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Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball

The Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team represents Kansas State University in college basketball competition. The program is classified in the NCAA Division I, and is a member of the Big 12 Conference. The head coach is Jerome Tang.

Kansas State Wildcats
UniversityKansas State University
First season1902
All-time record1,717-1,222 (.584)
Athletic directorGene Taylor
Head coachJerome Tang (2nd season)
ConferenceBig 12
LocationManhattan, Kansas, U.S.
ArenaBramlage Coliseum[1]
(Capacity: 11,000)
NicknameWildcats
ColorsRoyal purple and white[2]
   
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
Alternate
NCAA tournament runner-up
1951
NCAA tournament Final Four
1948, 1951, 1958, 1964
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1948, 1951, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1981, 1988, 2010, 2018, 2023
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1951, 1956, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1968, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1981, 1982, 1988, 2010, 2018, 2023
NCAA tournament round of 32
1975, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1987, 1988, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2018, 2023
NCAA tournament appearances
1948, 1951, 1956, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1968, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1993, 1996, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2023
Conference tournament champions
1977, 1980
Conference regular season champions
1917, 1919, 1948, 1950, 1951, 1956, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1968, 1970, 1972, 1973, 1977, 2013, 2019

The program began competition in 1902. The first two major-conference titles won by the school were won by the men's basketball team, in 1917 and 1919 (in the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association). Kansas State has gone on to win 19 regular season conference crowns. Jeff Sagarin listed the program 27th in his all-time rankings in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia.[3] Following the 2022-23 season, the Wildcats have a record of 1,717–1,222.

History edit

Kansas State University has appeared in 32 NCAA basketball tournaments, most recently in 2023. The team's all-time record in the NCAA tournament is 39–35 (.527). Kansas State's best finish at the tournament came in 1951, when it lost to Kentucky in the national championship game. The school has reached the Final Four 4 times, the Elite Eight 14 times, and the Sweet Sixteen 18 times. Included among K-State's tournament wins are some all-time classics, including an 83–80 win over Oscar Robertson's Cincinnati team in 1958, which Sports Illustrated called "the most exciting game of the 1958 season," and a 50–48 win over second-ranked Oregon State in 1981, which USA Today listed as one of the greatest games in NCAA tournament history.[4][5]

The team also had some notably successful seasons before the creation of the NIT (1938) and the NCAA tournament (1939), including conference titles in 1917 and 1919 under coach Zora G. Clevenger. The Helms Athletic Foundation named Frank Reynolds the program's first All-American player in 1917, and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll retroactively ranked Kansas State #12 in 1910, #18 in 1916, #8 in 1917 and #7 in 1919.[3]

 
Big Eight Player of the Year Lon Kruger with coach Jack Hartman.

The best season in the school's history may have been 1959, when the team finished the season ranked #1 in the final Associated Press poll and Coaches poll. K-State has finished ranked in the Top 10 of one of the two polls on eleven total occasions (most recently in 2023), and in the final top 25 polls 22 total times. The team has also posted a winning record at home every year since 1946.[6]

After a lengthy period with little success during the 1990s and 2000s, the team returned to prominence under head coach Frank Martin. Following a twelve-year absence, the team returned to the NCAA tournament after the 2007–08 season. Following that season, Kansas State freshman Michael Beasley was named an All-American and Big 12 Conference Player of the Year. In the 2009–10 season, the team spent much of the year ranked in the Top 10 of the AP poll and finished second in the Big 12. The team received a #2 seed in the 2010 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and advanced to the Elite Eight. Along the way, the Wildcats defeated Xavier in a double-overtime thriller, which CBSSports.com called "one of the best games in the history of the Sweet 16."[7]

 
Bramlage Coliseum, home of KSU basketball

On March 31, 2012, Bruce Weber was announced as head coach after Frank Martin left for South Carolina. During the 2012–2013 season, Weber's first in Manhattan, Kansas State won its first regular season conference title since 1977 and advanced to the NCAA tournament.[8] Weber's team won the conference title again in the 2018–2019 season. K-State appeared in the NCAA tournament five times in Weber's seven seasons, including advancing to the Elite Eight in 2018.

After three consecutive losing seasons, Weber resigned under pressure in March 2022. He was succeeded by longtime Baylor assistant coach Jerome Tang. In Tang's first season, he guided a KSU team picked to finish last in the Big 12 to a third-place finish and to the NCAA Tournament, the first NCAA appearance since 2019. With wins over Montana State, Kentucky, and Michigan State, Tang brought the Wildcats to its first Elite Eight appearance since 2018 and its fourteenth Elite Eight appearance in program history.

Achievements edit

Kansas State has a total of 36 All-Americans, 19 regular-season conference championships and nine conference tournament championships.[9]

The program ranks in the top 25 nationally in the following categories:

Top 25 All-Time Ranking
Weeks ranked #1 in AP poll[10][11] 16th (tie)
Weeks ranked in top 5 of AP poll 25th
NCAA Tournament appearances 22nd
NCAA Final Four appearances 22nd (tie)
NCAA Elite Eight appearances 6th (tie)
NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearances 12th
#1 NBA draft picks 3rd (tie)
NCAA Tournament wins 25th

The program also ranks in the top 50 nationally in the following categories:

Top 40 All-Time Ranking
All-time wins (NCAA Division I)[10] 42nd
Appearances in final AP poll[11] 29th (tie)
Appearances in top 10 of AP poll[11] 38th (tie)

Top 25 rankings edit

Kansas State University has finished in the final rankings of the AP poll or Coaches poll on 22 occasions throughout its history, including one season at #1 in the final polls (pre-NCAA Tournament). The AP poll first appeared in 1948, and has been published continuously since 1950–51. The Coaches poll began in the 1950–51 season. Currently, the final AP poll is released before the tournament and the final Coaches poll is released after the tournament.

Season Final record AP poll Coaches poll
1949–50 17–7 14 n/a
1950–51 25–4 4 3
1951–52 19–5 3 6
1952–53 17–4 12 9
1956–57 15–8 20
1957–58 22–5 3 4
1958–59 25–2 1 1
1959–60 16–10 16
1960–61 22–5 4 4
1961–62 22–3 6 5
1962–63 16–9 19
1972–73 23–5 9 7
1974–75 20–9 15
1976–77 24–7 16 11
1979–80 22–9 20
1987–88 25–9 20 8
2009–10 29–8 7 7
2010–11 23–11 21 24
2012–13 27–8 12 20
2017–18 25–12 19
2018–19 25–9 18 19
2022–23 26–10 15 9

Rivalries edit

Kansas: Sunflower Showdown edit

Kansas State's main rivalry is with the Kansas Jayhawks. The rivalry peaked in the 1950s when both teams were annually national title contenders. The 1987–88 season also proved to be momentous in the rivalry. In the first matchup of the season, on January 30, 1988, Mitch Richmond scored 35 points to lead Kansas State to a 72–61 win to halt KU's then-record 55-game home winning streak. On February 18, KU turned the tables, prevailing 64–63 at Ahearn Field House in Manhattan to deny K-State a victory over KU in the old field house's last year. In what was supposed to be the rubber game, in the 1988 Big Eight Conference men's basketball tournament, Kansas State won a decisive victory by a 69–54 score. However, the biggest was yet to come. Both teams qualified for the NCAA tournament, and after three wins each in the tournament they faced each other on March 27 in Pontiac, Michigan, for the right to advance to the Final Four. Led by Danny Manning's 20 points, KU turned a tight game into a runaway and prevailed 71–58. Kansas would go on to win the national championship.

The rivalry slipped in significance after the 1988 season, and from 1994 to 2005 KU won 31 straight games against K-State, the longest streak for either school in the series. KU also posted a 24-game win streak against the Wildcats in Manhattan, which ended on January 30, 2008, when #22 Kansas State upset #2 Kansas 84–75.

