their interior defense and they fizzled out at season s end with four losses in their final seven games including a loss to Iowa State in the Big 12 Tournament quarterfinals in Kansas City and an NCAA Tournament Round of 32 loss to Stanford to end the year Kansas concluded the year 25 10 the first ten loss season for Kansas since Roy Williams 1999 2000 Jayhawks went 24 10 After the exodus of Andrew Wiggins and Joel Embiid to the NBA draft the Jayhawks reloaded with freshmen Kelly Oubre Jr and Cliff Alexander the Jayhawks looked poised for another Big 12 season title which would be their 11th straight After a loss in the Champions Classic to Kentucky the Jayhawks finished 11 2 in the non conference In what many who regarded as the toughest conference in the nation Big 12 the Jayhawks won their 11th straight title outright with a record of 13 5 having lost a strong post presence in Cliff Alexander due to an investigation by the NCAA of improper benefits being given to Alexander Evidence never clearly materialized but Alexander was held out and played his last game as a Jayhawk at Kansas State where they lost by 7 They then lost in the Big 12 Championship game to Iowa State 70 66 and had a final record going into the tournament of 26 8 The Jayhawks were given a 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament where they ousted 15 seed New Mexico State by 19 points but exited the tournament early at the hands of Wichita State by 13 points Both Oubre Jr and Alexander declared for the draft shortly after the conclusion of the NCAA tournament The 2015 16 Jayhawks led by Perry Ellis and Frank Mason won a 12th consecutive Big 12 title and won the Big 12 Tournament Seeded 1 in the NCAA South Region the Jayhawks reached the Elite Eight where they stumbled against 2 seed Villanova the eventual national champions In 2016 17 behind the leadership of national player of the year Frank Mason the Jayhawks won a 13th consecutive Big 12 title tying UCLA s record for most consecutive conference titles Although the team made an early exit from the Big 12 Tournament with a quarterfinal loss to TCU the Jayhawks got the 1 seed in the NCAA Midwest Region They dominated UC Davis Michigan State and Purdue in their first three games but ran into a buzzsaw against Oregon in the Elite Eight The 2017 18 Jayhawks lost a number of players to graduation the NBA Draft and transfer but appeared to be poised for another spectacular season Star freshman Billy Preston was sidelined by an NCAA inquiry into the financial picture surrounding his car and ultimately left the team to play professional basketball in Europe Kansas won its first seven games before losing in Kansas City to Washington and at home to Arizona State Kansas would lose a total of three home games during the season the most for any Bill Self coached Kansas team and the most since losing three home games in the 1998 99 season The season bottomed out in early February with a home loss to Oklahoma State and a 16 point loss at Baylor But Kansas rallied to win a 14th straight Big 12 title breaking UCLA s record Then they defeated West Virginia to win the Big 12 Tournament Seeded 1 in the NCAA Midwest Region the Jayhawks defeated Penn Seton Hall Clemson and Duke to reach Bill Self s third Final Four appearance and the program s 15th overall However they stumbled against Villanova for the second time in three years As with their last outing Villanova wound up as the college champions Kansas played in the 2015 World University Games in South Korea as the United States representatives in July 2015 The Jayhawks went undefeated in the World University Games winning the championship to give the United States its first gold medal in World University Games men s basketball since 2005 21 In August 2017 Self and the Jayhawks traveled to Italy to play four exhibition matches against local professional Italian teams Shortly before the 2019 20 season began the NCAA announced they had major NCAA violations stemming from their involvement in the 2017 18 NCAA Division I men s basketball corruption scandal putting their NCAA record consecutive tournament appearance streak in jeopardy 22 The Jayhawks finished the 2019 20 regular season 28 3 and were unanimously ranked number one in the final regular season AP poll The Jayhawks went undefeated against unranked teams and their three losses came to ranked teams The Jayhawks were a favorite to win the NCAA Tournament but the tournament was cancelled on March 12 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic The following season the Jayhawks struggled early in the conference schedule After eight games they had a 4 4 conference record At one point during conference play they lost five of seven games which included a 3 game losing streak a rarity under Self They would finish the regular season the season winning seven of their last eight games including a 71 58 defeat of number 2 ranked Baylor who was undefeated going into the game Kansas withdrew from the Big 12 tournament after a player tested positive for COVID 19 They qualified for the tournament extending their NCAA record to 31 consecutive tournaments They defeated Eastern Washington in the first round The following round they were beaten by USC 51 85 their worst NCAA Tournament loss in school history and one of the worst defeats in program history On April 2 2021 Kansas signed Self to a lifetime contract The contract will automatically add an extra year to every year he coaches until he retires or dies 23 The 2021 22 team earned a number 1 seed in the 2022 NCAA tournament They defeated Providence in the tournament to become the winningest program in the nation 24 They defeated Villanova in the Final Four The Jayhawks defeated North Carolina 72 69 in the national championship game to win Self s second championship and the team s fourth NCAA championship In the championship game they completed a 16 point comeback including being down 40 25 at halftime the largest in NCAA championship history 25 Conference affiliations EditKansas has been affiliated with the following conferences Conference Years Reason leftIndependent 1898 1907 Joined MVIAAMissouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1907 1928 Conference dissolvedBig Six Seven Eight Conference 1929 1995 Conference dissolvedBig 12 Conference 1996 present N A While there is an active conference with the name Missouri Valley it is officially and legally a separate entity from the MVIAA Rank in notable areas EditCategory Rank StatAll Time Wins 1st 2 385All Time Win 3rd 729Regular Season Conference championships 1st 64Consecutive Reg season Conf Championships 1st 14NCAA Tournament Titles 7th 4NCAA Title Game Appearances 5th 10NCAA Final Four Appearances 5th 16NCAA Elite Eight Appearances 3rd 25NCAA Sweet 16 Appearances 4th 32NCAA Tournament Appearances 3rd 51Consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances 1st 33 NCAA Tournament No 1 Seeds 2nd 16NCAA Tournament Games played 3rd 165NCAA Tournament Wins 4th 116NCAA Tournament Win T 6th 662Weeks Ranked as AP No 1 26 5th 65Weeks Ranked as AP No 2 27 2nd 102Weeks Ranked in AP Top 5 28 4th 359Weeks Ranked in AP Top 10 29 4th 558Weeks Ranked in AP Poll 30 4th 764Appearances in Final AP Poll 31 4th 44Consecutive Weeks Ranked in AP Poll 32 1st 231Seasons with 35 Wins or More 3rd 4Seasons with 30 Wins or More T 2nd 14Seasons with 25 Wins or More 3rd 34Seasons with 20 Wins or More 5th 49Seasons with a Winning Record 1st 99Seasons with a Non Losing Record 1st 102Consecutive seasons with 30 Wins 33 1st 4Consecutive seasons with 25 Wins 33 1st 13Consecutive seasons with 20 Wins 33 1st 34 34 Consensus First Team All American Selections 1st 30Consensus First Team All American Players 1st 23Academic All American Selections 2nd 15Academic All American Players 1st 11 Active streak Current Official NCAA Records and Awards data 35 Notable games EditOn February 3 1899 the Jayhawks coached by James Naismith played their first game in program history They played the Kansas City YMCA in a game the Jayhawks lost 5 16 The first victory in program history came on February 10 1899 The Jayhawks defeated the Topeka YMCA 31 6 On January 25 1907 the Jayhawks played Kansas State for the first time beginning the rivalry that would become known as the Sunflower Showdown a nod to the state flower of Kansas and one of the state s nicknames the Sunflower State The Jayhawks won 54 49 The Jayhawks bitter rivalry with Missouri began on March 11 1907 a game the Jayhawks lost 31 34 The rivalry would eventually become known as the Border War On March 22 1940 the Jayhawks played their first ever NCAA Tournament game They defeated Rice 50 44 in Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City Missouri The Jayhawks would defeat USC the following day to make their first national championship game appearance but lost to Indiana 42 60 On March 26 1952 the Jayhawks defeated St John s NY 80 63 to win their first NCAA Tournament National Championship Championship in program history On March 1 1955 Kansas played their first ever game at Allen Fieldhouse The arena was named after Phog Allen who was still their coach at the time They won the game against rival