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Oklahoma City Stars men's basketball

The Oklahoma City Stars men's basketball team is the basketball team that represents Oklahoma City University (OCU) in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States. The school's team currently competes in the Sooner Athletic Conference.

Oklahoma City Stars
2023–24 Oklahoma City Stars men's basketball team
UniversityOklahoma City University
Head coachMark Berokoff (1st season)
ConferenceSooner Athletic Conference
LocationOklahoma City, Oklahoma
ArenaAbe Lemons Arena
(Capacity: 3,500)
NicknameStars
ColorsBlue and white[1]
   
NCAA tournament Elite Eight
1956, 1957
NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen
1952, 1953, 1956, 1957, 1963, 1965
NCAA tournament appearances
1952, 1953, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1973
NAIA tournament champions
1991, 1992, 1994, 1996, 2007, 2008
Conference tournament champions
Midwestern City Conference
1981[2]
Sooner Athletic Conference
1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2013, 2019[3]

History edit

Oklahoma City competed in NCAA Division I for many years, and the program was especially noted for its success under coaches Doyle Parrack (1950–1955) and his successor Abe Lemons (1955–1973 and 1984–1990).[4] OCU appeared in eleven NCAA Men's Division I Basketball tournaments.

In 1985, the school moved from the NCAA to the NAIA and has since won six national championships.[5]

National championships edit

Tournament results edit

NCAA tournament results edit

The Chiefs appeared in 11 NCAA Division I basketball tournaments from 1952 to 1973, making them the most prolific tournament team that is no longer in Division I. Their record in tournaments was 8-13, giving them the second most wins of non-DI teams after New York University.[6]

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1952 Sweet Sixteen
Regional Third Place
Wyoming
UCLA
L 48–54
W 55–53
1953 Sweet Sixteen
Regional Third Place
Kansas
TCU
L 65–73
L 56–58
1954 First Round Bradley L 55–61
1955 First Round Bradley L 65–69
1956 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Memphis State
Kansas State
SMU
W 97–81
W 97–93
L 63–84
1957 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Loyola (LA)
Saint Louis
Kansas
W 76–55
W 75–66
L 61–81
1963 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Regional Third Place
Colorado State
Colorado
Texas
W 70–67
L 72–78
L 83–90
1964 First Round Creighton L 78–89
1965 First Round
Sweet Sixteen
Regional Third Place
Colorado State
San Francisco
BYU
W 70–68
L 67–91
W 112–102
1966 First Round Texas Western L 74–89
1973 First Round Arizona State L 78–103

NIT results edit

The Chiefs played in the National Invitation Tournament twice.[7]

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1959 Quarterfinals NYU L 48–63
1968 First Round Duke L 81–97

