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2005–06 NCAA Division I men's basketball season

Basketball season


Basketball season

FieldValue
year2005
imageNCAA logo.svg
preseason_ap[Duke Blue Devils](2005-06-duke-blue-devils-men-s-basketball-team)
regular_seasonNovember 6, 2005–
March 14, 2006
tourney_startMarch 14
nc_dateApril 3, 2006
champ_stadRCA Dome
champ_cityIndianapolis, Indiana
champ[Florida Gators](2005-06-florida-gators-men-s-basketball-team)
nit_champ[South Carolina Gamecocks](2005-06-south-carolina-gamecocks-men-s-basketball-team)
playeroftheyearJJ Redick, [Duke Blue Devils](2005-06-duke-blue-devils-men-s-basketball-team)

March 14, 2006

The 2005–06 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 6, 2005, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments and concluded with the 2006 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament championship game on April 3, 2006, at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Florida Gators won their first NCAA national championship with a 73–56 victory over the UCLA Bruins. This was the last Final Four at the RCA Dome, as it was demolished in 2008. The Final Four will return to the city of Indianapolis, but will be held at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Season headlines

  • Prior to the season, the NCAA purchased the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) from the Metropolitan Intercollegiate Basketball Association (MIBA). The NCAA took over operation of the NIT beginning in 2006, and MIBA, which had owned and operated the tournament for its first 68 years, was dissolved.
  • Prior to the season, a major realignment of teams in the Big East Conference and Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) sent shock waves across college basketball:
    • Boston College, which had become a charter member of the Big East in the 1979–80 season, followed Virginia Tech and Miami (who had moved the year before) from the Big East to the ACC.
    • The Big East brought in five teams from Conference USA (C-USA) —Cincinnati, DePaul, Louisville, Marquette, and South Florida. **To replace the teams that defected to the Big East (as well as TCU, which left C-USA for the Mountain West Conference and Charlotte and Saint Louis, who left for the Atlantic 10 Conference), Conference USA brought in six new members: Rice, SMU, Tulsa, and UTEP from the Western Athletic Conference; Marshall from the Mid-American Conference, and Central Florida from the Atlantic Sun Conference.
    • The Western Athletic Conference (WAC) added New Mexico State (from the Sun Belt Conference) and Idaho and Utah State (both from the Big West Conference).
    • East Tennessee State moved from the Southern Conference to the Atlantic Sun Conference.
    • The Colonial Athletic Association added Northeastern from the America East Conference and Georgia State from the Atlantic Sun Conference.
    • Troy moved from the Atlantic Sun Conference to the Sun Belt Conference.
  • The preseason AP All-American team was named on November 8. JJ Redick of Duke was the leading vote-getter (67 of 72 votes). The rest of the team included Shelden Williams of Duke (63 votes), Dee Brown of Illinois (51), Adam Morrison of Gonzaga (45) and Craig Smith of Boston College (31).
  • On February 1, 2006, the Rating Percentage Index (RPI) became available to the public for the first time, appearing on the NCAA Web site.
  • JJ Redick of Duke and Adam Morrison of Gonzaga engaged in a year-long battle for the national scoring title and Player of the Year honors. Morrison won the scoring race, edging Redick by 1.3 points per game. However, Redick won most National POY Awards, though in 2006 he and Morrison became the first co-winners of the Oscar Robertson Trophy.
  • Paul Millsap of Louisiana Tech became the first player ever to lead the nation in rebounding for three consecutive years.
  • In the 2006 NCAA tournament, George Mason made an improbable run to the Final Four, becoming the first true mid-major to do so since Penn in 1979. The Patriots' path was not easy, as they defeated schools that had won three of the past six titles—national powers Michigan State, North Carolina, and Connecticut—en route to its first Final Four berth.
  • Florida won its first national title in basketball, defeating UCLA in the NCAA tournament's championship game 73–57. The team was led by a group of sophomores, several of whom were the offspring of retired professional athletes, nicknamed "The Oh-fours". Forward Al Horford and guard Taurean Green were the sons of former NBA players (Tito Horford and Sidney Green, respectively), while center and Final Four MOP Joakim Noah was the son of retired tennis pro Yannick Noah. These three (along with fellow sophomore star Corey Brewer) surprised many by choosing not to enter the 2006 NBA draft, but instead returning to try to repeat as champions in the 2006–07 season.

