2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
The 2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 6, 2018. The first tournament was the 2K Sports Classic and the season concluded with the Final Four in Minneapolis on April 8, 2019. Practices officially began on September 28, 2018.
Rule changes
On February 22, 2019, the NCAA announced a set of experimental rules that it would use in the 2019 National Invitation Tournament.The following rules were also used in the 2018 NIT:
- The three-point line was moved to the FIBA standard of. When the arc approached the sideline, it changed to a line parallel to and from the sideline.
- The free-throw lane was widened from the current college standard of 12 feet to the NBA standard of 16 feet.
- After an offensive rebound, the shot clock was reset to 20 seconds instead of the current NCAA standard of 30.
- Team foul counts, for purposes of determining bonus free throws, were reset to zero at the 10-minute mark of each half, effectively dividing the game into quarters for that purpose.
- The "one-and-one" was eliminated. All bonus free throw situations resulted in two free throws for the non-fouled team. This mirrored current practice in NCAA women's basketball, which has been played in quarters since the 2015–16 season.
- Teams entered the bonus upon the fifth team foul in each 10-minute segment.
- The team foul count was reset to zero at the start of any overtime period. Teams entered the bonus upon the fourth team foul in an overtime period.
- In a completely new feature, the NCAA adopted the NBA's bonus rule regarding team fouls in the last two minutes of any period. Teams entered the bonus on the second team foul in the last two minutes of a ten-minute segment or overtime period, regardless of the total team foul count at that point of the period.
Season headlines
- May 23, 2018 – The NCAA announced its Academic Progress Rate sanctions for the 2018–19 school year. A total of nine programs in eight sports were declared ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the required APR benchmark, including the following Division I men's basketball team:
- *Alabama A&M
- May 29 – Conference USA announced a new men's basketball scheduling format that took effect with the 2018–19 season. The league now plays an 18-game schedule formatted as follows:
- * During the first 14 games of the conference season, each team plays its designated travel partner home-and-home, and single games against every other team.
- * At this point, teams are placed into three groups based on their conference standings through 14 games, with the top five teams in one group, the next five in a second group, and the bottom four teams in the final group. Teams play within their grouping for the final four games of the conference season, with home and away games determined by a preset formula.
- * Each team will be locked into a seed for the C-USA tournament that corresponds to its group. For example, teams in the top group will be assured the top five seeds. The specific seedings will be determined by conference record across the full league schedule.
- June 4 – The Sun Belt Conference announced a new men's basketball scheduling format similar to that announced by Conference USA the previous week. Effective with the 2019–20 season, the league was to have played a 20-game schedule formatted as follows:
- * The conference would split into East and West Divisions for scheduling purposes, though this split would not affect overall league standings.
- ** East: Appalachian State, Coastal Carolina, Georgia Southern, Georgia State, South Alabama, Troy
- ** West: Arkansas State, Little Rock, Louisiana, Louisiana–Monroe, Texas State, UT Arlington
- * For the first 16 games of the conference season, each team would play home-and-home against other divisional members and single games against teams in the other division.
- * After 16 conference games, teams would be divided into four "pods" based on their conference standings at that time. The top three teams would be assigned to Pod A, the next three to Pod B, and so on through Pod D for the bottom three teams. The final four games for each team would be home-and-homes against the other two teams in that pod.
- * Each team would be locked into a seed for the Sun Belt tournament that corresponds to its pod. For example, teams in Pod A would be assured the top three seeds. Unlike the C-USA system, the specific seed would be based strictly on standings in the final four conference games—not overall conference record.
- June 18 – Purdue University Fort Wayne, which was set to begin operation on July 1 following the dissolution of Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne, announced that the athletic program that it would inherit from IPFW, previously known as the Fort Wayne Mastodons, would become the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons. PFW also changed its colors from IPFW's former blue and silver scheme to the old gold and black used by its new parent institution.
- August 8 – In response to the sport's ongoing corruption scandal, the NCAA announced a suite of major changes to its rules governing college basketball:
- * Certain high school players and college players with remaining eligibility will now be allowed to have formal relationships with agents while retaining college eligibility. These agents must be certified by the NCAA. College players can be represented if they have formally requested an evaluation of their NBA prospects from the league. Should the NBA change the age limit for the draft to once again allow players to be drafted directly from high school, the rule also allows for high school players to be represented, effective on the July 1 before their senior year, if USA Basketball has designated them as "elite senior prospects". However, these relationships will be allowed only during the draft process, and must be terminated if the player returns to school.
