2000 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament























2000 NCAA Division I
Men's Basketball Tournament

2000FinalFour.png
2000 Final Four logo

Season1999–00
Teams64
Finals site
RCA Dome
Indianapolis, Indiana
Champions
Michigan State Spartans (2nd title, 2nd title game,
4th Final Four)
Runner-up
Florida Gators (1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Semifinalists

  • North Carolina Tar Heels (15th Final Four)


  • Wisconsin Badgers (2nd Final Four)

Winning coach
Tom Izzo (1st title)
MOP
Mateen Cleaves (Michigan State)
Attendance624,777
Top scorer
Morris Peterson Michigan State
(105 points)


NCAA Division I Men's Tournaments
«1999

2001»

The 2000 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament involved 64 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 16, 2000, and ended with the championship game on April 3 in Indianapolis, Indiana at the RCA Dome. A total of 63 games were played.


Due to a string of upsets throughout the tournament, only one top-four seed advanced to the Final Four. That was Michigan State, who finished the season as the #1 team in the nation and was given the top seed in the Midwest Region and the top overall seed. The highest seeded of the other three Final Four teams was Florida, who won the East Region as the fifth seed. Two eight-seeds made the Final Four, with Wisconsin and North Carolina rounding the bracket out. Wisconsin won the West Region while North Carolina won the South Region, with both regions seeing their top three seeds eliminated during the first weekend of play.


Michigan State won their first national championship since 1979 by defeating Florida 89-76 in the final game. Mateen Cleaves of Michigan State was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player, while Morris Peterson was its leading scorer.


Despite the string of upsets, no seed lower than 11 won a game in the tournament. The only 11 seed to win was Pepperdine, which defeated Indiana in the East Region's first round in what turned out to be Bob Knight's last game coaching the Hoosiers before his firing that offseason. Also, two teams that qualified as 10 seeds advanced to the Sweet Sixteen as Seton Hall in the East and Gonzaga in the West both advanced.


Because of the upsets, the Elite Eight consisted of one top seed (Michigan State), one second seed (Iowa State), one third seed (Oklahoma State), one fifth seed (Florida), one sixth seed (Purdue), one seventh seed (Tulsa), and two eighth seeds (Wisconsin and North Carolina).




Contents





  • 1 Locations

    • 1.1 First & Second Rounds


    • 1.2 Regional Sites and Final Four



  • 2 Teams


  • 3 Bids by conference


  • 4 Final Four

    • 4.1 National Semifinals


    • 4.2 Championship Game



  • 5 Bracket

    • 5.1 East Regional – Syracuse, New York


    • 5.2 South Regional – Austin, Texas


    • 5.3 Midwest Regional – Auburn Hills, Michigan


    • 5.4 West Regional – Albuquerque, New Mexico


    • 5.5 Final Four at Indianapolis, Indiana



  • 6 Television


  • 7 Radio


  • 8 Local radio


  • 9 See also


  • 10 References




Locations




2000 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament is located in the US

Tucson

Tucson



Salt Lake City

Salt Lake City



Minneapolis

Minneapolis



Cleveland

Cleveland



Nashville

Nashville



Birmingham

Birmingham



Winston-Salem

Winston-Salem



Buffalo

Buffalo




2000 first and second rounds




2000 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament is located in the US

Albuquerque

Albuquerque



Austin

Austin



Auburn Hills

Auburn Hills



Syracuse

Syracuse



Indianapolis

Indianapolis




2000 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)



First & Second Rounds


































RegionSiteVenueHost
East

Buffalo, New York

HSBC Arena

Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference

Winston-Salem, North Carolina

Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum

Wake Forest
Midwest

Cleveland, Ohio

CSU Convocation Center

Cleveland State

Minneapolis, Minnesota

Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome

Minnesota
South

Birmingham, Alabama

BJCC Arena

Southeastern Conference

Nashville, Tennessee

Gaylord Entertainment Center

Vanderbilt
West

Salt Lake City, Utah

Jon M. Huntsman Center

Utah

Tucson, Arizona

McKale Center

Arizona


Regional Sites and Final Four


























RegionSiteVenueHost

East

Syracuse, New York

Carrier Dome

Syracuse

Midwest

Auburn Hills, Michigan

The Palace of Auburn Hills

Mid-American Conference

South

Austin, Texas

Frank Erwin Center

Texas

West

Albuquerque, New Mexico

University Arena ("The Pit")