Season outlook

Pre-season polls

The top 25 from the AP and ESPN/USA Today Coaches Polls November 7, 2005.

'Associated Press'RankingTeam
1Duke (61)
2Texas (6)
3Connecticut
4Michigan State (4)
5Villanova (1)
6Oklahoma
7Louisville
8Gonzaga
9Kentucky
10Arizona
11Boston College
12Memphis
13Stanford
14West Virginia
15Alabama
16Syracuse
17Illinois
18Wake Forest
19UCLA
20[Iowa](2005-06-iowa-hawkeyes-men-s-basketball-team)
21George Washington
22Nevada
23Indiana
24Maryland
25[Iowa State](2005-06-iowa-state-cyclones-men-s-basketball-team)

|

**ESPN/USA Today coaches**RankingTeam
1Duke (28)
2Connecticut
3Texas (2)
4Villanova (1)
5Michigan State
6Oklahoma
7Gonzaga
8Louisville
9Arizona
10Kentucky
11Boston College
12Memphis
13Stanford
14Alabama
15West Virginia
16Syracuse
17Illinois
18UCLA
18Wake Forest
20Iowa
21Maryland
22Indiana
23[Iowa State](2005-06-iowa-state-cyclones-men-s-basketball-team)
24George Washington
25Nevada

|}

Conference membership changes

These schools joined new conferences for the 2005–06 season.

SchoolFormer conferenceNew conference
Big East ConferenceAtlantic Coast Conference
Atlantic Sun ConferenceConference USA
Conference USAAtlantic 10 Conference
Conference USABig East Conference
Conference USABig East Conference
Southern ConferenceAtlantic Sun Conference
Atlantic Sun ConferenceColonial Athletic Association
Big West ConferenceWestern Athletic Conference
Peach Belt Conference (D-II)Atlantic Sun Conference
Conference USABig East Conference
Conference USABig East Conference
Mid-American ConferenceConference USA
Sun Belt ConferenceWestern Athletic Conference
Peach Belt Conference (D-II)Atlantic Sun Conference
America East ConferenceColonial Athletic Association
Western Athletic ConferenceConference USA
Conference USAAtlantic 10 Conference
Conference USABig East Conference
Western Athletic ConferenceConference USA
Conference USAMountain West Conference
Western Athletic ConferenceConference USA
Atlantic Sun ConferenceSun Belt Conference
Western Athletic ConferenceConference USA
Big West ConferenceWestern Athletic Conference

Regular season

Conferences

Conference winners and tournaments

Thirty conference seasons concluded with a single-elimination tournament. Generally, all member schools were eligible to participate in their conference tournament regardless of their records, but the Big East did not invite its teams with the worst records to its 2006 tournament. Conference tournament winners received an automatic bid to the 2006 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament, while a school that won its conference regular season title but did not win its conference tournament was guaranteed a bid to the 2006 National Invitation Tournament unless it received an at-large bid to the NCAA tournament. The Ivy League was the only NCAA Division I conference that did not hold a conference tournament, instead sending its regular-season champion to the NCAA tournament.