Jeff Sagarin's rankings of the nation's top programs by decade in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia nicely track the history of the rivalry.[3] In the 1950s, when the rivalry was at its peak, Kansas State finished the decade ranked as the #3 program in the nation and KU was ranked as #4.[3] In the 1960s KU was ranked #9 for the decade and KSU was ranked #11. In the 1970s, the programs were again nearly even, with Kansas State ranked at #24 and KU at #25. In the 1980s some separation appeared, as KU finished the decade ranked at #19 and Kansas State at #31. The big difference appeared in the 1990s and 2000s when KU was ranked at #4 and #2 for the decades, while Kansas State does not appear anywhere in the top 40.[3]

The rivalry has become more relevant again in recent years, with both teams ranked in the AP Top 25 for many of their match-ups.[12]

Missouri edit

As of the 2022–23 season, Missouri is Kansas State's second most-played rival, with 237 games dating back to 1907. Kansas State leads the series 121–116. The series was last played regularly in the 2011–12 season, before Missouri moved to the Southeastern Conference.[13][14] For nearly a century beforehand, the two schools shared conferences, beginning in the 1913–14 season in the Missouri Valley Conference, then in the Big Eight Conference and its predecessors from 1928 to 1996, and finally the Big 12 Conference from 1996 to 2012.

Since Missouri's move to the SEC, the two teams have matched up twice, meeting on neutral floors in 2015 and 2018, both Kansas State victories.

Wichita State edit

Kansas State had an ongoing in-state, out-of-conference rivalry with Wichita State, dating back to 1932 and last played in 2022. Kansas State leads the series 22–11. The series had six games from 1932 to 1964, then six games on a home-and-home rotation from the 1969–70 to 1971–72 seasons, and most recently 19 home-and-home games every season from 1985–86 to 2003–04.[15]

When Wichita State became a Top 25 regular in the early 2010s, there came interest in reviving the series.[16] In February 2013, Kansas state senator Michael O'Donnell introduced a bill requiring Kansas and Kansas State to schedule Wichita State.[17]

The series was renewed in 2021, with a four-game series calling for games at Intrust Bank Arena in Wichita that year, at Bramlage Coliseum in 2022, T-Mobile Center in Kansas City in 2023, and finally at Charles Koch Arena in 2024.[18]

Postseason edit

NCAA tournament results edit

The Wildcats have appeared in the NCAA tournament 32 times. Their overall record in the NCAA Tournament is 40–36 (.526) through the 2023 tournament.[19]

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1948 Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd-place game
Wyoming
Baylor
Holy Cross
W 58–48
L 52–60
L 54–60
1951 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Championship
Arizona
BYU
Oklahoma A&M
Kentucky
W 61–59
W 64–54
W 68–44
L 58–68
1956 Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd-place game
Oklahoma City
Houston
L 93–97
W 89–70
1958 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd-place game
Cincinnati
Oklahoma State
Seattle
Temple
W 83–80OT
W 69–57
L 51–73
L 57–67
1959 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
DePaul
Cincinnati
W 102–70
L 75–85
1961 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Houston
Cincinnati
W 75–64
L 64–69
1964 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National 3rd-place game
Texas Western
Wichita
UCLA
Michigan
W 64–60
W 94–93
L 84–90
L 90–100
1968 Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd-place game
TCU
Louisville
L 72–77
L 63–93
1970 Sweet Sixteen
Regional 3rd-place game
New Mexico State
Houston
L 66–70
W 107–98
1972 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Texas
Louisville
W 66–55
L 65–72
1973 Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Southwestern Louisiana
Memphis State
W 66–63
L 72–92
1975 First round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Penn
Boston College
Syracuse
W 69–62
W 74–65
L 87–95OT
1977 First round
Sweet Sixteen
Providence
Marquette
W 87–80
L 66–67
1980 #7 First round
Second round
#10 Arkansas
#2 Louisville
W 71–53
L 69–71OT
1981 #8 First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#9 San Francisco
#1 Oregon State
#4 Illinois
#2 North Carolina
W 64–60
W 50–48
W 57–52
L 68–82
1982 #5 First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
#12 Northern Illinois
#4 Arkansas
#8 Boston College
W 77–68
W 65–64
L 65–69
1987 #9 First round
Second round
#8 Georgia
#1 UNLV
W 82–79OT
L 61–80
1988 #4 First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#13 La Salle
#5 DePaul
#1 Purdue
#6 Kansas
W 66–53
W 66–58
W 73–70
L 58–71
1989 #6 First round #11 Minnesota L 75–86
1990 #11 First round #6 Xavier L 79–87
1993 #6 First round #11 Tulane L 53–55
1996 #10 First round #7 New Mexico L 48–69
2008 #11 First round
Second round
#6 USC
#3 Wisconsin
W 80–67
L 55–72
2010 #2 First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#15 North Texas
#7 BYU
#6 Xavier
#5 Butler
W 82–62
W 84–72
W 101–962OT
L 56–63
2011 #5 Second round
Third Round
#12 Utah State
#4 Wisconsin
W 73–68
L 65–70
2012 #8 Second round
Third Round
#9 Southern Miss
#1 Syracuse
W 70–64
L 59–75
2013 #4 Second round #13 La Salle L 61–63
2014 #9 Second round #8 Kentucky L 49–56
2017 #11 First Four
First round
#11 Wake Forest
#6 Cincinnati
W 95–88
L 61–75
2018 #9 First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#8 Creighton
#16 UMBC
#5 Kentucky
#11 Loyola Chicago
W 69–59
W 50–43
W 61–58
L 62–78
2019 #4 First round #13 UC Irvine L 64–70
2023 #3 First round
Second round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#14 Montana State
#6 Kentucky
#7 Michigan State
#9 Florida Atlantic
W 77–65
W 75–69
W 98–93OT
L 76–79

From 2011 to 2015 the round of 64 was known as the Second round, round of 32 was Third Round

NCAA tournament seeding history edit

The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.

Years → '80 '81 '82 '87 '88 '89 '90 '93 '96 '08 '10 '11 '12 '13 '14 '17 '18 '19 '23
Seeds→ 7 8 5 9 4 6 11 6 10 11 2 5 8 4 9 11 9 4 3

NIT results edit

The Wildcats have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) seven times. Their combined record is 6–9.

Year Round Opponent Result
1976 Quarterfinals Kentucky L 76–81
1992 First round
Second round
Western Kentucky
Notre Dame
W 85–74
L 48–64
1994 First round
Second round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
3rd-place game
Mississippi State
Gonzaga
Fresno State
Vanderbilt
Siena
W 78–69
W 66–64
W 115–77
L 76–82
L 79–92
1998 First round NC State L 39–59
1999 First round TCU L 71–72
2007 First round
Second round
Vermont
DePaul
W 59–57
L 65–70
2009 First round
Second round
Illinois State
San Diego State
W 83–79OT
L 52–70
2024 First round Iowa L 82-91

NCIT results edit

The Wildcats appeared in one of the only two ever National Commissioners Invitational Tournaments. Their record is 0–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
1974 Quarterfinals Bradley L 64–68

Individual awards and accomplishments edit

Retired jerseys edit

The following players' jerseys have been retired by Kansas State, though their respective jersey numbers remain available for use. They represent the finest basketball players to come through Kansas State. The criteria for determining the honor includes statistical achievement, conference and national records, honors received (such as all-conference, All-American, Academic All-American), character and sportsmanship.[20]

Kansas State Wildcats retired jerseys
No. Player Position Career Year of Retirement
10 Chuckie Williams SG 1972–1976 2006
12 Mike Evans PG 1974–1978 2006
12 Lon Kruger PG 1971–1974 2006
22 Ernie Barrett F / G 1948–1951 2005
23 Mitch Richmond SG 1986–1988 2009
25 Rolando Blackman SG 1977–1981 2007
30 Bob Boozer PF 1956–1959 2005
33 Jack Parr C 1955–1958 2005
33 Dick Knostman C 1950–1953 2007

National honors edit

 
Michael Beasley was named National Freshman of the Year, an All-American and the Big 12 Player of the Year in 2008

The following Kansas State players and coaches are in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (with induction year):

The following Kansas State players and coaches are in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame (with induction year):

Kansas State players and coaches have won the following national awards:

All-Americans edit

The following players were named first, second or third-team All-Americans by one of outlets used by the NCAA to determine consensus selections

