2010–11 NCAA Division I men's basketball season


















The 2010–11 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 8, 2010 with the preliminary games of the 2010 Coaches Vs. Cancer Classic, and ended with the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament's championship game on April 4, 2011 at Reliant Stadium in Houston. The tournament's first-round games occurred March 15–16, 2011 in Dayton, followed by second and third rounds on Thursday through Sunday, March 17–20, 2011. Regionals games will be played on Thursday through Sunday, March 24–27, 2011, with the Final Four played on Saturday and Monday, April 2 and 4, 2011.




Contents





  • 1 Season headlines

    • 1.1 Milestones and records



  • 2 New arenas


  • 3 Season outlook

    • 3.1 Pre-season polls



  • 4 Conference membership changes


  • 5 Regular season

    • 5.1 Early-season tournaments


    • 5.2 Conference standings


    • 5.3 Conference winners and tournaments


    • 5.4 Statistical leaders



  • 6 Postseason tournaments

    • 6.1 NCAA Tournament

      • 6.1.1 Final Four – Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas


      • 6.1.2 Tournament upsets



    • 6.2 National Invitation Tournament

      • 6.2.1 NIT Semifinals and Final



    • 6.3 College Basketball Invitational


    • 6.4 CollegeInsider.com Tournament



  • 7 Award winners

    • 7.1 Consensus All-American teams


    • 7.2 Major player of the year awards


    • 7.3 Major freshman of the year awards


    • 7.4 Major coach of the year awards


    • 7.5 Other major awards



  • 8 Coaching changes


  • 9 References




Season headlines



  • Butler became the first program outside of one of the six "power conferences" to go to back-to-back Final Fours since UNLV in 1990 and 1991.[1]

  • On April 12, 2010, Centenary announced that it will be re-classifying to Division III for all of its sports upon the conclusion of the 2010–11 school year.[2] First year men's basketball coach Adam Walsh led the Gentlemen in their final year as a Division I program. Notable Centenary basketball alumni include Hall of Famer Robert Parish and the 2000–01 NCAA scoring champion Ronnie McCollum.

  • On June 4, 2010 legendary college basketball player and coach John Wooden died at the age of 99.[3]

  • The NCAA Tournament officially expanded to 68 teams as the NCAA announced that Dayton, Ohio would be the site of the "First Four" opening games.[4]

  • The AP preseason All-American team was named on November 1. Duke's Kyle Singler was the leading vote-getter with 62 of a possible 65 votes. Joining Singler were Kansas State guard Jacob Pullen (53 votes), BYU guard Jimmer Fredette (49), Purdue center JaJuan Johnson (46) and North Carolina forward Harrison Barnes (17). Barnes became the first freshman in history to be named to the preseason team.[5]


  • Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo had to serve a one-game suspension in December for a secondary violation of NCAA recruitment rules. He had hired an associate of a potential recruit to help during a youth basketball camp in June.[6] Also, Tennessee head coach Bruce Pearl was suspended for the first eight conference games and received a $1.5 million salary reduction due to recruiting violations and providing false information during the NCAA investigation.

  • On February 22, 2011, Matt Howard of Butler was named Academic All-American of the Year.[7]

  • The March 13 airing of the ESPN films documentary The Fab Five, a followup to its 30 for 30 series, sparked national outrage that lead to a series of media exchanges between members of the press, Michigan Wolverines men's basketball players and Duke Blue Devils men's basketball players in forums such as The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and The Washington Post.[8][9][10][11][12][13]


Milestones and records



  • Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski won his 800th game at Duke on November 24, making him the fifth ever coach to reach that milestone at one school.[14]


  • Belmont coach Rick Byrd won his 600th game on January 30.[15]

  • Jimmer Fredette became the all-time leading scorer in Mountain West Conference history on February 4, 2011.[16] Then, behind his career high 52-point outburst against New Mexico on March 11, he became BYU's all-time leading scorer after surpassing Danny Ainge.[17]

  • On February 19, 2011, Morehead State's Kenneth Faried grabbed 12 rebounds, giving him 1,576 for his career, and broke Tim Duncan's modern-era NCAA rebounding record.[18] Duncan's rebounding total of 1,570 had stood since 1997.