Kansas State 77 67 In the NCAA title game in 1957 Wilt Chamberlain and Kansas were defeated by the North Carolina Tar Heels 54 53 in triple overtime in what many who consider to be the greatest NCAA Championship game ever played Chamberlain was later named the NCAA Final Four Most Outstanding Player the second to win the award and be a part of the losing team Kansas B H Born won the award in 1953 36 In the 1966 Midwest Regional Finals Kansas the favored team to face Kentucky played Texas Western Texas Western got a controversial double overtime victory 81 80 The would be winning shot a 35 footer at the buzzer was made by All American Jo Jo White at the end of the first overtime but White was called for stepping on the sideline The game was featuredin the 2006 film Glory Road which is based on that season s Texas Western National Championship team On April 4 1988 in the 50th NCAA Tournament National Championship game Kansas defeated the heavily favored Oklahoma Sooners 83 79 to win its second NCAA Men s Basketball championship Led by senior forward and Player of the Year Danny Manning Kevin Pritchard Milt Newton Chris Piper and a roster of players who came to be known as The Miracles raced the Sooners to a 50 50 halftime tie that had the referees shaking their heads and smiling as they left the court Upon their return for the second half Larry Brown convinced his Jayhawks that now that they proved they could run with the Sooners they needed to slow the game down and take the Sooners out of their fast break offense The Sooners built a 5 point second half lead until the Kansas defense finally clamped down The Jayhawks led by Manning 31 points 18 rebounds 5 steals 2 blocked shots caught up with them around the 11 minute mark The rest of the game was neck and neck until Manning finally sealed the victory from the free throw line 37 On December 9 1989 AP 2 Kansas beat Kentucky 150 95 in Allen Fieldhouse 38 The 150 points scored by the Jayhawks set the school record for most points scored in a game and the team s 80 first half points set the record for most points scored in a half On January 27 2003 Kansas defeated Texas 90 87 at Allen Fieldhouse behind a 24 point 23 rebound performance by Nick Collison Upon Collison fouling out of the game his effort moved longtime ESPN college basketball analyst Dick Vitale to give him a standing ovation only the second time Vitale had ever done so the first being for David Robinson 39 Both Kansas and Texas would make the Final Four that year On April 7 2008 in the 2008 National Championship game the Kansas Jayhawks defeated the Memphis Tigers 75 68 in a come from behind overtime victory to become the 2008 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament Champions Mario Chalmers made a three point shot with 2 1 seconds remaining bringing the Jayhawks all the way back from a 60 51 deficit with two minutes remaining The Jayhawks went 4 4 from the field including 2 2 from 3 point range and also went 2 2 from the line in the final 2 minutes The Jayhawks then continued their hot flurry by going 4 6 from the field in OT and 4 4 from the line outscoring the Tigers 12 5 in overtime to capture their third NCAA title and fifth overall including the retroactively awarded Helms Foundation Championships for the 1922 and 1923 seasons Chalmers finished with 18 points 3 rebounds 3 assists and 4 steals and was chosen the Most Outstanding Player at the Final Four the fifth Jayhawk all time to be selected Final Four MOP On January 15 2011 Kansas celebrated its 69th consecutive home win over Nebraska the longest such Division I record since 1992 and the longest home winning streak in KU s history The streak ended on January 22 2011 with a loss at home to the Texas Longhorns On February 25 2012 the Jayhawks played their final conference game against their longtime rival the Missouri Tigers The Kansas Jayhawks came back from a 19 point deficit in the second half to take the team to an 87 86 overtime win against the Tigers The volume level inside the arena was a sustained 120 dB with a high point of 127 dB when Thomas Robinson blocked Phil Pressey s shot at the end of regulation to preserve the tie On January 4 2016 the Jayhawks who were ranked 1st in the AP poll and 2nd in the coaches poll played Oklahoma who was ranked 2nd in the AP poll and 1st in the coaches poll The game was back and forth the last few minutes of regulation The game eventually went to 3 overtimes and KU won 109 106 Kansas forward Perry Ellis scored 27 points and got 13 rebounds while Oklahoma guard Buddy Hield scored 46 points The game was the first time in Big 12 history that a conference game featured the number 1 ranked team and the number 2 ranked team On February 27 2016 the Jayhawks won their 12th consecutive Big 12 regular season championship with a 67 58 win at home against Texas Tech Kansas is one regular season conference championship behind UCLA s record of 13 straight 40 On February 24 2018 the Jayhawks won their 14th consecutive Big 12 regular season championship with a 74 72 win at Texas Tech With this win Kansas broke the NCAA record for most consecutive league championships previously held by UCLA with 13 41 On March 25 2018 the Jayhawks played Duke in the 2018 NCAA tournament in the Elite Eight The game featured two of the top college basketball programs in the nation with a Hall of Fame coach on both sidelines with Bill Self and Mike Krzyzewski The game was a back and forth game that had 18 lead changes and 11 ties Senior guard Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk made a 3 pointer with 25 7 seconds left to tie the game at 72 Duke guard Grayson Allen missed the potential game winning shot as time expired and the game went into overtime Kansas guard Malik Newman scored all 13 of the Jayhawks points in overtime to help them win 85 81 earning KU their first Final Four trip since 2012 42 After defeating Providence in the 2022 NCAA tournament Kansas passed Kentucky to be the winningest program in the nation 43 When the Jayhawks defeated North Carolina in the 2022 National Championship game they completed the largest comeback in National Championship game history They were down by as much as 16 points in the first half and were down 25 40 at halftime and won 72 69 44 Coaches EditDespite having a program for over 120 years the Jayhawks have only had 8 head coaches Four of their coaches have been inducted to the Hall of Fame as a coach The longest tenured coach was Phog Allen at 39 seasons while the shortest tenured coach was Larry Brown who coached for 5 seasons Allen also has the most wins in Kansas basketball history with 590 The next closest coach is current head coach Bill Self who has won over 500 games Ted Owens is the only coach in program history to have been fired Allen and Harp are the only Jayhawk coaches to have also played at the school Self had his first coaching job as an assistant under Brown at Kansas Of programs who have been around for at least 100 years Kansas has had the fewest coaches yet they have been led to the Final Four by more coaches than any other program Every coach that has coached Kansas since the inception of the NCAA Tournament in 1939 has led the team to a Final Four Phog Allen Dick Harp Ted Owens Larry Brown Roy Williams and Bill Self have all led Kansas to NCAA Final Four appearances Of those coaches Allen Brown and Bill Self have led the Jayhawks to NCAA Championships in 1952 1988 2008 and 2022 respectively In addition to an NCAA Tournament National Championship Allen won two retroactively awarded Helms Athletic Foundation National Championships for the 1922 and 1923 seasons Allen and Self are the only coaches to win multiple National Championships of any kind while Self is the only one to win multiple NCAA Tournament National Championships While officially only having had eight coaches in program history the Jayhawks also had three interim coaches who are not considered an official part of the coaching history In 1919 Karl Schlademan coached and won the first game of the season before relinquishing the coaching position to Allen in order to concentrate on his duties as head track coach In 1947 Howard Engleman coached 14 games going 8 6 after Allen was ordered to take a rest following the 13th game of the season Engleman s record is not listed in this table as he was never officially a head coach at the university 45 Assistant coach Norm Roberts served as acting head coach for the beginning of the 2022 23 season while Bill Self served a 4 game suspension for alleged recruiting violations 46 He served as the acting head coach again for Kansas in the Big 12 and NCAA Tournaments while Bill Self was away from the team following a heart procedure Each of these coaches have every one of their wins counted in their career records in the NCAA record books The only exception is Roberts who only has 4 wins early in the season counted instead the 4 wins and 2 losses in the postseason those 4 wins and 2 losses are counted in Self s career coaching record Years Duration of head coaching career at KansasRecord Number of career games won lost at KansasPercent Percentage of games won at KansasInducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a