Player Year(s) Team(s)
F. I. Reynolds 1917 Consensus First TeamHelms (1st)
Frank Groves 1937 Converse (3rd), Omaha World Newspaper (2nd)
Ernie Barrett 1951 Consensus Second TeamAP (2nd), UPI (3rd), Look Magazine (2nd), International News Service (1st)
Dick Knostman 1952 AP (3rd)
1953 Consensus Second TeamAP (2nd), UPI (2nd), Look Magazine (1st), NEA (1st), International News Service (2nd), Collier's (2nd)
Jack Parr 1958 NABC (3rd)
Bob Boozer 1958 Consensus First TeamAP (2nd), USBWA (1st), NABC (1st), UPI (2nd), NEA (2nd), International News Service (2nd)
1959 Consensus First TeamAP (1st), USBWA (1st), NABC (1st), UPI (1st), NEA (1st)
Mike Evans 1978 AP (3rd)
Rolando Blackman 1980 AP (3rd)
1981 NABC (3rd)
Mitch Richmond 1988 Consensus Second TeamUSBWA (2nd), UPI (2nd)
Michael Beasley 2008 Consensus First TeamAP (1st), USBWA (1st), USBWA (1st), SN (1st)
Jacob Pullen 2010 SN (3rd)
2011 AP (3rd), NABC (3rd), SN (3rd)
Keyontae Johnson 2023 AP (3rd), NABC (3rd)
Markquis Nowell 2023 AP (3rd), USBWA (3rd), NABC (3rd), SN (3rd)

Conference honors edit

The Big Eight Conference established the Conference Player of the Year and Coach of the Year awards in 1957. These awards have continued into the Big 12 Conference era.

Wildcats to pros edit

The following former Wildcats have gone on to play professionally, either in the NBA or elsewhere.[21] Kansas State University has had two overall #1 draft picks in the NBA since the draft began in 1947: Howie Shannon (1949) and Bob Boozer (1959).

Draft history edit

NBA/ABA Draft Picks
Round Pick Overall Player Year
1st 1st 1st Howie Shannon 1949
1st 1st 1st Bob Boozer 1959
1st 2nd 2nd Michael Beasley 2008
1st 5th 5th Mitch Richmond 1988
1st 7th 7th Ernie Barrett 1951
1st 9th 9th Rolando Blackman 1981
1st 15th 15th Chuckie Williams 1976
2nd 10th 19th Lew Hitch 1951
1st 21st 21st Mike Evans 1978
2nd 9th 24th Gene Williams 1969
4th 6th 31st Willie Murrell 1964
2nd 3rd 33rd Wes Iwundu 2017
2nd 15th 38th Norris Coleman 1987
2nd 17th 44th Steve Henson 1990
2nd 17th 47th Bill Walker 2008
2nd 20th 50th Keyontae Johnson 2023
10th 2nd 70th Jack Parr 1958
10th 8th 91st Larry Comley 1961
8th 5th 166th Ed Nealy 1982

Former players as coaches edit

A number of former Wildcat players have gone to successful careers as head basketball coaches, including:

Coaches edit

Kansas State has had 23 head coaches. A number of notable and successful coaches have led the Wildcats through the years. Following are all the coaches that have been at Kansas State.[9]

Coach Years at KSU W L Win% Conf. W Conf. L Conf. Win % Awards and Achievements During Tenure
Charles W. Melick 1905–1906 7 9 .438 N/A N/A N/A
Mike Ahearn 1906–1911 26 24 .520 N/A N/A N/A
Guy Lowman 1911–1914 30 16 .652 0 10 .000
Carl J. Merner 1914–1916 19 15 .559 13 13 .500
Zora G. Clevenger 1916–1920 54 17 .761 38 16 .704 • Highest winning percentage in program history
• 2 Conference regular season championships (1917, 1919)
E.A. Knoth 1920–1921 14 6 .700 11 4 .733 • Highest conference winning percentage in program history
E.C. Curtiss 1921–1923 5 28 .152 5 27 .156
Charles Corsaut 1923–1933 89 81 .524 61 63 .492
Frank Root 1933–1939 38 72 .345 19 47 .287
Jack Gardner^ 1939–1942; 1946–1953 147 81 .645 66 46 .589 • NCAA Championship Game (1951)
• 2 Final Fours (1948, 1951)
• 2 Elite Eights (1948, 1951)
• 1 Sweet Sixteen (1951)
• 2 NCAA Tournament appearances (1948, 1951)
• 3 Conference regular season championships (1948, 1950, 1951)
• 3 Conference Holiday tournament championships (1947, 1950, 1952)
• 2 times ranked in top 6 of final AP and UPI polls (1951, 1952)
Chili Cochrane 1942–1943 6 14 .300 1 9 .100
Cliff Rock 1943–1944 7 15 .318 1 9 .100
Fritz Knorr 1944–1946 14 33 .298 6 14 .300
Tex Winter^ 1953–1968 261 118 .689 154 57 .730 • 2 Final Fours (1958, 1964)
• 4 Elite Eights (1958, 1959, 1961,1964)
• 6 Sweet Sixteens (1956, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1968)
• 6 NCAA Tournament appearances (1956, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1964, 1968)
• 8 Conference regular season championships (1956, 1958–1961, 1963, 1964, 1968)
• 4 Conference Holiday tournament championships (1958, 1960, 1961, 1963)
• Ranked No. 1 in final AP and UPI polls (1959)
• 4 times ranked in top 6 of final AP and UPI polls (1958, 1959, 1961, 1962)
UPI National Coach of the Year (1958)
• Big 7 Coach of the Year (1958)
• 2× Big 8 Coach of the Year (1959, 1960)
• Undefeated conference season (14–0) (1959)
• Developed the Triangle offense
Cotton Fitzsimmons 1968–1970 34 20 .630 19 9 .679 • 1 Sweet Sixteen (1970)
• 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance (1970)
• 1 Conference regular season Championship (1970)
• Big 8 Coach of the Year (1970)
NABC District Coach of the Year (1970)
Jack Hartman 1970–1986 295 169 .636 133 91 .594 • 4 Elite Eights (1972, 1973, 1975, 1981)
• 6 Sweet Sixteens (1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1981, 1982)
• 7 NCAA Tournament appearances (1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1980–1982)
• 1 NIT Tournament Appearance (1976)
• 3 Conference regular season championships (1972, 1973, 1977)
• 2 Conference tournament championships (1977, 1980)
NABC Coach of the Year (1980)
• 2× Big 8 Coach of the Year (1975, 1977)
• NABC District Coach of the Year (1977)
• Most wins in program history
Lon Kruger^ 1986–1990 81 46 .638 34 22 .607 • 1 Elite Eight (1988)
• 1 Sweet Sixteen (1988)
• 4 NCAA Tournament appearances (1987–1990)
• NABC District Coach of the Year (1988)
• Only KSU coach to take squads to NCAA Tournament in four consecutive seasons
Dana Altman 1990–1994 68 54 .557 19 37 .339 • 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance (1993)
• 2 NIT Tournament appearances (1992, 1994)
• Big 8 Coach of the Year (1993)
Tom Asbury 1994–2000 85 88 .491 29 63 .315 • 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance (1996)
• 2 NIT Tournament appearances (1998, 1999)
Jim Wooldridge 2000–2006 83 90 .480 32 64 .333
Bob Huggins 2006–2007 23 12 .657 10 6 .625 • 1 NIT Tournament Appearance (2007)
Frank Martin 2007–2012 117 54 .684 50 32 .610 • 1 Elite Eight (2010)
• 1 Sweet Sixteen (2010)
• 4 NCAA Tournament appearances (2008, 2010–2012)
• 1 NIT Tournament Appearance (2009)
• Big 12 Coach of the Year (AP & Coaches) (2010)
• Highest NCAA seed (2) in program history (2010)
• Most wins (29) in one season (2010)
CollegeInsider.com Big 12 Coach of the Year (2008)
• Jim Phelan Award as mid-season National Coach of the Year (2009–10)
USBWA District VI Coach of the Year (2010)
NABC District 8 Coach of the Year (2010)
• Only KSU coach to win 20 or more games in first 5 seasons
Bruce Weber 2012–2022 184 147 .556 82 98 .456 • 1 Elite Eight (2018)
• 1 Sweet Sixteen (2018)
• 5 NCAA Tournament appearances (2013, 2014, 2017-2019)
• 2 Conference regular season championships (2013, 2019)
• Big 12 Coach of the Year (AP & Coaches) (2013)
USBWA District VI Coach of the Year (2013)
NABC District 8 Coach of the Year (2013)
• Most wins (27) in the first year (2013)
• Most wins (47) in the first 2 years
• Most conference wins (14) in the first year (2013)
• Most conference wins (24) in the first 2 years
• Most conference wins (32) in the first 3 years
• Most all-time Top 25 victories (27)
• Only KSU coach to win 25 or more games in back to back seasons
Jerome Tang 2022–Present 45 25 .643 19 17 .528 • 1 Elite Eight (2023)
• 1 Sweet Sixteen (2023)
• 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance (2023)
• Naismith College Coach of the Year (2023)
• College Hoops Today Coach of the Year (2023)
• Big 12 Coach of the Year (AP & Coaches) (2023)
USBWA District VI Coach of the Year (2023)
NABC District 8 Coach of the Year (2023)
• Most Top 25 wins in a single season (7)