NAIA results edit

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
1987 1 First Round
Second Round
Northwood
#16 Georgetown (KY)
W 101–66
L 64–67
1991 2 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
Concordia (NE)
#15 Concord
St. Mary’s (MI)
#6 Pfeiffer
#5 Central Arkansas
W 80–77
W 107–85
W 112–94
W 100–83
W 77–74
1992 1 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
Columbia Union
#16 Urbana
Cumberlands
#5 Pfeiffer
#7 Central Arkansas
W 107–73
W 96–89
W 97–63
W 102–92
W 82–73
1993 6 First Round
Second Round
Spring Hill
Lenoir–Rhyne
W 84–79
L 67–85
1994 5 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
Siena Heights
St. Mary's (TX)
#4 Drury
#16 Oklahoma Baptist
Life
W 104–99
W 86–75
W 90–70
W 86–85
W 99–81
1995 3 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Iowa Wesleyan
#14 Transylvania
#11 Pfeiffer
W 107–75
W 98–67
L 78–92
1996 14 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
St. Xavier
#3 The Master’s
#6 Birmingham–Southern
Belmont
#1 Georgetown (KY)
W 94–58
W 108–85
W 82–66
W 80–77
W 86–80
1998 8 First Round
Second Round
The Master’s
#9 Incarnate Word
W 84–73
L 52–63
1999 6 First Round
Second Round
Houston Baptist
Life
W 61–59
L 74–87
2000 5 First Round
Second Round
Westmont
#12 Spring Hill
W 70–62
L 67–77
2001 First Round
Second Round
#15 Xavier (LA)
#2 Azusa Pacific
W 91–69
L 54–94
2002 16 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Houston Baptist
#1 Georgetown (KY)
#9 Azusa Pacific
W 88–82
W 74–59
L 72–80
2003 First Round #9 St. Xavier
L 56–82
2004 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
#7 Columbia (MO)
#10 Lewis–Clark State
#15 Mobile
W 81–48
W 79–65
L 62–75
2005 First Round
Second Round
#6 Mobile
Carroll (MT)
W 77–74
L 65–66
2006 7 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
Columbia (MO)
#10 Houston Baptist
Lindsey Wilson
#3 Robert Morris (IL)
Texas Wesleyan
W 91–64
W 99–77
W 77–67
W 94–92
L 65–67
2007 2 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
Wiley
#15 Illinois–Springfield
#10 Azusa Pacific
Faulkner
#4 Concordia (CA)
W 90–74
W 90–78
W 84–68
W 76–61
W 79–71
2008 7 First Round
Second Round
Elite Eight
Fab Four
National Championship
Cumberland
#10 California Baptist
#2 Lee
Campbellsville
#5 Mountain State
W 81–64
W 69–63
W 86–66
W 78–64
W 75–72
2010 16 First Round Southern Poly L 70–78
2013 First Round #1 Columbia (MO) L 37–68
2015 First Round #10 Concordia (CA) L 62–74
2016 6 First Round #3 MidAmerica Nazarene L 82–87 (OT)
2017 7 First Round #2 Dillard L 65–86
2018 2 First Round
Second Round
#7 Xavier (LA)
#3 Georgetown (KY)
W 65–50
L 83–91
2019 7 First Round
Second Round
#2 Stillman
#3 Carroll (MT)
W 101–84
L 69–80

Note: The NAIA shifted from national to regional seeds in 2016.[8]

Frederickson Fieldhouse edit

Frederickson Fieldhouse was an athletics facility on the campus of Oklahoma City University. It was built in honor of a major OCU benefactor George Frederickson of Oklahoma City. It was built by the John Henry Frederickson Jr. Construction company, also of Oklahoma City. John Frederickson was the General Contractor, and his son, Chris Frederickson, also worked on the job as a laborer. George Frederickson was the uncle of John Henry Frederickson Jr. In his gift to OCU, George stipulated that the building should be built by his nephew, John Henry.

Frederickson Field House 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m2) facility was at the time of its construction (1959) the largest hyperbolic paraboloid structure on earth. The Frederickson construction company was in fact a pioneering company in the design and building of extremely thin-shell concrete buildings, of which Frederickson Field House was one. Another famous thin-shell concrete structure built by John Henry Frederickson was the First Christian Church, also in Oklahoma City. That building has an "eggshell" shaped roof that is actually thinner (in proportion) that a real eggshell.

The Frederickson Field house venue held 3,400 for basketball. Asked why the scoreboard at the Field House was the first one to have a three digit placement for the team scores, Abe Lemons, the coach at the time, said come to the first game and you will find out. Teams rarely scored in the 100s at the time (late 1950s) but in the first game at the Field House OCU beat Florida State Univ by scoring 129 points in the game. The Chiefs (now the STARS, due to the OCU administration's caving in to political correctness) were to be one on the highest scoring teams in the country, scoring over 100 points a game on many occasions. A Division I team the OCU teams were an Independent team until joining the Midwestern City Conference, now known as the Horizon League. OCU dropped to NAIA status in 1985. It was replaced with the more modern Henry J. Freede Wellness and Activities Center in 2000, and torn down in 2005.

References edit

  1. ^ "Colors – Oklahoma City University". Retrieved July 16, 2018.
  2. ^ http://hln.s3.amazonaws.com/sports/recordbooks/2/recordbook.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ "History: Team Achievements". OCU Sports. August 8, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2023.
  4. ^ ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game (Random House LLC, 2009), ISBN 978-0345513922, p. 315. Excerpts available at Google Books.
  5. ^ "History". Oklahoma City University. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  6. ^ "2023 MEN'S FINAL FOUR RECORDS BOOK" (PDF). p. 127. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
  7. ^ "2018 National Invitation Postseason Records" (PDF). p. 121. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
  8. ^ "Men's Basketball Championship Records" (PDF). NAIA. Retrieved September 6, 2020.