coachNumber Years Coach Record Percent Reason left Notes1 1898 1907 James Naismith 55 60 478 Retired Inventor of the game of Basketball Only Coach in Kansas Basketball history with a losing record2 1907 1909 1919 1956 Phog Allen 590 219 729 Retired Known as the Father Of Basketball Coaching for his innovations of the modern game and for the legendary coaches who played under him Created the NABC National Association of Basketball Coaches Successfully lobbied to make the game of basketball an Olympic sport Helped to create the modern NCAA tournament which began in 1939 1 NCAA Championship 2 Helms Championships 3 National Championship game appearances 3 Final Fours 24 Conference regular season Championships3 1909 1919 W O Hamilton 125 59 679 Resigned 5 Conference regular season Championships 1919 Karl Schlademan 1 0 1 000 Interim Coached a single game before resigning and allowing Phog Allen to take over 1946 1947 Howard Engleman 8 6 571 Interim Coached 14 games while Phog Allen was on a medical leave 4 1956 1964 Dick Harp 121 82 596 Resigned 1 National Championship game appearance 1 Final Four 2 Conference regular season Championships5 1964 1983 Ted Owens 348 182 657 Fired 2 Final Fours 6 Conference regular season Championships 1 Conference tournament Championship 1978 Basketball Weekly Coach of the Year6 1983 1988 Larry Brown 135 44 754 Accepted position with the San Antonio Spurs 1 NCAA Championship 2 Final Fours 1 Conference regular season Championship 2 Conference tournament Championships 1988 Naismith College Coach of the Year7 1988 2003 Roy Williams 418 101 805 Accepted position at North Carolina 2 National Championship game appearances 4 Final Fours 9 Conference regular season Championships 4 Conference tournament Championships 1990 Henry Iba Award Coach of the Year 1992 AP Coach of the Year 1997 Naismith College Coach of the Year8 2003 present Bill Self 580 132 815 Still active 2 NCAA Championships 3 National Championship game appearances 4 Final Fours 14 Consecutive Conference regular season Championships 17 Conference regular season Championships 9 Conference tournament Championships 2009 Henry Iba Award Coach of the Year AP Coach of the Year CBS Chevrolet Coach of the Year Sporting News Coach of the Year 2012 Naismith College Coach of the Year Sporting News Coach of the Year Adolph Rupp Cup 2006 2009 2011 2012 2017 2018 Big 12 Conference Men s Basketball Coach of the Year 2016 AP Coach of the Year 2022 2023 Norm Roberts 4 0 1 000 Acting Coached first 4 games of 2022 2023 season while Bill Self served a suspension for recruiting violations Also coached Kansas in the Big 12 Tournament and NCAA Tournament following a heart procedure on Self however Self received credit for those six games in the NCAA record books Total thru 2022 23 47 2 385 885 729 N A Allen was forced to retire prior to the 1956 57 season due to a University of Kansas policy that required university employees to retire at the age of 70 he turned 70 in November of 1955 48 Naismith is inducted in the Hall of Fame as the inventor of the game not as a coach Updated March 20 2023Facilities EditSnow Hall 1898 1907 Edit Before 1907 the Jayhawks played in various venues ranging from the basement of the original Snow Hall even though the ceiling was only 14 feet high to the skating rink at the local YMCA Although a current campus building bears the same name the original Snow Hall was demolished in 1934 49 Robinson Gymnasium 1907 1927 Edit Main article Robinson Gymnasium Robinson Gym was the first athletic building on the KU campus and featured a 2 500 seat auditorium used for basketball purposes The building was demolished in 1967 50 Hoch Auditorium 1927 1955 Edit Main article Budig Hall Hoch Auditorium Hoch Auditorium was a 3 500 seat multi purpose arena in Lawrence Kansas It opened in 1927 It was home to the University of Kansas Jayhawks basketball teams until Allen Fieldhouse opened in 1955 Many of Hoch s nicknames during the basketball years were Horrible Hoch and The House of Horrors Such nicknames were in reference to the difficulty opposing teams had in dealing with the tight area surrounding the court and the curved walls and decorative lattice work directly behind the backboards The curvature of the walls made the backboards appear to be moving causing opponents to miss free throws On June 15 1991 Hoch Auditorium was struck by lightning The auditorium and stage area were completely destroyed Only the limestone facade and lobby area were spared When reconstruction of the building was complete the rear half of the building was named Budig Hall for then KU Chancellor Gene Budig The name on the facade was altered to reflect the presence of three large auditorium style lecture halls within the building Hoch Auditoria Former KU Basketball Facilities Snow Hall Robinson Gymnasium The remaining facade of what was Hoch Auditorium Allen Fieldhouse 1955 present Edit Main article Allen Fieldhouse The 2006 07 men s basketball team plays against OSU at Allen Fieldhouse Allen Fieldhouse was dedicated on March 1 1955 when the Jayhawks defeated in state rival Kansas State 77 67 Since February 20 1994 the Jayhawks have lost only 14 regular season games in Allen Fieldhouse a 263 14 record 951 Since February 3 2007 the Jayhawks have gone 227 9 962 at Allen Fieldhouse as of April 17 2021 one of the best home record in all of basketball Allen Fieldhouse is also notorious for its noise level as well On November 4 2010 ESPN The Magazine named Allen Fieldhouse the loudest college basketball arena in the country reaching sustained decibel levels over 120 51 On February 13 2017 in a game against Big 12 opponent West Virginia fans at Allen Fieldhouse broke the Guinness World Record for loudest crowd roar at an indoor sporting event with a roar of 130 4 decibels which had been set by Kentucky on January 28 against Kansas 52 In the DeBruce Center at the northeast corner of the building is the original document of the Dr Naismith s Original 13 Rules Of Basketball purchased at auction by the Booth family for 4 3 million on December 10 2010 53 Kansas won 69 consecutive games at the Fieldhouse between February 3 2007 and January 17 2011 until Texas ended the longest streak in NCAA Division I since 1992 with a 74 63 win against Kansas on January 22 2011 This streak broke Kansas previous school record of 62 which lasted from February 26 1994 through December 18 1998 during which time the Jayhawks along with the remaining members of the Big Eight Conference merged with the remaining members of the Southwest Conference to become charter members of the Big 12 Conference The Jayhawks also completed a 55 game streak between February 22 1984 through January 30 1988 which is a Big 8 record Home game traditions EditBefore the start of every Jayhawks home game after the singing of The Star Spangled Banner it is a tradition to sing the alma mater Crimson and the Blue While singing the alma mater it is tradition for the students in attendance to put an arm over the shoulders of their neighbors and slowly sway side to side lifting their arms over their heads as the last line of the song is sung The song is concluded by the Rock Chalk Chant Post game the band will play a rendition of the Kansas state song Home on the Range which the crowd will stand up for similar to the national anthem After singing The Star Spangled Banner while the opposing team is being introduced members of the student section take out a copy of the student run newspaper The University Daily Kansan and wave the paper in front of their faces pretending to be reading it in an effort to show lack of interest in the opposing team After the opponents are introduced a short video is shown detailing the history and the accomplishments of Kansas basketball As the Jayhawks are introduced the students rip up their newspapers and throw the confetti pieces of paper in the air as celebration Whatever confetti remains is typically thrown in the air after the first basket made by the Jayhawks If an opposing player fouls out of the game the fans will wave the wheat waving their arms back and forth as a sarcastic good bye to the disqualified player to the tune of You Didn t Have Your Wheaties from a series of 1970s television commercials promoting Wheaties breakfast cereal The same waving motion to the tune of A Hot Time in the Old Town follows a Jayhawk victory If the Jayhawks are leading comfortably near the end of the game the crowd begins a slow version of the Rock Chalk Chant which has become the signature tradition of Allen Fieldhouse The chant can also occasionally be heard at neutral sites such as arenas for the NCAA tournament and the nearby T Mobile Center on the Missouri side of Kansas City which during the regular season serves as an alternate home arena Fans and students will also line up early for Late Night In The Phog which is the first practice of the season The practice is viewable to the public and includes skits with past players as the hosts Year by year Results EditMain article Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball seasonsRivalries EditKansas State Edit Main article Sunflower Showdown The Jayhawks longest played