Conference membership history edit

Series records edit

Record vs. Big 12 opponents edit

Kansas State
vs.
Overall record at Manhattan at Opponent's
Venue
at neutral site Last 5 meetings Last 10 meetings Current streak Big 12 era
Games
Baylor KSU, 26–25 KSU, 14–11 BU, 11–9 tied, 3–3 KSU, 3–2 BU, 7–3 W 3 BU, 24–21
BYU KSU, 5-4 KSU, 1-0 BYU, 3-1 KSU, 3–1 KSU, 3–2 KSU, 5–4 W 1 tied, 1-1
Cincinnati UC, 8-1 UC, 2-0 UC, 3-0 UC, 3–1 UC, 5–0 UC, 8–1 L 7 UC, 1-0
Houston KSU, 5-4 tied, 1-1 UH, 3-1 KSU, 3–0 UH, 3–2 KSU, 5–4 L 1 UH, 1-0
Iowa State KSU, 146–93 KSU, 85–29 KSU, 54–53 ISU, 11–7 KSU, 3–2 KSU, 6–4 W 1 ISU, 30–29
Kansas KU, 205–96 KU, 81–50 KU, 95–35 KU, 29–11 KU, 3–2 KU, 8–2 L 1 KU, 58–8
Oklahoma OU, 114–104 KSU, 65–38 OU, 67–28 KSU, 11–9 OU, 4–1 OU, 6–4 L 1 OU, 22–19
Oklahoma State KSU, 86–59 KSU, 43–18 OSU, 37–28 KSU, 15–4 KSU, 3–2 OSU, 6–4 L 1 OSU, 24–20
TCU KSU, 21–13 KSU, 9–7 KSU, 8–3 KSU, 4–3 TCU, 3–2 tied, 5-5 L 2 KSU, 18–11
Texas KSU, 25–23 KSU, 11–10 UT, 12–11 KSU, 3–1 KSU, 3–2 UT, 7–3 W 1 UT, 23–20
Texas Tech KSU, 26–23 KSU, 18–5 TTU, 17–7 tied, 1–1 TTU, 3–2 TTU, 7–3 L 2 TTU, 22–19
UCF KSU, 3-0 KSU, 2-0 tied, 0–0 KSU, 1–0 KSU, 3-0 KSU, 3–0 W 3 KSU, 1-0
West Virginia WVU, 16–12 KSU, 8–4 WVU, 9–4 WVU, 3–0 KSU, 3–2 tied, 5–5 W 2 WVU, 15–11
*As of March 13, 2024[9]

Record vs. former Big 12 opponents edit

Kansas State
vs.
Overall record at Manhattan at Opponent's
Venue
at neutral site Last 5 meetings Last 10 meetings Current streak Last meeting
Colorado KSU, 96–48 KSU, 54–11 CU, 33–32 KSU, 10–4 CU, 4–1 KSU, 6–4 L 5 Nov 11, 2020
Missouri KSU, 121–116 KSU, 62–44 MU, 64–42 KSU, 17–8 KSU, 5–0 KSU, 7–3 W 5 Nov 19, 2018
Nebraska KSU, 128–93 KSU, 69–35 NU, 55–39 KSU, 20–3 KSU, 5–0 KSU, 8–2 W 7 Dec 17, 2022
Texas A&M KSU, 18–10 KSU, 11–1 TAMU, 8–3 KSU, 4–1 TAM, 3–2 tied, 5–5 L 3 Jan 30, 2021
*As of March 2, 2023[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Kansas State Athletics. Archived from the original on November 1, 2010. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
  2. ^ Kansas State University Athletics Public Branding Guide (PDF). May 18, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d e ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia (PDF). ESPN. 2009.
  4. ^ "One Second To Go, One Point Behind..." Sports Illustrated. December 8, 1958.
  5. ^ "Greatest 63 games in NCAA Tournament history". USA Today. March 25, 2002.
  6. ^ Robinett, Kellis (February 27, 2020). "K-State basketball on verge of making school history for all the wrong reasons". The Wichita Eagle. Retrieved September 5, 2021.
  7. ^ "Kansas State, Xavier put on a show for the ages". CBSSports.com. March 26, 2010.
  8. ^ "K-State wins share of first conference title since 1977". Kansas City Star. March 9, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c d Kansas State Athletics, , archived from the original on February 15, 2011, retrieved March 24, 2011
  10. ^ a b "Division I Men's Basketball records" (PDF). NCAA. 2022. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c "Men's Basketball - College Poll Archive - Historical College Football, Basketball, and Softball Polls and Rankings".
  12. ^ . The Wichita Eagle. Archived from the original (English) on February 5, 2010. Retrieved February 2, 2010.
  13. ^ . Kansas State. January 10, 2015. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  14. ^ "Non-conference series history: Missouri." K-State Men's Basketball 2014–15 Media Guide. Kansas State Athletics: 2014. pp. 87–88.
  15. ^ "Non-conference series history: Wichita State." K-State Men's Basketball 2014–15 Media Guide. Kansas State Athletics: 2014. p. 89.
  16. ^ Lutz, Bob (February 23, 2012). . kansas.com. Archived from the original on February 25, 2012.
  17. ^ Rothschild, Scott (February 5, 2013). "Statehouse Live: Bill would require KU to play Wichita State University in basketball". Lawrence Journal-World. Retrieved March 15, 2015.
  18. ^ Wichita State, KSU agree to basketball series. "Wichita State, KSU agree to basketball series". KAKE News. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
  19. ^ "Kansas State Wildcats School History". Sports Reference. Retrieved May 1, 2022.
  20. ^ "Men's Basketball Retired Jerseys". K-State Athletics. January 24, 2005. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
  21. ^ . Archived from the original on October 18, 2010. Retrieved October 19, 2010.