External links edit

  • Official website

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The Oklahoma City Stars men s basketball team is the basketball team that represents Oklahoma City University OCU in Oklahoma City Oklahoma United States The school s team currently competes in the Sooner Athletic Conference Oklahoma City Stars2023 24 Oklahoma City Stars men s basketball teamUniversityOklahoma City UniversityHead coachMark Berokoff 1st season ConferenceSooner Athletic ConferenceLocationOklahoma City OklahomaArenaAbe Lemons Arena Capacity 3 500 NicknameStarsColorsBlue and white 1 NCAA tournament Elite Eight1956 1957NCAA tournament Sweet Sixteen1952 1953 1956 1957 1963 1965NCAA tournament appearances1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1963 1964 1965 1966 1973NAIA tournament champions1991 1992 1994 1996 2007 2008Conference tournament championsMidwestern City Conference 1981 2 Sooner Athletic Conference1994 1995 1999 2000 2002 2003 2006 2008 2013 2019 3 Contents 1 History 2 National championships 3 Tournament results 3 1 NCAA tournament results 3 2 NIT results 3 3 NAIA results 4 Frederickson Fieldhouse 5 References 6 External linksHistory editOklahoma City competed in NCAA Division I for many years and the program was especially noted for its success under coaches Doyle Parrack 1950 1955 and his successor Abe Lemons 1955 1973 and 1984 1990 4 OCU appeared in eleven NCAA Men s Division I Basketball tournaments In 1985 the school moved from the NCAA to the NAIA and has since won six national championships 5 National championships editYear Coach Opponent Score1991 Darrel Johnson Central Arkansas Bears 77 741992 Darrel Johnson Central Arkansas Bears 82 731994 Win Case Life Running Eagles 99 811996 Win Case Georgetown KY Tigers 86 802007 Ray Harper Concordia Eagles 79 712008 Ray Harper Mountain State Cougars 75 72National Championships 6Tournament results editNCAA tournament results edit The Chiefs appeared in 11 NCAA Division I basketball tournaments from 1952 to 1973 making them the most prolific tournament team that is no longer in Division I Their record in tournaments was 8 13 giving them the second most wins of non DI teams after New York University 6 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1952 Sweet SixteenRegional Third Place WyomingUCLA L 48 54W 55 531953 Sweet SixteenRegional Third Place KansasTCU L 65 73L 56 581954 First Round Bradley L 55 611955 First Round Bradley L 65 691956 First RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight Memphis StateKansas StateSMU W 97 81W 97 93L 63 841957 First RoundSweet SixteenElite Eight Loyola LA Saint LouisKansas W 76 55W 75 66L 61 811963 First RoundSweet SixteenRegional Third Place Colorado StateColoradoTexas W 70 67L 72 78L 83 901964 First Round Creighton L 78 891965 First RoundSweet SixteenRegional Third Place Colorado StateSan FranciscoBYU W 70 68L 67 91W 112 1021966 First Round Texas Western L 74 891973 First Round Arizona State L 78 103NIT results edit The Chiefs played in the National Invitation Tournament twice 7 Year Seed Round Opponent Result1959 Quarterfinals NYU L 48 631968 First Round Duke L 81 97NAIA results edit Year Seed Round Opponent Result1987 1 First RoundSecond Round Northwood 16 Georgetown KY W 101 66L 64 671991 2 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship Concordia NE 15 ConcordSt Mary s MI 6 Pfeiffer 5 Central Arkansas W 80 77W 107 85W 112 94W 100 83W 77 741992 1 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship Columbia Union 16 UrbanaCumberlands 5 Pfeiffer 7 Central Arkansas W 107 73W 96 89W 97 63W 102 92W 82 731993 6 First RoundSecond Round Spring HillLenoir Rhyne W 84 79L 67 851994 5 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship Siena HeightsSt Mary s TX 4 Drury 16 Oklahoma BaptistLife W 104 99 W 86 75W 90 70W 86 85W 99 811995 3 First RoundSecond RoundElite Eight Iowa Wesleyan 14 Transylvania 11 Pfeiffer W 107 75W 98 67 L 78 921996 14 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship St Xavier 3 The Master s 6 Birmingham SouthernBelmont 1 Georgetown KY W 94 58W 108 85W 82 66W 80 77W 86 801998 8 First RoundSecond Round The Master s 9 Incarnate Word W 84 73L 52 631999 6 First RoundSecond Round Houston BaptistLife W 61 59 L 74 872000 5 First RoundSecond Round Westmont 12 Spring