  • Charles Jenkins of Hofstra surpassed Antoine Agudio as the school's all-time leading scorer. He broke the previous record of 2,286 points on January 29, 2011, in a game against Drexel.[19] Jenkins graduated as the Colonial Athletic Association's second all-time leading scorer behind Navy's David Robinson, whose 2,669 points remain the CAA's most ever.[20]


  • Providence's Marshon Brooks set a new Big East regular season record for single-game scoring as he netted 52 points against Notre Dame in a 94-93 loss to the Irish.[21]


  • Hofstra guard Charles Jenkins,[22]College of Charleston guard Andrew Goudelock,[23] Duke forward Kyle Singler,[24]UTEP guard Randy Culpepper, BYU guard Jimmer Fredette,[25]Baylor guard LaceDarius Dunn,[26]Boston University forward John Holland,[27]Virginia Tech guard Malcolm Delaney, Appalachian State guard Donald Sims,[28]Seton Hall guard Jeremy Hazell,[29]Penn State guard Talor Battle,[30]Purdue guard E'Twaun Moore,[31]Kansas State guard Jacob Pullen,[32]Richmond guard Kevin Anderson,[33]Nicholls State forward Anatoly Bose,[34]Lipscomb center Adnan Hodzic,[35]Ole Miss guard Chris Warren,[36]Wofford forward Noah Dahlman[37]Morehead State center Kenneth Faried,[38] and Colorado guard Cory Higgins[39] each passed the 2,000 point mark for their careers.

  • After defeating Texas A&M in their next to last regular season game of the year, Kansas clinched at least a share of their seventh straight Big 12 Conference regular season title.[40] It is the most consecutive conference championships from a power conference since John Wooden's UCLA Bruins won 13 straight from 1967–1979.[40]


  • Pittsburgh head coach Jamie Dixon set the Division I record for most wins in a coach's first eight seasons after defeating South Florida on March 2.[41] It was his 214th career win.[41]


  • Butler set a Horizon League record with their fifth straight conference championship, shared or outright, breaking the previous record of four consecutive regular season championships, also set by Butler from 2000 to 2003.[42]


  • Xavier won their fifth straight conference championship, shared or outright, which matched the Atlantic 10 Conference record.[43]

  • Over the course of the 2010–11 Ivy League season, Harvard became the final member of the Ivy League to win at least a share of one men's basketball regular season championship since the league was formed during the 1956–57 season.[44]


  • Saint Joseph's coach Phil Martelli won his 300th game on March 11.[45] It happened after a 93–90 overtime win against Duquesne in the quarterfinals of the Atlantic 10 Conference tournament.[45]


  • Ohio State guard David Lighty broke the all-time career games played record on March 12.[46] The fifth-year senior appeared in his 153rd game, breaking the previous record of 152 set by Deon Thompson in 2009–10.

  • Duke's Kyle Singler and Morehead State's Kenneth Faried each eclipsed the dual 2000 points and 1000 rebounds thresholds, joining an exclusive list of NCAA Division I players to accomplish both feats.[38][47]


New arenas



  • Auburn moved from one on-campus venue to another, leaving behind their home since 1969, Beard–Eaves–Memorial Coliseum, for the new Auburn Arena. The Tigers' first game at their new home was a 79–66 win in a preseason exhibition against Division II West Alabama on November 3, 2010.[48] The first regular-season game was a 70–69 overtime loss to UNC Asheville on November 13, 2010.[49]


  • Louisville moved from Freedom Hall at the Kentucky Exposition Center, their home since 1956, to the KFC Yum! Center in downtown Louisville. The Cardinals' first game at their new home was an 83–66 win in a preseason exhibition against then-Division II Northern Kentucky on October 31, 2010.[50] The first regular-season game was an 88–73 win over Butler on November 16, 2010.[51]


  • Oregon opened Matthew Knight Arena, the replacement for venerable McArthur Court, on January 13, 2011. The Ducks defeated USC, 68–62.[52]


Season outlook



Pre-season polls



The top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls, October 28, 2010.[53]


























