External links edit

  • Official website  

kansas, state, wildcats, basketball, team, represents, kansas, state, university, college, basketball, competition, program, classified, ncaa, division, member, conference, head, coach, jerome, tang, kansas, state, wildcats2023, teamuniversitykansas, state, un. The Kansas State Wildcats men s basketball team represents Kansas State University in college basketball competition The program is classified in the NCAA Division I and is a member of the Big 12 Conference The head coach is Jerome Tang Kansas State Wildcats2023 24 Kansas State Wildcats men s basketball teamUniversityKansas State UniversityFirst season1902All time record1 717 1 222 584 Athletic directorGene TaylorHead coachJerome Tang 2nd season ConferenceBig 12LocationManhattan Kansas U S ArenaBramlage Coliseum 1 Capacity 11 000 NicknameWildcatsColorsRoyal purple and white 2 UniformsHome Away Alternate AlternateNCAA tournament runner up1951NCAA tournament Final Four1948 1951 1958 1964NCAA tournament Elite Eight1948 1951 1958 1959 1961 1964 1972 1973 1975 1981 1988 2010 2018 2023NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1951 1956 1958 1959 1961 1964 1968 1970 1972 1973 1975 1977 1981 1982 1988 2010 2018 2023NCAA tournament round of 321975 1977 1980 1981 1982 1987 1988 2008 2010 2011 2012 2018 2023NCAA tournament appearances1948 1951 1956 1958 1959 1961 1964 1968 1970 1972 1973 1975 1977 1980 1981 1982 1987 1988 1989 1990 1993 1996 2008 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2017 2018 2019 2023Conference tournament champions1977 1980Conference regular season champions1917 1919 1948 1950 1951 1956 1958 1959 1960 1961 1963 1964 1968 1970 1972 1973 1977 2013 2019 The program began competition in 1902 The first two major conference titles won by the school were won by the men s basketball team in 1917 and 1919 in the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association Kansas State has gone on to win 19 regular season conference crowns Jeff Sagarin listed the program 27th in his all time rankings in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia 3 Following the 2022 23 season the Wildcats have a record of 1 717 1 222 Contents 1 History 2 Achievements 2 1 Top 25 rankings 3 Rivalries 3 1 Kansas Sunflower Showdown 3 2 Missouri 3 3 Wichita State 4 Postseason 4 1 NCAA tournament results 4 2 NCAA tournament seeding history 4 3 NIT results 4 4 NCIT results 5 Individual awards and accomplishments 5 1 Retired jerseys 5 2 National honors 5 2 1 All Americans 5 3 Conference honors 5 4 Wildcats to pros 5 4 1 Draft history 5 5 Former players as coaches 6 Coaches 7 Conference membership history 8 Series records 8 1 Record vs Big 12 opponents 8 2 Record vs former Big 12 opponents 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistory editKansas State University has appeared in 32 NCAA basketball tournaments most recently in 2023 The team s all time record in the NCAA tournament is 39 35 527 Kansas State s best finish at the tournament came in 1951 when it lost to Kentucky in the national championship game The school has reached the Final Four 4 times the Elite Eight 14 times and the Sweet Sixteen 18 times Included among K State s tournament wins are some all time classics including an 83 80 win over Oscar Robertson s Cincinnati team in 1958 which Sports Illustrated called the most exciting game of the 1958 season and a 50 48 win over second ranked Oregon State in 1981 which USA Today listed as one of the greatest games in NCAA tournament history 4 5 The team also had some notably successful seasons before the creation of the NIT 1938 and the NCAA tournament 1939 including conference titles in 1917 and 1919 under coach Zora G Clevenger The Helms Athletic Foundation named Frank Reynolds the program s first All American player in 1917 and the Premo Porretta Power Poll retroactively ranked Kansas State 12 in 1910 18 in 1916 8 in 1917 and 7 in 1919 3 nbsp Big Eight Player of the Year Lon Kruger with coach Jack Hartman The best season in the school s history may have been 1959 when the team finished the season ranked 1 in the final Associated Press poll and Coaches poll K State has finished ranked in the Top 10 of one of the two polls on eleven total occasions most recently in 2023 and in the final top 25 polls 22 total times The team has also posted a winning record at home every year since 1946 6 After a lengthy period with little success during the 1990s and 2000s the team returned to prominence under head coach Frank Martin Following a twelve year absence the team returned to the NCAA tournament after the 2007 08 season Following that season Kansas State freshman Michael Beasley was named an All American and Big 12 Conference Player of the Year In the 2009 10 season the team spent much of the year ranked in the Top 10 of the AP poll and finished second in the Big 12 The team received a 2 seed in the 2010 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament and advanced to the Elite Eight Along the way the Wildcats defeated Xavier in a double overtime thriller which CBSSports com called one of the best games in the history of the Sweet 16 7 nbsp Bramlage Coliseum home of KSU basketball On March 31 2012 Bruce Weber was announced as head coach after Frank Martin left for South Carolina During the 2012 2013 season Weber s first in Manhattan Kansas State won its first regular season conference title since 1977 and advanced to the NCAA tournament 8 Weber s team won the conference title again in the 2018 2019 season K State appeared in the NCAA tournament five times in Weber s seven seasons including advancing to the Elite Eight in 2018 After three consecutive losing seasons Weber resigned under pressure in March 2022 He was succeeded by longtime Baylor assistant coach Jerome Tang In Tang s first season he guided a KSU team picked to finish last in the Big 12 to a third place finish and to the NCAA Tournament the first NCAA appearance since 2019 With wins over Montana State Kentucky and Michigan State Tang brought the Wildcats to its first Elite Eight appearance since 2018 and its fourteenth Elite Eight appearance in program history Achievements editKansas State has a total of 36 All Americans 19 regular season conference championships and nine conference tournament championships 9 The program ranks in the top 25 nationally in the following categories Top 25 All Time Ranking Weeks ranked 1 in AP poll 10 11 16th tie Weeks ranked in top 5 of AP poll 25th NCAA Tournament appearances 22nd NCAA Final Four appearances 22nd tie NCAA Elite Eight appearances 6th tie NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearances 12th 1 NBA draft picks 3rd tie NCAA Tournament wins 25th The program also ranks in the top 50 nationally in the following categories Top 40 All Time Ranking All time wins NCAA Division I 10 42nd Appearances in final AP poll 11 29th tie Appearances in top 10 of AP poll 11 38th tie Top 25 rankings edit Kansas State University has finished in the final rankings of the AP poll or Coaches poll on 22 occasions throughout its history including one season at 1 in the final polls pre NCAA Tournament The AP poll first appeared in 1948 and has been published continuously since 1950 51 The Coaches poll began in the 1950 51 season Currently the final AP poll is released before the tournament and the final Coaches poll is released after the tournament Season Final record AP poll Coaches poll 1949 50 17 7 14 n a 1950 51 25 4 4 3 1951 52 19 5 3 6 1952 53 17 4 12 9 1956 57 15 8 20 1957 58 22 5 3 4 1958 59 25 2 1 1 1959 60 16 10 16 1960 61 22 5 4 4 1961 62 22 3 6 5 1962 63 16 9 19 1972 73 23 5 9 7 1974 75 20 9 15 1976 77 24 7 16 11 1979 80 22 9 20 1987 88 25 9 20 8 2009 10 29 8 7 7 2010 11 23 11 21 24 2012 13 27 8 12 20 2017 18 25 12 19 2018 19 25 9 18 19 2022 23 26 10 15 9Rivalries editKansas Sunflower Showdown edit Main article Sunflower Showdown Kansas State s main rivalry is with the Kansas Jayhawks