- * Certain players who declare for the NBA draft but are not selected will be free to return to their former schools, as long as they have not signed professional contracts, or have not complied with NCAA rules for relationships with agents, in the meantime. However, this privilege is only extended to players who have requested NBA evaluation of their draft prospects and have been invited to the NBA Draft Combine.
- * School presidents, chancellors, and athletics staff members are now contractually required to comply with all NCAA investigations. This effectively gives the NCAA subpoena power in its investigations, which it previously lacked.
- * Presidents and chancellors are now personally accountable to the NCAA for athletic department compliance with NCAA rules.
- * The NCAA and its Committee on Infractions can now use information obtained in outside investigations in its infractions process. Previously, the NCAA could not use such information.
- August 22 – The NCAA announced that effective immediately, the RPI will no longer be used in the selection process for the Division I men's tournament. It was replaced by the NCAA Evaluation Tool, which takes into account the following:
- * Game results
- * Strength of schedule
- * Location
- * Scoring margin — Teams will receive no added credit for victory margins above 10 points. Additionally, overtime games will be assigned a scoring margin of 1 point, regardless of the actual score.
- * Net offensive and defensive efficiency
- * Quality of wins and losses — The NCAA will continue to use its "quadrant" system, introduced for last year's tournament selection process, to classify individual wins and losses.
- * All games will be evaluated equally; there is no bonus or penalty for when a game is played within the season.
- September 10 – The Northeast Conference announced that Merrimack College would start a transition from the NCAA Division II Northeast-10 Conference and join the NEC effective July 1, 2019. The Warriors will not be eligible for the NCAA tournament until becoming a full D-I member in 2023–24.
- September 28 – LSU player Wayde Sims, set to play his junior season for the Tigers, was killed in a shooting near the Southern University campus in Baton Rouge, home to both schools.
- October 3 – Long Island University announced that it would merge its two current athletic programs—the LIU Brooklyn Blackbirds, full members of the NEC, and the Division II LIU Post Pioneers—effective with the 2019–20 school year. The new program will compete under the LIU name with a new nickname and maintain LIU Brooklyn's Division I and NEC memberships. This change will have minimal effect on the existing LIU Brooklyn men's basketball program, as LIU has announced that the unified basketball team will be based at the Brooklyn campus.
- October 23 – The Associated Press preseason All-American team was released. Purdue guard Carsen Edwards was the leading vote-getter. Joining him on the team were North Carolina forward Luke Maye, Duke guard R. J. Barrett, Kansas forward Dedric Lawson, Wisconsin forward Ethan Happ and Nevada forward Caleb Martin.
- January 11, 2019 – The Western Athletic Conference announced that Dixie State University would start a transition from Division II and join the conference in July 2020.
- January 19 – The last two undefeated teams lost. First, Michigan suffered a 54-64 point loss at Wisconsin. Later on in the day, Virginia lost on the road to Duke by the score of 72-70.
- February 13 – Florida A&M announces four athletic teams, including men's basketball, are ineligible for postseason play due to failure to meet the APR multi-year threshold.
- February 20
- * North Carolina's 88–72 upset of top-ranked Duke was overshadowed by a freak injury suffered by superstar Duke freshman Zion Williamson. On the Blue Devils' first possession of the game, Williamson's left shoe catastrophically failed, with the sole completely separating from the midsole. Williamson suffered a sprained right knee in the incident, and did not return to the game. The following day, the injury was confirmed to be minor; although Williamson was listed as day-to-day immediately after the injury, he did not return to action until the Blue Devils' ACC Tournament opener on March 14.
- * On his way home from a postgame meal after Syracuse's 69–49 upset of Louisville, Orange head coach Jim Boeheim was involved in a fatal car accident. A car crashed on Interstate 690 in Syracuse, and the occupants attempted to cross over to the median. Boeheim hit one of them while swerving to avoid the disabled vehicle, and the victim died in a local hospital. Neither driver involved in the incident was found to be impaired, and Syracuse's police chief initially indicated that no charges would be filed in the case.
- March 5 – Kansas was eliminated from the race for the Big 12 Conference regular-season title with an 81–68 loss at Oklahoma, ending the Jayhawks' streak of consecutive conference regular-season titles at a Division I men's record of 14.
- March 7 – The district attorney for Onondaga County, New York issued his report on the fatal car accident in which Jim Boeheim was involved. According to the report, the disabled vehicle did not have lights on, and also had inoperable rear marker lights. Additionally, the passengers of that vehicle, including the individual who was struck and killed, were wearing dark clothing. Boeheim was officially cleared of wrongdoing, and no charges would be filed against anyone involved.
