2010–11 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

The 2010–11 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 8, 2010 with the preliminary games of the 2010 Coaches Vs. Cancer Classic, and ended with the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament's championship game on April 4, 2011 at Reliant Stadium in Houston. The tournament's first round games occurred March 15–16, 2011 in Dayton, followed by second and third rounds on Thursday through Sunday, March 17–20, 2011. Regionals games will be played on Thursday through Sunday, March 24–27, 2011, with the Final Four played on Saturday and Monday, April 2 and 4, 2011.

Season headlines

Milestones and records

New arenas

Season outlook

Pre-season polls

The top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls, October 28, 2010.[53]

Associated Press
Ranking Team
1 Duke (55)
2 Michigan State (8)
3 Kansas State (2)
4 Ohio State
5 Pittsburgh
6 Villanova
7 Kansas
8 North Carolina
9 Florida
10 Syracuse
11 Kentucky
12 Gonzaga
13 Illinois
14 Purdue
15 Missouri
16 Baylor
17 Butler
18 Washington
19 Memphis
20 Georgetown
21 Virginia Tech
22 Temple
23 Tennessee
24 BYU
25 San Diego State
ESPN/USA Today Coaches[54]
Ranking Team
1 Duke (29)
2 Michigan State (2)
3 Kansas State
4 Pittsburgh
5 Ohio State
6 Villanova
7 Kansas
8 Purdue
9 North Carolina
10 Kentucky
11 Florida
12 Gonzaga
13 Syracuse
14 Baylor
15 Missouri
16 Illinois
17 Washington
18 Butler
19 Memphis
20 Tennessee
21 Georgetown
22 Temple
23 Virginia Tech
24 Wisconsin
25 Texas

Regular season

A number of early-season tournaments marked the beginning of the college basketball season.[55]

Early-season tournaments

Name Dates Num. teams Champions
NIT Season Tip-Off Nov. 15–26
16
Tennessee
2K Sports Coaches vs. Cancer Classic Nov. 8–19
4*
Pittsburgh
Charleston Classic Nov. 18-21
8
Georgetown
Puerto Rico Tip-Off Nov. 18–21
8
Minnesota
Paradise Jam Tournament Nov. 19–22
8
Old Dominion
CBE Classic Nov. 12–23
4*
Duke
Maui Invitational Tournament Nov. 22–24
8
Connecticut
Cancún Challenge Nov. 18–24
4*
Missouri
Great Alaska Shootout Nov. 24–27
8
St. John's
76 Classic Nov. 25–28
8
UNLV
Old Spice Classic Nov. 25–28
8
Notre Dame
Las Vegas Invitational Nov. 15–27
4*
Kansas
Legends Classic Nov. 14–27
4*
Syracuse
South Padre Island Invitational Nov. 26–28
8
BYU
Diamond Head Classic Dec. 22–25
8
Butler

*Although these tournaments include more teams, only 4 play for the championship.

Conference winners and tournaments

Thirty athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Ivy League does not have a conference tournament, instead giving their automatic invitation to their regular-season champion. By contrast, the Atlantic Coast Conference does not have a regular-season champion, using the standings only for seeding purposes in its conference tournament.