The rivalry peaked in the 1950s when both teams were annually national title contenders The 1987 88 season also proved to be momentous in the rivalry In the first matchup of the season on January 30 1988 Mitch Richmond scored 35 points to lead Kansas State to a 72 61 win to halt KU s then record 55 game home winning streak On February 18 KU turned the tables prevailing 64 63 at Ahearn Field House in Manhattan to deny K State a victory over KU in the old field house s last year In what was supposed to be the rubber game in the 1988 Big Eight Conference men s basketball tournament Kansas State won a decisive victory by a 69 54 score However the biggest was yet to come Both teams qualified for the NCAA tournament and after three wins each in the tournament they faced each other on March 27 in Pontiac Michigan for the right to advance to the Final Four Led by Danny Manning s 20 points KU turned a tight game into a runaway and prevailed 71 58 Kansas would go on to win the national championship The rivalry slipped in significance after the 1988 season and from 1994 to 2005 KU won 31 straight games against K State the longest streak for either school in the series KU also posted a 24 game win streak against the Wildcats in Manhattan which ended on January 30 2008 when 22 Kansas State upset 2 Kansas 84 75 Jeff Sagarin s rankings of the nation s top programs by decade in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia nicely track the history of the rivalry 3 In the 1950s when the rivalry was at its peak Kansas State finished the decade ranked as the 3 program in the nation and KU was ranked as 4 3 In the 1960s KU was ranked 9 for the decade and KSU was ranked 11 In the 1970s the programs were again nearly even with Kansas State ranked at 24 and KU at 25 In the 1980s some separation appeared as KU finished the decade ranked at 19 and Kansas State at 31 The big difference appeared in the 1990s and 2000s when KU was ranked at 4 and 2 for the decades while Kansas State does not appear anywhere in the top 40 3 The rivalry has become more relevant again in recent years with both teams ranked in the AP Top 25 for many of their match ups 12 Missouri edit As of the 2022 23 season Missouri is Kansas State s second most played rival with 237 games dating back to 1907 Kansas State leads the series 121 116 The series was last played regularly in the 2011 12 season before Missouri moved to the Southeastern Conference 13 14 For nearly a century beforehand the two schools shared conferences beginning in the 1913 14 season in the Missouri Valley Conference then in the Big Eight Conference and its predecessors from 1928 to 1996 and finally the Big 12 Conference from 1996 to 2012 Since Missouri s move to the SEC the two teams have matched up twice meeting on neutral floors in 2015 and 2018 both Kansas State victories Wichita State edit Kansas State had an ongoing in state out of conference rivalry with Wichita State dating back to 1932 and last played in 2022 Kansas State leads the series 22 11 The series had six games from 1932 to 1964 then six games on a home and home rotation from the 1969 70 to 1971 72 seasons and most recently 19 home and home games every season from 1985 86 to 2003 04 15 When Wichita State became a Top 25 regular in the early 2010s there came interest in reviving the series 16 In February 2013 Kansas state senator Michael O Donnell introduced a bill requiring Kansas and Kansas State to schedule Wichita State 17 The series was renewed in 2021 with a four game series calling for games at Intrust Bank Arena in Wichita that year at Bramlage Coliseum in 2022 T Mobile Center in Kansas City in 2023 and finally at Charles Koch Arena in 2024 18 Postseason editNCAA tournament results edit The Wildcats have appeared in the NCAA tournament 32 times Their overall record in the NCAA Tournament is 40 36 526 through the 2023 tournament 19 Year Seed Round Opponent Result 1948 Elite EightFinal FourNational 3rd place game WyomingBaylorHoly Cross W 58 48L 52 60L 54 60 1951 Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational Championship ArizonaBYUOklahoma A amp MKentucky W 61 59W 64 54W 68 44L 58 68 1956 Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd place game Oklahoma CityHouston L 93 97W 89 70 1958 Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational 3rd place game CincinnatiOklahoma StateSeattleTemple W 83 80OTW 69 57L 51 73L 57 67 1959 Sweet SixteenElite Eight DePaulCincinnati W 102 70L 75 85 1961 Sweet SixteenElite Eight HoustonCincinnati W 75 64L 64 69 1964 Sweet SixteenElite EightFinal FourNational 3rd place game Texas WesternWichitaUCLAMichigan W 64 60W 94 93L 84 90L 90 100 1968 Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd place game TCULouisville L 72 77L 63 93 1970 Sweet SixteenRegional 3rd place game New Mexico StateHouston L 66 70W 107 98 1972 Sweet SixteenElite Eight TexasLouisville W 66 55L 65 72 1973 Sweet SixteenElite Eight Southwestern LouisianaMemphis State W 66 63L 72 92 1975 First roundSweet SixteenElite Eight PennBoston CollegeSyracuse W 69 62W 74 65L 87 95OT 1977 First roundSweet Sixteen ProvidenceMarquette W 87 80L 66 67 1980 7 First roundSecond round 10 Arkansas 2 Louisville W 71 53L 69 71OT 1981 8 First roundSecond roundSweet SixteenElite Eight 9 San Francisco 1 Oregon State 4 Illinois 2 North Carolina W 64 60W 50 48W 57 52L 68 82 1982 5 First roundSecond roundSweet Sixteen 12 Northern Illinois 4 Arkansas 8 Boston College W 77 68W 65 64L 65 69 1987 9 First roundSecond round 8 Georgia 1 UNLV W 82 79OTL 61 80 1988 4 First roundSecond roundSweet SixteenElite Eight 13 La Salle 5 DePaul 1 Purdue 6 Kansas W 66 53W 66 58W 73 70L 58 71 1989 6 First round 11 Minnesota L 75 86 1990 11 First round 6 Xavier L 79 87 1993 6 First round 11 Tulane L 53 55 1996 10 First round 7 New Mexico L 48 69 2008 11 First roundSecond round 6 USC 3 Wisconsin W 80 67L 55 72 2010 2 First roundSecond roundSweet SixteenElite Eight 15 North Texas 7 BYU 6 Xavier 5 Butler W 82 62W 84 72W 101 962OTL 56 63 2011 5 Second roundThird Round 12 Utah State 4 Wisconsin W 73 68L 65 70 2012 8 Second roundThird Round 9 Southern Miss 1 Syracuse W 70 64L 59 75 2013 4 Second round 13 La Salle L 61 63 2014 9 Second round 8 Kentucky L 49 56 2017 11 First FourFirst round 11 Wake Forest 6 Cincinnati W 95 88L 61 75 2018 9 First roundSecond roundSweet SixteenElite Eight 8 Creighton 16 UMBC 5 Kentucky 11 Loyola Chicago W 69 59W 50 43W 61 58L 62 78 2019 4 First round 13 UC Irvine L 64 70 2023 3 First roundSecond roundSweet SixteenElite Eight 14 Montana State 6 Kentucky 7 Michigan State 9 Florida Atlantic W 77 65 W 75 69 W 98 93OT L 76 79 From 2011 to 2015 the round of 64 was known as the Second round round of 32 was Third Round NCAA tournament seeding history edit The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition Years 80 81 82 87 88 89 90 93 96 08 10 11 12 13 14 17 18 19 23 Seeds 7 8 5 9 4 6 11 6 10 11 2 5 8 4 9 11 9 4 3 NIT results edit The Wildcats have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament NIT seven times Their combined record is 6 9 Year Round Opponent Result 1976 Quarterfinals Kentucky L 76 81 1992 First roundSecond round Western KentuckyNotre Dame W 85 74L 48 64 1994 First roundSecond roundQuarterfinalsSemifinals3rd place game Mississippi StateGonzagaFresno StateVanderbiltSiena W 78 69W 66 64W 115 77L 76 82L 79 92 1998 First round NC State L 39 59 1999 First round TCU L 71 72 2007 First roundSecond round VermontDePaul W 59 57L 65 70 2009 First roundSecond round Illinois StateSan Diego State W 83 79OTL 52 70 2024 First round Iowa L 82 91 NCIT results edit The Wildcats appeared in one of the only two ever National Commissioners Invitational Tournaments Their record is 0 1 Year Round Opponent Result 1974 Quarterfinals Bradley L 64 68Individual awards and accomplishments editRetired jerseys edit The following players jerseys have been retired by Kansas State though their respective jersey numbers remain