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1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

Basketball season


Basketball season

FieldValue
year1979
image[[File:NCAA 70s logo.svg247px]]
preseason_ap[Indiana Hoosiers](1979-80-indiana-hoosiers-men-s-basketball-team)
tourney_startMarch 6
nc_date24, 1980
champ_stadMarket Square Arena
champ_cityIndianapolis, Indiana
champ[Louisville Cardinals](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)
helmschamp[Louisville Cardinals](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)
nit_champ[Virginia Cavaliers](1979-80-virginia-cavaliers-men-s-basketball-team)
playeroftheyear
helmspoyDarrell Griffith, [Louisville Cardinals](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)

The 1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 17, 1979, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on March 24, 1980, at the Market Square Arena in Indianapolis. The Louisville Cardinals won their first NCAA national championship with a 59–54 victory over the UCLA Bruins.

Rule changes

  • Officials were ordered to more strictly enforce foul rules already on the books, including bench decorum, hand-checking and charging fouls.
  • Any mistaken attempt to call a time-out after a team runs out of time-outs results in a technical foul and two free throws for the opposing team. The rule would figure prominently in the outcome of the 1993 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.

Season headlines

  • ESPN launched on September 7, 1979, as the first all-sports television network and began televising college basketball in November. It took advantage of college basketball's rapidly growing popularity to begin a highly profitable relationship with the NCAA which greatly expanded television coverage of college basketball in the United States.
  • The basketball-centered original Big East Conference began play. Working closely with ESPN, it rapidly developed a reputation as a powerhouse of college basketball and a dominating force in the sport.
  • The ECAC North Conference began play, with 10 original members. It was renamed the North Atlantic Conference in 1988 and the America East Conference in 1996.
  • The ECAC South Conference was founded, consisting of schools that participated in the Eastern College Athletic Conference's Division I ECAC South tournaments for independents. The ECAC South did not play as a conference until the 1981–82 season; in the meantime, its members continued compete as independents during the regular season and seek a bid to the NCAA tournament via the ECAC's regional tournament. The conference was renamed the Colonial Athletic Association in 1985 and the Coastal Athletic Association in 2023.
  • The Midwestern City Conference began play, with six original members. It was renamed the Midwestern Collegiate Conference in 1985 and the Horizon League in 2001.
  • The National Invitation Tournament expanded from 24 to 32 teams.
  • The NCAA tournament expanded from 40 to 48 teams. For the first time, more than two teams from each conference could be selected for the tournament. The NCAA also instituted the "round-robin rule," requiring a conference to play either a single-round-robin regular-season format and a conference tournament or a double-round-robin regular-season format to be eligible for an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. The expanded access of conference members to tournament bids combined with the "round-robin rule" made it difficult for Division I independents — most of which were located in the Northeastern United States — to get a tournament bid, greatly accelerating the decline in the number of independents, a decline which had begun in the 1974–75 season when the NCAA allowed more than one team per conference into the tournament for the first time. The Big East Conference formed as a result of the new tournament access requirements, and additional conferences would form by 1981.
  • ESPN televised 23 games of the 1980 NCAA tournament, becoming the first television network to broadcast the early rounds of an NCAA Tournament.
  • For the first time, none of the No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament advanced to the Final Four.
  • Louisville's "doctors of dunk" brought Denny Crum his first NCAA title with a 59–54 win over surprise finalist UCLA and coach Larry Brown. Wooden Award winner Darrell Griffith was named Final Four Most Outstanding Player.
  • The first year of the Ralph Sampson era ended with a Virginia Cavaliers National Invitation Tournament championship – a 58–55 win over Minnesota. Sampson, a 7 ft freshman center, was named the tournament's Most Valuable Player.

Season outlook

Pre-season polls

Main article: 1979–80 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings

The top 20 from the AP Poll and UPI Coaches Poll during the pre-season.

