Rabu, 16 Mei 2018

Sponsored Links

UNC Women's Basketball: 1994 National Championship Reunion - YouTube
src: i.ytimg.com

The 1994 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 17, 1994, and ended with the championship game on April 4 in Charlotte, North Carolina, played at Charlotte Coliseum. A total of 63 games were played.

The Final Four consisted of Arkansas, making their fifth trip and first since 1990, Arizona, making their second ever trip and first since 1988, Florida, making their first ever trip, and Duke, making their sixth trip in the last seven tournaments.

In the national championship game, Arkansas defeated Duke by a score of 76-72 and won their first ever national championship.

Corliss Williamson of Arkansas was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

Bill Clinton, former governor of Arkansas, was in attendance for the Final Four, as well as the regionals that were held in Dallas the previous week. (Clinton was already scheduled to be in Dallas for the wedding of his brother Roger and added the basketball games to his plans.)


Video 1994 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament



Locations

First & Second Rounds

Regional Sites and Final Four

The 1994 tournament included five new venues and four new cities. In Florida, Miami and St. Petersburg, were used for the first time. St. Petersburg would go on to host the Final Four in 1999, while this would be the only games held at Miami Arena; in 2009, the only other year that the city has hosted the tournament, the games were played at American Airlines Arena. Landover, an eastern suburb of Washington, D.C., was used for the only time; games in Washington D.C. have since been at Capital One Arena, which replaced USAir Arena as home to the city's sports teams. Sacramento became the sixth metropolitan area in California to host games. The Kansas Coliseum was used instead of Levitt Arena in Wichita for the only time. This also marked the last tournament for the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena and the Dee Events Center. Games in the Los Angeles area have since been held at the Staples Center or the Honda Center in Anaheim. In all, of the thirteen venues used in the 1994 tournament, seven (in Charlotte, Dallas, Landover, Los Angeles, Miami, Sacramento and Wichita) have closed and been replaced, with all but the Kansas Coliseum (which is being converted into an aerospace test facility) and Sacramento's Sleep Train Arena being demolished, its future still not determined since the opening of the Golden 1 Center downtown. Additionally, the Nassau Coliseum has been renovated into a smaller-capacity building, placing its future use as a tournament site in doubt.

In 1994 Charlotte became the 24th city, and the Charlotte Coliseum the 29th venue, to host the Final Four. It is the last of four arenas - including Market Square Arena in 1980, Reunion Arena in 1986, and McNichols Sports Arena in 1990 - whose primary tenant was a NBA franchise. (The Charlotte 49ers had also used the building from its opening to the previous season, but had moved back to reopened Independence Arena, which is seven miles closer to campus than the new Coliseum.) The tournament was the only one between 1985 and 2018 to not include an NFL stadium; the only domed stadium used for the tournament, the Thunderdome, was at the time an NHL arena and is now an MLB stadium.

Amusingly, the site of the Southeast regional finals--Knoxville, TN--is farther north than any other of this year's regional sites.


Maps 1994 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament



Teams


2014-15 Upper Deck NCAA March Madness Collection JK-1 Jason Kidd ...
src: img.comc.com


Bracket

East Regional - Miami

Southeast Regional - Knoxville, Tennessee

Midwest Regional - Dallas

West Regional - Los Angeles

West Region First Round

West Region Second Round

Final Four @ Charlotte, North Carolina


ESPN Ranks the Top 74 NCAA Champions - Arkansas Fight
src: cdn.vox-cdn.com


Broadcast information

On television, CBS Sports covered all 63 games of the tournament, with regional splits until the Regional Finals followed by national telecasts.

Exclusive national radio coverage was provided by CBS Radio Sports.

CBS announcers

  • James Brown/Jim Nantz and Billy Packer - Brown/Packer, First & Second Round at Uniondale, New York; Nantz/Packer, Midwest Regional at Dallas, Texas; Final Four at Charlotte, North Carolina
  • Dick Stockton and Al McGuire - First & Second Round at Lexington, Kentucky; West Regional at Los Angeles
  • Greg Gumbel and Bill Raftery - First & Second Round at Landover, Maryland; Southeast Regional at Knoxville, Tennessee
  • Verne Lundquist and Dan Bonner/Clark Kellogg - Lundquist/Bonner, First & Second Round at St. Petersburg, Florida; Lundquist/Kellogg, East Regional at Miami
  • Sean McDonough and Derrek Dickey - First & Second Round at Wichita, Kansas
  • Ted Robinson and Greg Kelser - First & Second Round at Oklahoma City
  • Tim Ryan and Ann Meyers - First & Second Round at Ogden, Utah
  • Dave Sims and Larry Farmer - First & Second Round at Sacramento, California

CBS Radio Sports announcers

  • - First & Second Round at Ogden, Utah

Local announcers


2014-15 Upper Deck NCAA March Madness Collection JK-1 Jason Kidd ...
src: img.comc.com


See also

  • 1994 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 National Invitation Tournament
  • 1994 National Women's Invitation Tournament
  • 1994 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament
  • 1994 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament

Source of the article : Wikipedia

Comments
0 Comments