2002–03 Syracuse Orangemen basketball team

The 2002–03 Syracuse Orangemen basketball team represented Syracuse University in NCAA men's basketball competition in the 2002–03 Division I season. The head coach was Jim Boeheim, serving for his 27th year. The team played its home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York. The team finished with a 30–5 (13–3) record, while capturing its first modern-era NCAA Championship.

2002–03 Syracuse Orangemen men's basketball
NCAA tournament National Champions
Big East regular season co-champions
ConferenceBig East Conference
Ranking
CoachesNo. 1
APNo. 13
Record30–5 (13–3 Big East)
Head coach
Assistant coaches
Home arenaCarrier Dome
Seasons
2002–03 Big East men's basketball standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
East
Boston College106 .6251912 .613
No. 23 Connecticut106 .6252310 .697
Providence88 .5001814 .563
Villanova88 .5001516 .484
St. John's79 .4382113 .618
Miami412 .2501117 .393
Virginia Tech*412 .2501118 .379
West
No. 13 Syracuse133 .813305 .857
No. 4 Pittsburgh133 .813285 .848
Seton Hall106 .6251713 .567
No. 22 Notre Dame106 .6252410 .706
Georgetown610 .3751915 .559
West Virginia511 .3131415 .483
Rutgers*412 .2501216 .429
2003 Big East tournament winner
As of March 31, 2003[1]
Rankings from AP Poll
*Did not qualify for 2003 Big East tournament

The team had just one senior, guard Kueth Duany. He was joined in the starting lineup by forwards Hakim Warrick (sophomore), Carmelo Anthony (freshman), center Craig Forth (sophomore), and guard Gerry McNamara (freshman). Other key contributors included guards Josh Pace (sophomore) and Billy Edelin (freshman), and center Jeremy McNeil (junior).

Season recap

Things did not start well for Syracuse. Guards DeShaun Williams[2] and James Thues[3] both left the team. Williams transferred to Iona while Thues left for Detroit. Freshman point guard Billy Edelin was suspended for 12 games for participating in a non-sanctioned basketball league. Syracuse then started its season with a loss against Memphis, despite Carmelo Anthony's 27 points, a then-high for a Syracuse freshman debut.[4]

But things turned around, as Syracuse went 13–3 in the Big East, with several memorable wins. McNamara would establish himself as a clutch player, nailing a game-winning 3-pointer as then-No. 17 Syracuse notched an 82–80 win over then-No. 10 Notre Dame in February.[5] In an upset of then-No. 24 Syracuse over then-No. 2 Pittsburgh, McNeil, a career 49.1% free throw shooter, hit two key free throws, and added a game-winning tip in a 67–65 upset.[6]

The Orangemen would play five Big 12 teams throughout the year, including games against Missouri[7] in the regular season, and against Oklahoma (Elite Eight), Oklahoma State (second round), Texas (National Semifinal) and then Kansas (National Championship game).[8]

In the championship game against Kansas, with Syracuse leading by three with under 15 seconds left, Warrick missed two free throws that would've sealed the game with Syracuse hanging on to a three-point lead, 81–78. With 1.5 seconds left and the score still the same, Kansas' Michael Lee was open on the baseline for a potential game-tying 3-pointer. But Warrick used his long arms to block Lee's attempt and Syracuse captured its first-ever national championship.[9]

Coincidentally, the game was played in the Superdome in New Orleans, where Syracuse had lost the National Championship to Indiana in 1987 on a last-second shot by Keith Smart.[10]

