2015–16 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

The 2015–16 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 13. The first tournament was the 2K Sports Classic and ended with the Final Four in Houston April 2–4. Practices officially began in October.

Rule changes

The following rule changes were proposed by the NCAA Men's Rules Committee for the 2015–16 season,[1][2] and officially approved by the NCAA Men's Playing Rules Oversight Panel:[3]

Season headlines

Milestones and records

Conference membership changes

After a tumultuous four years in which over 80 Division I schools moved to new conferences—some more than once—only two schools joined new conferences as full members for 2015–16:

School Former conference New conference
NJIT Highlanders Independent Atlantic Sun[39]
Northern Kentucky Norse Atlantic Sun Horizon[40]

Another change in membership involved the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). This did not involve a school moving to a new league, but rather a change in identity of a Division I school. During the summer of 2015, the University of Texas–Pan American (UTPA) and the University of Texas at Brownsville (UTB) merged to form the new University of Texas Rio Grande Valley (UTRGV). The UTPA athletic program was inherited by UTRGV, which retained UTPA's WAC membership.

Following UAB's decision to drop football at the end of the 2014 season, its future membership in Conference USA (C-USA) beyond 2014–15 was initially uncertain, as league bylaws require all member schools to either sponsor FBS football or be committed to establishing an FBS program. Due to ongoing efforts by boosters and other supporters to raise funds to bring UAB football back, C-USA indicated that UAB would be allowed to remain in the league for the 2015–16 season, but not beyond that time unless football was reinstated.[41] On June 1, 2015, UAB initially announced that the football program would be reinstated in 2016,[42] later pushing back the return of football to 2017; this was sufficient to satisfy C-USA, which announced that it would keep UAB as a member.[43]

The 2015–16 season was the last for Coastal Carolina in the Big South Conference. On September 1, 2015, the university and the Sun Belt Conference jointly announced that the Chanticleers would join the Sun Belt in July 2016, initially as a non-football member. The football team will join the Sun Belt in 2017, the second year of its transition from FCS to FBS football.[44]

New arenas

Season outlook

Pre–season polls

The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.

AP[47]
Ranking Team
1 North Carolina
2 Kentucky
3 Maryland
4 Kansas
5 Duke
6 Virginia
7 Iowa State
8 Oklahoma
9 Gonzaga
10 Wichita State
11 Villanova
12 Arizona
13 Michigan State
14 California
15 Indiana
16 Utah
17 Wisconsin
18 Vanderbilt
19 Notre Dame
20 Connecticut
21 LSU
22 Baylor
23 Purdue
24 Butler
25 Michigan
USA Today Coaches[48]
Ranking Team
1 Kentucky
1 North Carolina
3 Maryland
4 Duke
5 Kansas
6 Virginia
7 Iowa State
8 Oklahoma
9 Villanova
10 Arizona
11 Gonzaga
12 Wichita State
13 Michigan State
14 California
15 Indiana
16 Utah
17 Wisconsin
18 Notre Dame
19 LSU
20 Vanderbilt
21 Baylor
22 Butler
23 West Virginia
24 Connecticut
25 Purdue

Regular season

Early season tournaments

Name Dates Location No. teams Champion
NIT Season Tip-Off November 26–27 Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, New York)
4 Villanova
2K Sports Classic November 20, 22 Madison Square Garden
(New York City)
4 Duke
Puerto Rico Tip-Off November 19–20, 22 Roberto Clemente Coliseum
(San Juan, Puerto Rico)
8 Miami (FL)
Charleston Classic November 19–20, 22 TD Arena
(Charleston, South Carolina)
8 Virginia
Paradise Jam Tournament November 20–23 Sports and Fitness Center
(Saint Thomas, VI)
8 South Carolina
Hall of Fame Tip Off November 21–22 Mohegan Sun Arena
(Uncasville, Connecticut)
4 Purdue (Naismith)

Buffalo (Springfield)

Men Who Speak Up Main Event November 23, 25 MGM Grand Garden Arena
(Las Vegas)
8 Howard (Middleweight Bracket)

Creighton (Heavyweight Bracket)

Corpus Christi Coastal Classic November 27–28 American Bank Center
(Corpus Christi, Texas)
4 UTEP
CBE Hall of Fame Classic November 23–24 Sprint Center
(Kansas City, Missouri)
4 North Carolina
Legends Classic November 23–24 Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, New York)
4 Marquette
Gulf Coast Showcase November 23–25 Germain Arena
(Estero, Florida)
8 Weber State
Maui Invitational November 23–25 Lahaina Civic Center
(Lahaina, HI)
8 Kansas
Cancún Challenge November 24–25 Moon Palace Golf & Spa Resort
(Cancún, MX)
8 South Dakota State (Mayan Division)

Maryland (Riviera Division)

Great Alaska Shootout November 25–28 Sullivan Arena
(Anchorage, AK)
8 Middle Tennessee
Battle 4 Atlantis November 25–27 Imperial Arena
(Nassau, BAH)
8 Syracuse
AdvoCare Invitational November 26–27, 29 HP Field House
(Lake Buena Vista, Florida)
8 Xavier
Wooden Legacy November 26–27, 29 Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, California)
8 Michigan State
Las Vegas Invitational November 26–27 Orleans Arena
(Las Vegas)
4 West Virginia
Emerald Coast Classic November 27–28 Emerald Coast Classic Arena
(Niceville, Florida)
4 Iowa State
Barclays Center Classic November 27–28 Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, New York)
4 Cincinnati
Las Vegas Classic December 22–23 Orleans Arena
(Las Vegas)
4 SMU
Diamond Head Classic December 22–23, 25 Stan Sheriff Center
(Honolulu, HI)
8 Oklahoma

Conference winners and tournaments

Thirty-one athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The team with the best regular-season record in each conference is given the number one seed in each tournament, with tiebreakers used as needed in the case of ties for the top seeding. All conferences also recognize regular-season champions, with co-championships being awarded in the case of ties. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2016 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. For the final time, the Ivy League did not hold a conference tournament, instead giving its automatic invitation to its regular season champion.