'Associated Press'RankingTeam
1[Indiana](1979-80-indiana-hoosiers-men-s-basketball-team) (28)
2[Kentucky](1979-80-kentucky-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team) (5)
3[Duke](1979-80-duke-blue-devils-men-s-basketball-team) (18)
4Ohio State (7)
5Notre Dame (1)
6North Carolina
7Louisiana State
8[UCLA](1979-80-ucla-bruins-men-s-basketball-team)
9[DePaul](1979-80-depaul-blue-demons-men-s-basketball-team)
10[Louisville](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)
11[Purdue](1979-80-purdue-boilermakers-men-s-basketball-team)
12Syracuse
13[Virginia](1979-80-virginia-cavaliers-men-s-basketball-team)
14Texas A&M
15Brigham Young
16[St. John's](1979-80-st-john-s-redmen-basketball-team)
17Oregon State
18[Marquette](1979-80-marquette-warriors-men-s-basketball-team)
19[Georgetown](1979-80-georgetown-hoyas-men-s-basketball-team)
20[Kansas](1979-80-kansas-jayhawks-men-s-basketball-team)

|

**UPI Coaches**RankingTeam
1[Indiana](1979-80-indiana-hoosiers-men-s-basketball-team)
2Ohio State
3Notre Dame
4North Carolina
5Kentucky
6[Duke](1979-80-duke-blue-devils-men-s-basketball-team)
7[UCLA](1979-80-ucla-bruins-men-s-basketball-team)
8Louisiana State
9DePaul
[Virginia](1979-80-virginia-cavaliers-men-s-basketball-team)
11[Purdue](1979-80-purdue-boilermakers-men-s-basketball-team)
12Syracuse
13Texas A&M
14[Louisville](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)
15St. John's
16Oregon State
17Brigham Young
18[Iowa](1979-80-iowa-hawkeyes-men-s-basketball-team)
19Marquette
20UNLV

|}

Conference membership changes

SchoolFormer conferenceNew conference
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentMidwestern City Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division I independentNAIA independent
Division I independentSouthern Conference
Division I independentMidwestern City Conference
SIAC (D-II)Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division I independentAtlantic Coast Conference
Big Sky ConferenceWest Coast Athletic Conference
Division I independentWestern Athletic Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentMidwestern City Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
West Coast Athletic ConferenceBig Sky Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Trans America Athletic ConferenceMidwestern City Conference
Division I independentMidwestern City Conference
Eastern Athletic Association (Eastern 8)Division I independent
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentEastern Athletic Association (Eastern 8)
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division II independentWest Coast Athletic Conference
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division I independentBig East Conference
Division II independentDivision I independent
Division I independentSun Belt Conference
Division I independentECAC North Conference
Division I independentSun Belt Conference
Division I independentMidwestern City Conference

Regular season

Conferences

Conference winners and tournaments

The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference — with members Delaware State, Howard, North Carolina A&T, and South Carolina State — became a Division I conference this season. Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State, and North Carolina Central opted not to reclassify with the conference and remained in Division II.

