Global Information Lookup Global Information

College basketball information


College basketball
Virginia Cavaliers v Duke Blue Devils in 2012
Governing body
List
    • NCAA
    • NAIA
    • USCAA
    • NJCAA
    • NCCAA
    • ACCA
    • CCCAA
    • AIAW (defunct)
First played1937 (NAIA)
Clubs700 (NCAA)
230 (NAIA)
Club competitions
Men's
  • Division I, Division II, Division III (NCAA)
  • Championship (NAIA)
  • Division I, Division II, Division III (NJCAA)

Women's

  • Division I, Division II, Division III (NCAA)
  • Championship (NAIA)
  • Division I (NJCAA)
Audience records
Single match35,642 (Syracuse v Duke at Carrier Dome, 23 Feb 2019) (NCAA) [1]

In United States colleges and universities, basketball is governed by collegiate athletic bodies including the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA), the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA), and the National Christian College Athletic Association (NCCAA). Each of these various organizations is subdivided into one to three divisions, based on the number and level of scholarships that may be provided to the athletes. Teams with more talent tend to win over teams with less talent.

Each organization has different conferences to divide the teams into groups. Traditionally, the location of a school has been a significant factor in determining conference affiliation. The bulk of the games on a team's schedule during the season are against fellow conference members. Therefore, geographic proximity of conference members allows local rivalries to develop and minimizes travel costs. Further, televised road games played in the same time zone as that of the visiting team's fans tend to draw larger audiences, which enhances the value of the media rights.

Institutional compatibility is another factor that may lead schools to band together in the same conference. For instance, as of 2024, all full members of the West Coast Conference are Christian colleges and universities located in the Pacific Time Zone. The Ivy League comprises institutions with similar, high academic standards that prefer to schedule nearly all their conference basketball games on Fridays and Saturdays, except during breaks between semesters, to minimize the disruption caused to the studies of the student-athletes.

Since the 1990s, geographic proximity has gradually become a less important factor in determining membership in NCAA Division I conferences. For instance, the Big Ten Conference was originally composed of institutions in the Midwest. It has since expanded to include members in New Jersey, Maryland and Pennsylvania. On July 1, 2024, the Big Ten will admit four new members, all of which are located in the Pacific Time Zone. The Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) had a footprint that extended from Maryland to Florida, with all members located in states on the Atlantic Coast in the 1990s. It has since expanded to include members in Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Kentucky and Indiana. On July 1, 2024, the ACC will admit two new members located in California and one new member located in Texas.

The shifts in conference membership are primarily driven by schools seeking lucrative media rights deals and appropriately competitive playing partners for their football programs. In most cases, schools house as many of their sports in the same primary conference as possible. So, the football-driven changes in affiliation lead to changes in the composition of basketball conferences. When a conference loses a member to another conference, it will often try to recruit a replacement from a third conference. This triggers a domino effect, and smaller, less stable conferences struggle to remain large enough to compete at the same level as they had in the past. The smallest Division I conferences sometimes recruit Division II teams and help those institutions transition to Division I, in order to replace teams they have lost. Sometimes, this is done pre-emptively to make the conference larger and protect it against the possible loss of some of its teams.

Teams are not required to join conferences and may play as independents instead. Chicago State is presently the only independent basketball team in Division I of the NCAA. Finding opponents can be problematic for an independent team, particularly during the latter part of the season, when most other teams are regularly playing conference opponents. In addition, each conference gets an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. Independent teams do not have access to such a pathway and must be selected at-large in order to participate in the tournament. Chicago State will join the Northeast Conference on July 1, 2024, leaving no independent teams in NCAA Division I.

Most games between conference opponents take place in the latter part of the season. While there are various rankings of teams throughout the entire NCAA,[2] there are also conference standings based on the results of games against conference opponents. Once the conference schedule is complete, the conference stages a tournament that includes some or all of its teams. The regular-season conference standings are generally used to determine qualification for and seeding in the conference tournament. The Western Athletic Conference is an exception. It uses the regular-season conference standings to determine qualification for its tournament, but seeding is based on a formulaic ranking of the strength of the qualifiers, including their performances against non-conference opponents. In most cases, the winner of the conference tournament receives an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. However, teams that are in transition from Division II are not eligible for the NCAA tournament. Therefore, if such a team wins a conference tournament, the conference will use an alternate method to select the team to receive its automatic bid. Some conferences allow transitioning teams to participate in their conference tournaments; others do not allow this.[3]

  1. ^ Syracuse vs. Duke Breaks NCAA On-Campus Attendance Record With Crowd of 35,642 by Tristan Jung at Sports Illustrated – 23 Feb 2019
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference :0 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference :1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

and 10 Related for: College basketball information

Request time (Page generated in 0.9289 seconds.)

College basketball

Last Update:

In United States colleges and universities, basketball is governed by collegiate athletic bodies including the National Collegiate Athletic Association...

Word Count : 8848

Basketball

Last Update:

women's basketball. Thus, the sport quickly spread throughout America's schools, colleges and universities with uniform rules for both sexes. Basketball was...

Word Count : 11896

Blue bloods in college basketball

Last Update:

American college basketball, the term "blue bloods" is used in reference to National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I basketball programs...

Word Count : 1260

History of basketball

Last Update:

the world. After basketball became established in American colleges, the professional game followed. The American National Basketball Association (NBA)...

Word Count : 5459

Basketball in the United States

Last Update:

National Basketball Association (NBA) is a professional basketball league that governs most levels of basketball in the United States. Basketball is the...

Word Count : 1391

NBA draft

Last Update:

Ignite team, and youth professional basketball leagues. College players who have finished their four-year college eligibility are automatically eligible...

Word Count : 3064

List of nicknames in basketball

Last Update:

nicknames in the sport of basketball. Most are related to professional basketball, although a few notable nicknames from the U.S. college game are included....

Word Count : 9482

List of oldest and youngest NBA players

Last Update:

and youngest National Basketball Association players. The National Basketball Association (NBA) is a men's professional basketball league in North America...

Word Count : 2575

College recruiting

Last Update:

problems of college sports. Although, he says there are benefits to universities in playing big-time sports, which he defines as Division I basketball and schools...

Word Count : 3820

ESPN College Basketball

Last Update:

ESPN College Basketball is a blanket title used for presentations of college basketball on ESPN and its family of networks (including ABC since 2006)....

Word Count : 3828

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net