Schedule

Date
time, TV
Rank#Opponent#ResultRecordHigh pointsHigh reboundsHigh assistsSite (attendance)
city, state
Regular season
Nov 14, 2002*
vs. Memphis
Coaches vs. Cancer Classic
L 63–70 0–1
 27  Anthony  11  Tied  3  McNamara Madison Square Garden (8,826)
New York, NY
Nov 24, 2002*
ValparaisoW 81–66 1–1
 28  Anthony  10  Tied  6  Pace Carrier Dome (18,874)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 3, 2002*
ColgateW 98–68 2–1
 27  Anthony  11  Anthony  7  Pace Carrier Dome (15,615)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 6, 2002*
CornellW 85–62 3–1
 21  Anthony  10  Tied  5  Tied Carrier Dome (16,384)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 10, 2003*
UNC GreensboroW 92–65 4–1
 23  Warrick  8  Forth  4  Anthony Carrier Dome (16,941)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 14, 2002*
BinghamtonW 94–58 5–1
 24  Anthony  11  Anthony  5  Anthony Carrier Dome (19,770)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 21, 2002*
Georgia TechW 92–65 6–1
 25  McNamara  11  Tied  10  McNamara Carrier Dome (18,804)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 28, 2002*
AlbanyW 109–79 7–1
 28  Anthony  9  Tied  9  McNamara Carrier Dome (18,683)
Syracuse, NY
Dec 30, 2002*
CanisiusW 87–69 8–1
 25  Warrick  14  Anthony  3  Tied Carrier Dome (17,305)
Syracuse, NY
Jan 8, 2003
at Seton HallW 70–66 9–1
(1–0)
 20  Duany  7  Warrick  5  McNamara Continental Airlines Arena (8,415)
East Rutherford, NJ
Jan 11, 2003
Boston CollegeW 82–74 10–1
(2–0)
 24  Tied  15  Warrick  5  Tied Carrier Dome (20,692)
Syracuse, NY
Jan 13, 2003*
, ESPN
No. 11 MissouriW 76–69 11–1
 20  Warrick  10  Anthony  7  McNamara Carrier Dome (18,756)
Syracuse, NY
Jan 18, 2003
at No. 3 PittsburghL 60–73 11–2
(2–1)
 19  McNamara  10  Warrick  3  McNamara Petersen Events Center (12,508)
Pittsburgh, PA
Jan 22, 2003
Seton HallW 83–65 12–2
(3–1)
 22  Warrick  10  Warrick  6  Tied Carrier Dome (17,119)
Syracuse, NY
Jan 26, 2003
, CBS
at MiamiW 54–49 13–2
(4–1)
 18  Warrick  14  Anthony  4  Tied Ryder Center (5,789)
Coral Gables, FL
Jan 29, 2003
at RutgersL 65–68 13–3
(4–2)
 17  Anthony  11  Warrick  5  Tied Louis Brown Athletic Center (8,007)
Piscataway, NJ
Feb 1, 2003
No. 2 PittsburghW 67–65 14–3
(5–2)
 20  Warrick  13  Anthony  4  McNamara Carrier Dome (30,303)
Syracuse, NY
Feb 3, 2003
No. 21 GeorgetownW 88–80 15–3
(6–2)
 22  Tied  7  Tied  3  Tied Carrier Dome (20,702)
Syracuse, NY
Feb 8, 2003
No. 21 at West VirginiaW 94–80 16–3
(7–2)
 29  Anthony  12  Anthony  12  McNamara WVU Coliseum (13,092)
Morgantown, WV
Feb 10, 2003
No. 18 at No. 19 ConnecticutL 61–75 16–4
(7–3)
 29  Anthony  11  Anthony  4  McNamara Hartford Civic Center (16,294)
Hartford, CT
Feb 15, 2003
No. 18 No. 9 Notre DameW 82–80 17–4
(8–3)
 26  Anthony  12  Warrick  6  McNamara Carrier Dome (32,116)
Syracuse, NY
Feb 18, 2003
No. 17 St. John'sW 66–60 18–4
(9–3)
 21  Anthony  13  Anthony  5  McNamara Carrier Dome (21,044)
Syracuse, NY
Feb 23, 2003*
, CBS
No. 17 at Michigan StateW 76–75 19–4
 25  Anthony  8  Warrick  4  Anthony Breslin Center (14,759)
East Lansing, MI
Feb 26, 2003
No. 15 West VirginiaW 89–51 20–4
(10–3)
 24  Anthony  10  Anthony  6  McNamara Carrier Dome (19,484)
Syracuse, NY
Mar 1, 2003
, ABC
No. 15 at GeorgetownW 93–84 OT21–4
(11–3)
 30  Anthony  18  Warrick  2  Tied MCI Center (17,352)
Washington, D.C.
Mar 4, 2003
No. 12 at No. 16 Notre DameW 92–88 22–4
(12–3)
 26  Edelin  13  Warrick  7  Warrick Joyce Center (11,450)
South Bend, IN
Mar 9, 2003
No. 12 RutgersW 83–74 23–4
(13–3)
 30  Anthony  14  Anthony  7  McNamara Carrier Dome (33,071)
Syracuse, NY
Big East tournament
Mar 13, 2003
(1 W) No. 11 vs. (5 W) Georgetown
Quarterfinals
W 74–69 24–4
 21  Anthony  8  Forth  3  McNamara Madison Square Garden (19,528)
New York, NY
Mar 14, 2003
(1 W) No. 11 vs. (2 E) Connecticut
Semifinals
L 67–80 24–5
 29  Anthony  15  Anthony  3  McNamara Madison Square Garden (19,528)
New York, NY
NCAA tournament
Mar 21, 2003*
, CBS
(3 E) No. 13 vs. (14 E) Manhattan
First Round
W 76–65 25–5
 17  Anthony  9  Anthony  4  Tied FleetCenter (18,141)
Boston, MA
Mar 23, 2003*
, CBS
(3 E) No. 13 vs. (6 E) No. 23 Oklahoma State
Second Round
W 68–56 26–5
 20  Edelin  6  McNamara  8  Tied FleetCenter (18,389)
Boston, MA
Mar 28, 2003*
, CBS
(3 E) No. 13 vs. (10 E) Auburn
Sweet Sixteen
W 79–78 27–5
 18  Anthony  8  Anthony  4  Edelin Pepsi Arena (15,093)
Albany, NY
Mar 30, 2003*
, CBS
(3 E) No. 13 vs. (1 E) No. 3 Oklahoma
Elite Eight
W 63–47 28–5
 20  Anthony  10  Anthony  4  Warrick Pepsi Arena (15,207)
Albany, NY
Apr 5, 2003*
, CBS
(3 E) No. 13 vs. (1 S) No. 5 Texas
Final Four
W 95–84 29–5
 33  Anthony  14  Anthony  4  Tied Louisiana Superdome (54,432)
New Orleans, LA
Apr 7, 2003*
, CBS
(3 E) No. 13 vs. (2 W) No. 6 Kansas
National Championship
W 81–78 30–5
 20  Anthony  10  Anthony  7  Anthony Louisiana Superdome (54,524)
New Orleans, LA
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Eastern Time.