ConferenceRegular
season winnerConference
player of the yearConference
tournamentTournament
venue (City)Tournament
winner
Atlantic Coast Conference[Maryland](1979-80-maryland-terrapins-men-s-basketball-team)Albert King, Maryland[1980 ACC men's basketball tournament](1980-acc-men-s-basketball-tournament)Greensboro Coliseum
(Greensboro, North Carolina)[Duke](1979-80-duke-blue-devils-men-s-basketball-team)
Big East Conference[Georgetown](1979-80-georgetown-hoyas-men-s-basketball-team), [St. John's](1979-80-st-john-s-redmen-basketball-team) & [Syracuse](1979-80-syracuse-orangemen-basketball-team)John Duren, Georgetown[1980 Big East men's basketball tournament](1980-big-east-men-s-basketball-tournament)Providence Civic Center
(Providence, Rhode Island)[Georgetown](1979-80-georgetown-hoyas-men-s-basketball-team)
Big Eight Conference[Missouri](1979-80-missouri-tigers-men-s-basketball-team)Rolando Blackman, Kansas State[1980 Big Eight Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-big-eight-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Kemper Arena
(Kansas City, Missouri)
(Semifinals and Finals)Kansas State
Big Sky Conference[Weber State](1979-80-weber-state-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team)Don Newman, Idaho[1980 Big Sky Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-big-sky-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Dee Events Center
(Ogden, Utah)[Weber State](1979-80-weber-state-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team)
Big Ten Conference[Indiana](1979-80-indiana-hoosiers-men-s-basketball-team)None SelectedNo Tournament
East Coast ConferenceSt. Joseph's (East)
Lafayette (West)Michael Brooks, La Salle[1980 East Coast Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-east-coast-conference-division-i-men-s-basketball-tournament)The Palestra
(Philadelphia)La Salle
Eastern Athletic Association (Eastern 8)[Villanova](1979-80-villanova-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team), Duquesne & RutgersEarl Belcher, St. Bonaventure[1980 Eastern 8 men's basketball tournament](1980-eastern-8-men-s-basketball-tournament)Civic Arena
(Pittsburgh)[Villanova](1979-80-villanova-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team)
Eastern College Athletic
Conference (ECAC)Division I ECAC members
played as independents
during the regular season
(see note)[1980 ECAC Metro men's basketball tournament](1980-ecac-metro-men-s-basketball-tournament)Nassau Coliseum
(Uniondale, New York)[Iona](1979-80-iona-gaels-men-s-basketball-team)
[1980 ECAC South men's basketball tournament](1980-ecac-south-men-s-basketball-tournament)Hampton Coliseum
(Hampton, Virginia)Old Dominion
ECAC NorthBoston University & NortheasternRufus Harris, Maine &
Ron Perry, Holy Cross[1980 ECAC North men's basketball tournament](1980-america-east-men-s-basketball-tournament)Hart Center
(Worcester, Massachusetts)Holy Cross
Ivy League[Penn](1979-80-penn-quakers-men-s-basketball-team)Peter Moss, BrownNo Tournament
Metro Conference[Louisville](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)Darrell Griffith, [Louisville](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)[1980 Metro Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-metro-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Freedom Hall
(Louisville, Kentucky)[Louisville](1979-80-louisville-cardinals-men-s-basketball-team)
Mid-American Conference[Toledo](1979-80-toledo-rockets-men-s-basketball-team)Jim Swaney, Toledo[1980 MAC men's basketball tournament](1980-mac-men-s-basketball-tournament)Crisler Arena
(Ann Arbor, Michigan)[Toledo](1979-80-toledo-rockets-men-s-basketball-team)
Mid-Eastern Athletic ConferenceHowardJames Ratiff, Howard[1980 MEAC men's basketball tournament](1980-meac-men-s-basketball-tournament)Greensboro Coliseum
(Greensboro, North Carolina)Howard
Midwestern City ConferenceLoyola (IL)Calvin Garrett, Oral Roberts[1980 Midwestern City Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-midwestern-city-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Roberts Municipal Stadium
(Evansville, Indiana)Oral Roberts
Missouri Valley ConferenceBradleyLewis Lloyd, Drake[1980 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-missouri-valley-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Robertson Memorial Field House
(Peoria, Illinois)Bradley
Ohio Valley ConferenceMurray State & Western KentuckyGary Hooker, Murray State[1980 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-ohio-valley-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)E. A. Diddle Arena
(Bowling Green, Kentucky)[Western Kentucky](1979-80-western-kentucky-hilltoppers-basketball-team)
Pacific-10 Conference[Oregon State](1979-80-oregon-state-beavers-men-s-basketball-team)Don Collins, Washington StateNo Tournament
Pacific Coast Athletic Association[Utah State](1979-80-utah-state-aggies-men-s-basketball-team)Dean Hunger, Utah State[1980 PCAA men's basketball tournament](1980-pcaa-men-s-basketball-tournament)Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, California)[San Jose State](1979-80-san-jose-state-spartans-men-s-basketball-team)
Southeastern Conference[Kentucky](1979-80-kentucky-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team)Kyle Macy, Kentucky[1980 SEC men's basketball tournament](1980-sec-men-s-basketball-tournament)Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex
(Birmingham, Alabama)[LSU](1979-80-lsu-tigers-basketball-team)
Southern ConferenceFurmanJonathan Moore, Furman[1980 Southern Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-southern-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Roanoke Civic Center
(Roanoke, Virginia)Furman
Southland Conference[Lamar](1979-80-lamar-cardinals-basketball-team)Andrew Toney, Southwestern LouisianaNo Tournament
Southwest Conference[Texas A&M](1979-80-texas-a-m-aggies-men-s-basketball-team)Terry Teagle, Baylor[1980 Southwest Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-southwest-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)HemisFair Arena
(San Antonio, Texas)[Texas A&M](1979-80-texas-a-m-aggies-men-s-basketball-team)
Southwestern Athletic Conference[Alcorn State](1979-80-alcorn-state-braves-basketball-team)Larry Smith, Alcorn State[1980 SWAC men's basketball tournament](1980-swac-men-s-basketball-tournament)[Alcorn State](1979-80-alcorn-state-braves-basketball-team)
Sun Belt ConferenceSouth AlabamaJames Ray, Jacksonville[1980 Sun Belt Conference men's basketball tournament](1980-sun-belt-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Charlotte Coliseum
(Charlotte, North Carolina) (Semifinals and Finals)[VCU](1979-80-vcu-rams-men-s-basketball-team)
Trans America Athletic ConferenceNortheast LouisianaGeorge Lett, Centenary[1980 TAAC men's basketball tournament](1980-taac-men-s-basketball-tournament)Ewing Coliseum
(Monroe, Louisiana)Centenary
West Coast Athletic ConferenceSt. Mary's &
San FranciscoKurt Rambis, Santa ClaraNo Tournament
Western Athletic Conference[BYU](1979-80-byu-cougars-men-s-basketball-team)None SelectedNo Tournament