Associated Press
Ranking
Team
1

Duke (55)
2

Michigan State (8)
3

Kansas State (2)
4

Ohio State
5

Pittsburgh
6

Villanova
7

Kansas
8

North Carolina
9

Florida
10

Syracuse
11

Kentucky
12

Gonzaga
13

Illinois
14

Purdue
15

Missouri
16

Baylor
17

Butler
18

Washington
19

Memphis
20

Georgetown
21

Virginia Tech
22

Temple
23

Tennessee
24

BYU
25

San Diego State






















































ESPN/USA Today Coaches[54]
Ranking
Team
1

Duke (29)
2

Michigan State (2)
3

Kansas State
4

Pittsburgh
5

Ohio State
6

Villanova
7

Kansas
8

Purdue
9

North Carolina
10

Kentucky
11

Florida
12

Gonzaga
13

Syracuse
14

Baylor
15

Missouri
16

Illinois
17

Washington
18

Butler
19

Memphis
20

Tennessee
21

Georgetown
22

Temple
23

Virginia Tech
24

Wisconsin
25

Texas


Conference membership changes


These schools joined new conferences for the 2010–11 season.














School
Former conference
New conference

New Orleans

Sun Belt Conference

NCAA Division II

Savannah State

NCAA Division I Independent

Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference

Winston-Salem State
NCAA Division I Independent
NCAA Division II


Regular season


A number of early-season tournaments marked the beginning of the college basketball season.[55]



Early-season tournaments


































































NameDatesNum. teamsChampions

NIT Season Tip-Off
Nov. 15–26
16

Tennessee

2K Sports Coaches vs. Cancer Classic
Nov. 8–19
4*

Pittsburgh

Charleston Classic
Nov. 18-21
8

Georgetown

Puerto Rico Tip-Off
Nov. 18–21
8

Minnesota

Paradise Jam Tournament
Nov. 19–22
8

Old Dominion

CBE Classic
Nov. 12–23
4*

Duke

Maui Invitational Tournament
Nov. 22–24
8

Connecticut

Cancún Challenge
Nov. 18–24
4*

Missouri

Great Alaska Shootout
Nov. 24–27
8

St. John's

76 Classic
Nov. 25–28
8

UNLV

Old Spice Classic
Nov. 25–28
8

Notre Dame
Las Vegas Invitational
Nov. 15–27
4*

Kansas
Legends Classic
Nov. 14–27
4*

Syracuse

South Padre Island Invitational
Nov. 26–28
8

BYU

Diamond Head Classic
Dec. 22–25
8

Butler

*Although these tournaments include more teams, only 4 play for the championship.



Conference standings



Conference winners and tournaments


Thirty athletic conferences each end their regular seasons with a single-elimination tournament. The teams in each conference that win their regular season title are given the number one seed in each tournament. The winners of these tournaments receive automatic invitations to the 2011 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. The Ivy League does not have a conference tournament, instead giving their automatic invitation to their regular-season champion. By contrast, the Atlantic Coast Conference does not have a regular-season champion, using the standings only for seeding purposes in its conference tournament.










































































































































































































Conference
Regular
Season Winner[56]

Conference
Player of the Year
Conference
Tournament
Tournament
Venue (City)
Tournament
Winner[57]
America East ConferenceVermont
John Holland, Boston University[58]
2011 America East Men's Basketball Tournament
Chase Family Arena
(Hartford, Connecticut)
Final at campus site

Boston University
Atlantic 10 ConferenceXavier
Tu Holloway, Xavier[59]
2011 Atlantic 10 Men's Basketball Tournament
Boardwalk Hall
(Atlantic City, New Jersey)

Richmond
Atlantic Coast ConferenceNorth Carolina
Nolan Smith, Duke[60]
2011 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament
Greensboro Coliseum
(Greensboro, North Carolina)

Duke
Atlantic Sun ConferenceBelmont
Mike Smith, East Tennessee State[61]
2011 Atlantic Sun Men's Basketball Tournament
University Center
(Macon, Georgia)

Belmont
Big 12 ConferenceKansas
Marcus Morris, Kansas[62]
2011 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament
Sprint Center
(Kansas City, Missouri)

Kansas
Big East ConferencePittsburgh
Ben Hansbrough, Notre Dame[63]
2011 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament
Madison Square Garden
(New York City, New York)