Conference Regular
Season Winner[56]
Conference
Player of the Year
Conference
Tournament
Tournament
Venue (City)
Tournament
Winner[57]
America East Conference Vermont John Holland, Boston University[58] 2011 America East Men's Basketball Tournament Chase Family Arena
(Hartford, Connecticut)
Final at campus site
Boston University
Atlantic 10 Conference Xavier Tu Holloway, Xavier[59] 2011 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament Boardwalk Hall
(Atlantic City, New Jersey)
Richmond
Atlantic Coast Conference North Carolina Nolan Smith, Duke[60] 2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Greensboro Coliseum
(Greensboro, North Carolina)
Duke
Atlantic Sun Conference Belmont Mike Smith, East Tennessee State[61] 2011 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament University Center
(Macon, Georgia)
Belmont
Big 12 Conference Kansas Marcus Morris, Kansas[62] 2011 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament Sprint Center
(Kansas City, Missouri)
Kansas
Big East Conference Pittsburgh Ben Hansbrough, Notre Dame[63] 2011 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament Madison Square Garden
(New York City, New York)
Connecticut
Big Sky Conference Northern Colorado Devon Beitzel, Northern Colorado[64] 2011 Big Sky Men's Basketball Tournament Butler–Hancock Sports Pavilion
(Greeley, Colorado)
First round at campus sites
Northern Colorado
Big South Conference Coastal Carolina Jesse Sanders, Liberty[65] 2011 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Campus Sites UNC Asheville
Big Ten Conference Ohio State JaJuan Johnson, Purdue[66] 2011 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Conseco Fieldhouse
(Indianapolis, Indiana)
Ohio State
Big West Conference Long Beach State Casper Ware, Long Beach State[67] 2011 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Honda Center
(Anaheim, California)
UC Santa Barbara
Colonial Athletic Association George Mason Charles Jenkins, Hofstra[68] 2011 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament Richmond Coliseum
(Richmond, Virginia)
Old Dominion
Conference USA UAB Aaron Johnson, UAB[69] 2011 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament Don Haskins Center
(El Paso, Texas)
Memphis
Great West Conference Utah Valley Isiah Williams, Utah Valley[70] 2011 Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament UCCU Center
(Orem, Utah)
North Dakota
Horizon League Milwaukee, Butler & Cleveland State Norris Cole, Cleveland State[71] 2011 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament U.S. Cellular Arena
(Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
First round at campus sites
Butler
Independent New Orleans Antwan Carter, Longwood[72] No Tournament
Ivy League Harvard & Princeton Keith Wright, Harvard[73] No Tournament - Princeton won a one-game playoff, receiving the Ivy's automatic NCAA bid.
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Fairfield Ryan Rossiter, Siena[74] 2011 MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament Webster Bank Arena
(Bridgeport, Connecticut)
Saint Peter's
Mid-American Conference Kent State (East)
Western Michigan (West)
Justin Greene, Kent State[75] 2011 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, Ohio)
Akron
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Bethune-Cookman C. J. Reed, Bethune-Cookman[76] 2011 MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum
(Winston-Salem, North Carolina)
Hampton
Missouri Valley Conference Missouri State Kyle Weems, Missouri State[77] 2011 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, Missouri)
Indiana State
Mountain West Conference BYU & San Diego State Jimmer Fredette, BYU[78] 2011 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Thomas & Mack Center
(Paradise, Nevada)
San Diego St.
Northeast Conference Long Island Ken Horton, Central Connecticut State[79] 2011 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Campus Sites Long Island
Ohio Valley Conference Murray State Kenneth Faried, Morehead State[80] 2011 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Nashville Municipal Auditorium
(Nashville, Tennessee)
Morehead State
Pacific-10 Conference Arizona Derrick Williams, Arizona[81] 2011 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Staples Center
(Los Angeles, California)
Washington
Patriot League Bucknell Mike Muscala, Bucknell[82] 2011 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament Campus Sites Bucknell
Southeastern Conference Florida (East)
Alabama (West)
Chandler Parsons, Florida[83][84] 2011 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament Georgia Dome
(Atlanta, Georgia)
Kentucky
Southern Conference Charleston & Wofford (South)
Western Carolina & Chattanooga (North)
Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston[85][86] 2011 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament McKenzie Arena
(Chattanooga, Tennessee)
Wofford
Southland Conference McNeese State (East)
Sam Houston State (West)
Gilberto Clavell, Sam Houston State[87] 2011 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Leonard E. Merrell Center
(Katy, Texas)
Texas-San Antonio
Southwestern Athletic Conference Texas Southern Travele Jones, Texas Southern[88] 2011 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament Garland Special Events Center
(Garland, Texas)
Alabama State
The Summit League Oakland Keith Benson, Oakland[89] 2011 The Summit League Men's Basketball Tournament Sioux Falls Arena
(Sioux Falls, South Dakota)
Oakland
Sun Belt Conference Florida Atlantic (East)
Arkansas State & Louisiana–Lafayette (West)
Solomon Bozeman, Arkansas-Little Rock[90] 2011 Sun Belt Men's Basketball Tournament Summit Arena
(Hot Springs, Arkansas)
Arkansas-Little Rock
West Coast Conference Saint Mary's & Gonzaga Mickey McConnell, Saint Mary's[91] 2011 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)
Gonzaga
Western Athletic Conference Utah State Tai Wesley, Utah State[92] 2011 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)
Utah State