Note: From 1975 to 1981, the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC), a loosely organized sports federation of colleges and universities in the Northeastern United States, organized Division I ECAC regional tournaments for those of its members that were independents in basketball. Each 1980 tournament winner received an automatic bid to the 1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament in the same way that the tournament champions of conventional athletic conferences did. The ECAC North was a separate, conventional conference.

Conference standings

Division I independents

A total of 47 college teams played as Division I independents. Among them, DePaul (26–2) had both the best winning percentage (.929) and the most wins.

Informal championships

ConferenceRegular
season winnerMost Valuable Player
Philadelphia Big 5Saint Joseph'sMichael Brooks, La Salle

Saint Joseph's finished with a 4–0 record in head-to-head competition among the Philadelphia Big 5.

Statistical leaders

PlayerSchoolPPGPlayerSchoolRPGPlayerSchoolFG%PlayerSchoolFT%
Tony MurphySouthern32.1Larry SmithAlcorn St.15.1Steve JohnsonOregon St.71.0
Lewis LloydDrake30.2Lewis LloydDrake15.0Ron CharlesMichigan St.67.6
Harry KellyTX Southern29.0Rickey BrownMississippi St.14.4Cherokee RhoneCentenary66.6
Ken PageNew Mexico28.0Monti DavisTenn. St.13.3Roosevelt BouieSyracuse65.4
James TillmanEastern Kentucky27.2Gary HookerMurray St.12.3Murray BrownFlorida St.64.6

Post-season tournaments

NCAA tournament

Main article: 1980 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

Final Four

Played at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis, Indiana | RD1-seed1=E5 | RD1-team1=Iowa | RD1-score1=72 | RD1-seed2=MW2 | RD1-team2=Louisville | RD1-score2=80 | RD1-seed3=ME6 | RD1-team3=Purdue | RD1-score3=62 | RD1-seed4=W8 | RD1-team4=UCLA | RD1-score4=67 | RD2-seed1=MW2 | RD2-team1=Louisville | RD2-score1=59 | RD2-seed2=W8 | RD2-team2=UCLA | RD2-score2=54 | RD2b-seed1=E5 | RD2b-team1=Iowa | RD2b-score1=58 | RD2b-seed2=ME6 | RD2b-team2=Purdue | RD2b-score2=75