- March 8 – In further fallout from the corruption scandal, LSU suspended head coach Will Wade indefinitely. This action came the day after it was revealed that FBI wiretaps had intercepted calls between Wade and Christian Dawkins, an aspiring agent who had been convicted on federal felony charges relating to the corruption scandal, during one of which Wade referenced a "strong-ass offer" made to a recruit.
- March 15 – Long Island University announced that its merged athletic program would compete as the LIU Sharks.
- April 14 – Will Wade was reinstated as LSU head coach after a meeting between the LSU athletic department, Wade, and NCAA compliance officials.
Milestones and records
- During the season, the following players reached the 2,000 career point milestone – Marshall guard Jon Elmore, Montana State guard Tyler Hall, Wofford guard Fletcher Magee, Cornell guard Matt Morgan, Lipscomb guard Garrison Mathews, Georgia Southern guard Tookie Brown, Eastern Kentucky forward Nick Mayo, Northern Colorado guard Jordan Davis, Hofstra guard Justin Wright-Foreman, Wisconsin forward Ethan Happ, Charlotte guard Jon Davis, UNC Greensboro guard Francis Alonso, Purdue Fort Wayne guard John Konchar, Appalachian State guard Ronshad Shabazz, Northern Kentucky forward Drew McDonald, Nevada swingman Jordan Caroline, Wyoming guard Justin James, Mississippi State guard Quinndary Weatherspoon, and Clemson guard Marcquise Reed.
- * Konchar additionally became the first Division I men's player with 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds, 500 assists and 200 steals in his career.
- Two players reached the 3,000-point milestone in February. First, Campbell guard Chris Clemons reached the mark on February 16 in the Fighting Camels' 76–71 loss to Presbyterian. Then, on February 23, South Dakota State forward Mike Daum reached the mark in the Jackrabbits' 94–89 win over South Dakota.
- November 12 – Buffalo was ranked 25th in the AP top 25 poll - signifying the first time in school history that the program cracked the top 25.
- November 24 – High Point head coach Tubby Smith won his 600th career Division I game, as his Panthers defeated East Carolina 55–52.
- December 3 — Furman was ranked 25th in the AP top 25 poll - signifying the first time in school history that the program cracked the top 25.
- December 7 — Mike Daum became the Summit League's all-time leading scorer. In a 42-point outing against Southern, Daum passed former Oral Roberts forward Caleb Green's conference record 2,504 points.
- December 21 – Chris Clemons of Campbell became the Big South Conference's all-time leading scorer. He passed VMI guard Reggie Williams' 2,556 career points for the honor.
- January 19 – Montana State's Tyler Hall became the Big Sky Conference all-time leading scorer, breaking a mark of 2,169 set the previous season by Bogdan Bliznyuk of Eastern Washington.
- February 23 – Syracuse drew a crowd of 35,642 in the Carrier Dome for its 75–65 loss to then top-ranked Duke, breaking the school's own record attendance of 35,446 for an on-campus college basketball game. Not only was this a record, it was also greater than the home attendances of more than half of Division I men's teams in the entire regular season.
- February 25 – Wofford made the AP top 25 for the first time in the school's history, entering the poll at #24.
- March 3 – Marshall guard Jon Elmore became the Conference USA all-time leading scorer, passing UTEP’s Stefon Jackson. Earlier in the season, Elmore became the conference’s all-time assist leader, making him the only player currently leading a conference in both categories all-time.
- * Later in the season, in a quarterfinal match of the CollegeInsider Postseason Tournament, Elmore made three 3-pointers to become Conference USA's all-time leader in that category. He surpassed the previous record of 345 set by Charlotte's Jobey Thomas in 2002.
- March 15 – Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo won his 600th career Division I game as the Spartans defeated Ohio State 77–70 in the quarterfinals of the Big Ten Conference Tournament.
- March 16 – Washington guard Matisse Thybulle broke former Oregon State star Gary Payton’s 29 year-old Pac-12 Conference career steals record as he collected his 322nd steal in the Huskies’ Pac-12 Tournament final loss to Oregon.
- March 20 – Wichita State head coach Gregg Marshall won his 500th career Division I game as the Shockers defeated Furman 76–70 in the 1st round of the NIT.
- March 21 – The first day of the first round of the NCAA Tournament saw one significant milestone achieved and one major record broken:
- * First, in an afternoon West Regional game, Murray State's Ja Morant became the first player with a triple-double in the NCAA tournament since Draymond Green in 2012, with 17 points, 11 rebounds, and 16 assists in the Racers' 83–64 win over Marquette.