Statistical leaders

Points Per Game
Rebounds Per Game
Assists Per Game
Steals Per Game
Player School PPG Player School RPG Player School APG Player School SPG
Jimmer Fredette BYU 28.9 Kenneth Faried Morehead St. 14.5 Aaron Johnson UAB 7.7 Anthony Nelson Niagara 3.4
Marshon Brooks Providence 24.6 Ryan Rossiter Siena 13.2 Scott Machado Iona 7.6 Jay Threatt Delaware St. 3.1
Adrian Oliver San Jose St. 24.0 Jordan Williams Maryland 11.8 D. J. Cooper Ohio 7.5 Josh Slater Lipscomb 3.1
Andrew Goudelock C. of Charleston 23.7 Chris Gaston Fordham 11.3 Hank Thorns TCU 7.0 T. J. McConnell Duquesne 2.8
Kemba Walker Connecticut 23.5 Kyle O'Quinn Norfolk St. 11.1 Darius Morris Michigan 6.7 Jared Cunningham Oregon St. 2.8
Blocked Shots Per Game
Field Goal Percentage
Three-Point FG Percentage
Free Throw Percentage
Player School BPG Player School FG% Player School 3FG% Player School FT%
William Mosley Northwestern St. 4.9 Leon Powell SE Missouri St. 63.0 Jon Diebler Ohio St. 50.2 Chris Warren Mississippi 92.8
Keith Benson Oakland 3.6 Brian Qvale Montana 62.6 Robert Nyakundi SMU 49.7 Oliver McNally Harvard 92.6
C. J. Aiken St. Joseph's 3.5 Kenneth Faried Morehead St. 62.3 Ashton Gibbs Pittsburgh 49.0 Zamal Nixon Houston 92.2
Kyle O'Quinn Norfolk St. 3.4 Thomas Coleman NC A&T 61.9 Scott Bamforth Weber St. 48.8 Brian Barbour Columbia 91.7
Sam Muldrow South Carolina 3.4 Noah Dahlman Wofford 61.2 Gabe Rogers N. Arizona 46.8 Justin Robinson Rider 90.7

Postseason tournaments

NCAA Tournament

Final Four – Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas

National Semifinals
April 2
National Championship Game
April 4
      
4 Kentucky 55
3 Connecticut 56
3 Connecticut 53
8 Butler 41
11 VCU 62
8 Butler 70

Tournament upsets

A "major upset" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.

Date Winner Score Loser
March 17 #13 Morehead State 6261 #4 Louisville
March 17 #12 Richmond 6966 #5 Vanderbilt
March 19 #8 Butler 7170 #1 Pittsburgh
March 20 #11 VCU 9476 #3 Purdue
March 20 #11 Marquette 6662 #3 Syracuse
March 20 #10 Florida State 7157 #2 Notre Dame
March 27 #11 VCU 7161 #1 Kansas

National Invitation Tournament

After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the National Invitation Tournament invited 32 teams to participate.

NIT Semifinals and Final

Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City

Semifinals
March 29, 2011
Championship Game
March 31, 2011
      
1 Alabama 62
1 Colorado 61
1 Alabama 57
4 Wichita State 66
2 Washington State 44
4 Wichita State 75

College Basketball Invitational

The fourth College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament was held beginning March 15 and ended with a best-of-three final, ending April 1. Oregon defeated Creighton, 2 games to 1.

  Semifinals
March 23, 2011
Championship Series
March 28, 30, and April 1
(Best of Three)
                     
   Boise State 71  
   Oregon 79  
    Host Gm.2/3  Oregon 76 71 71
  Host Gm.1  Creighton 84 58 69
   UCF 64
   Creighton 82  

CollegeInsider.com Tournament

The third CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament was held beginning March 14 and ended with a championship game on March 30. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. Santa Clara defeated Iona 76–69 in the final, as Santa Clara's Kevin Foster was tournament MVP.[93]

Semifinals
March 25 and 26
Championship
March 30
      
1 Santa Clara 72
4 Southern Methodist 55
Santa Clara 76
Iona 69
3 Iona 83
2 East Tennessee State 80

Award winners

Consensus All-American teams

Consensus First Team
Player Position Class Team
Jimmer Fredette PG Senior Brigham Young
JaJuan Johnson C Senior Purdue
Nolan Smith PG-SG Senior Duke
Jared Sullinger PF-C Freshman Ohio State
Kemba Walker PG Junior Connecticut