Conference Regular
season winner
Conference
Player of the Year
Conference
Coach of the Year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (city)
Tournament
winner
America East Conference Stony Brook Jameel Warney, Stony Brook[49] Steve Pikiell, Stony Brook[49] 2016 America East Men's Basketball Tournament Campus sites Stony Brook
American Athletic Conference Temple Nic Moore, SMU[50] Fran Dunphy, Temple[50] 2016 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Amway Center
(Orlando, Florida)
Connecticut
Atlantic 10 Conference VCU, St. Bonaventure & Dayton DeAndre’ Bembry, Saint Joseph's[51] Mark Schmidt, St. Bonaventure[51] 2016 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament Barclays Center
(Brooklyn, New York)
Saint Joseph's
Atlantic Coast Conference North Carolina Malcolm Brogdon, Virginia[52][53] Jim Larrañaga, Miami[52][53] 2016 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament Verizon Center
(Washington, D.C.)
North Carolina
Atlantic Sun Conference North Florida Dallas Moore, North Florida[54] Matthew Driscoll, North Florida[54] 2016 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament Campus sites Florida Gulf Coast
Big 12 Conference Kansas Buddy Hield, Oklahoma[55] Tubby Smith, Texas Tech[55] 2016 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament Sprint Center
(Kansas City, Missouri)
Kansas
Big East Conference Villanova Kris Dunn, Providence[56] Kevin Willard, Seton Hall & Jay Wright, Villanova[56] 2016 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament Madison Square Garden
(New York City)
Seton Hall
Big Sky Conference Weber State Joel Bolomboy, Weber State[57] Bill Evans, Idaho State[58] 2016 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Reno Events Center
(Reno, Nevada)
Weber State
Big South Conference High Point & Winthrop John Brown, High Point[59] Ritchie McKay, Liberty[59] 2016 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Pope Convocation Center
(Buies Creek, North Carolina)
UNC Asheville
Big Ten Conference Indiana Denzel Valentine, Michigan State Tom Crean, Indiana 2016 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Bankers Life Fieldhouse
(Indianapolis)
Michigan State
Big West Conference Hawaii Stefan Janković, Hawaii[60] Eran Ganot, Hawaii[60] 2016 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Honda Center
(Anaheim, California)
Hawaii
Colonial Athletic Association Hofstra & UNC Wilmington Juan'ya Green, Hofstra[61] Kevin Keatts, UNC Wilmington[61] 2016 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament Royal Farms Arena
(Baltimore)
UNC Wilmington
Conference USA UAB Alex Hamilton, Louisiana Tech[62] Jerod Haase, UAB[62] 2016 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament Birmingham–Jefferson Convention Complex
(Birmingham, Alabama)
Middle Tennessee
Horizon League Valparaiso Kay Felder, Oakland[63] Bryce Drew, Valparaiso[63] 2016 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament Joe Louis Arena
(Detroit)
Green Bay
Ivy League Yale Justin Sears, Yale[64] James Jones, Yale[64] No tournament
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Monmouth Justin Robinson, Monmouth[65] King Rice, Monmouth[66] 2016 MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament Times Union Center
(Albany, New York)
Iona
Mid-American Conference Akron (East)
Ball State & Central Michigan (West)
Antonio Campbell, Ohio[67] Keith Dambrot, Akron[67] 2016 Mid-American Conference Men's Basketball Tournament First round at campus sites
Remainder at Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, Ohio)
Buffalo
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Hampton James Daniel III, Howard[68] Murray Garvin, South Carolina State[68] 2016 MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament Norfolk Scope
(Norfolk, Virginia)
Hampton
Missouri Valley Conference Wichita State Fred VanVleet, Wichita State[69] Barry Hinson, Southern Illinois[70] 2016 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, Missouri)
Northern Iowa
Mountain West Conference San Diego State Marvelle Harris, Fresno State[71] Steve Fisher, San Diego State[71] 2016 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Thomas & Mack Center
(Paradise, Nevada)
Fresno State
Northeast Conference Wagner Cane Broome, Sacred Heart[72] Bashir Mason, Wagner[72] 2016 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Campus sites Fairleigh Dickinson
Ohio Valley Conference Belmont (East)
Murray State & Tennessee–Martin (West)
Evan Bradds, Belmont[73] Dana Ford, Tennessee State[73] 2016 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Nashville Municipal Auditorium
(Nashville, Tennessee)
Austin Peay
Pac-12 Conference Oregon Jakob Pöltl, Utah[74] Dana Altman, Oregon[74] 2016 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament MGM Grand Garden Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)
Oregon
Patriot League Bucknell Tim Kempton, Lehigh[75] Nathan Davis, Bucknell[75] 2016 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament Campus sites Holy Cross
Southeastern Conference Kentucky & Texas A&M Tyler Ulis, Kentucky[76][77] Billy Kennedy, Texas A&M[76][77] 2016 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament Bridgestone Arena
(Nashville, Tennessee)
Kentucky
Southern Conference Chattanooga Stephen Croone, Furman[78] Matt McCall, Chattanooga[78] 2016 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament U.S. Cellular Center
(Asheville, North Carolina)
Chattanooga
Southland Conference Stephen F. Austin Thomas Walkup, Stephen F. Austin[79] Brad Underwood, Stephen F. Austin[79] 2016 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Leonard E. Merrell Center
(Katy, Texas)
Stephen F. Austin
Southwestern Athletic Conference Texas Southern Derrick Griffin, Texas Southern[80] Mike Davis, Texas Southern[80] 2016 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament Toyota Center
(Houston, Texas)
Southern
The Summit League IPFW & South Dakota State Max Landis, IPFW[81] Jon Coffman, IPFW[81] 2016 Summit League Men's Basketball Tournament Denny Sanford Premier Center
(Sioux Falls, South Dakota)
South Dakota State
Sun Belt Conference Little Rock Shawn Long, Louisiana–Lafayette[82] Chris Beard, Little Rock[82] 2016 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Lakefront Arena
(New Orleans)
Little Rock
West Coast Conference Gonzaga & Saint Mary's Kyle Collinsworth, BYU[83] Randy Bennett, Saint Mary's[83] 2016 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)
Gonzaga
Western Athletic Conference New Mexico State Pascal Siakam, New Mexico State[84] Rod Barnes, Cal State Bakersfield[84] 2016 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament Orleans Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)
Cal State Bakersfield

    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
    James Daniel III Howard 27.1 Egidijus Mockevičius Evansville 14.0 Kay Felder Oakland 9.3 Tra-Deon Hollins Omaha 4.0
    Buddy Hield Oklahoma 25.0 Rokas Gustys Hofstra 13.0 Jordan Johnson Milwaukee 8.1 Hameed Ali Texas A&M–CC 2.7
    Josh Adams Wyoming 24.7 Joel Bolomboy Weber State 12.6 Jaaron Simmons Ohio 7.9 Carrington Love Green Bay 2.6
    Kay Felder Oakland 24.4 Shawn Long LA-Lafayette 12.1 Denzel Valentine Michigan State 7.8 Gary Payton II Oregon State 2.5
    Stefan Moody Ole Miss 23.6 Chris Horton Austin Peay 12.0 Kyle Collinsworth BYU 7.4 Kris Dunn Providence 2.5
    Blocked shots per game
    Field goal percentage
    Three-point field goal percentage
    Free throw percentage
    Player School BPG Player School FG% Player School 3FG% Player School FT%
    Vashil Fernandez Valparaiso 3.3 Evan Bradds Belmont 71.4 Giddy Potts Middle Tennessee 50.6 Fletcher McGee Wofford 92.5
    Tai Odiase UI-Chicago 3.2 Venky Jois Eastern Washington 67.9 Bryn Forbes Michigan State 48.1 Ben Millaud-Meunier St. Francis (PA) 91.0
    Jameel Warney Stony Brook 3.0 Derrick Griffin Texas Southern 66.2 Fletcher McGee Wofford 47.9 Q. J. Peterson VMI 90.5
    Laron Smith Bethune–Cookman 3.0 Rokas Gustys Hofstra 66.0 Matt Donlan Youngstown State 46.3 Sam Hunt NC A&T 90.4
    Luke Kornet Vanderbilt 3.0 Adrian Diaz FIU 65.0 Trent Mackey North Florida 46.0 Jaleen Smith New Hampshire 90.0