- * Then, in a late-evening Midwest Regional game, Wofford's Fletcher Magee became the Division I career leader in three-pointers, surpassing Oakland's Travis Bader in the Terriers' 84–68 win over Seton Hall. Magee's seven three-pointers gave him 509 for his career to Bader's previous record of 504. This was also Wofford's first-ever NCAA Tournament win.
Conference membership changes
School | Former Conference | New Conference |
California Baptist | PacWest | WAC |
Hampton | MEAC | Big South |
Liberty | Big South | ASUN |
North Alabama | Gulf South | ASUN |
North Dakota | Big Sky | Summit League |
USC Upstate | ASUN | Big South |
In addition to the schools changing conferences, the 2018–19 season was the last for Savannah State in D-I with its decision to reclassify all of its sports to D-II.
Also, one D-I member adopted a new institutional and athletic identity. The 2017–18 school year was the last for Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne as a single institution; the school's health sciences programs were taken over by Indiana University as Indiana University Fort Wayne, while all other academic programs are now governed by Purdue University as Purdue University Fort Wayne. As noted previously, the former IPFW athletic program was inherited by PFW and is now known as the Purdue Fort Wayne Mastodons.
Arenas
New arenas
- Elon began play at the new Schar Center, which replaced their home of 69 seasons, Alumni Gym.
- Marquette along with the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks moved into the new Fiserv Forum, which replaced Bradley Center after 30 years.
- After 32 seasons at the off-campus Burton Coliseum, McNeese State opened the new on-campus Health and Human Performance Education Complex.
- The two new Division I entries for 2018 continued to play at existing on-campus facilities. California Baptist plays at the CBU Events Center, which opened in 2017, and North Alabama plays at Flowers Hall, their home since 1972.
Arenas reopening
- Cincinnati returned to Fifth Third Arena.
- Houston initially planned to reopen the renamed Fertitta Center by the start of the 2018–19 season, but the new arena did not open until December 1, 2018, six games into the season. The Cougars' first game in the renovated facility was a 65–61 upset of then-#18 Oregon.
- Northwestern returned to Welsh–Ryan Arena.
- Villanova returned the bulk of its schedule to the renamed Finneran Pavilion.
Arenas closing
Temporary arenas
- With the reopening of Fertitta Center delayed, Houston began the 2018–19 season at Texas Southern's Health and Physical Education Arena, where the Cougars played most of their 2017–18 home games.
- Due to delays in the construction of the new UPMC Events Center, originally scheduled to open in January 2019 but since delayed to that summer, Robert Morris played its entire home schedule at the Student Recreation and Fitness Center, a facility that opened in 2017 at the on-campus North Athletic Complex as part of the UPMC Events Center project.
Season outlook
Pre–season polls
The top 25 from the AP and USA Today Coaches Polls.Regular season
Early season tournaments
Upsets
An upset is a victory by an underdog team. In the context of NCAA Division I Men's Basketball this generally constitutes an unranked team defeating a team currently ranked In the Top 25. This list will highlight those upsets of ranked teams by unranked teams as well as upsets of #1 teams. Rankings are from the AP Poll.Bold type indicates winning teams in "true road games"-i.e., those played on an opponent's home court.