New Mexico

Final Four

Indianapolis, Indiana

RCA Dome

Butler/IUPUI

For the third time in a decade, and fourth time overall, Indianapolis was the host city of the Final Four. The tournament saw one new host city and three new host venues included for the first time. The tournament came to Cleveland for the first time ever, hosted on the campus of Cleveland State University. This marked the first new host venue on a college campus since the first appearance of Thompson–Boling Arena in 1990, and the first host city to debut on a college campus since Boise in 1983. The tournament returned to Nashville at the then-four-year-old Gaylord Entertainment Center downtown, with previous tournaments having been hosted in Memorial Gym on the campus of Vanderbilt University. And for the first time since 1954, the tournament returned to Buffalo, at the HSBC Arena (now KeyBank Center). The first round tournament games coincided with the date of the arena's name change; previously it had been known as Marine Midland Arena. For the fifth, and as of 2018[update] most recent, time, both the Huntsman Center and McKale Center were chosen as the two first and second round hosts of the West regionals. All 13 venues have gone on to host more tournament games since this season. Any future tournament games to be held in Cleveland would be played at Quicken Loans Arena; if in Salt Lake City, Vivint Smart Home Arena.



Teams








































































































East Regional – Syracuse
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Duke

Mike Krzyzewski

ACC
27-4

Automatic
#2

Temple

John Chaney

Atlantic 10
26-5
Automatic
#3

Oklahoma State

Eddie Sutton

Big 12
24-6
At-Large
#4

Illinois

Lon Kruger

Big Ten
21-9
At-Large
#5

Florida

Billy Donovan

SEC
24-7
At-Large
#6

Indiana

Bob Knight

Big Ten
20-8
At-Large
#7

Oregon

Ernie Kent

Pac-10
22-7
At-Large
#8

Kansas

Roy Williams

Big 12
23-9
At-Large
#9

DePaul

Pat Kennedy

Conference USA
21-10
At-Large
#10

Seton Hall

Tommy Amaker

Big East
20-9
At-Large
#11

Pepperdine

Jan van Breda Kolff

West Coast
24-8
At-Large
#12

Butler

Barry Collier

MCC
23-7
Automatic
#13

Penn

Fran Dunphy

Ivy League
21-7
Automatic
#14

Hofstra

Jay Wright

America East
24-6
Automatic
#15

Lafayette

Fran O'Hanlon

Patriot League
24-6
Automatic
#16

Lamar

Mike Deane

Southland
15-15
Automatic






































































































South Regional – Austin
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Stanford

Mike Montgomery

Pac-10
26-3
At-Large
#2

Cincinnati

Bob Huggins

Conference USA
28-3
At-Large
#3

Ohio State

Jim O'Brien

Big Ten
22-6
At-Large
#4

Tennessee

Jerry Green

SEC
24-6
At-Large
#5

Connecticut

Jim Calhoun

Big East
24-9
At-Large
#6

Miami (FL)

Leonard Hamilton

Big East
21-10
At-Large
#7

Tulsa

Bill Self

WAC
29-4
At-Large
#8

North Carolina

Bill Guthridge

ACC
18-13
At-Large
#9

Missouri

Quin Snyder

Big 12
18-12
At-Large
#10

UNLV

Bill Bayno

Mountain West
20-9
At-Large
#11

Arkansas

Nolan Richardson

SEC
19-14
Automatic
#12

Utah State

Stew Morrill

Big West
28-5
Automatic
#13

Louisiana-Lafayette

Jessie Evans

Sun Belt
25-8
Automatic
#14

Appalachian State

Buzz Peterson

Southern
23-8
Automatic
#15

UNC-Wilmington

Jerry Wainwright

CAA
18-12
Automatic
#16

South Carolina State

Cy Alexander

MEAC
20-13
Automatic






































































































Midwest Regional – Auburn Hills
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Michigan State