    Postseason

    NCAA Tournament

    Tournament upsets

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

    Date Winner Score Loser Region Round
    March 17 Yale (12) 79–75 Baylor (5) West Round of 64
    March 17 Little Rock (12) 85–83 (2OT) Purdue (5) Midwest Round of 64
    March 18 Hawaii (13) 77–66 California (4) South Round of 64
    March 18 Middle Tennessee (15) 90–81 Michigan State (2) Midwest Round of 64
    March 18 Stephen F. Austin (14) 70–56 West Virginia (3) East Round of 64
    March 19 Gonzaga (11) 82–59 Utah (3) Midwest Round of 32
    March 27 Syracuse (10) 68–62 Virginia (1) Midwest Elite 8

    Final FourNRG Stadium, Houston, Texas

    National Semifinals
    April 2
    National Championship game
    Apr 4
          
    2 (W) Oklahoma 51
    2 (S) Villanova 95
    2 (S) Villanova 77
    1 (E) North Carolina 74
    1 (E) North Carolina 83
    10 (MW) Syracuse 66

    National Invitation Tournament

    After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the NCAA invited 32 teams to participate in the National Invitation Tournament. The tournament began on March 15, 2016 with all games prior to the semifinals were played on campus sites.

    NIT Semifinals and Final

    Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City on March 29 and 31

    The semifinals and final were held on March 29 and March 31 at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

    Semifinals
    March 29
    Championship game
    March 31
          
    1 Valparaiso 72
    2 BYU 70
    1 Valparaiso 60
    4 George Washington 76
    4 George Washington 65
    2 San Diego State 46

    Vegas 16 Tournament

    After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the NCAA invited 8 teams to participate in the first ever Vegas 16 Tournament. The tournament began on March 28, 2016 with all 8 teams playing in the opening round. The semifinals was played on March 29, and the Championship game on March 30. All games were played at Mandalay Bay Events Center in Las Vegas.

    Semifinals
    March 29
    Championship game
    March 30
          
    Old Dominion 64
    UC-Santa Barbara 49
    Old Dominion 68
    Oakland 67
    Oakland 104
    East Tennessee State 81

    College Basketball Invitational

    The ninth College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament began on March 15, 2016. This tournament featured 16 teams who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT.

      Semifinals
    March 23
    Championship Series
    March 28, April 1
    (best of three)
                         
     Morehead State 77  
     Ohio 72  
         Morehead State (1-2) 86 68 82
       Nevada (2-1) 83 77 85*
     Nevada 86
     Vermont 72  

    CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament

    The eighth CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament began on March 14 and ended with that championship game on March 29. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. 26 teams participated in this tournament.

    Semifinals
    March 27
    Championship
    March 29
          
    NJIT 65
    Columbia 80
    Columbia 73
    UC-Irvine 67
    UC-Irvine 66
    Coastal Carolina 47