Winner | Score | Loser | Date | Tournament/Event |
Buffalo | 99–94OT | #13 West Virginia | November 9, 2018 | |
Indiana | 96–73 | #24 Marquette | November 14, 2018 | Gavitt Tipoff Games |
UConn | 83–76 | #15 Syracuse | November 15, 2018 | 2K Empire Classic/Rivalry |
Iowa | 77–69 | #13 Oregon | November 15, 2018 | 2K Empire Classic |
Furman | 76–68OT | #8 Villanova | November 17, 2018 | |
Arizona State | 72–67 | #15 Mississippi State | November 19, 2018 | MGM Resorts Main Event |
Lipscomb | 73–64 | #18 TCU | November 20, 2018 | |
#3 Gonzaga | 89–87 | #1 Duke | November 21, 2018 | Maui Invitational |
Creighton | 87–82 | #16 Clemson | November 21, 2018 | Cayman Islands Classic |
Texas | 92–89 | #7 North Carolina | November 22, 2018 | Las Vegas Invitational |
Villanova | 66–60 | #14 Florida State | November 25, 2018 | AdvoCare Invitational |
Oklahoma State | 90–77 | #19 LSU | November 25, 2018 | AdvoCare Invitational |
Texas Southern | 89–84 | #18 Oregon | November 26, 2018 | |
Penn State | 63–62 | #13 Virginia Tech | November 27, 2018 | ACC–Big Ten Challenge |
Louisville | 82–78OT | #9 Michigan State | November 27, 2018 | ACC–Big Ten Challenge |
Syracuse | 72–62 | #16 Ohio State | November 28, 2018 | ACC–Big Ten Challenge |
Radford | 62–59 | #17 Texas | November 30, 2018 | |
Marquette | 83–71 | #12 Kansas State | December 1, 2018 | |
Houston | 65–61 | #18 Oregon | December 1, 2018 | |
Minnesota | 85–78 | #24 Nebraska | December 5, 2018 | |
Purdue | 62–60 | #23 Maryland | December 6, 2018 | |
Seton Hall | 84–83OT | #9 Kentucky | December 8, 2018 | Citi Hoops Classic |
Tulsa | 47–46 | #16 Kansas State | December 8, 2018 | |
Marquette | 74–69OT | #12 Wisconsin | December 8, 2018 | |
#7 Tennessee | 76–73 | #1 Gonzaga | December 9, 2018 | Jerry Colangelo Classic |
Penn | 78–75 | #17 Villanova | December 11, 2018 | Philadelphia Big 5 |
Old Dominion | 68–62 | #25 Syracuse | December 15, 2018 | |
Vanderbilt | 81–65 | #18 Arizona State | December 17, 2018 | |
NC State | 78–71 | #7 Auburn | December 19, 2018 | |
LSU | 75–57 | #24 Furman | December 21, 2018 | |
#18 Arizona State | 80–76 | #1 Kansas | December 22, 2018 | |
Princeton | 67–66 | #17 Arizona State | December 29, 2018 | |
Western Kentucky | 83–76 | #15 Wisconsin | December 29, 2018 | |
St. John's | 89–69 | #16 Marquette | January 1, 2019 | |
Maryland | 74–72 | #24 Nebraska | January 2, 2019 | |
Purdue | 86–70 | #25 Iowa | January 3, 2019 | |
Minnesota | 59–52 | #22 Wisconsin | January 3, 2018 | |
Alabama | 77–75 | #13 Kentucky | January 5, 2019 | |
Iowa State | 77–60 | #5 Kansas | January 5, 2019 | |
New Mexico | 85–58 | #6 Nevada | January 5, 2019 | |
Villanova | 76–71 | #24 St. John's | January 8, 2019 | |
Baylor | 73–70 | #20 Iowa State | January 8, 2019 | |
South Carolina | 87–82OT | #14 Mississippi State | January 8, 2019 | |
Temple | 73–69 | #17 Houston | January 9, 2019 | |
Ole Miss | 82–67 | #11 Auburn | January 9, 2019 | |
Rutgers | 64–61 | #16 Ohio State | January 9, 2019 | |
Maryland | 78–75 | #22 Indiana | January 11, 2019 | |
Kansas State | 58–57 | #20 Iowa State | January 12, 2019 | |
Louisville | 83–62 | #12 North Carolina | January 12, 2019 | |
Ole Miss | 81–77 | #14 Mississippi State | January 12, 2019 | |
Iowa | 72–62 | #16 Ohio State | January 12, 2019 | |
DePaul | 79–71 | #24 St. John's | January 12, 2019 | |
Nebraska | 66–51 | #25 Indiana | January 14, 2019 | |
Pittsburgh | 75–62 | #11 Florida State | January 14, 2019 | |
Syracuse | 95–91OT | #1 Duke | January 14, 2019 | |
Wake Forest | 71–67 | #17 NC State | January 15, 2019 | |
LSU | 83–69 | #18 Ole Miss | January 15, 2019 | |
Kansas State | 74–61 | #20 Oklahoma | January 16, 2019 | |
Iowa State | 68–64 | #8 Texas Tech | January 16, 2019 | |
Wisconsin | 64–54 | #2 Michigan | January 19, 2019 | |
West Virginia | 65–64 | #7 Kansas | January 19, 2019 | |
Purdue | 70–55 | #25 Indiana | January 19, 2019 | Rivalry/Indiana National Guard Governor's Cup |
Baylor | 73–62 | #8 Texas Tech | January 19, 2019 | |
Texas | 75-72 | #20 Oklahoma | January 19, 2019 | |
Boston College | 87–82 | #11 Florida State | January 20, 2019 | |
South Carolina | 80–77 | #16 Auburn | January 22, 2019 | |
Kansas State | 58–45 | #14 Texas Tech | January 22, 2019 | |
Northern Illinois | 77–75 | #14 Buffalo | January 22, 2019 | |