Tom Izzo

Big Ten
26-7
Automatic
#2

Iowa State

Larry Eustachy

Big 12
29-4
Automatic
#3

Maryland

Gary Williams

ACC
24-9
At-Large
#4

Syracuse

Jim Boeheim

Big East
24-5
At-Large
#5

Kentucky

Tubby Smith

SEC
22-9
At-Large
#6

UCLA

Steve Lavin

Pac-10
19-11
At-Large
#7

Auburn

Cliff Ellis

SEC
23-9
At-Large
#8

Utah

Rick Majerus

Mountain West
22-8
At-Large
#9

Saint Louis

Lorenzo Romar

Conference USA
19-13
Automatic
#10

Creighton

Dana Altman

Missouri Valley
23-9
Automatic
#11

Ball State

Ray McCallum

Mid-American
22-8
Automatic
#12

St. Bonaventure

Jim Baron

Atlantic 10
21-9
At-Large
#13

Samford

Jimmy Tillette

TAAC
21-10
Automatic
#14

Iona

Jeff Ruland

MAAC
20-10
Automatic
#15

Central Connecticut State

Howie Dickenman

NEC
25-5
Automatic
#16

Valparaiso

Homer Drew

Mid-Continent
19-12
Automatic






































































































West Regional – Albuquerque
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Arizona

Lute Olson

Pac-10
26-6
Automatic
#2

St. John's

Mike Jarvis

Big East
24-7
Automatic
#3

Oklahoma

Kelvin Sampson

Big 12
26-6
At-Large
#4

LSU

John Brady

SEC
26-5
At-Large
#5

Texas

Rick Barnes

Big 12
23-8
At-Large
#6

Purdue

Gene Keady

Big Ten
21-9
At-Large
#7

Louisville

Denny Crum

Conference USA
19-11
At-Large
#8

Wisconsin

Dick Bennett

Big Ten
18-13
At-Large
#9

Fresno State

Jerry Tarkanian

WAC
24-9
At-Large
#10

Gonzaga

Mark Few

West Coast
24-8
Automatic
#11

Dayton

Oliver Purnell

Atlantic 10
22-8
At-Large
#12

Indiana State

Royce Waltman

Missouri Valley
22-9
At-Large
#13

Southeast Missouri State

Gary Garner

Ohio Valley
22-6
Automatic
#14

Winthrop

Gregg Marshall

Big South
21-8
Automatic
#15

Northern Arizona

Mike Adras

Big Sky
20-10
Automatic
#16

Jackson State

Andy Stoglin

SWAC
17-15
Automatic


Bids by conference
















Bids by Conference
Bids
Conference(s)
6

Big Ten, Big 12, SEC
5

Big East
4

C-USA, Pac-10
3

ACC, Atlantic 10
2

Mountain West, Missouri Valley, WAC, WCC
1
19 others


Final Four


At RCA Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana



National Semifinals


  • April 1, Michigan State (M1) 53, Wisconsin (W8) 41
    In the first half it appeared that the Cinderella run of the Wisconsin Badgers had a great chance of continuing. Wisconsin's slow down offense, smothering defense tempo held the game to a Michigan State Spartans 19-17 lead. However, the only number one seed left in the tournament opened the second half with a 13-2 run, including 10 points from senior Morris Peterson. After the run, Michigan State coasted home against Wisconsin's limited offense.[1]

    • Florida (E5) 71, North Carolina (S8) 59
    Despite being behind 18-3 to start the game and trailing at halftime, the North Carolina Tar Heels took control of the early minutes of the second half, and managed to sneak ahead 48-42 on standout freshman guard Joseph Forte's second consecutive three-pointer with 15:44 to play. However, the Florida Gators answered back with a 9-0 run to give them the lead for good. The Gators held the Tar Heels to just six points over a 91/2 minute span to put them in great shape. Foul trouble ultimately doomed the Tar Heels, and the Gators advanced to their first ever National Championship game.[2]


