1978–79 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
{{Short description|Basketball season}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2023}}
{{Infobox NCAA Division I men's basketball season
| year = 1978
| image = 247px
| caption =
| preseason_ap = Duke Blue Devils{{cite web|url=http://www.appollarchive.com/mbasketball/ap/seasons.cfm?appollid=440|title=1979 Preseason AP Men's Basketball Poll|publisher=AP Poll Archive|access-date=2009-01-26}}
| regular_season =
| tourney_start = March 9
| nc_date = 26, 1979
| champ_stad = Special Events Center
| champ_city = Salt Lake City, Utah
| champ = Michigan State Spartans
| helmschamp = Michigan State Spartans
| nit_champ = Indiana Hoosiers
| cbi_champ =
| playeroftheyear = Larry Bird, Indiana State
| helmspoy = Larry Bird, Indiana State
}}
The 1978–79 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began in November 1978, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1979 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on March 26, 1979, at the Special Events Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. The Michigan State Spartans won their first NCAA national championship with a 75–64 victory over the Indiana State Sycamores.
Season headlines
- The Trans America Athletic Conference began play, with eight original members. It was renamed the Atlantic Sun Conference in 2001.
- Indiana State senior forward Larry Bird and Michigan Spartans sophomore point guard Earvin "Magic" Johnson emerged as two highly popular and successful players during the season, and their rivalry — culminating in a meeting in the national championship game — captured national attention of basketball fans and the sports media during the year.[https://hardwoodhistory.com/2011/03/22/the-1978-79-season/ Hartzell, Larry, "The 1978-79 Season," Hardwood History, March 22, 2011 Accessed April 6, 2021]
- In the Pacific 10 Conference, UCLA won an NCAA-record 13th consecutive conference title.
- The first Great Alaska Shootout took place. The long-running Shootout would become one of the premier early-season tournaments before it was discontinued after its 2017 edition.
- On February 24, North Carolina trailed Duke 7–0 at halftime. It was the first scoreless half for an NCAA basketball team since 1938.
- At Boston College, players took part in a point-shaving scheme which was revealed in 1980.
- The NCAA tournament expanded from 32 to 40 teams and used seeding to place all teams in its bracket for the first time.
- The first public lottery for tickets to the NCAA tournament Final Four was held.{{cite web |url=http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/2010/Rules.pdf |title=Playing Rules History |author= |date= |website=ncaa.org |publisher=NCAA |access-date=June 25, 2024 |page=12}} The championship game enjoyed the highest television rating in college basketball history.
- The National Invitation Tournament expanded from 16 to 24 teams.
- The growing fan appreciation and financial success of college basketball during the season prompted planning for the creation of the ESPN network and the original Big East Conference, both of which launched the following season and would push the sport to greater prominence in the years to come.
Season outlook
= Pre-season polls =
{{main|1978–79 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings}}
The top 20 from the AP Poll during the pre-season.*{{cite book|title=ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game|publisher=Random House|year=2009|isbn=978-0-345-51392-2}}
style="vertical-align:top;"
| {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" !colspan=2| 'Associated Press' |
Ranking
!Team |
---|
1
|Duke (38) |
2
|UCLA (8) |
3
|Notre Dame (1) |
4 |
5
|Kansas (1) |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
12 |
13
|USC |
14
|LSU |
15 |
16 |
17 |
18 |
19 |
20
|UNLV |
|
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
!colspan=2| UPI Coaches |
Ranking
!Team |
---|
1
|Duke |
2
|UCLA |
3 |
4 |
rowspan=2 valign=middle | 5 |
Kansas |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10
|USC |
11 |
12 |
13 |
14 |
15 |
16 |
17
|LSU |
18 |
19 |
20 |
|}
Conference membership changes
The 1978–79 season was most notable for the expansion of the Pacific-8 Conference to 10 members with the addition of the men's athletic programs of Arizona and Arizona State (the conference did not sponsor women's sports until the 1986–87 school year). The conference duly renamed itself the Pacific-10 Conference.
class="wikitable sortable"
!School !Former conference !New conference |
{{sort|Alabama Birmingham|Alabama-Birmingham Blazers}}
| No team |
{{sort|Arizona|Arizona Wildcats}} |
{{sort|Arizona State|Arizona State Sun Devils}} |
{{sort|Centenary|Centenary Gentlemen}} |
{{sort|East Tennessee State|East Tennessee State Buccaneers}} |
{{sort|Hardin–Simmons|Hardin–Simmons Cowboys}} |
{{sort|Houston Baptist|Houston Baptist Huskies}} |
{{sort|Mercer|Mercer Bears}} |
{{sort|Northeast Louisiana|Northeast Louisiana Indians}} |
{{sort|Oklahoma City|Oklahoma City Chiefs}} |
{{sort|Pan American|Pan American Broncs}} |
{{sort|Samford|Samford Bulldogs}} |
{{sort|San Diego State|San Diego State Aztecs}} |
{{sort|Virginia Tech|Virginia Tech Hokies}} |
{{sort|Utah State|Utah State Aggies}} |
{{sort|William & Mary|William & Mary Indians}}
| Southern |
Regular season
=Conferences=
== Conference winners and tournaments ==
Of 22 Division I basketball conferences, 13 determined their league champion with a single-elimination tournament, while seven leagues sent their regular-season champion to the NCAA Tournament. The Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) did not receive an automatic tournament bid until the 1979–80 season, while the Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC) received its automatic bid in 1980–81.