Alabama | 74–53 | #20 Ole Miss | January 22, 2019 | |
Illinois | 78–67 | #13 Maryland | January 26, 2019 | B1G Super Saturday |
Purdue | 73–63 | #6 Michigan State | January 27, 2019 | |
Minnesota | 92–87 | #19 Iowa | January 27, 2019 | |
Texas | 73–63 | #11 Kansas | January 29, 2019 | |
Alabama | 83–79 | #22 Mississippi State | January 29, 2019 | |
Iowa | 74–59 | #5 Michigan | February 1, 2019 | |
Bowling Green | 92–88 | #18 Buffalo | February 1, 2019 | |
Arkansas | 90–89 | #19 LSU | February 2, 2019 | |
Indiana | 79–75OT | #6 Michigan State | February 2, 2019 | |
Illinois | 79–74 | #9 Michigan State | February 5, 2019 | |
St. John's | 70–69 | #10 Marquette | February 5, 2019 | |
Kansas State | 74–67 | #13 Kansas | February 5, 2019 | Sunflower Showdown |
Clemson | 59–51 | #11 Virginia Tech | February 9, 2019 | |
TCU | 92–83 | #17 Iowa State | February 9, 2019 | |
Penn State | 75–69 | #6 Michigan | February 12, 2019 | |
#5 Kentucky | 86–69 | #1 Tennessee | February 16, 2019 | Rivalry |
St. John's | 71–65 | #13 Villanova | February 17, 2019 | |
Baylor | 73–69 | #19 Iowa State | February 19, 2019 | |
Georgetown | 85–73 | #17 Villanova | February 20, 2019 | |
Syracuse | 69–49 | #18 Louisville | February 20, 2019 | |
Florida | 82–77OT | #13 LSU | February 20, 2019 | |
#8 North Carolina | 88–72 | #1 Duke | February 20, 2019 | Rivalry |
San Diego State | 65–57 | #6 Nevada | February 20, 2019 | |
TCU | 75–72 | #19 Iowa State | February 23, 2019 | |
Xavier | 66–54 | #17 Villanova | February 24, 2019 | |
Ohio State | 90–70 | #22 Iowa | February 26, 2019 | |
Indiana | 75–732OT | #19 Wisconsin | February 26, 2019 | |
Penn State | 78–61 | #17 Maryland | February 27, 2019 | |
Villanova | 67–61 | #10 Marquette | February 27, 2019 | |
California | 76–73 | #25 Washington | February 28, 2019 | |
Indiana | 63–62 | #6 Michigan State | March 2, 2019 | |
UCF | 69–64 | #8 Houston | March 2, 2019 | |
Rutgers | 86–72 | #22 Iowa | March 2, 2019 | |
Utah State | 81–76 | #12 Nevada | March 2, 2019 | |
Creighton | 66–60 | #10 Marquette | March 3, 2019 | |
Minnesota | 73–69 | #11 Purdue | March 5, 2019 | |
Oklahoma | 81–68 | #13 Kansas | March 5, 2019 | |
Seton Hall | 73–64 | #16 Marquette | March 6, 2019 | |
Auburn | 84–80 | #5 Tennessee | March 9, 2019 | |
Seton Hall | 79–75 | #23 Villanova | March 9, 2019 | |
Georgetown | 86–84 | #16 Marquette | March 9, 2019 | |
Temple | 67–62 | #25 UCF | March 9, 2019 | |
Saint Mary's | 60–47 | #1 Gonzaga | March 12, 2019 | West Coast Tournament |
Nebraska | 69–61 | #21 Maryland | March 14, 2019 | Big Ten Tournament |
West Virginia | 79–74 | #7 Texas Tech | March 14, 2019 | Big 12 Tournament |
Florida | 76–73 | #9 LSU | March 15, 2019 | SEC Tournament |
Minnesota | 75–73 | #13 Purdue | March 15, 2019 | Big Ten Tournament |
Iowa State | 63–59 | #15 Kansas State | March 15, 2019 | Big 12 Tournament |
San Diego State | 65–56 | #14 Nevada | March 15, 2019 | Mountain West Tournament |
Seton Hall | 81–79 | #23 Marquette | March 15, 2019 | Big East Tournament |
Iowa State | 78–66 | #17 Kansas | March 16, 2019 | Big 12 Tournament |
Conference winners and tournaments
Each of the 32 Division I athletic conferences ends its regular season 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. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2019 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament.Conference | Regular season first place | :Category:NCAA Division I men's basketball conference players of the year|Conference Player of the Year | :Category:NCAA Division I men's basketball conference coaches of the year|Conference Coach of the Year | Conference tournament | Tournament venue | Tournament winner |
America East Conference | Vermont | Anthony Lamb, Vermont | John Becker, Vermont | 2019 America East Men's Basketball Tournament | Campus sites | Vermont |
American Athletic Conference | Houston | Jarron Cumberland, Cincinnati | Kelvin Sampson, Houston | 2019 American Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | FedEx Forum | Cincinnati |
Atlantic 10 Conference | VCU | Jón Axel Guðmundsson, Davidson | Mike Rhoades, VCU | 2019 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament | Barclays Center | Saint Louis |