rivalry is with cross state rival Kansas State The Jayhawks lead the series 203 94 The Jayhawks have dominated the series since 1984 holding a record of 86 12 in that time frame K State has not led the all time series since 1922 The schools have met annually since 1912 and first played in 1907 Kansas leads in Lawrence 93 35 in Manhattan 81 48 and on neutral courts 29 11 The Largest K State victory was by 27 points 96 69 on January 20 1979 The largest Kansas win was 45 points 90 45 on March 10 1955 K State longest win streak was 5 games which they achieved twice from 1972 to 1974 and 1982 83 The longest winning streak from Kansas was 31 games from 1994 to 2005 54 Missouri Edit Main article Border War Kansas Missouri rivalry The Jayhawks main rival has been Missouri for many years The two teams first played in 1907 The two teams played every year until Missouri left the Big 12 for the SEC The schools renewed the rivalry beginning in the 2021 22 season The Jayhawks won the first game in the renewal of the rivalry 102 65 55 KU leads the all time series 174 94 The Jayhawks largest victory was 47 points 96 49 on December 28 1977 Missouri s largest victory was 30 points 99 69 on January 17 1976 The Jayhawks longest winning streak was 14 games from 1910 to 1913 Missouri s longest winning streak was 9 from 1920 to 1922 Wichita State Edit While not officially a rivalry the Jayhawks have played cross state opponent Wichita State 15 times The teams most recently met in the 2015 NCAA tournament in the round of 32 Wichita State won that game 79 65 The teams haven t met in the regular season since KU defeated Wichita State 103 54 on January 6 1993 However the teams have a game scheduled for the 2023 24 season Kansas leads the all time series 12 3 The Jayhawks largest victory was the aforementioned 49 point victory in 1993 The Shockers largest victory was the 14 point victory in the 2015 NCAA Tournament mentioned already Wichita State has never won consecutive games against Kansas The Jayhawks won five times in a row from 1989 to 1993 Wichita State won both games between the schools in the NCAA Tournament Post season results EditRegular season conference championships Edit The Jayhawks have won 63 conference championships since their inception including an NCAA record 14 consecutive from 2005 through 2018 The Jayhawks have belonged to the Big 12 Conference since it formed before the 1996 97 season Before that the Jayhawks have belonged to the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association from the 1907 08 to 1927 28 seasons the Big Six Conference from 1928 29 to 1946 47 the Big Seven Conference from 1947 48 to 1957 58 the Big Eight Conference from 1958 to 1959 up until the end of the 1995 96 season The Big Six and Big Seven conferences were actually the more often used names of the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association which existed under that official name until 1964 when it was changed to the Big Eight 56 Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 13 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1914 1915 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927Big 6 7 8 Conference 30 1931 1932 1933 1934 1936 1937 1938 1940 1941 1942 1943 1946 1950 1952 1953 1954 1957 1960 1966 1967 1971 1974 1975 1978 1986 1991 1992 1993 1995 1996Big 12 Conference 21 1997 1998 2002 2003 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2020 2022 2023Conference tournament championships Edit The Big Eight Conference did not regularly have a post season tournament until after the 1977 season Prior to that teams usually played in the Big Eight before that Big Seven Holiday Tournament in December The Holiday tournament ended after the 1979 season Big Seven Big Eight Holiday Tournament 13 1951 1953 1956 1957 1962 1964 1965 1966 1968 1970 1974 1977 1978Big Eight Conference 4 1981 1984 1986 1992Big 12 Conference 12 1997 1998 1999 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2013 2016 2018 2022NCAA Tournament seeding history Edit The NCAA started seeding teams with the 1978 tournament with the seeding format used today beginning in 1979 The Jayhawks were seeded for the first time in their 1981 tournament appearance There was no tournament in 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic Years 81 84 85 86 87 88 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03Seeds 7 5 3 1 5 6 2 3 1 2 4 1 2 1 1 6 8 4 1 2Years 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 22 23Seeds 4 3 4 1 1 3 1 1 2 1 2 2 1 1 1 4 3 1 1 Indicates overall number one seed Indicates NCAA championship Final Four history Edit 1940 Runner up 1952 Champion 1953 Runner up 1957 Runner up 1971 Semifinalist 1974 Semifinalist 1986 Semifinalist 1988 Champion 1991 Runner up 1993 Semifinalist 2002 Semifinalist 2003 Runner up 2008 Champion 2012 Runner up 2018 Semifinalist 2022 ChampionMen s NCAA Tournament Most Outstanding Player Edit 1952 Clyde Lovellette 1953 B H Born 1957 Wilt Chamberlain 1988 Danny Manning 2008 Mario Chalmers 2022 Ochai Agbaji Did not play on a championship team National Championships Edit The Jayhawks have been awarded a combined 6 Championships two Helms Championships and four NCAA Tournament National Championships The Helms titles were awarded retroactively by the Helms Athletic Foundation in 1943 Some schools do not claim Helms championships Kansas however does claim them and has a banner hanging for both in Allen Fieldhouse along with their legitimate NCAA Tournament championships 57 Helms Athletic Foundation Championships Edit 1921 22Head Coach Phog Allen Record 16 21922 23Head Coach Phog Allen Record 17 1NCAA Tournament National Championships Edit 1952 Edit Main article 1951 52 Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball team The Jayhawks 1951 52 team won the schools first NCAA Tournament Championship They were coached by Phog Allen and finished the season with a 28 3 record 1952 NCAA Tournament Results Round Opponent ScoreFirst Round TCU 68 64Second Round St Louis 74 55Final Four Santa Clara 74 55Championship St John s 80 631988 Edit Main article 1987 88 Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball team The 1987 88 team won the Jayhawks second NCAA Tournament championship The Jayhawks were coached by Larry Brown They finished the season 27 11 which is the lowest winning percentage 710 and most losses of any team to win the national championship 58 The team remains the only championship team of the Jayhawks that did not win the regular season conference championship or the conference tournament championship 1988 NCAA Tournament Results Round Opponent ScoreFirst Round No 11 Xavier 85 72Second Round No 14 Murray State 61 58Sweet Sixteen No 7 Vanderbilt 77 64Elite Eight No 4 Kansas State 71 58Final Four No 2 Duke 66 59Championship No 1 Oklahoma 83 792008 Edit Main article 2007 08 Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball team The banner in Allen Fieldhouse for the 2008 National ChampionshipThe 2007 08 team won the Jayhawks third NCAA Tournament Championship They were coached by Bill Self and finished the season with a 37 3 record which is a school record for wins in a season 2008 NCAA Tournament Results Round Opponent ScoreFirst Round No 16 Portland State 85 61Second Round No 8 UNLV 75 56Sweet Sixteen No 12 Villanova 72 57Elite Eight No 10 Davidson 59 57Final Four No 1 North Carolina 84 66Championship No 1 Memphis 75 68OT2022 Edit Main article 2021 22 Kansas Jayhawks men s basketball team The 2021 22 team won the Jayhawks fourth NCAA Tournament Championship which is their most recent championship They were coached by Bill Self and finished the season with a 34 6 record The Jayhawks tournament run in 2022 is the only one since teams began being seeded that they did not play a single number 1 seed in the Final Four and National Championship game 2022 NCAA Tournament Results Round Opponent ScoreFirst Round No 16 Texas Southern 83 56Second Round No 9 Creighton 79 72Sweet Sixteen No 4 Providence 66 61Elite Eight No 10 Miami FL 76 50Final Four No 2 Villanova 81 65Championship No 8 North Carolina 72 69Complete NCAA tournament results Edit The Jayhawks have appeared in the NCAA tournament 51 times Their combined record is 116 49 Their largest victory in a tournament game was a 58 point 110 52 victory over Prairie View A amp M in 1998 which is also the Jayhawks tournament record for most points scored in a tournament game Their largest defeat in a tournament game was a 34 point defeat 51 85 against USC in 2021 which was also their lowest point in the NCAA tournament total since the introduction of the shot clock in the 1985 86 season They have been eliminated in the first round only six times since the beginning of the tournament only two of those times have been since the tournament expanded to 64 teams The Jayhawks have played in 11 overtime games in the NCAA Tournament and have a 6 5 record Two of their overtime games went into multiple overtimes those was their 3 overtime game against North Carolina in the 1957 National Championship game and their double overtime loss to Texas Western in the 1966 Elite Eight The loss to Texas Western was featured in the 2006 film Glory Road Only four times in