    Conference standings

    2015–16 American Athletic Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Temple 14 4   .778     21 12   .636
    #24 SMU* 13 5   .722     25 5   .833
    Houston 12 6   .667     22 10   .688
    Cincinnati 12 6   .667     22 11   .667
    Tulsa 12 6   .667     20 12   .625
    Connecticut 11 7   .611     25 11   .694
    Memphis 8 10   .444     19 15   .559
    UCF 6 12   .333     12 18   .400
    East Carolina 4 14   .222     12 20   .375
    South Florida 4 14   .222     8 25   .242
    Tulane 3 15   .167     12 22   .353
    *Ineligible for postseason due to postseason ban
    American Athletic Conference Tournament Champions
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 America East Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Stony Brook 14 2   .875     26 7   .788
    Albany 13 3   .813     24 9   .727
    Vermont 11 5   .688     23 14   .622
    New Hampshire 11 5   .688     20 13   .606
    UMass Lowell* 7 9   .438     11 18   .379
    Binghamton 5 11   .313     8 22   .267
    Hartford 4 12   .250     10 23   .303
    Maine 4 12   .250     8 22   .267
    UMBC 3 13   .188     7 25   .219
    * Ineligible for postseason during transition to Division I.
    2016 America East Tournament winner
    201516 Atlantic 10 men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Dayton 14 4   .778     25 8   .758
    VCU 14 4   .778     25 11   .694
    St. Bonaventure 14 4   .778     22 9   .710
    Saint Joseph's 13 5   .722     28 8   .778
    George Washington 11 7   .611     28 10   .737
    Davidson 10 8   .556     20 13   .606
    Rhode Island 9 9   .500     17 15   .531
    Fordham 8 10   .444     17 14   .548
    Richmond 7 11   .389     16 16   .500
    Massachusetts 6 12   .333     14 18   .438
    Duquesne 6 12   .333     17 17   .500
    George Mason 5 13   .278     11 21   .344
    Saint Louis 5 13   .278     11 21   .344
    La Salle 4 14   .222     9 22   .290
    2016 A10 Tournament winner
    2015–16 Atlantic Sun men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    North Florida 10 4   .714     22 12   .647
    NJIT 8 6   .571     20 15   .571
    Jacksonville 8 6   .571     16 16   .500
    Florida Gulf Coast 8 6   .571     21 14   .600
    Kennesaw State 7 7   .500     11 20   .355
    Lipscomb 7 7   .500     12 21   .364
    Stetson* 4 10   .286     12 22   .353
    USC Upstate 4 10   .286     10 22   .313
    *ineligible for the 2016 NCAA Tournament due to APR violations
    2016 Atlantic Sun Tournament winner
    2015–16 ACC men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    #3 North Carolina 14 4   .778     33 7   .825
    #4 Virginia 13 5   .722     29 8   .784
    #10 Miami (FL) 13 5   .722     27 8   .771
    #16 Louisville* 12 6   .667     23 8   .742
    Notre Dame 11 7   .611     24 12   .667
    #19 Duke 11 7   .611     25 11   .694
    Virginia Tech 10 8   .556     20 15   .571
    Clemson 10 8   .556     17 14   .548
    Pittsburgh 9 9   .500     21 12   .636
    Syracuse 9 9   .500     23 14   .622
    Georgia Tech 8 10   .444     21 15   .583
    Florida State 8 10   .444     20 14   .588
    NC State 5 13   .278     16 17   .485
    Wake Forest 2 16   .111     11 20   .355
    Boston College 0 18   .000     7 25   .219
    *Ineligible for both the 2016 ACC Tournament and the 2016 NCAA Tournament due to self-imposed postseason ban.
    2016 ACC Tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 Big East men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    #6 Villanova 16 2   .889     35 5   .875
    #9 Xavier 14 4   .778     28 5   .848
    #20 Seton Hall 12 6   .667     25 9   .735
    Providence 10 8   .556     24 11   .686
    Butler 10 8   .556     22 11   .667
    Creighton 9 9   .500     20 15   .571
    Marquette 8 10   .444     20 13   .606
    Georgetown 7 11   .389     15 18   .455
    DePaul 3 15   .167     9 22   .290
    St. John's 1 17   .056     8 24   .250
    2016 Big East Tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 Big Sky men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Weber State 15 3   .833     26 9   .743
    Montana 14 4   .778     21 12   .636
    Idaho 12 6   .667     21 13   .618
    Idaho State 11 7   .611     16 15   .516
    Eastern Washington 10 8   .556     18 16   .529
    North Dakota 10 8   .556     17 16   .515
    Montana State 9 9   .500     14 17   .452
    Portland State 8 10   .444     13 18   .419
    Northern Colorado 7 11   .389     10 21   .323
    Sacramento State 6 12   .333     14 17   .452
    Southern Utah 3 15   .167     5 24   .172
    Northern Arizona 3 15   .167     5 25   .167
    2016 Big Sky Tournament winner
    2015–16 Big South men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Winthrop 13 5   .722     23 9   .719
    High Point 13 5   .722     21 11   .656
    UNC Asheville 12 6   .667     22 12   .647
    Coastal Carolina 12 6   .667     21 12   .636
    Gardner–Webb 10 8   .556     17 16   .515
    Liberty 10 8   .556     13 19   .406
    Radford 9 9   .500     16 15   .516
    Campbell 5 13   .278     12 18   .400
    Presbyterian 5 13   .278     11 20   .355
    Longwood 5 13   .278     10 23   .303
    Charleston Southern 5 13   .278     9 21   .300
    2016 Big South Tournament winner
    2015–16 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    #14 Indiana 15 3   .833     27 8   .771
    #2 Michigan State 13 5   .722     29 6   .829
    #18 Maryland 12 6   .667     27 9   .750
    #12 Purdue 12 6   .667     26 9   .743
    #25 Iowa 12 6   .667     22 10   .688
    Wisconsin 12 6   .667     22 13   .629
    Ohio State 11 7   .611     21 14   .600
    Michigan 10 8   .556     23 13   .639
    Northwestern 8 10   .444     20 12   .625
    Penn State 7 11   .389     16 16   .500
    Nebraska 6 12   .333     16 18   .471
    Illinois 5 13   .278     15 19   .441
    Minnesota 2 16   .111     8 23   .258
    Rutgers 1 17   .056     7 25   .219
    2016 Big Ten Tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 Big West men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Hawaii 13 3   .813     28 5   .848
    UC Irvine 13 3   .813     28 10   .737
    Long Beach State 12 4   .750     20 15   .571
    UC Santa Barbara 11 5   .688     19 14   .576
    UC Davis 6 10   .375     11 19   .367
    UC Riverside 5 11   .313     14 19   .424
    Cal State Northridge* 5 11   .313     10 20   .333
    Cal Poly 4 12   .250     10 20   .333
    Cal State Fullerton 3 13   .188     10 20   .333
    *ineligible for postseason due to self-imposed ban due to academic fraud violations
    2016 Big West Tournament winner
    2015–16 Big 12 men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    #1 Kansas 15 3   .833     33 5   .868
    #8 West Virginia 13 5   .722     26 9   .743