Atlantic Coast Conference | Virginia and North Carolina | Zion Williamson, Duke | Tony Bennett, Virginia | 2019 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament | Spectrum Center | Duke |
Atlantic Sun Conference | Lipscomb and Liberty | Garrison Mathews, Lipscomb | Casey Alexander, Lipscomb | 2019 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament | Campus sites | Liberty |
Big 12 Conference | Kansas State and Texas Tech | Jarrett Culver, Texas Tech | Chris Beard, Texas Tech | 2019 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament | Sprint Center | Iowa State |
Big East Conference | Villanova | Markus Howard, Marquette | Jay Wright, Villanova | 2019 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament | Madison Square Garden | Villanova |
Big Sky Conference | Montana | Jordan Davis, Northern Colorado | Jeff Linder, Northern Colorado | 2019 Big Sky Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | CenturyLink Arena | Montana |
Big South Conference | Campbell and Radford | Chris Clemons, Campbell | Kevin McGeehan, Campbell | 2019 Big South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | First round: Campus sites Quarterfinals/semifinals: #1 seed Final: Top surviving seed | Gardner–Webb |
Big Ten Conference | Michigan State and Purdue | Cassius Winston, Michigan State | Matt Painter, Purdue | 2019 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | United Center | Michigan State |
Big West Conference | UC Irvine | Lamine Diane, Cal State Northridge | Russell Turner, UC Irvine | 2019 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Honda Center | UC Irvine |
Colonial Athletic Association | Hofstra | Justin Wright-Foreman, Hofstra | Joe Mihalich, Hofstra | 2019 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament | North Charleston Coliseum | Northeastern |
Conference USA | Old Dominion | B. J. Stith, Old Dominion | Jeff Jones, Old Dominion | 2019 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament | Ford Center | Old Dominion |
Horizon League | Wright State and Northern Kentucky | Drew McDonald, Northern Kentucky | Scott Nagy, Wright State | 2019 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament | Quarterfinals: Campus sites Semifinals and final: Little Caesars Arena | Northern Kentucky |
Ivy League | Harvard and Yale | Miye Oni, Yale | Mike Martin, Brown | 2019 Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament | Payne Whitney Gymnasium | Yale |
Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference | Iona | Cameron Young, Quinnipiac | Tim Cluess, Iona | 2019 MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament | Times Union Center | Iona |
Mid-American Conference | Buffalo and Toledo | C. J. Massinburg, Buffalo | Nate Oats, Buffalo | 2019 Mid-American Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | First round: Campus sites Remainder: Quicken Loans Arena | Buffalo |
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference | Norfolk State | R. J. Cole, Howard | Robert Jones, Norfolk State | 2019 MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament | Norfolk Scope | North Carolina Central |
Missouri Valley Conference | Loyola and Drake | Marques Townes, Loyola | Darian DeVries, Drake | 2019 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Enterprise Center | Bradley |
Mountain West Conference | Nevada and Utah State | Sam Merrill, Utah State | Craig Smith, Utah State | 2019 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Thomas & Mack Center | Utah State |
Northeast Conference | Saint Francis and Fairleigh Dickinson | Keith Braxton, Saint Francis | Rob Krimmel, Saint Francis | 2019 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Campus sites | Fairleigh Dickinson |
Ohio Valley Conference | Belmont and Murray State | Ja Morant, Murray State | Rick Byrd, Belmont | 2019 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Ford Center | Murray State |
Pac-12 Conference | Washington | Jaylen Nowell, Washington | Mike Hopkins, Washington | 2019 Pac-12 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | T-Mobile Arena | Oregon |
Patriot League | Colgate and Bucknell | Rapolas Ivanauskas, Colgate | Matt Langel, Colgate | 2019 Patriot League Men's Basketball Tournament | Campus sites | Colgate |
Southeastern Conference | LSU | Grant Williams, Tennessee | Kermit Davis, Ole Miss | 2019 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament | Bridgestone Arena | Auburn |