Connecticut
Big Sky ConferenceNorthern Colorado
Devon Beitzel, Northern Colorado[64]
2011 Big Sky Men's Basketball Tournament
Butler–Hancock Sports Pavilion
(Greeley, Colorado)
First round at campus sites

Northern Colorado
Big South ConferenceCoastal Carolina
Jesse Sanders, Liberty[65]
2011 Big South Conference Men's Basketball TournamentCampus Sites
UNC Asheville
Big Ten ConferenceOhio State
JaJuan Johnson, Purdue[66]
2011 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Conseco Fieldhouse
(Indianapolis, Indiana)

Ohio State
Big West ConferenceLong Beach State
Casper Ware, Long Beach State[67]
2011 Big West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Honda Center
(Anaheim, California)

UC Santa Barbara
Colonial Athletic AssociationGeorge Mason
Charles Jenkins, Hofstra[68]
2011 CAA Men's Basketball Tournament
Richmond Coliseum
(Richmond, Virginia)

Old Dominion
Conference USAUAB
Aaron Johnson, UAB[69]
2011 Conference USA Men's Basketball Tournament
Don Haskins Center
(El Paso, Texas)

Memphis
Great West ConferenceUtah Valley
Isiah Williams, Utah Valley[70]
2011 Great West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
UCCU Center
(Orem, Utah)

North Dakota
Horizon League
Milwaukee, Butler & Cleveland State

Norris Cole, Cleveland State[71]
2011 Horizon League Men's Basketball Tournament
U.S. Cellular Arena
(Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
First round at campus sites

Butler
IndependentNew Orleans
Antwan Carter, Longwood[72]
No Tournament
Ivy League
Harvard & Princeton

Keith Wright, Harvard[73]
No Tournament - Princeton won a one-game playoff, receiving the Ivy's automatic NCAA bid.
Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceFairfield
Ryan Rossiter, Siena[74]
2011 MAAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Webster Bank Arena
(Bridgeport, Connecticut)

Saint Peter's
Mid-American Conference
Kent State (East)
Western Michigan (West)

Justin Greene, Kent State[75]
2011 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, Ohio)

Akron
Mid-Eastern Athletic ConferenceBethune-Cookman
C. J. Reed, Bethune-Cookman[76]
2011 MEAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum
(Winston-Salem, North Carolina)

Hampton
Missouri Valley ConferenceMissouri State
Kyle Weems, Missouri State[77]
2011 Missouri Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Scottrade Center
(St. Louis, Missouri)

Indiana State
Mountain West Conference
BYU & San Diego State

Jimmer Fredette, BYU[78]
2011 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Thomas & Mack Center
(Paradise, Nevada)

San Diego St.
Northeast ConferenceLong Island
Ken Horton, Central Connecticut State[79]
2011 Northeast Conference Men's Basketball TournamentCampus Sites
Long Island
Ohio Valley ConferenceMurray State
Kenneth Faried, Morehead State[80]
2011 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Nashville Municipal Auditorium
(Nashville, Tennessee)

Morehead State
Pacific-10 ConferenceArizona
Derrick Williams, Arizona[81]
2011 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Staples Center
(Los Angeles, California)

Washington
Patriot LeagueBucknell
Mike Muscala, Bucknell[82]
2011 Patriot League Men's Basketball TournamentCampus Sites
Bucknell
Southeastern Conference
Florida (East)
Alabama (West)

Chandler Parsons, Florida[83][84]
2011 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament
Georgia Dome
(Atlanta, Georgia)

Kentucky
Southern Conference
Charleston & Wofford (South)
Western Carolina & Chattanooga (North)

Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston[85][86]
2011 Southern Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
McKenzie Arena
(Chattanooga, Tennessee)

Wofford
Southland Conference
McNeese State (East)
Sam Houston State (West)

Gilberto Clavell, Sam Houston State[87]
2011 Southland Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Leonard E. Merrell Center
(Katy, Texas)

Texas-San Antonio
Southwestern Athletic ConferenceTexas Southern
Travele Jones, Texas Southern[88]
2011 SWAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Garland Special Events Center
(Garland, Texas)