program history has Kansas failed to win a single game in the tournament and only twice since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985 Like most schools Kansas rarely plays conference opponents in the tournament The 1988 tournament was the only time they ve ever played conference opponents In that tournament they defeated rival Kansas State in the Elite 8 and Oklahoma in the national championship game Appearances are grouped by the number of teams in the bracket Round names are based on what round names were at the time of the tournament not the present names The term Elite eight began in 1956 Final four began in 1975 and Sweet Sixteen began in 1988 Eight team tournamentYear Round Opponent Result1940 First roundSemifinalsNational Championship RiceUSCIndiana W 50 44W 43 42L 42 601942 First roundtRegional 3rd Place Game ColoradoRice L 44 46W 55 53Sixteen to Thirty two team tournamentYear Round Opponent Result1952 First roundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsNational Championship TCUSaint LouisSanta ClaraSt John s W 68 64W 74 55W 74 55W 80 631953 First roundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsNational Championship Oklahoma CityOklahoma A amp MWashingtonIndiana W 73 65W 61 55W 79 53L 68 691957 First roundElite eightSemifinalsNational Championship SMUOklahoma CitySan FranciscoNorth Carolina W 73 65OTW 81 61W 80 56L 53 543OT1960 First roundElite eight TexasCincinnati W 90 81L 71 821966 First roundElite eight SMUTexas Western W 76 70L 80 812OT1967 First roundRegional 3rd Place HoustonLouisville L 53 66W 70 681971 First roundElite eightSemifinalsNational 3rd Place Game HoustonDrakeUCLAWestern Kentucky W 78 77W 73 71L 60 68L 75 771974 First roundElite eightSemifinalsNational 3rd Place Game CreightonOral RobertsMarquetteUCLA W 55 54W 93 90OTL 51 64L 61 781975 First Round Notre Dame L 71 771978 First Round UCLA L 76 83Forty to Fifty three teamsYear Seed Round Opponent Result1981 No 7 First RoundSecond RoundRegional semifinal No 10 Ole MissNo 2 Arizona StateNo 6 Wichita State W 69 66W 88 71L 65 661984 No 5 First RoundSecond Round No 12 Alcorn StateNo 4 Wake Forest W 57 56L 59 69Sixty four teamsYear Seed Round Opponent Result1985 No 3 First RoundSecond Round No 14 OhioNo 11 Auburn W 49 38L 64 661986 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundRegional semifinalElite EightFinal Four No 16 North Carolina A amp TNo 9 TempleNo 5 Michigan StateNo 6 NC StateNo 1 Duke W 71 46W 65 43W 96 86OTW 75 67L 67 711987 No 5 First RoundSecond RoundRegional semifinal No 12 HoustonNo 13 SW Missouri StateNo 1 Georgetown W 66 55W 67 63L 57 701988 No 6 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship No 11 XavierNo 14 Murray StateNo 7 VanderbiltNo 4 Kansas StateNo 2 DukeNo 1 Oklahoma W 85 72W 61 58W 77 64W 71 58W 66 59W 83 791990 No 2 First RoundSecond Round No 15 Robert MorrisNo 7 UCLA W 79 71L 70 711991 No 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship No 14 New OrleansNo 6 PittsburghNo 2 IndianaNo 1 ArkansasNo 1 North CarolinaNo 2 Duke W 55 49W 77 66W 83 65W 93 81W 79 73L 65 721992 No 1 First RoundSecond Round No 16 HowardNo 9 UTEP W 100 67L 60 661993 No 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four No 15 Ball StateNo 7 BYUNo 6 CaliforniaNo 1 IndianaNo 1 North Carolina W 94 72W 90 76W 93 76W 83 77L 68 781994 No 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 13 UT ChattanoogaNo 5 Wake ForestNo 1 Purdue W 102 73W 69 58L 78 831995 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 16 ColgateNo 8 Western KentuckyNo 4 Virginia W 82 68W 75 70L 58 671996 No 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 15 South Carolina StateNo 10 Santa ClaraNo 3 ArizonaNo 4 Syracuse W 92 54W 76 51W 83 80L 57 601997 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 16 Jackson StateNo 8 PurdueNo 4 Arizona W 78 64W 75 61L 82 851998 No 1 First RoundSecond Round No 16 Prairie View A amp MNo 8 Rhode Island W 110 52L 75 80Sixty five teamsYear Seed Round Opponent Result1999 No 6 First RoundSecond Round No 11 EvansvilleNo 3 Kentucky W 95 74L 88 92OT2000 No 8 First RoundSecond Round No 9 DePaulNo 1 Duke W 81 77OTL 64 692001 No 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 13 Cal State NorthridgeNo 5 SyracuseNo 1 Illinois W 99 75W 87 58L 64 802002 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four No 16 Holy CrossNo 8 StanfordNo 4 IllinoisNo 2 OregonNo 1 Maryland W 70 59W 86 63W 73 69W 104 86L 88 972003 No 2 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship No 15 Utah StateNo 10 Arizona StateNo 3 DukeNo 1 ArizonaNo 3 MarquetteNo 3 Syracuse W 64 61W 108 76W 69 65W 78 75W 94 61L 78 812004 No 4 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 13 UICNo 12 PacificNo 9 UABNo 3 Georgia Tech W 78 44W 78 63W 100 74L 71 79OT2005 No 3 First Round No 14 Bucknell L 63 642006 No 4 First Round No 13 Bradley L 73 772007 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 16 NiagaraNo 8 KentuckyNo 4 Southern IllinoisNo 2 UCLA W 107 67W 88 76W 61 58L 55 682008 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship No 16 Portland StateNo 8 UNLVNo 12 VillanovaNo 10 DavidsonNo 1 North CarolinaNo 1 Memphis W 85 61W 75 56W 72 57W 59 57W 84 66W 75 68OT2009 No 3 First RoundSecond RoundSweet Sixteen No 14 North Dakota StateNo 11 DaytonNo 2 Michigan State W 84 74W 60 43L 62 672010 No 1 First RoundSecond Round No 16 LehighNo 9 Northern Iowa W 90 74L 67 69First four eraYear Seed Round Opponent Result2011 No 1 Second RoundThird RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 16 Boston UniversityNo 9 IllinoisNo 12 RichmondNo 11 VCU W 72 53W 73 59W 77 57L 61 712012 No 2 Second RoundThird RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship No 15 DetroitNo 10 PurdueNo 11 NC StateNo 1 North CarolinaNo 2 Ohio StateNo 1 Kentucky W 65 50W 63 60W 60 57W 80 67W 64 62L 59 672013 No 1 Second RoundThird RoundSweet Sixteen No 16 Western KentuckyNo 8 North CarolinaNo 4 Michigan W 64 57W 70 58L 85 87OT2014 No 2 Second RoundThird Round No 15 Eastern KentuckyNo 10 Stanford W 80 69L 57 602015 No 2 Second RoundThird Round No 15 New Mexico StateNo 7 Wichita State W 75 56L 65 782016 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 16 Austin PeayNo 9 ConnecticutNo 5 MarylandNo 2 Villanova W 105 79 W 73 61 W 79 63 L 59 642017 No 1 First RoundSecond roundSweet SixteenElite Eight No 16 UC DavisNo 9 Michigan StateNo 4 PurdueNo 3 Oregon W 100 62W 90 70W 98 66L 60 742018 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal Four No 16 PennNo 8 Seton HallNo 5 ClemsonNo 2 Duke No 1 Villanova W 76 60W 83 79W 80 76W 85 81 OTL 79 952019 No 4 First RoundSecond Round No 13 NortheasternNo 5 Auburn W 87 53L 75 892020 No tournament due to COVID 19 pandemic2021 No 3 First RoundSecond Round No 14 Eastern WashingtonNo 6 USC W 93 84L 51 852022 No 1 First RoundSecond RoundSweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship No 16 Texas Southern No 9 CreightonNo 4 ProvidenceNo 10 Miami FL No 2 VillanovaNo 8 North Carolina W 83 56 W 79 72 W 66 61 W 76 50 W 81 65 W 72 692023 No 1 First RoundSecond Round No 16 Howard No 8 Arkansas W 96 68 L 71 72 Following the introduction of the First Four round in 2011 the Round of 64 and Round of 32 were referred to as the Second Round and Third Round respectively from 2011 to 2015 then from 2016 moving forward the Round 64 and Round of 32 will be called the First and Second rounds Record by roundRound RecordFirst Four N A Round of 64 35 2Round of 32 24 13Sweet 16 26 7Elite 8 17 9Final Four 10 6Regional3rd place game 2 03rd place game 0 2National Championship 4 6 Since its inception in 2011 Kansas has not participated in the First Four Round no longer played NIT results Edit The Jayhawks have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT two times Their combined record is 3 2 Year Round Opponent Result1968 First RoundQuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinal TempleVillanovaSaint Peter sDayton W 82 76W 55 49W 58 46L 48 611969 First Round Boston College L 62 78Jayhawks of note EditAll time scoring leaders Edit 59 Rank Player Points Per game Years1 Danny Manning 2 951 20 1 1985 882 Nick Collison 2 097 14 8 2000 033 Raef LaFrentz 2 066 15 8 1995 984 Clyde Lovellette 1 979 24 7 1950 525 Sherron Collins 1 888 13 2 2007 106 Frank Mason III 1 885 13 0 2014 177 Darnell Valentine 1 821 15 4 1978 818 Keith Langford 1 812 13 3 2002 059 Perry Ellis 1 798 12 5 2012 1610 Paul Pierce 1 768 16 4 1996 98All Americans Edit Consensus first team Edit Kansas leads all NCAA teams with 32 consensus First Team All American selections 25 different players have received the honor 60 1909 Tommy Johnson forward 1915 Ralph Sproull forward 1919 Dutch Lonborg guard 1922 Paul Endacott guard 1923 Paul Endacott guard 1923 Charlie T Black guard 1924 Charlie T Black guard 1924 Tusten Ackerman center 1925 Tusten Ackerman center 1926 Gale Gordon guard 1926 Al Peterson center 1938 Fred Pralle guard 1941 Howard Engleman forward 1943 Charles B Black forward 1951 Clyde Lovellette center 1952 Clyde Lovellette center 1957 Wilt Chamberlain center 1958 Wilt Chamberlain center 1987 Danny Manning forward 1988 Danny Manning forward 1997 Raef LaFrentz forward 1998 Raef LaFrentz forward 1998 Paul Pierce forward 