available for use They represent the finest basketball players to come through Kansas State The criteria for determining the honor includes statistical achievement conference and national records honors received such as all conference All American Academic All American character and sportsmanship 20 Kansas State Wildcats retired jerseys No Player Position Career Year of Retirement 10 Chuckie Williams SG 1972 1976 2006 12 Mike Evans PG 1974 1978 2006 12 Lon Kruger PG 1971 1974 2006 22 Ernie Barrett F G 1948 1951 2005 23 Mitch Richmond SG 1986 1988 2009 25 Rolando Blackman SG 1977 1981 2007 30 Bob Boozer PF 1956 1959 2005 33 Jack Parr C 1955 1958 2005 33 Dick Knostman C 1950 1953 2007 National honors edit nbsp Michael Beasley was named National Freshman of the Year an All American and the Big 12 Player of the Year in 2008 The following Kansas State players and coaches are in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame with induction year Bob Boozer 2010 as member of 1960 United States men s Olympic basketball team Cotton Fitzsimmons 2021 Jack Gardner 1984 Mitch Richmond 2014 Tex Winter 2011 The following Kansas State players and coaches are in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame with induction year Bob Boozer 2016 Rolando Blackman 2015 Jack Gardner 2006 Tex Winter 2010 Kansas State players and coaches have won the following national awards Player honors USBWA National Freshman of the YearBest freshman Michael Beasley 2008 dd Frances Pomeroy Naismith AwardOutstanding undersized senior Jacob Pullen 2011 dd Pete Newell Big Man AwardTop low post player Michael Beasley 2008 dd Bob Cousy AwardTop point guard Markquis Nowell 2023 dd Coaching honors NABC Coach of the Year AwardCoach of the year Jack Hartman 1981 dd UPI College Basketball Coach of the YearCoach of the year Tex Winter 1958 dd Naismith College Coach of the YearCoach of the year Jerome Tang 2023 dd All Americans edit The following players were named first second or third team All Americans by one of outlets used by the NCAA to determine consensus selections Player Year s Team s F I Reynolds 1917 Consensus First Team Helms 1st Frank Groves 1937 Converse 3rd Omaha World Newspaper 2nd Ernie Barrett 1951 Consensus Second Team AP 2nd UPI 3rd Look Magazine 2nd International News Service 1st Dick Knostman 1952 AP 3rd 1953 Consensus Second Team AP 2nd UPI 2nd Look Magazine 1st NEA 1st International News Service 2nd Collier s 2nd Jack Parr 1958 NABC 3rd Bob Boozer 1958 Consensus First Team AP 2nd USBWA 1st NABC 1st UPI 2nd NEA 2nd International News Service 2nd 1959 Consensus First Team AP 1st USBWA 1st NABC 1st UPI 1st NEA 1st Mike Evans 1978 AP 3rd Rolando Blackman 1980 AP 3rd 1981 NABC 3rd Mitch Richmond 1988 Consensus Second Team USBWA 2nd UPI 2nd Michael Beasley 2008 Consensus First Team AP 1st USBWA 1st USBWA 1st SN 1st Jacob Pullen 2010 SN 3rd 2011 AP 3rd NABC 3rd SN 3rd Keyontae Johnson 2023 AP 3rd NABC 3rd Markquis Nowell 2023 AP 3rd USBWA 3rd NABC 3rd SN 3rd Conference honors edit The Big Eight Conference established the Conference Player of the Year and Coach of the Year awards in 1957 These awards have continued into the Big 12 Conference era Player of the Year Bob Boozer 1958 1959 Lon Kruger 1973 1974 Mike Evans 1978 Rolando Blackman 1980 Michael Beasley 2008 dd Coach of the Year Tex Winter 1958 1959 1960 Cotton Fitzsimmons 1970 Jack Hartman 1975 1977 Dana Altman 1993 Frank Martin 2010 Bruce Weber 2013 Jerome Tang 2023 dd Wildcats to pros edit The following former Wildcats have gone on to play professionally either in the NBA or elsewhere 21 Kansas State University has had two overall 1 draft picks in the NBA since the draft began in 1947 Howie Shannon 1949 and Bob Boozer 1959 Tyrone Adams Curtis Allen Ron Anderson Freddy Asprilla Ernie Barrett Danny Beard Michael Beasley Rolando Blackman Brandon Bolden Bob Boozer Barry Brown Jr Jack Carby Norris Coleman Luis Colon Denis Clemente Larry Comley Les Craft Cartier Diarra Adrian Diaz Roy DeWitz Justin Edwards Corlbe Ervin Mike Evans Marcus Foster Wally Frank Carl R Gerlach Thomas Gipson David Hall Rick Harman Ed Head Jordan Henriquez Steve Henson Lew Hitch Steve Honeycutt Stephen Hurt Martavious Irving Jim Iverson Wes Iwundu D J Johnson Keyontae Johnson Mike Johnson Nigel Johnson Askia Jones Wally Judge Jerry Jung Curtis Kelly Darren Kent Dick Knostman Lon Kruger Ernie Kusnyer Don Matuszak Cartier Martin Jeremiah Massey Don Matuzsak Makol Mawien Mike McGuirl Rodney McGruder Pat McKenzie Steve Mitchell Willie Murrell Juevol Myles Ed Nealy Markquis Nowell Michael Orris Jack Parr Pervis Pasco Fred Peete Nick Pino Cedrick Price Jesse Prisock Jacob Pullen Randy Reed Mitch Richmond Angel Rodriguez Bob Rousey Nick Russell Jamar Samuels Matt Siebrandt Earl Seyfert Howie Shannon David Sloan Mark Smith Roy Smith Xavier Sneed Shane Southwell Jack Stone Kamau Stokes Dominique Sutton Roger Suttner Austin Trice Jerry Venable Dean Wade Bill Walker Jeff Webb Chuckie Williams Gene Williams Larry Williams Nino Williams Jari Wills Akeem Wright Mike Wroblewski Deilvez Yearby Draft history edit NBA ABA Draft Picks Round Pick Overall Player Year 1st 1st 1st Howie Shannon 1949 1st 1st 1st Bob Boozer 1959 1st 2nd 2nd Michael Beasley 2008 1st 5th 5th Mitch Richmond 1988 1st 7th 7th Ernie Barrett 1951 1st 9th 9th Rolando Blackman 1981 1st 15th 15th Chuckie Williams 1976 2nd 10th 19th Lew Hitch 1951 1st 21st 21st Mike Evans 1978 2nd 9th 24th Gene Williams 1969 4th 6th 31st Willie Murrell 1964 2nd 3rd 33rd Wes Iwundu 2017 2nd 15th 38th Norris Coleman 1987 2nd 17th 44th Steve Henson 1990 2nd 17th 47th Bill Walker 2008 2nd 20th 50th Keyontae Johnson 2023 10th 2nd 70th Jack Parr 1958 10th 8th 91st Larry Comley 1961 8th 5th 166th Ed Nealy 1982 Former players as coaches edit A number of former Wildcat players have gone to successful careers as head basketball coaches including Bob Chipman finished career as 21st winningest coach in college basketball history Mike Evans Bill Guthridge National college coach of the year 1998 Steve Henson Tim Jankovich Gene Keady 4x national college coach of the year National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame Lon Kruger Coached five Division I schools to the NCAA tournament Jim Molinari Brad Underwood Josh EilertCoaches editMain article List of Kansas State Wildcats men s basketball head coaches Kansas State has had 23 head coaches A number of notable and successful coaches have led the Wildcats through the years Following are all the coaches that have been at Kansas State 9 Coach Years at KSU W L Win Conf W Conf L Conf Win Awards and Achievements During Tenure Charles W Melick 1905 1906 7 9 438 N A N A N A Mike Ahearn 1906 1911 26 24 520 N A N A N A Guy Lowman 1911 1914 30 16 652 0 10 000 Carl J Merner 1914 1916 19 15 559 13 13 500 Zora G Clevenger 1916 1920 54 17 761 38 16 704 Highest winning percentage in program history 2 Conference regular season championships 1917 1919 E A Knoth 1920 1921 14 6 700 11 4 733 Highest conference winning percentage in program history E C Curtiss 1921 1923 5 28 152 5 27 156 Charles Corsaut 1923 1933 89 81 524 61 63 492 Frank Root 1933 1939 38 72 345 19 47 287 Jack Gardner 1939 1942 1946 1953 147 81 645 66 46 589 NCAA Championship Game 1951 2 Final Fours 1948 1951 2 Elite Eights 1948 1951 1 Sweet Sixteen 1951 2 NCAA Tournament appearances 1948 1951 3 Conference regular season championships 1948 1950 1951 3 Conference Holiday tournament championships 1947 1950 1952 2 times ranked in top 6 of final AP and UPI polls 1951 1952 Chili Cochrane 1942 1943 6 14 300 1 9 100 Cliff Rock 1943 1944 7 15 318 1 9 100 Fritz Knorr 1944 1946 14 33 298 6 14 300 Tex Winter 1953 1968 261 118 689 154 57 730 2 Final Fours 1958 1964 4 Elite Eights 1958 1959 1961 1964 6 Sweet Sixteens 1956 1958 1959 1961 1964 1968 6 NCAA Tournament appearances 1956 1958 1959 1961 1964 1968 8 Conference regular season championships 1956 1958 1961 1963 1964 1968 4 Conference Holiday