1978 NCAA Division I basketball tournament

The 1978 NCAA Division I basketball tournament involved 32 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 11, 1978, and ended with the championship game on March 27 in St. Louis, Missouri. A total of 32 games were played, including a national third-place game.

1978 NCAA Division I
basketball tournament
NCAA logo from 1971 to 1979
Season1977–78
Teams32
Finals siteThe Checkerdome
St. Louis, Missouri
ChampionsKentucky Wildcats (5th title, 7th title game,
8th Final Four)
Runner-upDuke Blue Devils (2nd title game,
4th Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachJoe B. Hall (1st title)
MOPJack Givens (Kentucky)
Attendance447,234
Top scorerMike Gminski (Duke)
(109 points)
NCAA Division I men's tournaments
«19771979»

The process of seeding the bracket was first used in this tournament. Sixteen conference winners with automatic bids were seeded 1 through 4 in each region. At-large teams were seeded 1 through 4 in each region separately. There were in fact only eleven true at-large teams in the field, as the remaining five were conference winners with automatic bids and seeded as "at-large."[1] The practice of distinguishing between automatic and at-large teams ended with this edition; the expanded field of forty in the 1979 tournament was simply seeded from one to ten in each of the four regions.

Led by head coach Joe B. Hall, Kentucky won its fifth national title with a 94–88 victory over Duke, coached by Bill Foster. Wildcat forward Jack Givens scored 41 points in the finale and was named the tournament's most outstanding player.[2][3][4][5]

The bracket's biggest upset came in the first round, when little-heralded Miami (Ohio) defeated defending champion Marquette 84-81 in overtime. The victory was even sweeter for Miami Redskins (now RedHawks) fans as former Marquette coach Al McGuire had earlier strongly criticized the NCAA for potentially matching Marquette against Kentucky in the second round, with Marquette being given a first-round opponent in Miami that was supposedly not even worthy of providing an adequate tune-up game.

Unranked Cal State Fullerton (CSUF) pulled off two upsets, first over 4th ranked New Mexico (coached by Norm Ellenberger and led by Michael Cooper) and then over top-10 San Francisco (featuring Bill Cartwright). The loss was especially painful for New Mexico as the regional semifinals and finals were held on the Lobos' home court in Albuquerque. CSUF then almost upset Arkansas in the West Regional final, losing by 3 points. In each of the three games, the Titans overcame second-half double-digit deficits. In the Arkansas game, they cut a big deficit to 1 and had the ball with 14 seconds left. But Arkansas' Ron Brewer stripped the ball from Keith Anderson and Jim Counce drove down to hit a clinching layup.

In the Mideast regional final, Kentucky knocked off Michigan State, led by freshman Earvin "Magic" Johnson. This was the only time in a 4-year period (that included his senior year in high school, 2 years of college, and his rookie NBA season) that Magic's team did not win its final game of the playoffs and hence the championship.

The Final Four games (semifinals, third-place, and championship) at St. Louis Arena (a.k.a. The Checkerdome) were not played on the arena's official floor. Water damage to it forced the NCAA to borrow the floor from Indiana University's Assembly Hall in Bloomington.

This was the fourth and last year for a 32-team bracket; the field expanded to forty teams in 1979 and 48 in 1980, all seeded. The 64-team field debuted in 1985, eliminating byes for the top seeds (1979–1984). The third-place game at the Final Four was last played in 1981.

Schedule and venues

Charlotte
Philadelphia
Tulsa
Knoxville
Wichita
Indianapolis
Eugene
Tempe
1978 sites for first round games
Providence
Dayton
Lawrence
Albuquerque
St. Louis
1978 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1978 tournament:

First round

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals, 3rd-place game, and championship (Final Four and championship)

Teams

RegionSeedTeamCoachConferenceFinishedFinal OpponentScore
East
East1QDukeBill E. FosterAtlantic CoastRunner UpKentuckyL 94–88
East3QFurmanJoe WilliamsSouthernRound of 32IndianaL 63–62
East1LIndianaBob KnightBig TenSweet SixteenVillanovaL 61–60
East4LLa SallePaul WestheadEast CoastRound of 32VillanovaL 103–97
East4QPennBob WeinhauerIvy LeagueSweet SixteenDukeL 84–80
East3LRhode IslandJack KraftIndependentRound of 32DukeL 63–62
East2LSt. BonaventureJim SatalinIndependentRound of 32PennL 92–83
East2QVillanovaRollie MassiminoEastern AthleticRegional Runner-upDukeL 90–72
Mideast
Mideast4LFlorida StateHugh DurhamMetropolitanRound of 32KentuckyL 85–76
Mideast1QKentuckyJoe B. HallSoutheasternChampionDukeW 94–88
Mideast1LMarquetteHank RaymondsIndependentRound of 32Miami (OH)L 84–81
Mideast3QMiami (OH)Darrell HedricMid-AmericanSweet SixteenKentuckyL 91–69
Mideast2QMichigan StateJud HeathcoteBig TenRegional Runner-upKentuckyL 52–49
Mideast3LProvidenceDave GavittIndependentRound of 32Michigan StateL 77–63
Mideast2LSyracuseJim BoeheimIndependentRound of 32Western KentuckyL 87–86
Mideast4QWestern KentuckyJim RichardsOhio ValleySweet SixteenMichigan StateL 90–69
Midwest
Midwest3QCreightonTom ApkeMissouri ValleyRound of 32DePaulL 80–78
Midwest1LDePaulRay MeyerIndependentRegional Runner-upNotre DameL 84–64
Midwest4QHoustonGuy LewisSouthwestRound of 32Notre DameL 100–77
Midwest2QLouisvilleDenny CrumMetropolitanSweet SixteenDePaulL 90–89
Midwest1QMissouriNorm StewartBig EightRound of 32UtahL 86–79
Midwest2LNotre DameDigger PhelpsIndependentFourth PlaceArkansasL 71–69
Midwest4LSt. John'sLou CarneseccaIndependentRound of 32LouisvilleL 76–68
Midwest3LUtahJerry PimmWestern AthleticSweet SixteenNotre DameL 69–56
West
West2LArkansasEddie SuttonSouthwestThird PlaceNotre DameW 71–69
West4LCal State FullertonBobby DyePacific CoastRegional Runner-upArkansasL 61–58
West3LKansasTed OwensBig EightRound of 32UCLAL 83–76
West2QNew MexicoNorm EllenbergerWestern AthleticRound of 32Cal State FullertonL 90–85
West1LNorth CarolinaDean SmithAtlantic CoastRound of 32San FranciscoL 68–64
West3QSan FranciscoBob GaillardWest CoastSweet SixteenCal State FullertonL 75–72
West1QUCLAGary CunninghamPacific-8Sweet SixteenArkansasL 74–70
West4QWeber StateNeil McCarthyBig SkyRound of 32ArkansasL 73–52