2002 Drew Gooden forward 2003 Nick Collison forward 2005 Wayne Simien forward 2010 Sherron Collins guard 2012 Thomas Robinson forward 2017 Frank Mason III guard 2018 Devonte Graham guard 2022 Ochai Agbaji guard 2023 Jalen Wilson guard indicates player has made at least 2000 points and 1000 rebounds in his college career Other first team selections Edit 1925 Gale Gordon guard 1925 Al Peterson center 1930 Forrest Cox guard 1932 Ted O Leary forward 1933 Bill Johnson center 1936 Ray Ebling forward 1937 Fred Pralle guard 1942 Charles B Black forward 1942 Ray Evans guard 1943 Ray Evans guard 1946 Charles B Black forward 1947 Charles B Black forward 1950 Clyde Lovellette center 1953 B H Born center 1961 Bill Bridges forward 1962 Jerry Gardner guard 1965 Walt Wesley center 1966 Walt Wesley center 1968 Jo Jo White guard 1969 Jo Jo White guard 1970 Dave Robisch forward 1971 Dave Robisch forward 1972 Bud Stallworth forward 1981 Darnell Valentine guard 1986 Danny Manning forward 2020 Udoka Azubuike center Academic All Americans Edit 1971 Bud Stallworth 1974 Tom Kivisto 1977 Cris Barnthouse amp Ken Koenigs 1978 Ken Koenigs 1979 Darnell Valentine 1980 Darnell Valentine 1981 Darnell Valentine 1982 David Magley 1996 Jacque Vaughn 1997 Jacque Vaughn amp Jerod Haase 1999 Ryan Robertson 2010 Cole Aldrich 2011 Tyrel Reed indicates Academic All American of the Year National Player of the Year awards Edit 1923 Paul Endacott Helms Foundation 1924 Charlie T Black Helms Foundation 1952 Clyde Lovellette Helms Foundation 1988 Danny Manning Wooden NABC Naismith 2002 Drew Gooden NABC 2003 Nick Collison NABC 2017 Frank Mason III Consensus 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 McDonald s All Americans Edit The 49 McDonald s All Americans listed below have played for Kansas 68 An asterisk Indicates player did not finish his college career at Kansas A cross indicates player did not begin his college career at Kansas The 2015 game had the most future Jayhawks playing in the game with four however two players transferred to Kansas and one transferred out of Kansas The 2022 game also had 4 players but one transferred to Kansas and one transferred out of Kansas 1970 19991977 Darnell Valentine 1978 Tony Guy 1979 Ricky Ross 1981 Greg Dreiling 1982 Kerry Boagni 1984 Danny Manning 1985 Rick Calloway 1986 Mark Randall 1987 Mike Maddox 1990 Darrin Hancock 1991 Calvin Rayford amp Ben Davis 1993 Jacque Vaughn 1994 Raef LaFrentz 1995 Ryan Robertson amp Paul Pierce 1996 Lester Earl 1997 Kenny Gregory amp Eric Chenowith 1998 Jeff Boschee 1999 Nick Collison 2000 20192001 Wayne Simien amp Aaron Miles 2003 J R Giddens amp David Padgett 2005 Micah Downs Mario Chalmers amp Julian Wright 2006 Sherron Collins amp Darrell Arthur 2007 Cole Aldrich 2009 Xavier Henry 2010 Josh Selby 2012 Perry Ellis 2013 Wayne Selden Jr amp Andrew Wiggins 2014 Cliff Alexander amp Kelly Oubre 2015 Carlton Bragg Cheick Diallo Malik Newman amp Dedric Lawson 2016 Udoka Azubuike amp Josh Jackson 2018 David McCormack Quentin Grimes amp Devon Dotson 2020 present2020 Bryce Thompson 2022 Gradey Dick M J Rice Ernest Udeh Arterio Morris 2023 Elmarko JacksonJayhawk basketball players notable in other fields Edit Below are any former Jayhawks who are notable in other fields Included are the years they played basketball at Kansas and what they are notable for Jim Bausch Olympic decathlete 1929 1931 also a member of the College Football Hall of Fame Bob Dole Politician 1941 1944 also played football while at Kansas Walter Sutton Geneticist 1898 1899 69 Retired jerseys Edit KU only retires the jerseys and not the numbers of past basketball players Eight players honored played on one of KU s 5 championship teams Thirty one players have had their jersey retired by Kansas One former announcer Max Falkenstien is honored with the retired jerseys as well His number 60 was chosen because that was the number of years he was the radio announcer for the Jayhawks Charlie T Black and Paul Endacott are the only two players with their jerseys retired to play on two championship teams Four players from the 2008 Championship have their jersey retired which is the most players honored to be on a roster in any single season in Kansas basketball history 70 Kansas Jayhawks retired jerseysNo Player Position Career0 Drew Gooden F 2000 024 Nick Collison F 2000 03Sherron Collins 5 G 2006 105 Fred Pralle G 1936 38Howard Engleman F 1939 417 Tusten Ackerman 2 C 1923 258 Charlie T Black 1 2 G 1922 2410 Charles B Black F 1942 43 1946 47Kirk Hinrich G 2000 0311 Jacque Vaughn G 1994 9712 Paul Endacott 1 2 G 1921 2313 Wilt Chamberlain C 1957 58Walt Wesley C 1964 6614 Darnell Valentine G 1978 8115 Ray Evans G 1942 43 1946 47Jo Jo White G 1966 69Bud Stallworth F 1970 72Mario Chalmers 5 G 2006 0816 Clyde Lovellette 3 C 1950 5222 Marcus Morris F 2008 1123 B H Born 3 C 1952 54Wayne Simien F 2002 0525 Danny Manning 4 F 1985 88Brandon Rush 5 F 2005 0826 Gale Gordon G 1925 2732 Bill Bridges F 1959 6134 Paul Pierce F 1995 9836 Al Peterson C 1925 2740 Dave Robisch F 1969 7145 Raef LaFrentz F 1994 98Cole Aldrich 5 C 2007 201060 Max Falkenstien Announcer 1945 2006Notes1 Member of 1922 National Championship team 2 Member of 1923 National Championship team 3 Member of 1952 National Championship team 4 Member of 1988 National Championship team 5 Member of 2008 National Championship team Jayhawks in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Edit Twenty members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame have been associated with the Kansas men s basketball team This includes several players Kansas head coaches former Jayhawk players who have been inducted in other roles and former assistant coaches Players Edit Wilt Chamberlain Paul Endacott Bill Johnson Allen Kelley enshrined as member of 1960 Olympic gold medal team Clyde Lovellette Paul Pierce Jo Jo WhiteJayhawk Coaches Edit Below are Jayhawk head coaches in the Hall of Fame Phog Allen also a former player and former head coach of football team Larry Brown Roy Williams Bill Self also a former assistant coach Former players not enshrined as a player or Kansas coach Edit The following former players are enshrined in the Hall of Fame but not as a player or as a coach at Kansas John Bunn also freshmen team coach enshrined as a contributor Dutch Lonborg former athletic director enshrined as a coach Ralph Miller also a Kansas football player enshrined as a coach Ernie Quigley enshrined as a referee Adolph Rupp enshrined as a coach Dean Smith enshrined as a coachOthers Edit The following are people associated with Kansas basketball in some way that are in the Hall of Fame for a reason not already mentioned James Naismith head coach from 1898 to 1907 enshrined as inventor of the game namesake for Hall of Fame John Calipari assistant at Kansas from 1982 to 1985 enshrined as a head coach primarily a college coach but had a brief stint in the NBA Gregg Popovich assistant at Kansas for 1986 87 season enshrined as head coach in NBA Jayhawks in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Edit There are multiple former Kansas players that have been enshrined in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Some former players have been enshrined as players while some former players have been enshrined as coaches Coaches Edit Phog Allen also a former player Larry Brown Roy WilliamsPlayers Edit Wilt Chamberlain Paul Endacott Bill Johnson Clyde Lovellette Danny Manning Paul PierceFormer players inducted as coaches Edit Dean Smith coached at North Carolina Adolph Rupp coached at Kentucky Ralph Miller coached at Wichita now known as Wichita State Iowa and Oregon State Dutch Lonborg coached at McPherson Washburn and NorthwesternContributors Edit James Naismith former coach inducted as inventor of basketball John Bunn former basketball and football player inducted as chairman of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of FameOlympians Edit Below are Jayhawks who represented their country in the Olympic Games as a player or coach Thirteen Jayhawks have been chosen to represent their home country in the Olympics Only Sasha Kaun represented a country other than the United States when he represented Russia in 2012 Kaun is the most recent Jayhawk to play in the olympics while Danny Manning is the most recent Jayhawk to represent the United States Ten played in the Olympics two coached and one was selected but didn t play due to a boycott Darnell Valentine The 1952 Olympic team featured 7 Jayhawk players and a coach Two former Jayhawk basketball players have coached in the Olympics Year Player Medal1952 Phog Allen assistant coach 1952 Charlie Hoag 1952 Bill Hougland 1952 John Keller 1952 Dean Kelley 1952 Bob Kenney 1952 Bill Lienhard 1952 Clyde Lovellette 1956 Bill Hougland 1960 Allen Kelley 1968 Jo Jo White 1976 Dean Smith head coach 1980 Darnell Valentine DNP1988 Danny Manning 2012 Sasha Kaun Russia Presidential Medal of Freedom Edit The Presidential Medal of Freedom is the highest civilian honor in the United States and is awarded by the president Player Years at Kansas Year given President ReasonBob Dole 1941 1942 1997 Bill Clinton Lengthy political careerDean Smith 1949 1953 2013 Barack Obama Charity