ConferenceRegular
Season WinnerConference
Player of the YearConference
TournamentTournament
Venue (City)Tournament
winner
America East ConferenceAlbanyJamar Wilson, Albany[2006 America East men's basketball tournament](2006-america-east-men-s-basketball-tournament)Events Center
(Vestal, New York)
(Except Finals)Albany
Atlantic 10 ConferenceGeorge WashingtonSteven Smith, La Salle[2006 Atlantic 10 men's basketball tournament](2006-atlantic-10-men-s-basketball-tournament)U.S. Bank Arena
(Cincinnati)Xavier
Atlantic Coast ConferenceDukeJJ Redick, Duke[2006 ACC men's basketball tournament](2006-acc-men-s-basketball-tournament)Greensboro Coliseum
(Greensboro, North Carolina)Duke
Atlantic Sun ConferenceLipscomb & BelmontTim Smith, East Tennessee State[2006 Atlantic Sun men's basketball tournament](2006-atlantic-sun-men-s-basketball-tournament)Memorial Center
(Johnson City, Tennessee)Belmont
Big 12 ConferenceTexas & KansasP. J. Tucker, Texas[2006 Big 12 men's basketball tournament](2006-big-12-men-s-basketball-tournament)American Airlines Center
(Dallas, Texas)Kansas
Big East ConferenceConnecticut & VillanovaRandy Foye, Villanova[2006 Big East men's basketball tournament](2006-big-east-men-s-basketball-tournament)Madison Square Garden
(New York City)Syracuse
Big Sky ConferenceNorthern ArizonaRodney Stuckey, Eastern Washington[2006 Big Sky men's basketball tournament](2006-big-sky-men-s-basketball-tournament)Walkup Skydome
(Flagstaff, Arizona)
(Semifinals and Finals)Montana
Big South ConferenceWinthropJack Leasure, Coastal Carolina[2006 Big South Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-big-south-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Winthrop Coliseum
(Rock Hill, South Carolina)
(Semifinals and Finals)Winthrop
Big Ten ConferenceOhio StateTerence Dials, Ohio State[2006 Big Ten Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-big-ten-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Conseco Fieldhouse
(Indianapolis, Indiana)Iowa
Big West ConferencePacificChristian Maraker, Pacific[2006 Big West Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-big-west-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Anaheim Convention Center
(Anaheim, California)Pacific
Colonial Athletic AssociationUNC Wilmington & [George Mason](2005-06-george-mason-patriots-men-s-basketball-team)José Juan Barea, Northeastern[CAA men's basketball record book](http://www.nmnathletics.com/fls/8500/supportfiles/Records/recordbookmbask.pdf) , Colonial Athletic Association. Retrieved 2009-01-24.[2006 CAA men's basketball tournament](2006-caa-men-s-basketball-tournament)Richmond Coliseum
(Richmond, Virginia)UNC Wilmington
Conference USAMemphisRodney Carney, Memphis[2006 Conference USA men's basketball tournament](2006-conference-usa-men-s-basketball-tournament)FedExForum
(Memphis, Tennessee)Memphis
Horizon LeagueWisconsin-MilwaukeeBrandon Polk, Butler[2006 Horizon League men's basketball tournament](2006-horizon-league-men-s-basketball-tournament)U.S. Cellular Arena
(Milwaukee, Wisconsin)
(Except First Round)Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Ivy LeaguePennIbrahim Jaaber, PennNo Tournament
Metro Atlantic Athletic ConferenceManhattanKeydren Clark, St. Peter's[2006 MAAC men's basketball tournament](2006-maac-men-s-basketball-tournament)Pepsi Arena
(Albany, New York)Iona
Mid-American ConferenceKent State (East)
Northern Illinois (West)DeAndre Haynes, Kent State[2006 MAC men's basketball tournament](2006-mac-men-s-basketball-tournament)Quicken Loans Arena
(Cleveland, Ohio)Kent State
Mid-Continent ConferenceOral Roberts & IUPUICaleb Green, Oral Roberts[2006 Mid-Continent Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-summit-league-men-s-basketball-tournament)John Q. Hammons Arena
(Tulsa, Oklahoma)Oral Roberts
Mid-Eastern Athletic ConferenceDelaware StateJahsha Bluntt, Delaware State[2006 Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-mid-eastern-athletic-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)RBC Center
(Raleigh, North Carolina)Hampton
Missouri Valley ConferenceWichita StatePaul Miller, Wichita State[2006 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-missouri-valley-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Savvis Center
(St. Louis, Missouri)Southern Illinois
Mountain West ConferenceSan Diego StateBrandon Heath, San Diego State[2006 MWC men's basketball tournament](2006-mwc-men-s-basketball-tournament)Pepsi Center
(Denver, Colorado)San Diego State
Northeast ConferenceFairleigh DickinsonChad Timberlake, Fairleigh Dickinson[2006 Northeast Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-northeast-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Campus SitesMonmouth
Ohio Valley ConferenceMurray StateJ. Robert Merritt, Samford[2006 Ohio Valley Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-ohio-valley-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Gaylord Entertainment Center
(Nashville, Tennessee)
(Semifinals and Finals)Murray State
Pacific-10 Conference[UCLA](2005-06-ucla-bruins-men-s-basketball-team)Brandon Roy, Washington[2006 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-pacific-10-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Staples Center
(Los Angeles)[UCLA](2005-06-ucla-bruins-men-s-basketball-team)
Patriot LeagueBucknellCharles Lee, Bucknell[2006 Patriot League men's basketball tournament](2006-patriot-league-men-s-basketball-tournament)Campus SitesBucknell
Southeastern ConferenceTennessee (East)
LSU (West)Glen Davis, LSU[2006 SEC men's basketball tournament](2006-sec-men-s-basketball-tournament)Gaylord Entertainment Center
(Nashville, Tennessee)[Florida](2005-06-florida-gators-men-s-basketball-team)
Southern ConferenceElon (North)
Georgia Southern (South)Elton Nesbitt, Georgia Southern[2006 Southern Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-southern-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)North Charleston Coliseum
(North Charleston, South Carolina)Davidson
Southland ConferenceNorthwestern StateRicky Woods, Southeastern Louisiana[2006 Southland Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-southland-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Prather Coliseum
(Natchitoches, Louisiana)
(Finals)Northwestern State
Southwestern Athletic ConferenceSouthernBrion Rush, Grambling State[2006 Southwestern Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-southwestern-athletic-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex
(Birmingham, Alabama)Southern
Sun Belt ConferenceWestern Kentucky (East)
South Alabama (West)Anthony Winchester, Western Kentucky[2006 Sun Belt men's basketball tournament](2006-sun-belt-men-s-basketball-tournament)Murphy Center
(Murfreesboro, Tennessee)South Alabama
West Coast ConferenceGonzagaAdam Morrison, Gonzaga[2006 West Coast Conference men's basketball tournament](2006-west-coast-conference-men-s-basketball-tournament)McCarthey Athletic Center
(Spokane, Washington)Gonzaga
Western Athletic ConferenceNevadaNick Fazekas, Nevada[2006 WAC men's basketball tournament](2006-wac-men-s-basketball-tournament)Lawlor Events Center
(Reno, Nevada)Nevada