    #7 Oklahoma 12 6   .667     29 8   .784
    Texas 11 7   .611     20 13   .606
    #21 Baylor 10 8   .556     22 12   .647
    #22 Iowa State 10 8   .556     23 12   .657
    Texas Tech 9 9   .500     19 13   .594
    Kansas State 5 13   .278     17 16   .515
    Oklahoma State 3 15   .167     12 20   .375
    TCU 2 16   .111     12 21   .364
    2016 Big 12 Tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 CAA men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Hofstra 14 4   .778     24 10   .706
    UNC Wilmington 14 4   .778     25 8   .758
    Towson 11 7   .611     20 13   .606
    James Madison 11 7   .611     21 11   .656
    William & Mary 11 7   .611     20 11   .645
    Northeastern 9 9   .500     18 15   .545
    College of Charleston 8 10   .444     17 14   .548
    Elon 7 11   .389     16 16   .500
    Drexel 3 15   .167     6 25   .194
    Delaware 2 16   .111     7 23   .233
    2016 CAA Tournament winner
    2015–16 Conference USA men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    UAB 16 2   .889     26 7   .788
    Middle Tennessee 13 5   .722     25 10   .714
    Marshall 12 6   .667     17 16   .515
    Louisiana Tech 12 6   .667     23 10   .697
    Old Dominion 12 6   .667     25 13   .658
    UTEP 10 8   .556     19 14   .576
    Charlotte 9 9   .500     14 19   .424
    WKU 8 10   .444     18 16   .529
    North Texas 7 11   .389     12 20   .375
    Rice 7 11   .389     12 20   .375
    FIU 7 11   .389     13 19   .406
    Florida Atlantic 5 13   .278     8 25   .242
    Southern Miss* 5 13   .278     8 21   .276
    UTSA 3 15   .167     5 27   .156
    *Ineligible for postseason play due to self-imposed postseason ban.
    2016 C-USA Tournament winner
    2015–16 Horizon League men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Valparaiso 16 2   .889     30 7   .811
    Oakland 13 5   .722     23 12   .657
    Wright State 13 5   .722     22 13   .629
    Green Bay 11 7   .611     23 13   .639
    Milwaukee 10 8   .556     20 13   .606
    Detroit 9 9   .500     16 15   .516
    Youngstown State 6 12   .333     11 21   .344
    Northern Kentucky* 5 13   .278     9 21   .300
    Cleveland State 4 14   .222     9 23   .281
    UIC 3 15   .167     5 25   .167
    * Ineligible for NCAA postseason during transition to Division I.
    2016 Horizon League Tournament winner
    2015–16 Ivy League men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Yale 13 1   .929     23 7   .767
    Princeton 12 2   .857     22 7   .759
    Columbia 10 4   .714     25 10   .714
    Harvard 6 8   .429     14 16   .467
    Penn 5 9   .357     11 17   .393
    Dartmouth 4 10   .286     10 18   .357
    Cornell 3 11   .214     10 18   .357
    Brown 3 11   .214     8 20   .286
    † – NCAA Tournament participant
    2015–16 Mid-American Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    East
    Akron 13 5   .722     26 9   .743
    Ohio 11 7   .611     23 12   .657
    Kent State 10 8   .556     19 13   .594
    Buffalo 10 8   .556     20 15   .571
    Miami (OH) 6 12   .333     13 20   .394
    Bowling Green 5 13   .278     16 18   .471
    West
    Ball State 10 8   .556     21 14   .600
    Central Michigan 10 8   .556     17 16   .515
    Northern Illinois 9 9   .500     21 13   .618
    Eastern Michigan 9 9   .500     18 15   .545
    Toledo 8 10   .444     17 15   .531
    Western Michigan 7 11   .389     13 19   .406
    2016 MAC Tournament winner
    2015–16 MAAC men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Monmouth 17 3   .850     28 8   .778
    Iona 16 4   .800     22 11   .667
    Siena 13 7   .650     21 13   .618
    Fairfield 12 8   .600     19 14   .576
    Saint Peter's 12 8   .600     14 16   .467
    Manhattan 9 11   .450     13 18   .419
    Canisius 8 12   .400     14 19   .424
    Rider 8 12   .400     13 20   .394
    Quinnipiac 6 14   .300     9 21   .300
    Niagara 5 15   .250     7 25   .219
    Marist 4 16   .200     7 23   .233
    2016 MAAC Tournament winner
    2015–16 MEAC men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Hampton 13 3   .813     21 11   .656
    South Carolina State 12 4   .750     19 15   .559
    Norfolk State 12 4   .750     17 17   .500
    Bethune-Cookman 10 6   .625     14 18   .438
    Savannah State 9 7   .563     16 16   .500
    North Carolina Central 7 9   .438     13 19   .406
    North Carolina A&T 7 9   .438     10 22   .313
    Md. Eastern Shore 7 9   .438     10 22   .313
    Howard 6 10   .375     12 20   .375
    Morgan State 6 10   .375     9 22   .290
    Coppin State 6 10   .375     9 22   .290
    Delaware State 5 11   .313     7 25   .219
    Florida A&M* 4 12   .250     8 21   .276
    *ineligible for postseason due to APR violations
    2016 MEAC Tournament winner
    As of March 18, 2016; 
    2015–16 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Wichita State 16 2   .889     26 9   .743
    Evansville 12 6   .667     25 9   .735
    Illinois State 12 6   .667     18 14   .563
    Southern Illinois 11 7   .611     22 10   .688
    Northern Iowa 11 7   .611     23 13   .639
    Indiana State 8 10   .444     15 17   .469
    Missouri State 8 10   .444     13 19   .406
    Loyola–Chicago 7 11   .389     15 17   .469
    Bradley 3 15   .167     5 27   .156
    Drake 2 16   .111     7 24   .226
    2016 MVC Tournament winner
    2015–16 Mountain West Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    San Diego State 16 2   .889     28 10   .737
    Fresno State 13 5   .722     25 10   .714
    Boise State 11 7   .611     20 12   .625
    Nevada 10 8   .556     24 14   .632
    New Mexico 10 8   .556     17 15   .531
    Colorado State 8 10   .444     18 16   .529
    UNLV 8 10   .444     18 15   .545
    Utah State 7 11   .389     16 15   .516
    Wyoming 7 11   .389     14 18   .438
    Air Force 5 13   .278     14 18   .438
    San Jose State 4 14   .222     9 22   .290
    2016 MWC Tournament winner
    2015–16 Northeast Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Wagner 13 5   .722     23 11   .676
    Fairleigh Dickinson 11 7   .611     18 15   .545
    Sacred Heart 11 7   .611     12 18   .400
    St. Francis Brooklyn 11 7   .611     15 17   .469
    Mount St. Mary's 10 8   .556     14 19   .424
    LIU Brooklyn 9 9   .500     16 15   .516
    Saint Francis (PA) 9 9   .500     13 17   .433
    Robert Morris 8 10   .444     10 22   .313
    Bryant 5 13   .278     8 23   .258
    Central Connecticut 3 15   .167     4 25   .138
    2016 NEC Tournament winner
    2015–16 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    East
    Belmont 12 4   .750     20 12   .625
    Tennessee State 11 5   .688     20 11   .645
    Tennessee Tech 11 5   .688     19 12   .613
    Morehead State 11 5   .688     23 14   .622