Hill W 70 62 L 67 772001 First RoundSecond Round 15 Xavier LA 2 Azusa Pacific W 91 69 L 54 942002 16 First RoundSecond RoundElite Eight Houston Baptist 1 Georgetown KY 9 Azusa Pacific W 88 82W 74 59 L 72 802003 First Round 9 St Xavier L 56 822004 First RoundSecond RoundElite Eight 7 Columbia MO 10 Lewis Clark State 15 Mobile W 81 48 W 79 65 L 62 752005 First RoundSecond Round 6 MobileCarroll MT W 77 74 L 65 662006 7 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship Columbia MO 10 Houston BaptistLindsey Wilson 3 Robert Morris IL Texas Wesleyan W 91 64 W 99 77W 77 67 W 94 92 L 65 672007 2 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship Wiley 15 Illinois Springfield 10 Azusa Pacific Faulkner 4 Concordia CA W 90 74 W 90 78 W 84 68 W 76 61 W 79 712008 7 First RoundSecond RoundElite EightFab FourNational Championship Cumberland 10 California Baptist 2 Lee Campbellsville 5 Mountain State W 81 64 W 69 63 W 86 66 W 78 64 W 75 722010 16 First Round Southern Poly L 70 782013 First Round 1 Columbia MO L 37 682015 First Round 10 Concordia CA L 62 742016 6 First Round 3 MidAmerica Nazarene L 82 87 OT 2017 7 First Round 2 Dillard L 65 862018 2 First RoundSecond Round 7 Xavier LA 3 Georgetown KY W 65 50 L 83 912019 7 First RoundSecond Round 2 Stillman 3 Carroll MT W 101 84 L 69 80Note The NAIA shifted from national to regional seeds in 2016 8 Frederickson Fieldhouse editFrederickson Fieldhouse was an athletics facility on the campus of Oklahoma City University It was built in honor of a major OCU benefactor George Frederickson of Oklahoma City It was built by the John Henry Frederickson Jr Construction company also of Oklahoma City John Frederickson was the General Contractor and his son Chris Frederickson also worked on the job as a laborer George Frederickson was the uncle of John Henry Frederickson Jr In his gift to OCU George stipulated that the building should be built by his nephew John Henry Frederickson Field House 20 000 square foot 1 900 m2 facility was at the time of its construction 1959 the largest hyperbolic paraboloid structure on earth The Frederickson construction company was in fact a pioneering company in the design and building of extremely thin shell concrete buildings of which Frederickson Field House was one Another famous thin shell concrete structure built by John Henry Frederickson was the First Christian Church also in Oklahoma City That building has an eggshell shaped roof that is actually thinner in proportion that a real eggshell The Frederickson Field house venue held 3 400 for basketball Asked why the scoreboard at the Field House was the first one to have a three digit placement for the team scores Abe Lemons the coach at the time said come to the first game and you will find out Teams rarely scored in the 100s at the time late 1950s but in the first game at the Field House OCU beat Florida State Univ by scoring 129 points in the game The Chiefs now the STARS due to the OCU administration s caving in to political correctness were to be one on the highest scoring teams in the country scoring over 100 points a game on many occasions A Division I team the OCU teams were an Independent team until joining the Midwestern City Conference now known as the Horizon League OCU dropped to NAIA status in 1985 It was replaced with the more modern Henry J Freede Wellness and Activities Center in 2000 and torn down in 2005 References edit Colors Oklahoma City University Retrieved July 16 2018 http hln s3 amazonaws com sports recordbooks 2 recordbook pdf bare URL PDF History Team Achievements OCU Sports August 8 2011 Retrieved June 20 2023 ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia The Complete History of the Men s Game Random House LLC 2009 ISBN 978 0345513922 p 315 Excerpts available at Google Books History Oklahoma City University Retrieved 7 October 2014 2023 MEN S FINAL FOUR RECORDS BOOK PDF p 127 Retrieved June 19 2023 2018 National Invitation Postseason Records PDF p 121 Retrieved June 19 2023 Men s Basketball Championship Records PDF NAIA Retrieved September 6 2020 External links editOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oklahoma City Stars men 27s basketball amp oldid 1170623809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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