Consensus Second Team
Player Position Class Team
Kenneth Faried PF-C Senior Morehead State
Jordan Hamilton SG-SF Sophomore Texas
Ben Hansbrough PG Senior Notre Dame
Kawhi Leonard SF Sophomore San Diego State
Marcus Morris PF-C Junior Kansas
Jordan Taylor PG Junior Wisconsin
Derrick Williams SF-PF Sophomore Arizona

Major player of the year awards

Major freshman of the year awards

Major coach of the year awards

Other major awards

Coaching changes

A number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.

Team Former
Coach
Interim
Coach
New
Coach
Reason
Alabama A&M L. Vann Pettaway[120] Willie Hayes[121]
Alcorn State Larry Smith Luther Riley[122] ASU alum Smith was moved to director of athletic development for the school.[123]
Arkansas John Pelphrey[124] Mike Anderson
Boston University Pat Chambers Joe Jones[125] Chambers left to take the newly opened job at Penn State.[126]
Bradley Jim Les[127] Geno Ford
Cal State Bakerfield Keith Brown Rod Barnes[128] Brown's contract was not renewed after the Roadrunners finished 9–19.[129]
Colgate Emmett Davis[130] Matt Langel[131]
Dayton Brian Gregory Archie Miller[132] Gregory accepted the head coaching job at Georgia Tech.[133]
Eastern Michigan Charles Ramsey[134] Rob Murphy[135]
Eastern Washington Kirk Earlywine Jim Hayford[136] Earlywine was informed his contract would not be renewed.[137]
Fairfield Ed Cooley Sydney Johnson [138] Cooley accepted the vacant job at Providence
Florida A&M Eugene Harris[139] Clemon Johnson FAMU replaced Harris with star alum Johnson.[140]
Florida Gulf Coast Dave Balza[141] Andy Enfield[142]
Fresno State Steve Cleveland[143] Rodney Terry[144]
George Mason Jim Larranaga Paul Hewitt[145] Larranaga accepted the University of Miami coaching job on April 22.[146] Mason replaced him with Hewitt, who had just been fired by Georgia Tech.
George Washington Karl Hobbs Mike Lonergan Hobbs was fired a week after GW hired a new athletic director. He had struggled in his last four seasons, going 25–39 in the A10.[147] New hire Lonergan, previously Vermont head coach, has deep roots in the Washington area—he was born and raised in the Maryland suburbs, attended The Catholic University of America, coached Catholic for 13 seasons, including a Division III national title in 2001, and spent a year under Gary Williams at Maryland.[148]
Georgia State Rod Barnes Paul Graham Ron Hunter Barnes was fired after four seasons at the conclusion of the 2010–11 regular season. Overall wins versus losses was the reason cited.[149]
Georgia Tech Paul Hewitt Brian Gregory Hewitt was fired six years following his lone Final Four appearance.[150] Brian Gregory from Dayton was hired.[151]
IPFW Dane Fife Tony Jasick Fife left IPFW to become an assistant at Michigan State.[152]
IUPUI Ron Hunter Todd Howard[153] Hunter left for Georgia State after 17 years.[154]
Kennesaw State Tony Ingle Lewis Preston[155] The school decided not to renew Ingle or his staff to help turn around the team's academic performance.[156]
Kent State Geno Ford Rob Senderoff[157] Ford left Kent State for Bradley after leading the team to a first-place MAC finish.[158] The school promoted assistant Senderoff to the top job. At the time of his promotion, he was still under a show-cause penalty stemming from the Kelvin Sampson scandal at Indiana. The penalty expired on May 25.[159]
Lamar Steve Roccaforte[160] Pat Knight[161]
Louisiana Tech Kerry Rupp[162] Michael White[163]
Loyola (IL) Jim Whitesell[164] Porter Moser[165]
Manhattan Barry Rohrssen[166] Steve Masiello[167]
Maryland Gary Williams Mark Turgeon Williams retired at the end of the season after 22 years and a 461-252 (.646) record at his alma mater.[168]
Miami (FL) Frank Haith Jim Larranaga Haith left for the open Missouri job.[169]
Missouri Mike Anderson Frank Haith Arkansas hired former Nolan Richardson assistant Anderson.[170]
Missouri State Cuonzo Martin Paul Lusk[171] Martin accepted the head coaching job at Tennessee.[172]