Alabama State
The Summit LeagueOakland
Keith Benson, Oakland[89]
2011 The Summit League Men's Basketball Tournament
Sioux Falls Arena
(Sioux Falls, South Dakota)

Oakland
Sun Belt Conference
Florida Atlantic (East)
Arkansas State & Louisiana–Lafayette (West)

Solomon Bozeman, Arkansas-Little Rock[90]
2011 Sun Belt Men's Basketball Tournament
Summit Arena
(Hot Springs, Arkansas)

Arkansas-Little Rock
West Coast Conference
Saint Mary's & Gonzaga

Mickey McConnell, Saint Mary's[91]
2011 West Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Orleans Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)

Gonzaga
Western Athletic ConferenceUtah State
Tai Wesley, Utah State[92]
2011 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament
Orleans Arena
(Paradise, Nevada)

Utah State


Statistical leaders



































































































Points Per GameRebounds Per GameAssists Per Game
Steals Per Game
PlayerSchoolPPGPlayerSchoolRPGPlayerSchoolAPGPlayerSchoolSPG
Jimmer FredetteBYU28.9Kenneth FariedMorehead St.14.5Aaron JohnsonUAB7.7Anthony NelsonNiagara3.4
Marshon BrooksProvidence24.6Ryan RossiterSiena13.2Scott MachadoIona7.6Jay ThreattDelaware St.3.1
Adrian OliverSan Jose St.24.0Jordan WilliamsMaryland11.8D. J. CooperOhio7.5Josh SlaterLipscomb3.1
Andrew GoudelockC. of Charleston23.7Chris GastonFordham11.3Hank ThornsTCU7.0T. J. McConnellDuquesne2.8
Kemba WalkerConnecticut23.5Kyle O'QuinnNorfolk St.11.1Darius MorrisMichigan6.7Jared CunninghamOregon St.2.8

































































































Blocked Shots Per GameField Goal PercentageThree-Point FG Percentage
Free Throw Percentage
PlayerSchoolBPGPlayerSchoolFG%PlayerSchool3FG%PlayerSchoolFT%
William MosleyNorthwestern St.4.9Leon PowellSE Missouri St.63.0Jon DieblerOhio St.50.2Chris WarrenMississippi92.8
Keith BensonOakland3.6Brian QvaleMontana62.6Robert NyakundiSMU49.7Oliver McNallyHarvard92.6
C. J. AikenSt. Joseph's3.5Kenneth FariedMorehead St.62.3Ashton GibbsPittsburgh49.0Zamal NixonHouston92.2
Kyle O'QuinnNorfolk St.3.4Thomas ColemanNC A&T61.9Scott BamforthWeber St.48.8Brian BarbourColumbia91.7
Sam MuldrowSouth Carolina3.4Noah DahlmanWofford61.2Gabe RogersN. Arizona46.8Justin RobinsonRider90.7


Postseason tournaments



NCAA Tournament




Final Four – Reliant Stadium, Houston, Texas
























































National Semifinals
April 2
National Championship Game
April 4
      
4

Kentucky
55

3

Connecticut

56

3

Connecticut

53

8

Butler
41
11

VCU
62

8

Butler

70


Tournament upsets


A "major upset" is defined as a win by a team seeded 7 or more spots below its defeated opponent.


































Date
Winner
Score
Loser
March 17

#13 Morehead State
62–61
#4 Louisville
March 17

#12 Richmond
69–66
#5 Vanderbilt
March 19

#8 Butler
71–70
#1 Pittsburgh
March 20

#11 VCU
94–76
#3 Purdue
March 20

#11 Marquette
66–62
#3 Syracuse
March 20

#10 Florida State
71–57
#2 Notre Dame
March 27

#11 VCU
71–61
#1 Kansas


National Invitation Tournament



After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the National Invitation Tournament invited 32 teams to participate.