NOTE: From 1975 to 1981, the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), a loosely organized sports federation of colleges and universities in the Northeastern United States, organized Division I ECAC regional tournaments for those of its members that were independents in basketball. Each 1979 tournament winner received an automatic bid to the 1979 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in the same way that the tournament champions of conventional athletic conferences did.[http://jonfmorse.com/wiki/index.php?title=ECAC_Men%27s_Basketball_Tournaments Varsity Pride: ECAC Men's Basketball Tournaments]
==Conference standings==
cellpadding="5"
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 ACC men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Big Eight Conference men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Big Sky men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 ECC men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Eastern 8 men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Ivy League men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Metro Conference men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Mid-American Conference men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Pacific Coast Athletic Association men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Southeastern Conference men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Southern Conference men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Southland Conference men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Southwest Conference men's basketball standings}} |valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 SWAC men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 Trans America Athletic Conference men's basketball standings}} |
valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 West Coast Athletic Conference men's basketball standings}}
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 WAC men's basketball standings}} |
=Division I independents=
A total of 78 college teams played as Division I independents. Among them, Syracuse (26–4) had the best winning percentage (.867) and Syracuse and DePaul (26–6) finished with the most wins.{{cite web |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/conferences/independent/men/1979.html |work=Sports Reference |title=1978-79 Men's Independent Season Summary |access-date=August 20, 2024}}{{cite web |url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cbb/conferences/njny7/men/1979.html |work=Sports Reference |title=1978-79 Men's New Jersey-New York 7 Conference Season Summary |access-date=August 20, 2024}}
cellpadding="5"
|valign="top" width=25em|{{1978–79 NCAA Division I men's basketball independents standings}} |
= Informal championships =
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
!Conference !Regular | ||
New Jersey-New York 7 Conference | {{cbb link|year=1978|sex=men|team=Rutgers Scarlett Knights |title=Rutgers}} | None selected |
Rutgers finished with a 7–0 regular-season record in head-to-head competition among members of the New Jersey-New York 7 Conference.
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
!Conference !Regular | ||
Philadelphia Big 5 | Penn & Temple | Tony Price, Penn, & Rick Reed, Temple |
Penn and Temple both finished with 3–1 records in head-to-head competition among the Philadelphia Big 5.
= Statistical leaders =
class="wikitable" style="text-align: left;" | ||||||||||||||
colspan=3 | {{center|Points per game}} | colspan=3 | {{center|Rebounds per game}} | colspan=3 | {{center|Field goal percentage}} | colspan=3 | {{center|Free throw percentage}} | |||||||||||
Player | School | PPG | Player | School | RPG | Player | School | FG% | Player | School | FT% | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
align="left" | Lawrence Butler | Idaho St. | 30.1 | Monti Davis | Tenn. St. | 16.2 | Murray Brown | Florida St. | 69.1 | Darrell Mauldin | Campbell | 92.1 | |||
align="left" | Larry Bird | Indiana St. | 28.6 | Bill Cartwright | San Francisco | 15.7 | Jeff Ruland | Iona | 67.1 | Kurt Kanaskie | La Salle | 91.7 | |||
align="left" | Nick Galis | Seton Hall | 27.5 | Lionel Garrett | Southern | 15.5 | Steve Johnson | Oregon St. | 66.1 | Jim Krivacs | Texas | 91.0 | |||
align="left" | James Tillman | Eastern Kentucky | 26.9 | Larry Bird | Indiana St. | 14.9 | Jonathan Green | Tennessee St. | 65.6 | Tom Orner | Butler | 90.9 | |||
align="left" | Paul Dawkins | Northern Illinois | 26.7 | Larry Knight | Loyola-Illinois | 14.3 | Wiley Peck | Mississippi St. | 64.4 | Ron Perry | Holy Cross | 90.8 |
Post-season tournaments
= NCAA tournament =
{{main|1979 NCAA Division I basketball tournament|1979 NCAA Division I Basketball Championship Game}}
== Final Four ==
{{4TeamBracket | RD1=National semifinals | RD2=National finals | RD2b=Third place
| RD1-seed1=E9
| RD1-team1=Penn
| RD1-score1=67
| RD1-seed2=ME2
| RD1-team2=Michigan State
| RD1-score2=101
| RD1-seed3=MW1
| RD1-team3=Indiana State
| RD1-score3=76
| RD1-seed4=W2
| RD1-team4=DePaul
| RD1-score4=74
| RD2-seed1=ME2
| RD2-team1=Michigan State
| RD2-score1=75