Championship Game



  • April 3, 2000
    • Michigan State (M1) 89, Florida (E5) 76
    Michigan State senior Mateen Cleaves limped his way to the Most Outstanding Player (MOP) of the 2000 NCAA Tournament. Cleaves sprained his ankle with 16:18 to play in the 2nd half, and this was after Florida had trimmed Michigan State's double digit halftime lead to 50-44. Cleaves returned about four minutes later, and immediately helped lead the Spartans on a 16-6 run to put the game out of reach. The lone top-seed remaining would bring order to a tournament filled with upsets as they salted away the victory for the school's second National Championship (1979). Michigan State coach Tom Izzo earned his first title, from his second straight final four appearance. Morris Peterson led the Spartans with 21 points.[3]


Bracket



East Regional – Syracuse, New York










































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
            
1

Duke
82
16
Lamar
55
1

Duke
69

Winston-Salem
8
Kansas
64
8

Kansas
81
9
DePaul
77
1
Duke
78

5

Florida
87
5

Florida
69
12
Butler
68
5

Florida
93

Winston-Salem
4
Illinois
76
4

Illinois
68
13
Pennsylvania
58
5

Florida
77

3
Oklahoma State
65
6
Indiana
57
11

Pepperdine
77
11
Pepperdine
67

Buffalo
3

Oklahoma State
75
3

Oklahoma State
86
14
Hofstra
66
3

Oklahoma State
68

10
Seton Hall
66
7
Oregon
71
10

Seton Hall
72
10

Seton Hall
67

Buffalo
2
Temple
65
2

Temple
73
15
Lafayette
47


South Regional – Austin, Texas










































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
            
1

Stanford
84
16
South Carolina St
65
1
Stanford
53

Birmingham
8

North Carolina
60
8

North Carolina
84
9
Missouri
70
8

North Carolina
74

4
Tennessee
69
5

Connecticut
75
12
Utah St
67
5
Connecticut
51

Birmingham
4

Tennessee
65
4

Tennessee
63
13
Louisiana-Lafayette
58
8

North Carolina
59

7
Tulsa
55
6

Miami-FL
75
11
Arkansas
71
6

Miami-FL
75

Nashville
3
Ohio St
62
3

Ohio St
87
14
Appalachian St
61
6
Miami-FL
71

7

Tulsa
80
7

Tulsa
89
10
UNLV
62
7

Tulsa
69

Nashville
2
Cincinnati
61
2

Cincinnati
64
15
UNC-Wilmington
47


Midwest Regional – Auburn Hills, Michigan










































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
            
1

Michigan State
65
16
Valparaiso
38
1

Michigan State
73

Cleveland
8
Utah
61
8

Utah
48
9
St. Louis
45
1

Michigan State
75

4
Syracuse
58
5

Kentucky
85
12
St. Bonaventure
80**
5
Kentucky
50

Cleveland
4

Syracuse
52
4

Syracuse
79
13
Samford
65
1

Michigan State
75

2
Iowa State
64
6

UCLA
65
11
Ball State
57
6

UCLA
105

Minneapolis
3
Maryland
70
3

Maryland
74
14
Iona
59
6
UCLA
56

2

Iowa State
80
7

Auburn
72
10
Creighton
69
7
Auburn
60

Minneapolis
2

Iowa State
79
2

Iowa State
88
15
Central Connecticut St
78


West Regional – Albuquerque, New Mexico










































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
            
1

Arizona
71
16
Jackson St.
47
1
Arizona
59

Salt Lake City
8

Wisconsin
66
8

Wisconsin
66
9
Fresno St.
56
8

Wisconsin
61

4
LSU
48
5

Texas
77
12
Indiana St.
61
5
Texas
67

Salt Lake City
4

LSU
72
4

LSU
64
13
Southeast Missouri St.
61
8

Wisconsin
64

6
Purdue
60
6

Purdue
62
11
Dayton
61
6

Purdue
66

Tucson
3
Oklahoma
62
3

Oklahoma
74
14
Winthrop
50
6

Purdue
75

10
Gonzaga
66
7
Louisville
66
10

Gonzaga
77
10

Gonzaga
82

Tucson
2
St John's
76
2

St John's
61
15
Northern Arizona
56


Final Four at Indianapolis, Indiana
























































National Semifinals
National Championship Game
      

E5

Florida

71
S8
North Carolina
59
E5
Florida
76


M1

Michigan State

89

M1

Michigan State

53
W8
Wisconsin
41


Television


CBS Sports had exclusive TV coverage. They were carried on a regional basis until the "Elite Eight", at which point all games were shown nationally.