NIT Semifinals and Final


Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City
























































Semifinals
March 29, 2011
Championship Game
March 31, 2011
      
1

Alabama

62
1

Colorado
61
1
Alabama
57

4

Wichita State

66
2

Washington State
44
4

Wichita State

75


College Basketball Invitational



The fourth College Basketball Invitational (CBI) Tournament was held beginning March 15 and ended with a best-of-three final, ending April 1. Oregon defeated Creighton, 2 games to 1.

























































 
Semifinals
March 23, 2011

Championship Series
March 28, 30, and April 1
(Best of Three)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

  Boise State
71
 

  Oregon

79
 

 
 
Host Gm.2/3 Oregon
76

71

71

 
Host Gm.1 Creighton
84
58
69

  UCF
64

  Creighton

82
 


CollegeInsider.com Tournament



The third CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament was held beginning March 14 and ended with a championship game on March 30. This tournament places an emphasis on selecting successful teams from "mid-major" conferences who were left out of the NCAA Tournament and NIT. Santa Clara defeated Iona 76–69 in the final, as Santa Clara's Kevin Foster was tournament MVP.[93]























































Semifinals
March 25 and 26

Championship
March 30
      
1

Santa Clara

72
4

Southern Methodist
55

Santa Clara

76

Iona
69
3

Iona

83
2

East Tennessee State
80


Award winners



Consensus All-American teams





























Consensus First Team
Player
Position
Class
Team

Jimmer Fredette
PG
Senior

Brigham Young

JaJuan Johnson
C
Senior

Purdue

Nolan Smith
PG-SG
Senior

Duke

Jared Sullinger
PF-C
Freshman

Ohio State

Kemba Walker
PG
Junior

Connecticut





































Consensus Second Team
Player
Position
Class
Team

Kenneth Faried
PF-C
Senior

Morehead State

Jordan Hamilton
SG-SF
Sophomore

Texas

Ben Hansbrough
PG
Senior

Notre Dame

Kawhi Leonard
SF
Sophomore

San Diego State

Marcus Morris
PF-C
Junior

Kansas

Jordan Taylor
PG
Junior

Wisconsin

Derrick Williams
SF-PF
Sophomore

Arizona


Major player of the year awards



  • Wooden Award: Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[94]


  • Naismith Award: Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[95]


  • Associated Press Player of the Year: Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[96]


  • NABC Player of the Year: Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[95]


  • Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[97]


  • Adolph Rupp Trophy: Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[98]


  • Sporting News Player of the Year: Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[99]


Major freshman of the year awards



  • USBWA Freshman of the Year: Jared Sullinger, Ohio State[100]


  • Sporting News Freshman of the Year: Jared Sullinger, Ohio State[99]


Major coach of the year awards



  • Associated Press Coach of the Year: Mike Brey, Notre Dame[101]


  • Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Mike Brey, Notre Dame[102]


  • NABC Coach of the Year: Steve Fisher, San Diego State[103]


  • Naismith College Coach of the Year: Steve Fisher, San Diego State[104]


  • Adolph Rupp Cup: Steve Fisher, San Diego State[98]


  • Sporting News Coach of the Year: Jamie Dixon, Pittsburgh[99]


Other major awards



  • Bob Cousy Award (Best point guard): Kemba Walker, Connecticut[105]


  • Pete Newell Big Man Award (Best big man): JaJuan Johnson, Purdue[106]


  • NABC Defensive Player of the Year: Kenneth Faried, Morehead State[107]


  • Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best senior 6'0"/1.83 m or shorter): Jacob Pullen, Kansas State[108]


  • Lowe's Senior CLASS Award (top senior): Jimmer Fredette, Brigham Young[109]


  • Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): Lavoy Allen, Temple[110]


  • NIT/Haggerty Award (Top player in NYC metro area): Charles Jenkins, Hofstra[111]


  • Ben Jobe Award (Top minority coach): Cuonzo Martin, Missouri State[112]


  • Hugh Durham Award (Top mid-major coach): Rick Byrd, Belmont[113]


  • Jim Phelan Award (Top head coach): Stew Morrill, Utah State[114]


  • Lefty Driesell Award (Top defensive player): Kent Bazemore, Old Dominion[115]


  • Lou Henson Award (Top mid-major player): Matt Howard, Butler[116]


  • Lute Olson Award (Top non-freshman or transfer player): Kemba Walker, Connecticut[117]


  • Skip Prosser Man of the Year Award (Coach with moral character): Chris Mack, Xavier[118]


  • Elite 88 Award (Top GPA at Final Four): Matt Howard, Butler[119]