Conference standings

Division I independents

Ten schools played as Division I independents. Only , , Texas A&M–Corpus Christi, and were considered full NCAA Division I schools, as the rest were still in a transition phase from NCAA Division II.

Informal championships

ConferenceRegular
season winnerMost Valuable Player
Philadelphia Big 5[Villanova](2005-06-villanova-wildcats-men-s-basketball-team)Randy Foye, Villanova

Villanova finished with a 4–0 record in head-to-head competition among the Philadelphia Big 5.

Statistical leaders

Source for additional stats categories

PlayerSchoolPPGPlayerSchoolRPGPlayerSchoolAPGPlayerSchoolSPG
Adam MorrisonGonzaga28.1Paul MillsapLA Tech13.3Jared JordanMarist8.5
JJ RedickDuke26.8Kenny AdelekeHartford13.1José Juan BareaNortheastern8.4
Keydren ClarkSt. Peter's26.3Rashad Jones-JenningsUALR11.3Terrell EverettOklahoma6.9
Andre CollinsLoyola (MD)26.1Curtis WithersCharlotte11.3Walker RussellJacksonville St.6.8
Brion RushGrambling25.8Ivan AlmonteFlorida Int'l11.2Kenny GrantDavidson6.7
PlayerSchoolBPGPlayerSchoolFG%PlayerSchool3FG%PlayerSchoolFT%
Shawn JamesNortheastern6.5Randall HankeProvidence67.7Stephen SirN. Arizona48.9
Justin WilliamsWyoming5.4Cedric SmithTAMU-CC66.2Josh AlexanderStephen F. Austin47.7
Stéphane LasmeUMass3.9Joakim NoahFlorida62.7J. Robert MerrittSamford47.6
Shelden WilliamsDuke3.8James AugustineIllinois62.4Ross SchraederUC Irvine47.4
Slim MillienIdaho St.3.4Michael HarrisonColorado St.62.3Chris HernandezStanford47.2