tournament championships 1958 1960 1961 1963 Ranked No 1 in final AP and UPI polls 1959 4 times ranked in top 6 of final AP and UPI polls 1958 1959 1961 1962 UPI National Coach of the Year 1958 Big 7 Coach of the Year 1958 2 Big 8 Coach of the Year 1959 1960 Undefeated conference season 14 0 1959 Developed the Triangle offense Cotton Fitzsimmons 1968 1970 34 20 630 19 9 679 1 Sweet Sixteen 1970 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance 1970 1 Conference regular season Championship 1970 Big 8 Coach of the Year 1970 NABC District Coach of the Year 1970 Jack Hartman 1970 1986 295 169 636 133 91 594 4 Elite Eights 1972 1973 1975 1981 6 Sweet Sixteens 1972 1973 1975 1977 1981 1982 7 NCAA Tournament appearances 1972 1973 1975 1977 1980 1982 1 NIT Tournament Appearance 1976 3 Conference regular season championships 1972 1973 1977 2 Conference tournament championships 1977 1980 NABC Coach of the Year 1980 2 Big 8 Coach of the Year 1975 1977 NABC District Coach of the Year 1977 Most wins in program history Lon Kruger 1986 1990 81 46 638 34 22 607 1 Elite Eight 1988 1 Sweet Sixteen 1988 4 NCAA Tournament appearances 1987 1990 NABC District Coach of the Year 1988 Only KSU coach to take squads to NCAA Tournament in four consecutive seasons Dana Altman 1990 1994 68 54 557 19 37 339 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance 1993 2 NIT Tournament appearances 1992 1994 Big 8 Coach of the Year 1993 Tom Asbury 1994 2000 85 88 491 29 63 315 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance 1996 2 NIT Tournament appearances 1998 1999 Jim Wooldridge 2000 2006 83 90 480 32 64 333 Bob Huggins 2006 2007 23 12 657 10 6 625 1 NIT Tournament Appearance 2007 Frank Martin 2007 2012 117 54 684 50 32 610 1 Elite Eight 2010 1 Sweet Sixteen 2010 4 NCAA Tournament appearances 2008 2010 2012 1 NIT Tournament Appearance 2009 Big 12 Coach of the Year AP amp Coaches 2010 Highest NCAA seed 2 in program history 2010 Most wins 29 in one season 2010 CollegeInsider com Big 12 Coach of the Year 2008 Jim Phelan Award as mid season National Coach of the Year 2009 10 USBWA District VI Coach of the Year 2010 NABC District 8 Coach of the Year 2010 Only KSU coach to win 20 or more games in first 5 seasons Bruce Weber 2012 2022 184 147 556 82 98 456 1 Elite Eight 2018 1 Sweet Sixteen 2018 5 NCAA Tournament appearances 2013 2014 2017 2019 2 Conference regular season championships 2013 2019 Big 12 Coach of the Year AP amp Coaches 2013 USBWA District VI Coach of the Year 2013 NABC District 8 Coach of the Year 2013 Most wins 27 in the first year 2013 Most wins 47 in the first 2 years Most conference wins 14 in the first year 2013 Most conference wins 24 in the first 2 years Most conference wins 32 in the first 3 years Most all time Top 25 victories 27 Only KSU coach to win 25 or more games in back to back seasons Jerome Tang 2022 Present 45 25 643 19 17 528 1 Elite Eight 2023 1 Sweet Sixteen 2023 1 NCAA Tournament Appearance 2023 Naismith College Coach of the Year 2023 College Hoops Today Coach of the Year 2023 Big 12 Coach of the Year AP amp Coaches 2023 USBWA District VI Coach of the Year 2023 NABC District 8 Coach of the Year 2023 Most Top 25 wins in a single season 7 Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Inducted into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of FameConference membership history edit 1912 Kansas Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1913 1927 Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association 1928 1947 Big 6 Conference 1948 1957 Big 7 Conference 1958 1995 Big 8 Conference 1996 Present Big 12 ConferenceSeries records editRecord vs Big 12 opponents edit Kansas Statevs Overall record at Manhattan at Opponent s Venue at neutral site Last 5 meetings Last 10 meetings Current streak Big 12 eraGames Baylor KSU 26 25 KSU 14 11 BU 11 9 tied 3 3 KSU 3 2 BU 7 3 W 3 BU 24 21 BYU KSU 5 4 KSU 1 0 BYU 3 1 KSU 3 1 KSU 3 2 KSU 5 4 W 1 tied 1 1 Cincinnati UC 8 1 UC 2 0 UC 3 0 UC 3 1 UC 5 0 UC 8 1 L 7 UC 1 0 Houston KSU 5 4 tied 1 1 UH 3 1 KSU 3 0 UH 3 2 KSU 5 4 L 1 UH 1 0 Iowa State KSU 146 93 KSU 85 29 KSU 54 53 ISU 11 7 KSU 3 2 KSU 6 4 W 1 ISU 30 29 Kansas KU 205 96 KU 81 50 KU 95 35 KU 29 11 KU 3 2 KU 8 2 L 1 KU 58 8 Oklahoma OU 114 104 KSU 65 38 OU 67 28 KSU 11 9 OU 4 1 OU 6 4 L 1 OU 22 19 Oklahoma State KSU 86 59 KSU 43 18 OSU 37 28 KSU 15 4 KSU 3 2 OSU 6 4 L 1 OSU 24 20 TCU KSU 21 13 KSU 9 7 KSU 8 3 KSU 4 3 TCU 3 2 tied 5 5 L 2 KSU 18 11 Texas KSU 25 23 KSU 11 10 UT 12 11 KSU 3 1 KSU 3 2 UT 7 3 W 1 UT 23 20 Texas Tech KSU 26 23 KSU 18 5 TTU 17 7 tied 1 1 TTU 3 2 TTU 7 3 L 2 TTU 22 19 UCF KSU 3 0 KSU 2 0 tied 0 0 KSU 1 0 KSU 3 0 KSU 3 0 W 3 KSU 1 0 West Virginia WVU 16 12 KSU 8 4 WVU 9 4 WVU 3 0 KSU 3 2 tied 5 5 W 2 WVU 15 11 As of March 13 2024 9 Record vs former Big 12 opponents edit Kansas Statevs Overall record at Manhattan at Opponent s Venue at neutral site Last 5 meetings Last 10 meetings Current streak Last meeting Colorado KSU 96 48 KSU 54 11 CU 33 32 KSU 10 4 CU 4 1 KSU 6 4 L 5 Nov 11 2020 Missouri KSU 121 116 KSU 62 44 MU 64 42 KSU 17 8 KSU 5 0 KSU 7 3 W 5 Nov 19 2018 Nebraska KSU 128 93 KSU 69 35 NU 55 39 KSU 20 3 KSU 5 0 KSU 8 2 W 7 Dec 17 2022 Texas A amp M KSU 18 10 KSU 11 1 TAMU 8 3 KSU 4 1 TAM 3 2 tied 5 5 L 3 Jan 30 2021 As of March 2 2023 9 See also editList of teams with the most victories in NCAA Division I men s college basketball NCAA Division I Men s Final Four appearances by schoolReferences edit Bramlage Coliseum Kansas State Athletics Archived from the original on November 1 2010 Retrieved October 18 2010 Kansas State University Athletics Public Branding Guide PDF May 18 2020 Retrieved June 26 2022 a b c d e ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia PDF ESPN 2009 One Second To Go One Point Behind Sports Illustrated December 8 1958 Greatest 63 games in NCAA Tournament history USA Today March 25 2002 Robinett Kellis February 27 2020 K State basketball on verge of making school history for all the wrong reasons The Wichita Eagle Retrieved September 5 2021 Kansas State Xavier put on a show for the ages CBSSports com March 26 2010 K State wins share of first conference title since 1977 Kansas City Star March 9 2013 a b c d Kansas State Athletics K State Men s Basketball Media Guide archived from the original on February 15 2011 retrieved March 24 2011 a b Division I Men s Basketball records PDF NCAA 2022 Retrieved April 12 2023 a b c Men s Basketball College Poll Archive Historical College Football Basketball and Softball Polls and Rankings The Night The Rivalry Was Reborn The Wichita Eagle Archived from the original English on February 5 2010 Retrieved February 2 2010 Foster 3 pointer Lifts K State Past 16 18 Oklahoma in OT Kansas State January 10 2015 Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 15 2015 Non conference series history Missouri K State Men s Basketball 2014 15 Media Guide Kansas State Athletics 2014 pp 87 88 Non conference series history Wichita State K State Men s Basketball 2014 15 Media Guide Kansas State Athletics 2014 p 89 Lutz Bob February 23 2012 Kansas vs Wichita State kansas com Archived from the original on February 25 2012 Rothschild Scott February 5 2013 Statehouse Live Bill would require KU to play Wichita State University in basketball Lawrence Journal World Retrieved March 15 2015 Wichita State KSU agree to basketball series Wichita State KSU agree to basketball series KAKE News Retrieved April 1 2023 Kansas State Wildcats School History Sports Reference Retrieved May 1 2022 Men s Basketball Retired Jerseys K State Athletics January 24 2005 Retrieved November 19 2018 Wildcats In the Pros Archived from the original on October 18 2010 Retrieved October 19 2010 External links editOfficial website nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kansas State Wildcats men 27s basketball amp oldid 1216711128, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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