Bracket

* – Denotes overtime period

East region

QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
         
1QDuke63
3LRhode Island62
1QDuke84
4QPenn80
4QPenn92
2LSt. Bonaventure83
1QDuke90
2QVillanova72
1LIndiana63
3QFurman62
1LIndiana60
2QVillanova61
2QVillanova103
4LLa Salle97

Midwest region

QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
         
3LUtah86
1QMissouri79**
3LUtah56
2LNotre Dame69
2LNotre Dame100
4QHouston77
2LNotre Dame84
1LDePaul64
1LDePaul80
3QCreighton78
1LDePaul90
2QLouisville89**
2QLouisville76
4LSt. John's68

Mideast region

QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
         
1QMichigan State77
3LProvidence63
1QMichigan State90
4QWestern Kentucky69
4QWestern Kentucky87
2LSyracuse86*
1QMichigan State49
2QKentucky52
3QMiami (OH)84
1LMarquette81*
3QMiami (OH)69
2QKentucky91
2QKentucky85
4LFlorida State76

West region

QuarterfinalsSemifinalsFinals
         
1QUCLA83
3LKansas76
1QUCLA70
2LArkansas74
2LArkansas73
4QWeber State52
2LArkansas61
4LCal State Fullerton58
3QSan Francisco68
1LNorth Carolina64
3QSan Francisco72
4LCal State Fullerton75
4LCal State Fullerton90
2QNew Mexico85

Final Four

National semifinals
Saturday, March 25
National Championship Game
Monday, March 27
      
E1QDuke90
MW2LNotre Dame86
E1QDuke88
ME2QKentucky94
ME2QKentucky64
W2LArkansas59National third-place game
MW2LNotre Dame69
W2LArkansas71

Q = automatic qualifier bidL = at-large bid (including 5 automatic bids seeded with at-large teams)

Game summaries

Final Four

NBC
March 25
#5 Arkansas Razorbacks 59, #1 Kentucky Wildcats 64
Scoring by half: 30–32, 29–32
Pts: Ron Brewer 16
Rebs: Marvin Delph 8
Asts: Jim Counce 2
Pts: Jack Givens 23
Rebs: Jack Givens 9
Asts: Jay Shidler 4
NBC
March 25
#7 Duke Blue Devils 90, #6 Notre Dame Fighting Irish 86
Scoring by half: 43–29, 47–57
Pts: Mike Gminski 29
Rebs: Gene Banks 12
Asts: Jim Spanarkel/Bob Bender 5
Pts: Duck Williams 16
Rebs: Bill Laimbeer 10
Asts: Rich Branning 5

Championship

NBC
March 27
#7 Duke Blue Devils 88, #1 Kentucky Wildcats 94
Scoring by half: 38-45, 50-49
Pts: Gene Banks 22
Rebs: Mike Gminski 12
Pts: Jack Givens 41
Rebs: Rick Robey 11

Announcers

  • Dick Enberg/Curt Gowdy, Billy Packer,and Al McGuire – Final Four at St. Louis, Missouri; Gowdy called the Notre Dame-Duke Semifinal with Billy Packer, and served as host of the national championship game, while Enberg called the Arkansas-Kentucky semifinal with Packer and the Duke-Kentucky final with both Packer and McGuire.
  • Dick Enberg and Al McGuire – First round at Tulsa, Oklahoma (Louisville–St. John's, Notre Dame–Houston); Midwest Regional Final at Lawrence, Kansas; West Regional Final at Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Curt Gowdy and Billy Packer – East Regional Final at Providence, Rhode Island; Mideast Regional Final at Dayton, Ohio
  • Jay Randolph and Gary Thompson – Midwest Regional semifinals at Lawrence, Kansas;National Third Place Game (Arkansas-Notre Dame) at St. Louis, Missouri
  • Connie Alexander and Bill Strannigan – West Regional semifinals at Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • Dick Enberg and Billy Packer – First round at Knoxville, Tennessee (Kentucky–Florida State, Syracuse–Western Kentucky)
  • Curt Gowdy and Al McGuire – First round at Eugene, Oregon (Arkansas–Weber State, UCLA–Kansas)
  • Marv Albert and Bucky Waters – First round at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Villanova–La Salle, St. Bonaventure–Pennsylvania)
  • Merle Harmon and Fred Taylor – First round at Indianapolis, Indiana (Marquette–Miami Ohio, Michigan State–Providence)

See also

References