Post-season tournaments

NCAA tournament

Main article: 2006 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

The NCAA Tournament tipped off on March 14, 2006 with the opening round game in Dayton, Ohio, and concluded on April 3 at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana. A total of 65 teams entered the tournament. Thirty of the teams earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. The automatic bid of the Ivy League, which does not conduct a post-season tournament, went to its regular season champion. The remaining 34 teams were granted "at-large" bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee. The Big East Conference led the way with eight bids. Florida won their first NCAA title, beating UCLA 73–56 in the final. Florida forward Joakim Noah was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

Final Four – [[RCA Dome]], [[Indianapolis, Indiana]]

| RD1-seed1=A4 | RD1-team1=LSU | RD1-score1=45 | RD1-seed2=O2 | RD1-team2=UCLA | RD1-score2=59 | RD1-seed3=W11 | RD1-team3=George Mason | RD1-score3=58 | RD1-seed4=M3 | RD1-team4=Florida | RD1-score4=73 | RD2-seed1=O2 | RD2-team1=UCLA | RD2-score1=57 | RD2-seed2=M3 | RD2-team2=Florida | RD2-score2=73 A-Atlanta, O-Oakland, W-Washington, D.C., M-Minneapolis.

National Invitation tournament

Main article: 2006 National Invitation Tournament

After the NCAA Tournament field was announced, the 2006 National Invitation Tournament invited 40 teams to participate. Eight teams were given automatic bids for winning their conference regular seasons, and 32 other teams were also invited. Dave Odom's South Carolina Gamecocks won their second consecutive title, defeating the Tommy Amaker-coached Michigan Wolverines 76–64 in the championship game. Gamecock forward Renaldo Balkman was named tournament MVP.

Semifinals & final

| RD1-seed1=5 | RD1-team1=Old Dominion | RD1-score1=43 | RD1-seed2=1 | RD1-team2=Michigan | RD1-score2=66 | RD1-seed3=1 | RD1-team3=Louisville | RD1-score3=63 | RD1-seed4=3 | RD1-team4=South Carolina | RD1-score4=78 | RD2-seed1=1 | RD2-team1=Michigan | RD2-score1=64 | RD2-seed2=3 | RD2-team2=South Carolina | RD2-score2=76

Award winners

Consensus All-American teams

Main article: 2006 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans

PlayerPositionClassTeam
JJ RedickGSeniorDuke
Adam MorrisonFJuniorGonzaga
Randy FoyeGSeniorVillanova
Shelden WilliamsCSeniorDuke
Brandon RoyGSeniorWashington
PlayerPositionClassTeam
Dee BrownGSenior[Illinois](2005-06-illinois-fighting-illini-men-s-basketball-team)
Rodney CarneyGSeniorMemphis
P. J. TuckerFJuniorTexas
Rudy GayFSophomoreConnecticut
Leon PoweFSophomoreCalifornia
Allan RayGSeniorVillanova
Tyler HansbroughFFreshmanNorth Carolina

Major player of the year awards

  • Wooden Award: JJ Redick, Duke
  • Naismith Award: JJ Redick, Duke
  • Associated Press Player of the Year: JJ Redick, Duke
  • NABC Player of the Year: JJ Redick, Duke and Adam Morrison, Gonzaga
  • Oscar Robertson Trophy (USBWA): JJ Redick, Duke and Adam Morrison, Gonzaga
  • Adolph Rupp Trophy: JJ Redick, Duke
  • CBS/Chevrolet Player of the Year: JJ Redick, Duke
  • Sporting News Player of the Year: JJ Redick, Duke