work and accomplishments as North Carolina s men s basketball coachJayhawks in the NBA Edit The Jayhawks have multiple connections to the NBA Below is a list of former players and coaches People that are currently coaches or in management will show their current job as well as how they are associated with Kansas basketball Current management Edit R C Buford General Manager San Antonio Spurs assistant coach 1983 1988 Kevin Pritchard President of basketball operations Indiana Pacers player 1986 1990 Nick Collison Special assistant to general manager Oklahoma City Thunder player 1999 2003Coaches Edit Greg Dreiling Scout Dallas Mavericks player 1983 86 Alvin Gentry Head Coach New Orleans Pelicans assistant coach 1986 89 Gregg Popovich Head Coach San Antonio Spurs volunteer assistant 1986 87 season Jacque Vaughn Head coach Brooklyn Nets played at Kansas 1993 97 Michael Lee Golden State Warriors professional scout played at Kansas 2001 05 Aaron Miles Assistant coach Boston Celtics played at Kansas 2001 05 Rex Walters Assistant coach New Orleans Pelicans played at Kansas 1991 93Current players Edit Below is a list of former Jayhawk basketball on NBA rosters Free agents should not be included on the list Players with an asterisk are players that have been assigned to the G League In the offseason players who were signed to a team s summer league roster should not be included Ochai Agbaji Utah Jazz Udoka Azubuike Utah Jazz Christian Braun Denver Nuggets Gradey Dick Toronto Raptors Joel Embiid Philadelphia 76ers Devonte Graham San Antonio Spurs Marcus Morris Los Angeles Clippers Markieff Morris Dallas Mavericks Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk Charlotte Hornets Kelly Oubre Jr Charlotte Hornets Jalen Wilson Brooklyn Nets Andrew Wiggins Golden State WarriorsRecently became a Free agent Edit This section is former Jayhawks that were on an NBA roster during the 2019 2020 NBA season but are not on an NBA roster Any players on this list that are not on a roster by the start of the season should be moved to former players Players listed below may be under contract in an international league but are not under contract in the NBA or the G League Wayne Selden most recently played for the New York Knicks Josh Jackson most recently played for the Sacramento Kings Former players Edit Below are former Jayhawks who spent three or more seasons in the NBA Cole Aldrich 2010 18 Darrell Arthur 2008 18 Charles B Black 1948 51 Tarik Black 2014 18 Bill Bridges 1962 74 Walter Roger Brown 1972 79 Wilt Chamberlain 1959 72 Nick Collison 2003 18 Greg Dreiling 1986 96 Drew Gooden 2002 16 Xavier Henry 2010 14 Wayne Hightower 1962 71 Kirk Hinrich 2003 16 Maury King 1959 62 Raef LaFrentz 1998 09 Clyde Lovellette 1953 63 Danny Manning 1988 02 Frank Mason III 2017 21 Paul Mokeski 1979 90 Greg Ostertag 1995 05 Paul Pierce 1998 17 Scot Pollard 1997 08 Kevin Pritchard 1990 95 Mark Randall 1991 94 Dave Robisch 1971 83 Thomas Robinson 2012 17 Brandon Rush 2008 17 Isaac Stallworth 1972 76 Billy Thomas 1999 08 Calvin Thompson 1983 86 Darnell Valentine 1981 90 Jacque Vaughn 1997 09 Rex Walters 1993 99 Walt Wesley 1966 75 Jo Jo White 1969 80 Jeff Withey 2013 17 Julian Wright 2007 11 71 72 Draft history Edit 91 total NBA draft picks 73 39 players drafted 30th or better 38 if including territorial pick Wilt Chamberlain Equivalent to 1st round picks by modern draft standards 23 players drafted 31 60th Equivalent to 2nd round picks by modern draft standards Territorial Picks From 1947 to 1965 the draft allowed teams not drawing fans to select a local player in place of their first round pick Year Player Team1959 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia WarriorsRegular Draft Year Round Pick Overall Player Team1947 Ray Evans New York Knicks1948 Otto Schnellbacher Providence Steamrollers1952 1 9 9 Clyde Lovellette Minneapolis Lakers1953 8 Dean Kelley Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons1953 11 32 Gil Reich Boston Celtics1954 3 4 22 B H Born Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons1954 7 2 56 Allen Kelley Milwaukee Hawks1957 6 8 48 Maury King Boston Celtics1959 10 6 71 Ron Loneski St Louis Hawks1961 3 9 32 Bill Bridges Chicago Packers1962 1 5 5 Wayne Hightower San Francisco Warriors1963 4 2 28 Nolen Ellison Baltimore Bullets1965 8 7 68 George Unseld Los Angeles Lakers1966 1 6 6 Walt Wesley Cincinnati Royals1966 13 3 103 Al Lopes Baltimore Bullets1967 4 2 33 Ronald Franz Detroit Pistons1968 9 8 114 Roger Bohnenstiel New York Knicks1969 1 9 9 Jo Jo White Boston Celtics1969 4 5 48 Dave Nash Chicago Bulls1969 11 13 154 Bruce Sloan Philadelphia 76ers1971 3 9 44 Dave Robisch Boston Celtics1971 4 13 64 Walter Roger Brown Los Angeles Lakers1971 13 12 207 Pierre Russell Milwaukee Bucks1972 1 7 7 Bud Stallworth Seattle SuperSonics1972 14 4 184 Aubrey Nash Baltimore Bullets1975 7 2 110 Rick Suttle Los Angeles Lakers1975 8 18 144 Roger Morningstar Boston Celtics1976 1 16 16 Norm Cook Boston Celtics1977 7 14 124 Herb Nobles Detroit Pistons1978 5 11 99 Ken Koenigs Cleveland Cavaliers1978 6 8 118 John Douglas New Orleans Jazz1979 2 20 42 Paul Mokeski Houston Rockets1980 10 12 211 Randy Carroll Phoenix Suns1981 1 16 16 Darnell Valentine Portland Trail Blazers1981 3 1 47 Art Housey Dallas Mavericks1981 7 22 160 John Crawford Philadelphia 76ers1982 2 5 28 Dave Magley Cleveland Cavaliers1982 2 23 46 Tony Guy Boston Celtics1984 4 10 80 Carl Henry Kansas City Kings1984 9 1 185 Brian Martin Indiana Pacers1984 9 15 199 Kelly Knight Utah Jazz1986 2 2 26 Greg Dreiling Indiana Pacers1986 2 18 42 Ron Kellogg Atlanta Hawks1986 4 1 71 Calvin Thompson New York Knicks1988 1 1 1 Danny Manning Los Angeles Clippers1988 3 25 75 Archie Marshall San Antonio Spurs1990 2 7 34 Kevin Pritchard Golden State Warriors1991 1 26 26 Mark Randall Chicago Bulls1993 1 16 16 Rex Walters New Jersey Nets1993 2 15 42 Adonis Jordan Seattle SuperSonics1994 2 11 38 Darrin Hancock Charlotte Hornets1995 1 28 28 Greg Ostertag Utah Jazz1997 1 19 19 Scot Pollard Detroit Pistons1997 1 27 27 Jacque Vaughn Utah Jazz1998 1 3 3 Raef LaFrentz Denver Nuggets1998 1 10 10 Paul Pierce Boston Celtics1999 2 16 45 Ryan Robertson Sacramento Kings2001 2 14 45 Eric Chenowith New York Knicks2002 1 4 4 Drew Gooden Memphis Grizzlies2003 1 7 7 Kirk Hinrich Chicago Bulls2003 1 12 12 Nick Collison Seattle SuperSonics2005 1 29 29 Wayne Simien Miami Heat2007 1 13 13 Julian Wright New Orleans Hornets2008 1 13 13 Brandon Rush Portland Trail Blazers2008 1 27 27 Darrell Arthur New Orleans Hornets2008 2 4 34 Mario Chalmers Minnesota Timberwolves2008 2 22 52 Darnell Jackson Miami Heat2008 2 29 59 Sasha Kaun Seattle SuperSonics2010 1 11 11 Cole Aldrich New Orleans Hornets2010 1 12 12 Xavier Henry Memphis Grizzlies2011 1 13 13 Markieff Morris Phoenix Suns2011 1 14 14 Marcus Morris Houston Rockets2011 2 19 49 Josh Selby Memphis Grizzlies2012 1 5 5 Thomas Robinson Sacramento Kings2012 2 11 41 Tyshawn Taylor Brooklyn Nets2013 1 7 7 Ben McLemore Sacramento Kings2013 2 9 39 Jeff Withey Portland Trail Blazers2014 1 1 1 Andrew Wiggins Cleveland Cavaliers2014 1 3 3 Joel Embiid Philadelphia 76ers2015 1 15 15 Kelly Oubre Atlanta Hawks2016 2 3 33 Cheick Diallo Los Angeles Clippers2017 1 4 4 Josh Jackson Phoenix Suns2017 2 4 34 Frank Mason III Sacramento Kings2018 2 4 34 Devonte Graham Atlanta Hawks2018 2 17 47 Sviatoslav Mykhailiuk Los Angeles Lakers2020 1 27 27 Udoka Azubuike Utah Jazz2022 1 14 14 Ochai Agbaji Cleveland Cavaliers2022 1 21 21 Christian Braun Denver Nuggets2023 1 13 13 Gradey Dick Toronto Raptors2023 2 21 51 Jalen Wilson Brooklyn NetsNBA Award winners Edit Below are Jayhawks that have won an award in the NBA such as MVP Rookie of the Year etc Not included are Jayhawks who made All Star or All NBA teams or Jayhawks that have won All Star game MVP the dunk contest or 3 point contest Eleven times a Jayhawk has won a major award six different Jayhawks have won awards The only major award a Jayhawk has never won is Defensive Player of the Year Wilt Chamberlain won an award six times during his career including four MVP Awards Joel Embiid is the most recent winner of an award winning league MVP for the 2022 23 the second Jayhawk to win that award along with Chamberlain who also won the award with the Philadelphia 76ers Season Player Team Award1959 60 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia Warriors MVPRookie of the Year1965 66 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia 76ers MVP1966 67 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia 76ers MVP1967 68 Wilt Chamberlain Philadelphia 76ers MVP1971 72 Wilt Chamberlain Los Angeles Lakers NBA Finals MVP1975 76 Jo Jo White Boston Celtics NBA Finals MVP1997 98 Danny Manning Phoenix Suns Sixth Man of the Year2007 08 Paul Pierce Boston Celtics NBA Finals MVP2014 15 Andrew Wiggins Minnesota Timberwolves Rookie of the Year2022 23 Joel Embiid Philadelphia 76ers MVPCurrent Jayhawk college coaches Edit Division I Head Coaches former players Tad Boyle ColoradoDivision I Head Coaches former players and assistant coaches Jerod Haase StanfordWomen s Division I Head Coaches Terry Nooner Wichita StateDivision I assistants former players Jeremy Case Kansas Danny Manning Louisville