Coaching changes


A number of teams changed coaches during and after the season.































































































































































































































































































Team
Former
Coach
Interim
Coach
New
Coach
Reason

Alabama A&M

L. Vann Pettaway[120]


Willie Hayes[121]


Alcorn State

Larry Smith


Luther Riley[122]
ASU alum Smith was moved to director of athletic development for the school.[123]

Arkansas

John Pelphrey[124]


Mike Anderson


Boston University

Pat Chambers


Joe Jones[125]
Chambers left to take the newly opened job at Penn State.[126]

Bradley

Jim Les[127]


Geno Ford


Cal State Bakerfield

Keith Brown


Rod Barnes[128]
Brown's contract was not renewed after the Roadrunners finished 9–19.[129]

Colgate

Emmett Davis[130]


Matt Langel[131]


Dayton

Brian Gregory


Archie Miller[132]
Gregory accepted the head coaching job at Georgia Tech.[133]

Eastern Michigan

Charles Ramsey[134]


Rob Murphy[135]


Eastern Washington

Kirk Earlywine


Jim Hayford[136]
Earlywine was informed his contract would not be renewed.[137]

Fairfield

Ed Cooley


Sydney Johnson [138]
Cooley accepted the vacant job at Providence

Florida A&M

Eugene Harris[139]


Clemon Johnson
FAMU replaced Harris with star alum Johnson.[140]

Florida Gulf Coast

Dave Balza[141]


Andy Enfield[142]


Fresno State

Steve Cleveland[143]


Rodney Terry[144]


George Mason

Jim Larranaga


Paul Hewitt[145]
Larranaga accepted the University of Miami coaching job on April 22.[146] Mason replaced him with Hewitt, who had just been fired by Georgia Tech.

George Washington

Karl Hobbs


Mike Lonergan
Hobbs was fired a week after GW hired a new athletic director. He had struggled in his last four seasons, going 25–39 in the A10.[147] New hire Lonergan, previously Vermont head coach, has deep roots in the Washington area—he was born and raised in the Maryland suburbs, attended The Catholic University of America, coached Catholic for 13 seasons, including a Division III national title in 2001, and spent a year under Gary Williams at Maryland.[148]

Georgia State

Rod Barnes

Paul Graham

Ron Hunter
Barnes was fired after four seasons at the conclusion of the 2010–11 regular season. Overall wins versus losses was the reason cited.[149]

Georgia Tech

Paul Hewitt


Brian Gregory
Hewitt was fired six years following his lone Final Four appearance.[150] Brian Gregory from Dayton was hired.[151]

IPFW

Dane Fife


Tony Jasick
Fife left IPFW to become an assistant at Michigan State.[152]

IUPUI

Ron Hunter


Todd Howard[153]
Hunter left for Georgia State after 17 years.[154]

Kennesaw State

Tony Ingle


Lewis Preston[155]
The school decided not to renew Ingle or his staff to help turn around the team's academic performance.[156]

Kent State

Geno Ford


Rob Senderoff[157]
Ford left Kent State for Bradley after leading the team to a first-place MAC finish.[158] The school promoted assistant Senderoff to the top job. At the time of his promotion, he was still under a show-cause penalty stemming from the Kelvin Sampson scandal at Indiana. The penalty expired on May 25.[159]

Lamar

Steve Roccaforte[160]


Pat Knight[161]


Louisiana Tech

Kerry Rupp[162]


Michael White[163]


Loyola (IL)

Jim Whitesell[164]


Porter Moser[165]


Manhattan

Barry Rohrssen[166]


Steve Masiello[167]


Maryland

Gary Williams


Mark Turgeon
Williams retired at the end of the season after 22 years and a 461-252 (.646) record at his alma mater.[168]

Miami (FL)

Frank Haith


Jim Larranaga
Haith left for the open Missouri job.[169]

Missouri

Mike Anderson


Frank Haith
Arkansas hired former Nolan Richardson assistant Anderson.[170]

Missouri State

Cuonzo Martin


Paul Lusk[171]
Martin accepted the head coaching job at Tennessee.[172]

Monmouth

Dave Calloway


King Rice[173]
Calloway resigned under pressure, effective at the end of the season.[174]

Murray State

Billy Kennedy[175]


Steve Prohm
Kennedy left for the opening at Texas A&M. Steve Prohm had been an assistant coach at Murray State and was promoted on May 23 to be their new head coach.