Major freshman of the year awards

  • USBWA Freshman of the Year: Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina
  • Sporting News Freshman of the Year: Tyler Hansbrough, North Carolina

Major coach of the year awards

  • Associated Press Coach of the Year: Jay Wright, Villanova
  • Henry Iba Award (USBWA): Roy Williams, North Carolina
  • NABC Coach of the Year: Jay Wright, Villanova
  • Naismith College Coach of the Year: Jay Wright, Villanova
  • CBS/Chevrolet Coach of the Year: Jay Wright, Villanova
  • Adolph Rupp Cup: Roy Williams, North Carolina
  • Sporting News Coach of the Year: Bruce Pearl, Tennessee

Other major awards

  • Bob Cousy Award (Best point guard): Dee Brown, Illinois
  • Pete Newell Big Man Award (Best big man): Glen Davis, LSU
  • NABC Defensive Player of the Year: Shelden Williams, Duke
  • Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award (Best player under 6'0): Dee Brown, Illinois
  • Lowe's Senior CLASS Award (top senior): JJ Redick, Duke
  • Robert V. Geasey Trophy (Top player in Philadelphia Big 5): Randy Foye, Villanova
  • NIT/Haggerty Award (Top player in New York City metro area): Quincy Douby, Rutgers
  • Chip Hilton Player of the Year Award (Strong personal character): Gerry McNamara, Syracuse