Evan Manning Gonzaga 74 Jayhawks in the NBA G League Edit Players Edit Below are former Jayhawks under contract with a G League team but are not on a two way contract with an NBA team Tarik Black Grand Rapids Gold Mario Chalmers Sioux Falls Skyforce Cheick Diallo Motor City Cruise Devon Dotson Windy City Bulls Marcus Garrett Sioux Falls Skyforce Frank Mason III South Bay Lakers Malik Newman Cleveland ChargeNCAA records EditActive streaks Edit 20 win seasons 34 since 1990 Consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances 33 since 1990 Most consecutive coaches leading team to Final Four 6As of the conclusion of the 2020 21 season No tournament was held in 2020 due to the COVID 19 pandemic despite this the NCAA still considered all consecutive tournament streaks active following the cancelation of the tournament Team Edit Largest unranked to ranked jump From unranked to No 4 after beating No 1 UNLV No 2 LSU and No 25 SJU in the 1989 preseason NIT 75 Most wins over an opponent in a single calendar year 5 Over Nebraska in 1909 and Kansas State in 1935 Consecutive regular season conference championships 14 2005 to 2018 Consecutive weeks ranked in AP poll 231 February 2 2009 to February 8 2021 25 win seasons 15 2005 06 season to 2019 20 seasonIndividual Edit Career games scoring in double figures 132 Danny Manning Rebounds in first career game 31 Wilt Chamberlain vs Northwestern December 5 1956 Most blocks in a single NCAA tournament 31 Jeff WitheyOther Edit Most winning seasons 101 Most non losing seasons 500 or better 104 Most regular season conference championships 61 Most Consensus first team All Americans 23 Most Consensus first team All American selections 30See also EditNCAA Men s Division I Final Four appearances by coaches NCAA Men s Division I Final Four appearances by school List of teams with the most victories in NCAA Division I men s college basketball NCAA Men s Division I Basketball Tournament Consecutive AppearancesReferences Edit Color Brand Center Retrieved May 19 2017 Dole Institute to display letters between Phog Allen Bob Dole KU edu February 8 2016 Mayer NCAA no place for cheap shots KUsports com Mobile May 11 2011 Archived from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved February 21 2022 Key Dates in NABC History NABC Retrieved October 27 2013 The Prestige The Top 10 July 28 2008 Retrieved March 17 2017 No 1 seed Kansas earns NCAA record 28th consecutive tournament appearance KUAthletics com March 12 2017 King s Court Home sweet home ESPN com January 16 2013 The Top Arenas in College Basketball Experts poll AthlonSports com Archived from the original on September 30 2019 Retrieved March 5 2018 College basketball 5 toughest active places to win at in college basketball NCAA com College Basketball 15 Arenas You Don t Want to Play in BleacherReport com Jayhawks celebrate 2 000th victory March 12 2010 Retrieved April 13 2018 Naismith Untold Archived from the original on May 12 2008 Retrieved September 5 2008 Naismith s Record Archived from the original on July 4 2008 Retrieved February 21 2022 The Rules The DeBruce Center Debrucecenter ku edu November 4 2016 Retrieved March 17 2017 McGill grad James Naismith inventor of basketball Archived from the original on December 7 2008 Retrieved August 3 2017 Good as gold LJWorld com Retrieved March 17 2017 Vincent Askew Archived from the original on December 3 2012 Retrieved August 3 2017 Division I Records PDF Web1 ncaa org Retrieved August 3 2017 a b Player Bio Roy Williams NORTH CAROLINA OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE February 13 2010 Archived from the original on February 13 2010 Retrieved February 21 2022 Roy ACC Have Mixed NCAA History As No 1 Archived from the original on February 10 2013 Retrieved August 3 2017 KU led team wins gold at World University Game Sbnation coms July 13 2015 Retrieved March 17 2017 Kansas basketball hit with major NCAA violation charges stemming from FBI probe CBSSports com Kansas Signs Coach Bill Self to Lifetime Contract SI com Schuster Blake March 25 2022 Kansas overtakes Kentucky in all time wins USA Today Retrieved March 28 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Papillion Jude April 7 2022 Kansas completes biggest title game comeback ever to beat North Carolina The Tulane Hullabaloo The Tulane Hullabaloo Retrieved April 7 2022 Total AP Men s BB Poll Appearances Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 Total AP Men s BB Poll Appearances Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 Total AP Men s BB Poll Appearances Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 Total AP Men s BB Poll Appearances Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 Total AP Men s BB Poll Appearances Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 Final AP Men s Basketball Poll Appearances Summary College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 AP Poll Consecutive Poll Appearance Streaks College Poll Archive Historical College Football and Basketball Polls and Rankings collegepollarchive com Retrieved April 13 2018 a b c DIVISION I MEN S BASKETBALL RECORDS PDF Fs ncaa org Retrieved February 21 2022 Kansas Jayhawks Index College Basketball at Sports Reference com Retrieved February 21 2022 NCAA Career Statistics web1 ncaa org Retrieved April 13 2018 Lucas Adam 2006 The Best Game Ever How Frank McGuire s 57 Tar Heels Beat Wilt and Revolutionized College Basketball Globe Pequot Press ISBN 978 1 59228 982 0 Woodling Chuck 1988 Against All Odds How Kansas Won the 1988 NCAA Championship Lawrence Journal World and the University Press of Kansas ISBN 0 7006 0387 5 Greatest KU games No 9 2 kusports com January 20 2010 Retrieved March 17 2017 Keegan Tom January 16 2010 Greatest KU games No 10 2 kusports com Retrieved February 21 2022 Ellentuck Matt February 27 2016 Kansas wins 12th consecutive Big 12 title under Bill Self SBNation com Retrieved March 17 2017 KU clinches share of 14th straight Big 12 title in win over Tech February 24 2018 Retrieved February 27 2018 Newman leads Kansas past Duke 85 81 in OT for Final Four bid ESPN com Martin scores 23 top seeded Kansas beats Providence 66 61 ESPN com Jayhawks rally rock North Carolina 72 69 to win NCAA title ESPN com Phog Allen Archived from the original on May 15 2009 Retrieved August 3 2017 Kansas suspends Bill Self for 4 games in infractions case ESPN com November 2 2022 NCAA Statistics web1 ncaa org Retrieved April 13 2018 Center of Attention KU edu May 29 2018 Stallard Mark 2005 Tales From The Jayhawks Hardwood Sports Publishing LLC ISBN 1 58261 890 9 So Here s To You Dr and Mrs Robinson Archived from the original on January 15 2006 Retrieved August 3 2017 NCAA Basketball Kansas Jayhawks own the loudest arena in the nation Espn com November 4 2010 Retrieved November 19 2010 Kansas West Virginia Allen Fieldhouse breaks record for loudest crowd roar at indoor sporting event Ncaa com The DeBruce Center Home of the Original Rules of Basketball Opens KUAthletics com May 13 2016 Kansas Kansas State basketball all time results PDF Grfx cstv com Archived from the original PDF on March 3 2016 Retrieved February 21 2022 Kansas Athletics announces multi year agreement to reignite Border Showdown rivalry KUAthletics com October 22 2019 2007 08 Media Guide Kansas Jayhawks Archived from the original on February 20 2008 Retrieved April 5 2008 Talk of Kansas basketball hanging a 2020 national championship banner seems tacky KUSports com NCAA basketball champions and season records Ncaa com Retrieved February 21 2022 Men s Basketball 1 000 Point Scorers KUAthletics com Archived from the original on September 6 2015 Retrieved August 13 2016 2011 NCAA Record Book Awards p 8 PDF Retrieved August 3 2017 Kansas Frank Mason III is AP Player of the Year unanimous All America selection CBSSports com Kansas Frank Mason III is Sporting News college basketball Player of the Year SportingNews com August 12 2021 USA TODAY Sports player of the year Kansas Frank Mason III USAToday com Mason Wins Oscar Robertson Trophy Big12Sports con Mason awarded Naismith Trophy KUAthletics com April 2 2017 KU s Frank Mason adds to award haul with NABC player of year KansasCity com Kansas Frank Mason wins Wooden award as nation s top player ESPN com April 8 2017 McDonald s All American Games Mcdonaldsallamerican com Retrieved February 21 2022 Ashworth William April 5 2019 Scientist of the Day Walter Sutton Linda Hall Library Jayhawks in the Rafters KUsports com Retrieved March 17 2017 Basketball Statistics and History Basketball Reference com Archived from the original on July 20 2012 Retrieved March 17 2017 Jayhawks in the NBA ABA 2 kusports com Retrieved March 17 2017 NBA Draft Picks From University of Kansas Basketball Reference com Retrieved March 17 2017 Meehan Jim Gonzaga grad assistant Evan Manning looks forward to opener against alma mater Kansas The Spokesman Review Unranked to ranked Jump Archived from the original on October 2 2013 Retrieved August 3 2017 External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kansas Jayhawks men 27s basketball amp oldid 1165999269, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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