    Eastern Kentucky 6 10   .375     15 16   .484
    Jacksonville State 4 12   .250     8 23   .258
    West
    UT Martin 10 6   .625     20 15   .571
    Murray State 10 6   .625     17 14   .548
    Eastern Illinois 9 7   .563     13 17   .433
    Austin Peay 7 9   .438     18 18   .500
    SIU Edwardsville 3 13   .188     6 22   .214
    Southeast Missouri St. 2 14   .125     5 24   .172
    2016 OVC tournament winner
    2015–16 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    #5 Oregon 14 4   .778     31 7   .816
    #13 Utah 13 5   .722     27 9   .750
    #17 Arizona 12 6   .667     25 9   .735
    #23 California 12 6   .667     23 11   .676
    Colorado 10 8   .556     22 12   .647
    USC 9 9   .500     21 13   .618
    Oregon State 9 9   .500     19 13   .594
    Washington 9 9   .500     19 15   .559
    Stanford 8 10   .444     15 15   .500
    UCLA 6 12   .333     15 17   .469
    Arizona State 5 13   .278     15 17   .469
    Washington State 1 17   .056     9 22   .290
    2016 Pac-12 Tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 Patriot League men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Bucknell 14 4   .778     17 14   .548
    Lehigh 13 5   .722     17 15   .531
    Boston University 11 7   .611     19 15   .559
    Army 9 9   .500     19 14   .576
    Navy 9 9   .500     19 14   .576
    Colgate 9 9   .500     13 17   .433
    American 9 9   .500     12 19   .387
    Loyola (MD) 8 10   .444     9 21   .300
    Holy Cross 5 13   .278     15 20   .429
    Lafayette 3 15   .167     6 24   .200
    2016 Patriot League Tournament winner
    2015–16 SEC men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    #15 Texas A&M 13 5   .722     28 9   .757
    #10 Kentucky 13 5   .722     27 9   .750
    South Carolina 11 7   .611     25 9   .735
    Vanderbilt 11 7   .611     19 14   .576
    LSU 11 7   .611     19 14   .576
    Ole Miss 10 8   .556     20 12   .625
    Georgia 10 8   .556     20 14   .588
    Florida 9 9   .500     21 15   .583
    Arkansas 9 9   .500     16 16   .500
    Alabama 8 10   .444     18 15   .545
    Mississippi State 7 11   .389     14 17   .452
    Tennessee 6 12   .333     15 19   .441
    Auburn 5 13   .278     11 20   .355
    Missouri* 3 15   .167     10 21   .323
    *Ineligible for postseason play due to self-imposed postseason ban.
    2016 SEC Tournament winner
    Rankings from AP Poll
    2015–16 Southern Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Chattanooga 15 3   .833     29 6   .829
    East Tennessee State 14 4   .778     24 12   .667
    Furman 11 7   .611     19 16   .543
    Wofford 11 7   .611     15 17   .469
    Western Carolina 10 8   .556     16 18   .471
    UNC Greensboro 10 8   .556     15 19   .441
    Mercer 8 10   .444     19 15   .559
    Samford 4 14   .222     14 19   .424
    VMI 4 14   .222     9 21   .300
    The Citadel 3 15   .167     10 22   .313
    2016 SoCon Tournament winner
    2015–16 Southland Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Stephen F. Austin 18 0   1.000     28 6   .824
    Texas A&M–CC 15 3   .833     25 8   .758
    Sam Houston State 12 6   .667     18 16   .529
    Incarnate Word* 12 6   .667     17 12   .586
    Houston Baptist 10 8   .556     17 17   .500
    Southeastern Louisiana 9 9   .500     12 21   .364
    Abilene Christian* 8 10   .444     13 18   .419
    McNeese State 7 11   .389     9 20   .310
    Central Arkansas** 6 12   .333     7 21   .250
    New Orleans 6 12   .333     10 20   .333
    Nicholls State 6 12   .333     11 23   .324
    Northwestern State 5 13   .278     8 20   .286
    Lamar 3 15   .167     11 19   .367
    * Ineligible for postseason during transition to Division I
    ** Ineligible for postseason due to APR violations
    2016 Southland Tournament winner
    2015–16 SWAC men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Texas Southern 16 2   .889     18 15   .545
    Alcorn State* 13 5   .722     15 15   .500
    Jackson State 12 6   .667     20 16   .556
    Southern 11 7   .611     22 13   .629
    Alabama State 9 9   .500     14 17   .452
    Prairie View A&M 7 11   .389     7 24   .226
    Alabama A&M 6 12   .333     11 18   .379
    Arkansas–Pine Bluff 6 12   .333     8 25   .242
    Mississippi Valley State 6 12   .333     8 27   .229
    Grambling State 4 14   .222     7 24   .226
    *ineligible for postseason due to APR violations
    2016 SWAC Tournament winner
    2015–16 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Little Rock 17 3   .850     30 5   .857
    Louisiana–Monroe 15 5   .750     20 14   .588
    Texas–Arlington 13 7   .650     24 11   .686
    Louisiana–Lafayette 12 8   .600     19 15   .559
    Georgia Southern 10 10   .500     14 17   .452
    Georgia State 9 11   .450     16 14   .533
    Texas State 8 12   .400     15 16   .484
    South Alabama 8 12   .400     14 19   .424
    Arkansas State 7 13   .350     11 20   .355
    Appalachian State 7 13   .350     9 22   .290
    Troy 4 16   .200     9 22   .290
    2016 Sun Belt Conference Tournament winner
    2015–16 The Summit League men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    IPFW 12 4   .750     24 10   .706
    South Dakota State 12 4   .750     26 8   .765
    Omaha 10 6   .625     18 14   .563
    IUPUI 9 7   .563     13 19   .406
    North Dakota State 8 8   .500     20 13   .606
    Denver 7 9   .438     16 15   .516
    Oral Roberts 6 10   .375     14 17   .452
    South Dakota 5 11   .313     14 18   .438
    Western Illinois 3 13   .188     10 17   .370
    2016 Summit League Tournament winner
    2015–16 West Coast Conference men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    Saint Mary's 15 3   .833     29 6   .829
    Gonzaga 15 3   .833     28 8   .778
    BYU 13 5   .722     26 11   .703
    Pepperdine 10 8   .556     18 14   .563
    San Francisco 8 10   .444     15 15   .500
    Santa Clara 7 11   .389     11 20   .355
    Portland 6 12   .333     12 20   .375
    Loyola Marymount 6 12   .333     14 17   .452
    Pacific* 6 12   .333     8 20   .286
    San Diego 4 14   .222     9 21   .300
    *ineligible for postseason due to self probation
    2016 West Coast Conference Tournament winner
    2015–16 WAC men's basketball standings
    Conf     Overall
    Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
    New Mexico State 13 1   .929     23 11   .676
    Grand Canyon* 11 3   .786     27 7   .794
    Cal State Bakersfield 11 3   .786     24 9   .727
    Seattle 7 7   .500     15 17   .469
    Utah Valley 6 8   .429     12 18   .400
    UMKC 4 10   .286     12 19   .387
    UT Rio Grande Valley 4 10   .286     8 22   .267
    Chicago State 0 14   .000     4 28   .125
    * Ineligible for postseason during transition to Division I.
    2016 WAC Tournament winner