National Invitation tournament

Main article: 1980 National Invitation Tournament

NIT semifinals and finals

Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City | RD1-seed1= | RD1-team1=UNLV | RD1-score1=71 | RD1-seed2= | RD1-team2=Virginia | RD1-score2=90 | RD1-seed3= | RD1-team3=Minnesota | RD1-score3=65 | RD1-seed4= | RD1-team4=Illinois | RD1-score4=63 | RD2-seed1= | RD2-team1=Virginia | RD2-score1=58 | RD2-seed2= | RD2-team2=Minnesota | RD2-score2=55 | RD2b-seed1= | RD2b-team1=UNLV | RD2b-score1=74 | RD2b-seed2= | RD2b-team2=Illinois | RD2b-score2=84

Awards

Consensus All-American teams

Main article: 1980 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans

PlayerPositionClassTeam
Mark AguirreFSophomoreDePaul
Michael BrooksFSeniorLa Salle
Joe Barry CarrollCSeniorPurdue
Darrell GriffithGSeniorLouisville
Kyle MacyGSeniorKentucky
PlayerPositionClassTeam
Mike GminskiCSeniorDuke
Albert KingFJuniorMaryland
Mike O'KorenFSeniorNorth Carolina
Kelvin RanseyGSeniorOhio State
Sam WorthenGSeniorMarquette

Major player of the year awards

  • Wooden Award: Darrell Griffith, Louisville
  • Naismith Award: Mark Aguirre, DePaul
  • Helms Player of the Year: Darrell Griffith, Louisville
  • Associated Press Player of the Year: Mark Aguirre, DePaul
  • UPI Player of the Year: Mark Aguirre, DePaul
  • NABC Player of the Year: Michael Brooks, La Salle
  • Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): Mark Aguirre, DePaul
  • Adolph Rupp Trophy: Mark Aguirre, DePaul
  • Sporting News Player of the Year: Darrell Griffith, Louisville

Major coach of the year awards

  • Associated Press Coach of the Year: Ray Meyer, DePaul
  • Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Ray Meyer, DePaul
  • NABC Coach of the Year: Lute Olson, Iowa
  • UPI Coach of the Year: Ray Meyer, DePaul
  • Sporting News Coach of the Year: Lute Olson, Iowa

Other major awards

  • Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best player under 6'0): Jim Sweeney, Boston College
  • Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): Michael Brooks, La Salle
  • NIT/Haggerty Award (Top player in New York City metro area): Jeff Ruland, Iona

Coaching changes

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

TeamFormer
CoachInterim
CoachNew
CoachReason
AlabamaC. M. NewtonWimp SandersonNewton resigned to take the same position at Southeastern Conference rival Vanderbilt
AkronKen CunninghamBob Rupert
ArmyMike KrzyzewskiPete Gaudet
BaptistDavid ReesePhil Carter
Boise StateBus ConnorDave Leach
Cal State FullertonBobby DyeGeorge McQuarn
Colorado StateJim WilliamsTony McAndrews
CornellBen BluittTom Miller
DukeBill Fosterurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20101231144203/http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-baskbl/0910accmbkguide.htmldate=2010-12-31 }}, Updated August 21, 2010Duke hired the untested Krzyzewski after a 9–17 season at Army.
Fairleigh DickinsonAl LobalboDon Feeley
FloridaEd VisscherNorm Sloan
George MasonJohn LinnJoe Harrington
Georgia SouthernJ. B. ScearceJohn Nelson
HofstraJoe HarringtonDick Berg
IonaJim ValvanoPat Kennedy
Iowa StateLynn NanceRick SamuelsJohnny OrrNance resigned mid-season after an 8–10 start.
LafayetteRoy ChipmanWill Rackley
LamarBilly TubbsPat Foster
Loyola (IL)Jerry LyneGene Sullivan
Loyola MarymountRon JacobsEd Goorjian
MichiganJohnny OrrBill Frieder
NavyBob HamiltonPaul Evans
NebraskaJoe CiprianoMoe IbaIba took the helm after Cipriano died of cancer in November 1980.
Nevada-RenoJim CareySonny Allen
NiagaraDan RaskinPeter Lonergan
NC StateNorm SloanJim ValvanoSloan resigned at NC State to take over at Florida, his alma mater, to rebuild the Gators as they moved into their new arena.
Northwestern LouisianaTynes HildebrandWayne Yates
OhioDale BandyDanny Nee
OklahomaDave BlissBilly Tubbs
PittsburghTim GrgurichRoy Chipman
PurdueLee RoseGene Keady
San FranciscoDan BelluominiPete Barry
South CarolinaFrank McGuireBill FosterHall of Fame coach McGuire retired after 30 years of coaching.
South Carolina StateTim AutryJohnny Jones
South FloridaChip ConnerGordon GibbonsLee RoseConner was fired in January and later replaced with Rose – fresh off of a Final Four at Purdue.
Southern MethodistSonny AllenDave Bliss
Southern UtahStan JackTom McCracken
Tennessee TechCliff MalpassTom Deaton
TulsaJim KingBill FraneyNolan RichardsonKing resigned due to family concerns in February. Tulsa hired reigning NJCAA championship coach Richardson.
UC IrvineTim TiftBill Mulligan
ValparaisoKen RochlitzTom Smith
Western KentuckyGene KeadyClem Haskins
Wisconsin-MilwaukeeBob GottliebBob Voight

