Bellarmine Knights men's basketball
The Bellarmine Knights men's basketball team represents Bellarmine University in Louisville, Kentucky, United States. The Knights compete in the Atlantic Sun Conference and are currently transitioning to NCAA Division I. The team competed in the Great Lakes Valley Conference from the conference's founding in 1972 through the 2019–20 season. They are currently led by head coach Scott Davenport and play their home games at Knights Hall.
History
The program began in 1950, coinciding with the opening of Bellarmine College. The team played its first game on December 27, 1950, against St. Mary's College. The team joined the Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference in 1951 and remained in the conference until 1964. The Knights won the program's first conference title under Alex Groza when the team won the 1963 KIAC regular season and tournament titles. In addition Groza was named the KIAC coach of the year. That season also marked the first bid to the NCAA College Division, now Division II, basketball tournament.Over the past 10 years, BU became one of the country's premier NCAA Division II college basketball programs. The Knights won five Great Lakes Valley Conference Tournament Championships in 2009-10, 2010–11, 2016–17, 2017–18, 2018–19 and won GLVC regular season champion in 2010-11, 2011–12, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2016–17, and 2017-18. In NCAA postseason play, the Knights made 11-straight NCAA DII postseason appearances from 2009-2019, including four Division II Final Four appearances and won the 2011 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament. The 2011 victory marked the first athletic national championship in the university's history.
On March 26, 2011, the Knights won its first NCAA Division II National Championship, led by guards Jeremy Kendle and Braydon Hobbs. The Knights defeated BYU–Hawaii for the title, 71-68. The championship game aired on national television on the CBS network. An estimated 2,906 fans were in attendance for the championship game. Most of which were Bellarmine fans that had made the trip from Louisville to watch the Knights compete in the championship held in Springfield, Massachusetts at the MassMutual Center.
Division I transition
On June 19, 2019, the university's athletic program officially announced it accepted an invitation to join the ASUN Conference and transition to NCAA Division I beginning in the 2020–21 school year. The transition will take the Knights, a Division II perennial power during the first two decades of the 21st century, into a multiyear transition process. During the four-year process to transition, Bellarmine will compete at the Division I level but cannot qualify for NCAA-organized postseason play. The Knights can compete in postseason events not organized by the NCAA, currently the College Basketball Invitational and CollegeInsider.com Tournament.Postseason
NCAA Division II tournament results
The Knights have appeared in the NCAA Division II Tournament 20 times.1963 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Oglethorpe Austin Peay | L 49–57 W 96–86 |
1965 | Regional Semifinals Regional Finals | Norfolk State Evansville | W 91-74 L 74–81 |
1969 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Alcorn State Transylvania | L 75–76 L 64–65 |
1970 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Tennessee State Transylvania | L 77-82 W 114-62 |
1977 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Eastern Illinois Youngstown State | L 72-87 L 79-81 |
1982 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Central State Wright State | L 61-63 L 86-87 |
1984 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Lewis Cal State Bakersfield | L 87-93 W 81-71 |
1989 | Regional Semifinals Regional Finals | Ferris State Kentucky Wesleyan | W 108-92 L 77-84 |
1991 | Regional Semifinals Regional 3rd Place Game | Grand Valley State Missouri Western State | L 73-78 W 94-83 |
2009 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals | Kentucky Wesleyan Lake Superior State Findlay | W 76–65 W 92–83 L 86–89 |
2010 | First Round Regional Semifinals | Central State Quincy | W 70-66 L 61-66 |
2011 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals Quarterfinals Semifinals National Championship | Indianapolis Northern Kentucky Ferris State Midwestern State Minnesota State BYU–Hawaii | W 84–70 W 87–82 W 86–66 W 70–64 W 81–74 W 71–68 |
2012 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals Quarterfinals Semifinals | Lewis Findlay Kentucky Wesleyan Alabama-Huntsville Montevallo | W 86–63 W 86–63 W 79–74 W 82-73 L 72–79 |
2013 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals | Indianapolis Southern Indiana Drury | W 67–61 W 78–55 L 61–67 |
2014 | Regional Quarterfinals | Indianapolis | L 75–80 |
2015 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals Quarterfinals Semifinals | Drury Lake Superior State Indianapolis Minnesota State–Moorhead Florida Southern | W 84–60 W 85–59 W 81–72 W 92-75 L 76–79 |
2016 | Regional Quarterfinals | Ferris State | L 84–100 |
2017 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals Quarterfinals Semifinals | Wisconsin–Parkside Quincy Findlay Colorado Mines Fairmont State | W 72–61 W 93–64 W 84–66 W 92-72 L 68–79 |
2018 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals | Truman Findlay | W 82-65 L 73–74 |
2019 | Regional Quarterfinals Regional Semifinals Regional Finals | Walsh Findlay Southern Indiana | W 81-61 W 74-59 L 69–74 |
Record year-by-year
- Totals updated through 2018-19 season.
Facility