Navy

Billy Lange


Ed DeChellis
Lange left to become Associate Head Coach at Villanova.[176]

North Carolina State

Sidney Lowe


Mark Gottfried [177]
Wolfpack alum Lowe resigned after failing to make the NCAA Tournament in his five-year tenure.[178]

New Orleans

Joe Pasternack


Mark Slessinger
Pasternack resigned to become an assistant coach at Arizona under head coach Sean Miller.[179] Mark Slessinger was hired to pilot the Privateers out of division I.[180]

Northern Illinois

Ricardo Patton


Mark Montgomery[181]
Former Colorado coach was fired from NIU after a 35-83 overall record in four seasons.[182]

Oklahoma

Jeff Capel


Lon Kruger
Capel was fired just two years removed from an Elite Eight finish.[183]

Penn State

Ed DeChellis


Pat Chambers[126]
DeChellis made the unusual move of leaving a Big Ten school for Navy of the Patriot League.

Pepperdine

Tom Asbury


Marty Wilson
Asbury retired, turning the Waves program over to Associate Head Coach Wilson.[184]

Princeton

Sydney Johnson [138]


Mitch Henderson[185]
Johnson left for the open Fairfield Job[138]

Providence

Keno Davis


Ed Cooley[186]
Davis was fired after only three seasons.[187]

Radford

Brad Greenberg


Mike Jones[188]
Greenberg was fired following a 5-24 season and after sitting out the final four games of the season for NCAA violations.[189] In February 2012, he would be hit with a five-year show-cause penalty for misleading NCAA investigators.[190]

Southern

Rob Spivery


Roman Banks[191]


Stetson

Derek Waugh


Casey Alexander[192]
Waugh resigned after guiding the Hatters to only two winning seasons in 10+ years as coach.[193]

Tennessee

Bruce Pearl


Cuonzo Martin
Pearl was fired on March 21 after finishing the season with a 30-point loss to Michigan in the NCAA Tournament's Round of 64. This followed a tumultuous season in which he was suspended for recruiting violations, fined, admitted to misleading NCAA investigators and finishing with only a 19–15 overall record.[194]

Tennessee Tech

Mike Sutton


Steve Payne
Sutton retired and was replaced by top assistant Payne.[195]

Texas A&M

Mark Turgeon


Billy Kennedy
Turgeon left in May for the Maryland job.[196]

Texas A&M–Corpus Christi

Perry Clark


Willis Wilson[197]
Clark was fired after finishing 10–21 in his fourth season. Athletic director Tim Fitzpatrick claimed that success for the men's basketball program is "critically important."[198]

Texas Tech

Pat Knight


Billy Gillispie
Fired on March 7, 2011 after finishing the regular season 13-18 and missing NCAA tournament. Stated in preseason that he should lose his job if Texas Tech missed the NCAA tournament again.[199]

Towson

Pat Kennedy


Pat Skerry[200]
Announced on March 7, 2011, after finishing the regular season with a 4–26 record that included 19 straight losses.[201]

UC Davis

Gary Stewart[202]


Jim Les[203]


UNLV

Lon Kruger


Dave Rice[204]
Kruger left for Oklahoma after reportedly turning the job down.[205]

Utah

Jim Boylen


Larry Krystkowiak[206]
Announced on March 12, 2011, after consecutive losing seasons, Boylen was relieved of his duties. Utah finished with a 13-18 overall record (6-10 MWC), the second-straight losing season for the Utes, who were 14-17 in 2009-10.[207]

Valparaiso

Homer Drew


Bryce Drew
Homer's son, Bryce, had served as the associate head coach for a number of years prior to taking over the program in May 2011.[208]

Vermont

Mike Lonergan[209]


John Becker


Wyoming

Heath Schroyer

Fred Langley

Larry Shyatt[210]
Schroyer was the first coach fired during the season as he was let go on February 7, 2011 following an 8-15 start.[211]


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  211. ^ Heath Schroyer axed as Wyoming coach









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