Notes

References

References

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  3. "Burnsed, Brian, "A Brief History of Men's College Basketball," ''Champion'', Fall 2018 Accessed April 6, 2021".
  4. . (). ["Playing Rules History"](http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/2010/Rules.pdf). *NCAA*.
  5. Steinberg, Russell. (June 22, 2015). "The death of the independent in college basketball". SBNation.
  6. (2009). "ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game". [[Random House]].
  7. (2009). "2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book – Conferences Section". NCAA.
  8. [http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/acc/sports/m-baskbl/auto_pdf/09mbkguide083112.pdf 2008–09 ACC Men's Basketball Media Guide – Year by Year section] {{Webarchive. link. (2016-03-03 , retrieved 2010-08-01)
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  16. [http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/hori/genrel/auto_pdf/Records-MBB.pdf 2008–09 Horizon League Men's Basketball Record Book] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-05-23 , [[Horizon League]], retrieved 2010-08-01)
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  19. [http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/pac10/sports/m-baskbl/auto_pdf/Honors.pdf 2008–09 Pacific-10 Men's Basketball Media Guide- Honors Section] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-05-23 , [[Pacific-10 Conference]], retrieved 2010-08-01)
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  22. [http://www.soconsports.com/fls/4000/socon/files/0809mbkguide/honorsandawards.pdf?SPSID=35819&SPID=1798&DB_OEM_ID=4000 2008–09 SoCon Men's Basketball Media Guide – Honors Section], [[Southern Conference]], retrieved 2010-08-01
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  24. (February 27, 1980). "Teagle, Metcalf get top SWC honors". Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
  25. 2006–07 SWAC Men's Basketball Media Guide
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  28. [http://grfx.cstv.com/photos/schools/west/sports/m-baskbl/auto_pdf/2008-09mbbrecordbook.pdf 2008–09 WCC Men's Basketball Media Guide] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-05-23 , [[West Coast Conference]], retrieved 2010-08-01)
  29. [http://jonfmorse.com/wiki/index.php?title=ECAC_Men%27s_Basketball_Tournaments Varsity Pride: ECAC Men's Basketball Tournaments] This was also the inaugural season of the [Original Big East Conference].
  30. "1979-80 Men's Independent Season Summary". [[Sports Reference]].
  31. [1980–81 Street and Smith College Basketball Preview]
  32. [http://www.theacc.com/sports/m-baskbl/0910accmbkguide.html 2009–2010 ACC Men's Basketball Media Guide] {{Webarchive. link. (2010-12-31 , Updated August 21, 2010)
  33. [https://web.archive.org/web/20121103000748/http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1124028/2/index.htm The Week (november 28–30)]
  34. (January 16, 1980). "Basketball Notes". The Spartanburg Herald-Journal.
  35. (February 2, 1980). "King resigns Tulsa post". Lawrence Journal-World.
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