| RD2-seed2=MW1
| RD2-team2=Indiana State
| RD2-score2=64
| RD2b-seed1=E9
| RD2b-team1=Penn
| RD2b-score1=93
| RD2b-seed2=W2
| RD2b-team2=DePaul
| RD2b-score2={{nowrap|96OT}}
}}
= National Invitation tournament =
{{main|1979 National Invitation Tournament}}
== Semifinals & finals ==
{{4TeamBracket |seeds=no | RD1=Semifinals | RD2=Finals | RD2b=Third place
| RD1-seed1=
| RD1-team1=Indiana
| RD1-score1=64
| RD1-seed2=
| RD1-team2=Ohio State
| RD1-score2=55
| RD1-seed3=
| RD1-team3=Purdue
| RD1-score3=87
| RD1-seed4=
| RD1-team4=Alabama
| RD1-score4=68
| RD2-seed1=
| RD2-team1=Indiana
| RD2-score1=53
| RD2-seed2=
| RD2-team2=Purdue
| RD2-score2=52
| RD2b-seed1=
| RD2b-team1=Ohio State
| RD2b-score1=86
| RD2b-seed2=
| RD2b-team2=Alabama
| RD2b-score2=96
}}
Awards
= Consensus All-American teams =
{{main|1979 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans}}
style="width:600px" "border:'1' 'solid' 'gray'"
|+ Consensus First Team |
bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:40%" | Player
! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:4%" | Position ! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:16%" | Class ! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:40%" | Team |
---|
Larry Bird
| F | Senior |
Mike Gminski
| C | Junior | Duke |
David Greenwood
| F | Senior | UCLA |
Magic Johnson
| G | Sophomore |
Sidney Moncrief
| G | Senior | Arkansas |
style="width:600px" "border:'1' 'solid' 'gray'"
|+ Consensus Second Team |
bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:40%" | Player
! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:4%" | Position ! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:16%" | Class ! bgcolor="#CCCCCC" style="width:40%" | Team |
---|
Bill Cartwright
| C | Senior |
Calvin Natt
| C | Senior |
Mike O'Koren
| F | Junior |
Jim Paxson
| G/F | Senior | Dayton |
Jim Spanarkel
| G | Senior | Duke |
Kelly Tripucka
| F | Sophomore |
Sly Williams
| F | Junior |
= Major player of the year awards =
- Wooden Award: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- Naismith Award: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- Helms Player of the Year: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- Associated Press Player of the Year: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- UPI Player of the Year: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- NABC Player of the Year: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Larry Bird, Indiana State
- Adolph Rupp Trophy: Larry Bird, Indiana State
- Sporting News Player of the Year: Larry Bird, Indiana State
= Major coach of the year awards =
= Other major awards =
- Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best player under 6'0): Alton Byrd, Columbia
- Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): Tony Price, Penn & Rick Reed, Temple
- NIT/Haggerty Award (Top player in New York City metro area): Nick Galis, Seton Hall
Coaching changes
A number of teams changed coaches during the season and after it ended.{{cite news|url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/basketball/college/men/stats/2000/news.00coaches.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20000816033945/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/basketball/college/men/stats/2000/news.00coaches.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=August 16, 2000|title=NCAA Division I Men's College Basketball 2000 Coaching Changes|publisher=CNN/SI|access-date=2009-02-07 | date=2000-09-13}}
class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
!Team !Former !Interim !New !Reason |
Arkansas-Little Rock
| | |
Austin Peay
| | |
Dartmouth
| |Walters left for Providence. |
Detroit
| | |
East Carolina
| | |
Eastern Michigan
| | |
Florida A&M
| | |
Hofstra
| | |
La Salle
| |Westhead left to become an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Lakers. |
Louisiana Tech
| | |
Loyola Marymount
| | |
Marshall
| |Aberdeen died of a heart attack during the offseason, replaced by associate head coach Zuffelato. |
Massachusetts
| | |
Memphis State
| | |
Middle Tennessee State
| | |
New Mexico
|Ellenberger was fired following a recruiting scandal. Charlie Harrison served as interim coach for the 1979–80 season and Colson was hired as permanent coach in the 1980 offseason. |
New Mexico State
| | |
New Orleans
| | |
North Carolina A&T
| | |
Northeast Louisiana
| |Fant retired, turning the program to top assistant Hollis. |
Oklahoma City
| | |
Oklahoma State
| | |
Oral Roberts
| | |
Pacific
| |Morrison left for USC |
Pepperdine
| |Colson resigned. |
Providence
| |Gavitt left to concentrate on launching the new Big East Conference. |
Robert Morris
| | |
St. Francis (NY)
| | |
Saint Mary's
| | |
Saint Peter's
| | |
Samford
| | |
San Diego State
| | |
San Jose State
| | San Jose State tapped Michigan State assistant Berry fresh off the Spartans' national championship. |
Southern California
| | |
Tennessee–Chattanooga
| | |
Tennessee Tech
| | |
TCU
| | |
UCLA
| | |
Utah State
| | |
Vanderbilt
| | |
Virginia Commonwealth
| | |
Western Michigan
| | |
Xavier
| |Xavier brought in Penn assistant Staak. |
Notes
{{reflist|group=note}}