Coaching changes

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

TeamFormer
CoachInterim
CoachNew
CoachReason
Alabama-BirminghamMike AndersonMike DavisAfter leaving Indiana, Davis returned to his home state—bringing guard Robert Vaden with him.
Arizona StateRob EvansHerb SendekAfter a high-profile flirtation with Pitt's Jamie Dixon, Arizona State pulled Sendek from the ACC.
Ball StateTim BuckleyRonny ThompsonBuckley was reassigned after a 10–18 season.
BrownGlen MillerCraig RobinsonBrown hired former 2-time Ivy player of the year Robinson after Miller leaves for conference rival Penn.
CanisiusMike MacDonaldTom Parrotta
Central MichiganJay SmithErnie ZieglerTwo-time MAC coach of the year Smith left the coaching profession.
CincinnatiBob HugginsAndy KennedyMick CroninUC alum Cronin was hired for the head job over interim boss Kennedy.
The CitadelPat DennisEd Conroy
Cleveland StateMike GarlandGary Waters
College of CharlestonTom HerrionBobby CreminsCollege of Charleston made a splash hiring former Georgia Tech head man Cremins after Winthrop's Gregg Marshall accepted the job but then reneged.
DelawareDavid HendersonMonte RossHenderson is fired after consecutive 20-loss seasons.
DuquesneDanny NeeRon EverhartCoaching veteran Nee was fired after a 3–24 season.
FairfieldTim O'TooleEd CooleyO'Toole was fired only two years removed from winning MAAC coach of the year honors.
Florida AtlanticMatt DohertyRex WaltersDoherty leaves FAU for SMU after only one year.
FurmanLarry DavisJeff Jackson
HamptonBobby CollinsKevin Nickelberry
HartfordLarry HarrisonDan LeibovitzHarrison resigned despite being named America East coach of the year.
IdahoLeonard PerryGeorge Pfeifer
Idaho StateDoug OliverJoe O'BrienOliver announced his resignation mid-season and was replaced in March by three-time JUCO national championship coach O'Brien.
IndianaMike DavisKelvin SampsonDavis announced his resignation in February—effective at the end of the season. After a long search process, Indiana hired former Oklahoma coach Sampson.
[Iowa State](2005-06-iowa-state-cyclones-men-s-basketball-team)Wayne MorganGreg McDermottIowa State fired Morgan in the wake of a recruiting scandal.
Kansas StateJim WooldridgeBob HugginsK-State hired Huggins after a one-year absence from coaching.
LamarBilly TubbsSteve RoccaforteTubbs stepped down as head coach but remained as Lamar's Athletic Director, turning the team over to assistant Roccaforte.
ManhattanBobby GonzalezBarry RohrssenA hot coach for several seasons, Gonzalez made the move to the Big East and Seton Hall.
McNeese StateTic PriceDave Simmons
MississippiRod BarnesAndy KennedyOle Miss hired native son Kennedy after he was passed over for the permanent head coaching position at Cincinnati after serving as interim for the entire season.
MissouriQuin SnyderMelvin WatkinsMike AndersonSnyder was fired in February as his status became distracting due to a disappointing season and off-court scandal.
MontanaLarry KrystkowiakWayne TinkleMontana all-time leading scorer Krystkowiak left Montana for an assistant coaching job with the Milwaukee Bucks, while his former Grizzly teammate and assistant Tinkle is promoted.
Montana StateMick DurhamBrad Huse
Morehead StateKyle MacyDonnie TyndallFormer Kentucky All-American Macy resigns after a 4–23 season.
Morgan StateButch BeardTodd BozemanBozeman returns to coaching after an eight-year ban over recruiting violations at Cal.
Murray StateMick CroninBilly Kennedy
NebraskaBarry CollierDoc SadlerCollier left Nebraska to become athletic director at Butler.
New OrleansMonte ToweBuzz WilliamsTowe made the unusual move of leaving a head coaching spot to take the Associate head coach spot at his alma mater, NC State.
North Carolina StateHerb SendekSidney LoweAfter a lengthy search process, former Wolfpack guard Lowe comes in from an assistant coaching job with the Detroit Pistons.
UNC-WilmingtonBrad BrownellBenny Moss
NortheasternRon EverhartBill Coen
Northern ColoradoCraig RasmusonTad Boyle
Northern IowaGreg McDermottBen JacobsonUNI promoted top assistant Jacobson after McDermott left for Iowa State.
OklahomaKelvin SampsonJeff CapelOklahoma tapped VCU's Capel after Sampson left for Indiana.
Oklahoma StateEddie SuttonSean SuttonEddie Sutton turned the Cowboys over to son Sean.
PennFran DunphyGlen MillerPenn raided conference foe Brown to hire Miller away after Dunphy moved across town to coach Temple.
PepperdinePaul WestphalVance WalbergFormer Phoenix Suns coach Westphal was fired after a 7–20 season.
PortlandMichael HoltonEric Reveno
RutgersGary WatersFred HillWaters announced that he would resign late in the season. After the season, he was replaced by assistant Hill.
Saint Peter'sBob LeckieJohn Dunne
Seton HallLouis OrrBobby GonzalezSeton Hall turns to Manhattan's Gonzalez after Orr is fired.
Southern MethodistJimmy TubbsMatt DohertyTubbs was fired after an internal investigation uncovered NCAA violations.
South Carolina StateBen BettsJammal BrownBetts left to join Jeff Capel's staff at Oklahoma.
Southeast Missouri StateGary GarnerScott Edgar
TempleJohn ChaneyFran DunphyChaney retired after 24 seasons at Temple, allowing Dunphy to become the first man ever to coach at two different Big 5 schools.
Texas-ArlingtonEddie McCarterScott Cross
Texas-Pan AmericanRobert DavenportTom Schuberth
Texas-San AntonioTim CarterBrooks Thompson
Texas StateDennis NuttDoug Davalos
UTEPDoc SadlerTony BarbeeUTEP tapped Memphis assistant Barbee after Sadler left for Nebraska.
Virginia CommonwealthJeff CapelAnthony GrantVCU hired Florida assistant Grant after Capel left for the Big 12.
Washington StateDick BennettTony BennettDick Bennett retired, handing the reins to his son and assistant Tony.
Weber StateJoe CravensRandy Rahe
Winston-Salem StatePhillip StittBobby CollinsCollins was hired from Hampton to lead the Rams into their first season of Division I play.
Wright StatePaul BiancardiBrad BrownellBiancardi stepped down after being barred from recruiting by the NCAA over recruiting violations that occurred while Biancardi was at Ohio State.

References

|}

References

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