Roster

NameNumberPositionHeightWeightYearHometownPPGAPGRPG
Hakim Warrick1F6–9219SophomorePhiladelphia, PA14.81.68.5
Gerry McNamara3G6–2182FreshmanScranton, PA13.34.42.3
Josh Pace5G/F6–5190SophomoreGriffin, GA4.31.92.7
Kueth Duany13G/F6–6190SeniorSudan/Bloomington, IN11.02.03.7
Billy Edelin14G6–4195FreshmanSilver Spring, MD9.02.53.4
Carmelo Anthony15F6–8230FreshmanBaltimore, MD22.22.210.0
Matt Gorman24F/C6–9235FreshmanWatertown, NY2.30.12.1
Jeremy McNeil34C6–8257JuniorSan Antonio, TX3.30.24.2
Craig Forth51C7–1255SophomoreAlbany, NY3.80.93.3
Andrew Kouwe10PG6–0170JuniorTampa, FL1.70.30.3
Ronneil Herron11G5–11158SeniorWarner Robins, GA1.20.01.0
Tyrone Albright2G5–11165JuniorSyracuse, NY0.00.10.3
Gary Hall23F6–6230JuniorTully, NY0.40.40.4
Josh Brooks21F6–5180JuniorSaranac, NY0.00.00.2

References

  • 'Will to Win’, documentary by Syracuse.com
  • "The Inside Look at Carmelo Anthony and Syracuse's 2003 National Championship Run". Bleacher Report. March 20, 2018. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021 – via YouTube.