    Award winners

    Consensus All-American teams

    The following players are recognized as the 2016 Consensus All-Americans:

    Consensus First Team
    Player Position Class Team
    Malcolm Brogdon SG Senior Virginia
    Buddy Hield SG Senior Oklahoma
    Brice Johnson PF Senior North Carolina
    Ben Simmons F Freshman Louisiana State
    Tyler Ulis PG Sophomore Kentucky
    Denzel Valentine SG Senior Michigan State


    Consensus Second Team
    Player Position Class Team
    Kris Dunn PG Junior Providence
    Perry Ellis PF Senior Kansas
    Georges Niang PF/SF Senior Iowa State
    Jakob Pöltl C Sophomore Utah
    Jarrod Uthoff PF Senior Iowa

    Major player of the year awards

    Major freshman of the year awards

    Major coach of the year awards

    Other major awards

    Coaching changes

    Several teams changed coaches during and after the season.

    Team Former
    coach
    Interim
    coach
    New
    coach
    Reason
    Arkansas State John Brady Grant McCasland Resigned, effective end of the season[109] McCasland was named the new head coach.[110]
    Army Zach Spiker Jimmy Allen Spiker left for the Drexel job,[111] and was replaced by top assistant Allen.[112]
    Canisius Jim Baron Reggie Witherspoon Baron announced his immediate retirement on May 20, 2016.[113]
    Central Connecticut Howie Dickenman Donyell Marshall Dickenman announced his retirement on February 18, effective at the end of the season.[114] Central Connecticut hired Buffalo assistant Marshall, a former UConn star and NBA player.[115]
    Columbia Kyle Smith Jim Engles Smith left for the San Francisco job.[116] NJIT coach Engles was hired as a replacement.[117]
    Cornell Bill Courtney Brian Earl [118][119]
    Dartmouth Paul Cormier David McLaughlin [120]
    David McLaughlin is named as the new HC of the Dartmouth Big Green after being at Northeastern.[121]
    Delaware Monté Ross Martin Ingelsby [122][123]
    Denver Joe Scott Rodney Billups Scott was fired and replaced by Colorado assistant Billups.[124][125]
    Detroit Ray McCallum Bacari Alexander Detroit cleaned out its program after the season, starting with McCallum and two of his assistants.[126] Bacari Alexander returns to alma mater to become the head coach the Titans.[127]
    Drexel Bruiser Flint Zach Spiker On March 7, 2016, following the end of Drexel's season, Flint was fired as head basketball coach after 15 seasons with the team.[128] Spiker was hired from Army.[111]
    George Washington Mike Lonergan Maurice Joseph Despite leading the Colonials to the NIT title, Lonergan was fired on September 16 amid a university investigation into alleged verbal and emotional abuse of players.[129] GW promoted assistant Joseph on an interim basis.[130]
    Georgia Tech Brian Gregory Josh Pastner Gregory was fired after missing the NCAA tournament in all five of his seasons at Georgia Tech.[131] Memphis head coach Pastner was ultimately hired.[132]
    Jacksonville State James Green Ray Harper Green was fired after the season[133] and succeeded by recently departed Western Kentucky coach Harper.[134]
    James Madison Matt Brady Louis Rowe On March 14, 2016, Brady "mutually parted ways" with the Dukes as after eight seasons and one NCAA appearance. JMU's athletic director cited declining attendance and poor performances in the CAA tournament.[135][136]
    Little Rock Chris Beard Wes Flanigan Beard left to take the UNLV job,[137] though he would later move to Texas Tech.[138] Assistant coach Flanigan was elevated to the head coaching role.[139]
    Memphis Josh Pastner Tubby Smith Pastner left for the Georgia Tech job[132] and was replaced by Texas Tech coach Smith.[140]
    Milwaukee Rob Jeter LaVall Jordan [141][142]
    New Mexico State Marvin Menzies Paul Weir Marvin Menzies left for the Rebels of UNLV HC job.[143] After being the Associate HC of the Aggies, Paul Weir now will take the reins of the HC of the Aggies.[144]
    Nicholls State J. P. Piper Richie Riley Piper was fired following the season.[145] Former Assistant Coach at Clemson, Richie Riley has become the new HC of the Colonels.[146]
    NJIT Jim Engles Brian Kennedy Jim Engles left NJIT for Columbia[117] Brian Kennedy was named as the next HC of the Highlanders.[147]
    North Carolina A&T Cy Alexander
    Jay Joyner
    Alexander resigned on January 29 to pursue other opportunities within North Carolina A&T's athletics department.[148] Alexander compiled an overall record of 43–80 during his 3+ years as North Carolina A&T's head coach, including a 5–17 mark in 2015–16 at the time of his resignation.[148] Joyner had the interim tag removed on March 7 to become the next full-time head coach.[149]
    Northern Colorado B. J. Hill Jeff Linder Hill was fired while Northern Colorado was under NCAA investigation.[150] The Bears hired Boise State assistant Linder.[151]
    Oklahoma State Travis Ford Brad Underwood Ford was fired after nine seasons at Oklahoma State[152] Underwood took the job after leading Stephen F. Austin to NCAA tournament success.[153]
    Pacific Ron Verlin Mike Burns Damon Stoudamire Pacific fired Verlin on March 3, along with assistant Dwight Young. Both had been suspended since December amid an NCAA investigation into alleged academic misconduct.[154] The Tigers hired Memphis assistant Stoudamire, better known for his 13 seasons as an NBA player.[155]
    Pittsburgh Jamie Dixon Kevin Stallings Dixon left Pittsburgh to take the head coach job at his alma mater, TCU.[156] The Panthers hired Stallings away from Vanderbilt.[157]
    Portland Eric Reveno Terry Porter Reveno was fired after 10 seasons and an overall 140–178 record, finishing with a 12–20 season in 2015–16.[158] The Pilots hired one of their city's basketball icons in Porter, a longtime star for the Portland Trail Blazers who later had extensive NBA coaching experience.[159]
    Prairie View Byron Rimm
    Byron Smith
    Rimm announced his resignation on January 27, effective immediately, with the Panthers at 1–18 on the season. Rimm had only two winning seasons in 10 seasons as head coach. Assistant Byron Smith was named interim head coach for the remainder of the season.[160] Prairie View removed the interim tag from Smith on March 13.[161]
    Rutgers Eddie Jordan Steve Pikiell Jordan was fired on March 10 after three seasons. Jordan compiled an overall record of 29–68, ending with a 7–25 overall record and a 1–15 Big Ten record in 2015–16.[162] The Scarlet Knights turned to Stony Brook coach Pikiell.[163]
    Saint Louis Jim Crews Travis Ford Crews was fired on March 9 after four seasons. The Billikens made the NCAA tournament in each of Crews' first two seasons as head coach, but went 11–21 in each of the last two seasons.[164] SLU replaced Crews with newly departed Oklahoma State coach Ford.[165]
    San Francisco Rex Walters Kyle Smith Walters was fired on March 9, following the West Coast Conference tournament, after eight seasons in charge. After a run of three postseason appearances in four seasons, the Dons finished under .500 in WCC play in both 2014–15 and 2015–16.[166] USF hired Columbia's Smith fresh off the Lions' CIT victory.[116]
    Santa Clara Kerry Keating Herb Sendek [167] Herb Sendek hired as Santa Clara's head coach[168]
    SMU Larry Brown Tim Jankovich Brown surprisingly stepped down as SMU coach on July 8, 2016. Jankovich, who had been hired along with Brown in 2012 as his top assistant and designated successor, was elevated to the top spot.[169]
    South Dakota State Scott Nagy T. J. Otzelberger Nagy left for the Wright State job[170] and was replaced by Iowa State assistant Otzelberger.[171]
    Southern Utah Nick Robinson Todd Simon Former UNLV interim head coach Simon was hired to replace Robinson.[172][173]
    Stanford Johnny Dawkins Jerod Haase Dawkins was fired after eight seasons,[174] and replaced by UAB head coach Haase.[175]
    Stephen F. Austin Brad Underwood Kyle Keller Underwood left for Oklahoma State and was replaced by Texas A&M assistant Keller.[176][177]
    Stony Brook Steve Pikiell Jeff Boals Pikiell left for the Rutgers job and was replaced by Ohio State assistant Boals.[178][179]
    TCU Trent Johnson Jamie Dixon Johnson was fired after four seasons, a 50–79 overall record at the school, and an 8–64 record in Big 12 play.[180] He was replaced by Pittsburgh head coach and former TCU player Dixon.[156]
    Tennessee–Martin Heath Schroyer Anthony Stewart Schroyer left his post to become assistant head coach at NC State.[181] Assistant Stewart was named interim head coach for the 2016–17 season.[182]
    Texas Tech Tubby Smith Chris Beard Smith left for Memphis.[140] After leaving Little Rock for UNLV less than a month earlier, Beard left for Texas Tech, where he had served as an assistant from 2001 to 2011.[138]
    Texas–Rio Grande Valley Dan Hipsher Lew Hill [183][184]
    Tulane Ed Conroy Mike Dunleavy Word of Conroy's impending firing came to him as he was coaching the Green Wave to an upset victory in the 2016 AAC Tournament. The move was made official a few days later.[185] Former NBA coach Dunleavy was hired for his first college coaching job, after a six-year hiatus from coaching.[186]
    UAB Jerod Haase Robert Ehsan Haase left to take the Stanford job[175] and was replaced by assistant Ehsan.[187]
    UCF Donnie Jones Johnny Dawkins Jones was fired on March 10 after six seasons. Although he compiled a 100–88 overall record, the Knights went 12–18 overall and 6–12 in American Athletic play this season.[188] Dawkins was hired fresh off his firing by Stanford.[189]
    UMBC Aki Thomas Ryan Odom [190][191]
    UNLV Dave Rice Todd Simon Marvin Menzies Fired on January 10. Despite Rice's 98–54 record in four-plus seasons at UNLV, the Runnin' Rebels failed to make the postseason in either of the last two seasons, and an 0–3 start in Mountain West play was apparently the final straw for UNLV; top assistant Simon was named as interim head coach.[192] Following the season, Chris Beard was initially hired from Little Rock after leading the Trojans to NCAA Tournament success,[137][193] but left less than a month later for Texas Tech.[138] Menzies, a UNLV assistant during the Lon Kruger era, was hired to replace Beard.[194]
    UTSA Brooks Thompson Steve Henson Thompson was fired on March 10 after 10 seasons. He had a 133–178 overall record, with the Roadrunners finishing this season 5–27 overall and 3–15 in Conference USA play. He was replaced by Oklahoma assistant Henson.[195][196]
    Valparaiso Bryce Drew Matt Lottich Drew left to take over at Vanderbilt and was replaced by assistant Lottich.[197][198]
    Vanderbilt Kevin Stallings Bryce Drew Stallings left for the Pittsburgh job.[157] Vanderbilt hired Bryce Drew from Valparaiso.[197]
    Western Kentucky Ray Harper Rick Stansbury Harper resigned on March 17, 2016 after three WKU players were suspended following a school disciplinary hearing,[199] eventually landing at Jacksonville State.[134] The Hilltoppers hired veteran college head coach Stansbury from his then-current post as an assistant at Texas A&M.[200]
    Wisconsin Bo Ryan
    Greg Gard
    Ryan retired during the season.[201] Top assistant Gard was named as interim head coach; Wisconsin removed the interim tag after the regular season, signing Gard to a 5-year contract.[202]
    Wright State Billy Donlon Scott Nagy Despite making it into the finals of the Horizon League Tournament, Donlon was fired on March 17 after 6 seasons at Wright State with a 109-93 career record.[203] The Raiders then hired Nagy away from South Dakota State.[170]
    Wyoming Larry Shyatt Allen Edwards Shyatt announced his retirement on March 21, 2016, turning the program over to top assistant Edwards.[204]