Southern Conference | Wofford | Fletcher Magee, Wofford | Mike Young, Wofford | 2019 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | U.S. Cellular Center | Wofford |
Southland Conference | Sam Houston State | Cameron Delaney, Sam Houston State | Joe Golding, Abilene Christian | 2019 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Leonard E. Merrell Center | Abilene Christian |
Southwestern Athletic Conference | Prairie View A&M | Jeremy Combs, Texas Southern | Byron Smith, Prairie View A&M | 2019 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament | Quarterfinals: Campus sites Semifinals and final: Bill Harris Arena | Prairie View A&M |
Summit League | South Dakota State | Mike Daum, South Dakota State | Derrin Hansen, Omaha | 2019 Summit League Men's Basketball Tournament | Denny Sanford Premier Center | North Dakota State |
Sun Belt Conference | Georgia State | Tookie Brown, Georgia Southern | Chris Ogden, UT Arlington | 2019 Sun Belt Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | First round: Campus sites Remainder: Lakefront Arena | Georgia State |
West Coast Conference | Gonzaga | Rui Hachimura, Gonzaga | Mark Few, Gonzaga | 2019 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament | Orleans Arena | Saint Mary's |
Western Athletic Conference | New Mexico State | Jake Toolson, Utah Valley | Chris Jans, New Mexico State | 2019 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament | Orleans Arena | New Mexico State |
Statistical leaders
Postseason
NCAA Tournament
Tournament upsets
For this list, an "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 21 | Murray State | 83–64 | Marquette | West | First Round |
March 22 | UC Irvine | 70–64 | Kansas State | South | First Round |
March 22 | Oregon | 72–54 | Wisconsin | South | First Round |
March 22 | Liberty | 80–76 | Mississippi State | East | First Round |
NIT Tournament
CBI Tournament
CIT Tournament
Conference standings
Award winners
2019 Consensus All-America team
Major player of the year awards
- Wooden Award: Zion Williamson, Duke
- Naismith Award: Zion Williamson, Duke
- Associated Press Player of the Year: Zion Williamson, Duke
- NABC Player of the Year: Zion Williamson, Duke
- Oscar Robertson Trophy : Zion Williamson, Duke
- Sporting News Player of the Year: Zion Williamson, Duke
Major freshman of the year awards
- Wayman Tisdale Award : Zion Williamson, Duke
- NABC Freshman of the Year: Zion Williamson, Duke
- Sporting News Freshman of the Year: Zion Williamson, Duke
Major coach of the year awards
- Associated Press Coach of the Year: Chris Beard, Texas Tech
- Henry Iba Award : Rick Barnes, Tennessee
- NABC Coach of the Year: Matt Painter, Purdue
- Naismith College Coach of the Year: Rick Barnes, Tennessee
- Sporting News Coach of the Year: Mike Young, Wofford
Other major awards
- Bob Cousy Award : Ja Morant, Murray State
- Jerry West Award : RJ Barrett, Duke
- Julius Erving Award : Rui Hachimura, Gonzaga
- Karl Malone Award : Zion Williamson, Duke
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Award : Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
- Pete Newell Big Man Award : Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
- NABC Defensive Player of the Year: De'Andre Hunter, Virginia
- Naismith Defensive Player of the Year: Matisse Thybulle, Washington
- Senior CLASS Award : Luke Maye, North Carolina
- Robert V. Geasey Trophy : Phil Booth, Villanova
- Haggerty Award : Myles Powell, Seton Hall
- Ben Jobe Award : James Jones, Yale
- Hugh Durham Award : Darian DeVries, Drake
- Jim Phelan Award : Ritchie McKay, Liberty
- Lefty Driesell Award : Matisse Thybulle, Washington
- Lou Henson Award : Fletcher Magee, Wofford
- Lute Olson Award : Ja Morant, Murray State
- Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award : Robert Jones, Norfolk State
- Academic All-American of the Year : Joe Sherburne, UMBC
- Elite 90 Award : Davide Moretti, Texas Tech
- USBWA Most Courageous Award: The 2019 men's award was not presented to a figure involved with the Division I game. This year's recipient was involved with the NCAA Division II game — namely Ericka Downey, wife of Northeastern State men's head coach Mike Downey.
Coaching changes