Monmouth Dave Calloway King Rice[173] Calloway resigned under pressure, effective at the end of the season.[174]
Murray State Billy Kennedy[175] Steve Prohm Kennedy left for the opening at Texas A&M. Steve Prohm had been an assistant coach at Murray State and was promoted on May 23 to be their new head coach.
Navy Billy Lange Ed DeChellis Lange left to become Associate Head Coach at Villanova.[176]
North Carolina State Sidney Lowe Mark Gottfried [177] Wolfpack alum Lowe resigned after failing to make the NCAA Tournament in his five-year tenure.[178]
New Orleans Joe Pasternack Mark Slessinger Pasternack resigned to become an assistant coach at Arizona under head coach Sean Miller.[179] Mark Slessinger was hired to pilot the Privateers out of division I.[180]
Northern Illinois Ricardo Patton Mark Montgomery[181] Former Colorado coach was fired from NIU after a 35-83 overall record in four seasons.[182]
Oklahoma Jeff Capel Lon Kruger Capel was fired just two years removed from an Elite Eight finish.[183]
Penn State Ed DeChellis Pat Chambers[126] DeChellis made the unusual move of leaving a Big Ten school for Navy of the Patriot League.
Pepperdine Tom Asbury Marty Wilson Asbury retired, turning the Waves program over to Associate Head Coach Wilson.[184]
Princeton Sydney Johnson [138] Mitch Henderson[185] Johnson left for the open Fairfield Job[138]
Providence Keno Davis Ed Cooley[186] Davis was fired after only three seasons.[187]
Radford Brad Greenberg Mike Jones[188] Greenberg was fired following a 5-24 season and after sitting out the final four games of the season for NCAA violations.[189] In February 2012, he would be hit with a five-year show-cause penalty for misleading NCAA investigators.[190]
Southern Rob Spivery Roman Banks[191]
Stetson Derek Waugh Casey Alexander[192] Waugh resigned after guiding the Hatters to only two winning seasons in 10+ years as coach.[193]
Tennessee Bruce Pearl Cuonzo Martin Pearl was fired on March 21 after finishing the season with a 30-point loss to Michigan in the NCAA Tournament's Round of 64. This followed a tumultuous season in which he was suspended for recruiting violations, fined, admitted to misleading NCAA investigators and finishing with only a 19–15 overall record.[194]
Tennessee Tech Mike Sutton Steve Payne Sutton retired and was replaced by top assistant Payne.[195]
Texas A&M Mark Turgeon Billy Kennedy Turgeon left in May for the Maryland job.[196]
Texas A&M–Corpus Christi Perry Clark Willis Wilson[197] Clark was fired after finishing 10–21 in his fourth season. Athletic director Tim Fitzpatrick claimed that success for the men's basketball program is "critically important."[198]
Texas Tech Pat Knight Billy Gillispie Fired on March 7, 2011 after finishing the regular season 13-18 and missing NCAA tournament. Stated in preseason that he should lose his job if Texas Tech missed the NCAA tournament again.[199]
Towson Pat Kennedy Pat Skerry[200] Announced on March 7, 2011, after finishing the regular season with a 4–26 record that included 19 straight losses.[201]
UC Davis Gary Stewart[202] Jim Les[203]
UNLV Lon Kruger Dave Rice[204] Kruger left for Oklahoma after reportedly turning the job down.[205]
Utah Jim Boylen Larry Krystkowiak[206] Announced on March 12, 2011, After consecutive losing seasons, Boylen was relieved of his duties. Utah finished with a 13-18 overall record (6-10 MWC), the second-straight losing season for the Utes, who were 14-17 in 2009-10.[207]
Valparaiso Homer Drew Bryce Drew Homer's son, Bryce, had served as the associate head coach for a number of years prior to taking over the program in May 2011.[208]
Vermont Mike Lonergan[209] John Becker
Wyoming Heath Schroyer Fred Langley Larry Shyatt[210] Schroyer was the first coach fired during the season as he was let go on February 7, 2011 following an 8-15 start.[211]

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