- NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship
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The NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Championship is an annual championship tournament for colleges and universities that are members of NCAA Division II, a grouping of schools in the United States (plus one school in Canada) that are generally smaller than the higher-profile institutions of Division I. The tournament, originally known as the NCAA College Division Basketball Championship, was established in 1957, immediately after the NCAA subdivided its member schools into the University Division (today's Division I) and College Division. It became the Division II championship in 1974, when the NCAA split the College Division into the limited-scholarship Division II and the non-scholarship Division III, and added the "Men's" designation in 1982 when the NCAA began sponsoring national championships in women's sports.
Like all other NCAA basketball divisions for men and women, the champion is decided in a single-elimination tournament. The Division II tournament has 64 teams. The Division II tournaments for men and women differ in a major respect from those in Divisions I and III. The finals of both Division II tournaments consist of eight teams, instead of the four in the other two divisions.[citation needed] The eight survivors of regional play meet in the Elite Eight at a predetermined site.
Contents
Championship game results
Year Champion Score Runner up Score 1957 Wheaton 89 Kentucky Wesleyan 65 1958 South Dakota 75 St. Michael's 53 1959 Evansville 83 Southwest Missouri State 67 1960 Evansville 90 Chapman 69 1961 Wittenberg 42 Southeast Missouri State 38 1962† Mount St. Mary's 58 Sacramento State 57 1963 South Dakota State 44 Wittenberg 42 1964 Evansville 72 Akron 59 1965† Evansville 85 Southern Illinois 82 1966 Kentucky Wesleyan 54 Southern Illinois 51 1967 Winston-Salem State 77 Southwest Missouri State 74 1968 Kentucky Wesleyan 63 Indiana State 52 1969 Kentucky Wesleyan 75 Southwest Missouri State 71 1970 Philadelphia Textile 76 Tennessee State 65 1971 Evansville 97 Old Dominion 82 1972 Roanoke 84 Akron 72 1973† Kentucky Wesleyan 78 Tennessee State 76 1974 Morgan State 67 Southwest Missouri State 52 1975 Old Dominion 76 New Orleans 74 1976 Puget Sound 83 Chattanooga 74 1977 Chattanooga 71 Randolph-Macon 62 1978 Cheyney 47 Wisconsin-Green Bay 40 1979 North Alabama 64 Wisconsin-Green Bay 50 1980 Virginia Union 80 New York Tech 74 1981 Florida Southern 73 Mount St. Mary's 68 1982 District of Columbia 73 Florida Southern 63 1983 Wright State 92 District of Columbia 73 1984 Central Missouri State 81 St. Augustine's 77 1985 Jacksonville State 74 South Dakota State 73 1986 Sacred Heart 93 Southeast Missouri State 87 1987 Kentucky Wesleyan 92 Gannon 74 1988 Lowell 75 Alaska-Anchorage 72 1989 North Carolina Central 73 Southeast Missouri State 46 1990 Kentucky Wesleyan 93 Cal State Bakersfield 79 1991 North Alabama 79 Bridgeport 72 1992 Virginia Union 100 Bridgeport 75 1993 Cal State Bakersfield 85 Troy State 72 1994 Cal State Bakersfield 92 Southern Indiana 86 1995 Southern Indiana 71 UC Riverside 63 1996 Fort Hays State 70 Northern Kentucky 63 1997 Cal State Bakersfield 57 Northern Kentucky 56 1998 UC Davis 83 Kentucky Wesleyan 77 1999 Kentucky Wesleyan 75 Metropolitan State 60 2000 Metropolitan State 97 Kentucky Wesleyan 79 2001 Kentucky Wesleyan 72 Washburn 63 2002 Metropolitan State 80 Kentucky Wesleyan 72 2003* Northeastern State 75 Kentucky Wesleyan 64 2004 Kennesaw State 84 Southern Indiana 59 2005 Virginia Union 63 Bryant 58 2006 Winona State 73 Virginia Union 61 2007 Barton 77 Winona State 75 2008 Winona State 87 Augusta State 76 2009† Findlay 56 Cal Poly Pomona 53 2010 Cal Poly Pomona 65 Indiana (PA) 53 2011[1] Bellarmine 71 BYU–Hawaii 68 † Overtime
* Kentucky Wesleyan subsequently forfeited its 2003 runner-up status after it was revealed they had let two ineligible transfer players play[2]
Schools ranked by most championships
School Titles Kentucky Wesleyan 8 Evansville 5 Cal State Bakersfield 3 Virginia Union 3 Metropolitan State 2 North Alabama 2 Winona State 2 Locations
Years Location 1957–1976 Roberts Municipal Stadium (Evansville, Indiana) 1977 MassMutual Center (Springfield, Massachusetts) 1978–1979 Hammons Student Center (Springfield, Missouri) 1980–1994 MassMutual Center (Springfield, Massachusetts) 1995–2000 Commonwealth Convention Center (Louisville, Kentucky) 2001 Rabobank Arena (Bakersfield, California) 2002 Roberts Municipal Stadium (Evansville, Indiana) 2003 Lakeland Center (Lakeland, Florida) 2004 Rabobank Arena (Bakersfield, California) 2005 Bison Sports Arena (Fargo, North Dakota) 2006–2011 MassMutual Center (Springfield, Massachusetts) 2012–2013 The Bank of Kentucky Center (Highland Heights, Kentucky)[3] See also
- NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship
- NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship
- NAIA national men's basketball championship
References
- ^ "Ballarmine wins national championship". The Courier-Journal. March 26, 2011. http://www.courier-journal.com/article/20110326/SPORTS12/303260051/1010/FEATURES/Bellarmine-beats-BYU-Hawaii-71-68-championship-game. Retrieved 2011-03-26.
- ^ "PLUS: COLLEGE BASKETBALL; Kentucky Wesleyan Forfeits an Honor". The New York Times. August 7, 2003. http://www.nytimes.com/2003/08/07/sports/plus-college-basketball-kentucky-wesleyan-forfeits-an-honor.html. Retrieved 2011-03-26.
- ^ "NCAA selects NKU as host for 2012 and 2013 Division II Elite Eight for men's basketball" (Press release). Northern Kentucky University Athletics. June 11, 2010. http://nkunorse.com/news/2010/6/11/MBB_0611103213.aspx. Retrieved July 21, 2010.
National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Awards • Hall of Champions • Conferences
Division I sports
and championshipsInstitutions • Athletic Directors • Baseball (Championship, CWS) • Basketball (Men, Women) • Women's Bowling • Boxing • Cross Country (Men, Women) • Fencing (Championship) • Women's Field Hockey • Football (FBS / BCS, FCS) • Golf (Men, Women) • Gymnastics (Men, Women) • Ice Hockey (Men, Women) • Lacrosse (Men, Women) • Rifle • Rowing (Women's Championship) • Skiing • Soccer (Men, Women) • Softball (Championship, CWS) • Swimming & Diving (Men, Women) • Tennis (Men, Women) • Track & Field (Men's Indoor & Outdoor, Women's Indoor & Outdoor) • Volleyball (Men, Women) • Water Polo (Men, Women) • Wrestling (Championship)
Division II Institutions • Baseball (CWS) • Basketball (Men, Women) • Football (Championship) • Soccer (Men) • Softball (CWS)
Division III Institutions • Baseball (CWS) • Basketball (Men, Women) • Football (Championship) • Soccer (Men) • Softball (CWS)
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