  • Jim Nantz and Billy Packer – First & Second Round at Winston-Salem, North Carolina; East Regional at Syracuse, New York; Final Four at Indianapolis, Indiana


  • Verne Lundquist and Bill Raftery – First & Second Round at Minneapolis, Minnesota; Midwest Regional at Auburn Hills, Michigan


  • Dick Enberg and James Worthy – First & Second Round at Birmingham, Alabama; South Regional at Austin, Texas


  • Gus Johnson and Dan Bonner – First & Second Round at Tucson, Arizona; West Regional at Albuquerque, New Mexico


  • Kevin Harlan and Jon Sundvold – First & Second Round at Cleveland, Ohio


  • Ian Eagle and Jim Spanarkel – First & Second Round at Buffalo, New York


  • Tim Brando and Rolando Blackman – First & Second Round at Nashville, Tennessee


  • Craig Bolerjack and Barry Booker – First & Second Round at Salt Lake City, Utah

Greg Gumbel once again served as the studio host, joined by analyst Clark Kellogg.



Radio


Westwood One had exclusive radio coverage.


























































Play-by-play announcer
Color analyst(s)
Round(s)
Site(s)









John Rooney

Midwest 1st/2nd rounds
Cleveland

Wayne Larrivee

Midwest 1st/2nd Rounds
Minneapolis





















Kevin Harlan

Jon Sundvold
Midwest Regional
Auburn Hills, Michigan









John Rooney (Michigan State-Wisconsin & Michigan State-Florida)
Marty Brennaman (Florida-North Carolina)

Bill Raftery (Michigan State-Wisconsin & Michigan State-Florida)
Dave Gavitt (Florida-North Carolina)
Final Four
Indianapolis

Tommy Tighe once again served as studio host.



Local radio
















































































Region
Seed
Teams
Flagship station
Play-by-play announcer
Color analyst(s)
E
5

Florida

WRUF–AM (Florida)

Mick Hubert
Mark Wise
S
8

North Carolina

WCHL–AM (North Carolina)

Woody Durham

Mick Mixon
MW
1

Michigan State

WJIM–AM/WJIM-FM (Michigan State)

Mark Champion

Gus Ganakas
MW
4

Syracuse
(Syracuse)


MW
5

Kentucky
(Kentucky)


MW
8

Utah
(Utah)


MW
9

Saint Louis
(Saint Louis)


MW
12

St. Bonaventure

WHDL–AM 1450/WPIG–FM 95.7 (St. Bonaventure)
Gary Nease
John Watson
MW
13

Samford

WVSU–FM 91.1 (Samford)
Scott Griffin
Mike Royer
MW
16

Valparaiso
(Valparaiso)


W
4

LSU

WDGL-FM 98.1, WWL-AM 870
Jim Hawthorne
Kevin Ford
W
8

Wisconsin

WIBA–AM/WOLX-FM (Wisconsin)
Matt Lepay
Mike Lucas


See also


  • 2000 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 National Invitation Tournament

  • 2000 Women's National Invitation Tournament

  • 2000 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2000 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament


References




  1. ^ CNN Sports Illustrated. "2000 NCAA National Semifinals: (MW1) Michigan State 53, (W8) Wisconsin 41". CNNSI.com. Retrieved 2008-03-06..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ CNN Sports Illustrated. "2000 NCAA National Semifinals: (E5) Florida 71, (S8) North Carolina 59". CNNSI.com. Archived from the original on 26 March 2008. Retrieved 2008-03-06.


  3. ^ CNN Sports Illustrated. "2000 NCAA National Championship: (MW1) Michigan State 89, (E5) Florida 76". CNNSI.com. Retrieved 2008-03-06.











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