    See also

    References

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    2. "Men's basketball rules committee recommends package of proposals" (Press release). NCAA. May 15, 2015. Retrieved May 17, 2015.
    3. "Shorter shot clock, fewer timeouts among changes coming in 2015-16". ESPN.com. June 8, 2015. Retrieved June 9, 2015.
    4. [email protected]. "Raising the bar". NCAA.org – The Official Site of the NCAA. Retrieved 2016-02-24.
    5. Goodman, Jeff (June 29, 2015). "Bo Ryan to retire after next season". ESPN.com. Retrieved June 29, 2015.
    6. Katz, Andy (August 13, 2015). "Badgers' Bo Ryan leaves door open for return after 2015-16 season". ESPN.com. Retrieved August 14, 2015.
    7. "NCAA bans SMU from 2016 postseason, Larry Brown for nine games". ESPN.com. September 29, 2015. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
    8. Forde, Pat (October 2, 2015). "Louisville investigating allegations basketball staffer paid for prostitutes for players, recruits". Yahoo! Sports. Retrieved October 2, 2015.
    9. "Men's basketball – AP Preseason All-Americans". Columbus Dispatch. November 10, 2015. Retrieved January 29, 2016.
    10. Wire, SI. "Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan announces retirement". www.si.com. Retrieved 2016-02-24.
    11. "NCAA hits Hawaii with one-year postseason ban". ESPN.com. December 23, 2015. Retrieved December 23, 2015.
    12. "Former Hawaii head men's basketball coach violated NCAA ethical conduct rules" (Press release). NCAA. December 23, 2015. Retrieved December 23, 2015.
    13. Goodman, Jeff (January 13, 2016). "College players given extra time to mull NBA draft decision". ESPN.com. Retrieved January 13, 2016.
    14. "Major violations found at Missouri; penalties imposed by school". ESPN.com. January 13, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2016.
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    120. "Cormier will not return to coach Big Green in 2016-17".
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    164. "Saint Louis fires Jim Crews". ESPN.com. March 10, 2016. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
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    171. "S. Dakota State hires new coach".
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    174. McCauley, Janie (March 14, 2016). "Stanford fires coach Johnny Dawkins after eight seasons". collegebasketball.ap.org. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
    175. 1 2 "Haase Named Head Coach" (Press release). Stanford Athletics. March 25, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
    176. "Stephen F. Austin's Brad Underwood to coach Oklahoma State".
    177. "Kyle Keller Selected as Head Men's Basketball Coach at Stephen F. Austin".
    178. "Rutgers to hire Stony Brook's Steve Pikiell as new coach".
    179. "Stony Brook to hire Ohio State assistant Jeff Boals as new coach".
    180. Hawkins, Stephen (March 14, 2016). "TCU Coach Trent Johnson Fired After 8 Big 12 Wins in 4 Years". abcnews.com. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
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    185. "Conroy Relieved of Duties as Head Basketball Coach at Tulane". tulanegreenwave.com. March 14, 2016. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
    186. "Former NBA coach Mike Dunleavy Sr. agrees to take Tulane job".
    187. "Robert Ehsan Named UAB Men's Basketball Head Coach After National Search".
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    190. "UMBC basketball coach Aki Thomas fired". Baltimore Sun. March 3, 2016. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
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    192. Goodman, Jeff; Katz, Andy (January 10, 2016). "UNLV alum Dave Rice out as Rebels coach amid winless league start". ESPN.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
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    194. "UNLV agrees to hire Marvin Menzies as new head coach".
    195. Goodman, Jeff (March 10, 2016). "UTSA fires coach Brooks Thompson". ESPN.com. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
    196. "UTSA names Steve Henson as head men's basketball coach on Friday".
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    198. "Matt Lottich Hired as Valparaiso University Men's Basketball Head Coach" (Press release). Valparaiso Crusaders.
    199. Willis, Kevin (March 18, 2016). "WKU Men's Basketball Coach Ray Harper Resigns, Three Players Suspended". Murray, Kentucky: WKMS. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
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    201. "Bo Ryan announces retirement". UWBadgers.com. Sidearm Sports. Retrieved December 16, 2015.
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    203. "Wright State fires Billy Donlon".
    204. "Wyoming Announces Larry Shyatt to Step Aside as Head Coach".
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