2006 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament



















































2006 NCAA Division I
Men's Basketball Tournament

2006 Men s Final Four.svg
2006 Final Four logo

Season 2005–06
Teams 65
Finals site
RCA Dome
Indianapolis, Indiana
Champions
Florida Gators (1st title, 2nd title game,
3rd Final Four)
Runner-up
UCLA Bruins (13th title game,
16th Final Four)
Semifinalists


  • George Mason Patriots (1st Final Four)


  • LSU Tigers (4th Final Four)

Winning coach
Billy Donovan (1st title)
MOP
Joakim Noah (Florida)
Attendance 70,254
Top scorers
Glen Davis LSU
Joakim Noah Florida
(97 points)






NCAA Division I Men's Tournaments
«2005

2007»

The 2006 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament involved 65 teams playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball as a culmination of the 2005–06 basketball season. It began on March 14, 2006, and concluded on April 3 at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana.


None of the Tournament's top seeds advanced to the Final Four, the first time since 1980 that this occurred. For the second time in history, a team seeded 11th advanced to the Final Four as George Mason of the Colonial Athletic Association won the Washington, D.C. region. They were joined by Atlanta region winner LSU (who was the first team to advance to the Final Four as an 11-seed in 1986), Oakland region winner UCLA, who had not made the Final Four since they won the National Championship in 1995, and Minneapolis region winner Florida, who had not made the Final Four since their runner-up finish in 2000 also in Indianapolis.


Florida won its first-ever national basketball championship by defeating UCLA 73–57 in the final game. Florida's Joakim Noah was named the Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA Tournament.


George Mason's run was one of several upsets by lower-seeded teams in the tournament. For the second consecutive year, a No. 14 seed beat a No. 3 seed as Northwestern State defeated Iowa. No. 13 seed Bradley also defeated No. 4 seed Kansas and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen by defeating No. 5-seeded Pittsburgh in the Second Round. Two No. 12 seeds won as well, as Montana and Texas A&M both won their respective First Round matchups. For the second straight year, Milwaukee won as a double-digit seed, this time as the No. 11-seeded Panthers defeated Oklahoma in the First Round.




Contents






  • 1 Tournament procedure and locations


  • 2 Qualifying teams


  • 3 Bids by conference


  • 4 Bracket


    • 4.1 Opening Round game – Dayton, Ohio


    • 4.2 Atlanta Regional


    • 4.3 Oakland Regional


    • 4.4 Minneapolis Regional


    • 4.5 Washington, D.C. Regional


    • 4.6 Final Four – Indianapolis, Indiana




  • 5 Record by conference


  • 6 Announcers


  • 7 See also


  • 8 Notes


  • 9 References





Tournament procedure and locations





2006 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament is located in the United States

San Diego

San Diego



Salt Lake City

Salt Lake City



Dallas

Dallas



Auburn Hills

Auburn Hills



Dayton

Dayton



Jacksonville

Jacksonville



Greensboro

Greensboro



Philadelphia

Philadelphia




2006 first and second rounds (note: the play-in game was held in Dayton, Ohio)




2006 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament is located in the United States

Oakland

Oakland



Minneapolis

Minneapolis



Atlanta

Atlanta



Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C.



Indianapolis

Indianapolis




2006 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)


A total of 65 teams were selected to participate in the tournament. Of that total, 31 of the teams earned automatic bids by winning their conference tournaments. Penn earned an automatic bid by winning the regular-season title of the Ivy League, which did not conduct a conference tournament. The remaining 34 teams were granted "at-large" bids, which are extended by the NCAA Selection Committee.


The initial game on March 14 officially named the Opening Round game, but popularly called the "play-in game", had Monmouth, winner of the Northeast Conference Tournament, facing Hampton, who won the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Tournament, for a chance to play top seed Villanova in the First Round of the Tournament. Monmouth defeated Hampton, 71–49, to advance to play Villanova.


All teams were seeded from 1 to 16 within their regions. The Selection Committee seeded the entire field from 1 to 65. In a practice used since 2004, the ranking of the four top seeds against each other would determine the pairings in the Final Four. The top overall seed would be seeded to play the fourth overall seed in the national semifinals, should both teams advance that far. In 2006, these rankings were as follows: No. 1 Duke, No. 2 Connecticut, No. 3 Villanova, and No. 4 Memphis.[1]


The first and second-round games were played at the following sites:


  • March 16/18:



Cox Arena, San Diego, California (Host: San Diego State University)


Greensboro Coliseum, Greensboro, North Carolina (Host: Atlantic Coast Conference)


Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena, Jacksonville, Florida (Host: Jacksonville University)


Jon M. Huntsman Center, Salt Lake City, Utah (Host: University of Utah)


  • March 17/19:



American Airlines Center, Dallas, Texas (Host: Big 12 Conference)


The Palace of Auburn Hills, Auburn Hills, Michigan (Host: Oakland University)


University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio (Host: University of Dayton)


Wachovia Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Host: Atlantic 10 Conference)


The four regionals were officially named after the four host cities, a practice which also began in 2004. However, in 2007, the NCAA returned to naming regionals by their geographic location. The 2006 regionals were:


  • March 23/25:



Atlanta Regional, Georgia Dome, Atlanta, Georgia (Host: Georgia Institute of Technology)


Oakland Regional, Oakland Arena, Oakland, California (Host: University of San Francisco)


  • March 24/26:



Minneapolis Regional, Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome, Minneapolis, Minnesota (Host: University of Minnesota)


Washington, D.C. Regional, Verizon Center, Washington, D.C. (Host: Georgetown University)


Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four, held on April 1 and 3 at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, hosted by Butler University and the Horizon League. This was the fourth and final time the RCA Dome would host the Final Four before moving to Lucas Oil Stadium. For the first time, the tournament came to Jacksonville, Florida, playing games at the Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena. This marked the sixth city and fifth metropolitan area in the state of Florida to host games. The 2006 tournament also marked the final tournament games held at the Huntsman Center and Oakland (now Oracle) Arena. Tournament games have moved to downtown Salt Lake City and the Vivint Smart Home Arena since, to take advantage of more amenities there as opposed to the campus of the University of Utah. As for Oakland, there are currently no games scheduled in the near future, with 2022 scheduled to host games at the new Chase Center in downtown San Francisco. As the Golden State Warriors will also be moving to the Chase Center once it opens, it is unclear what will happen to the Oracle Arena once their primary tenant moves out.



Qualifying teams












































































































































Atlanta Regional
Seed
School
Conference
Coach
Record
Berth Type
No. 1

Duke

ACC

Mike Krzyzewski
30–3

Tournament Champion
No. 2

Texas

Big 12

Rick Barnes
27–6
At-Large Bid
No. 3

Iowa

Big Ten

Steve Alford
25–8

Tournament Champion
No. 4

LSU

SEC

John Brady
23–8
At-Large Bid
No. 5

Syracuse

Big East

Jim Boeheim
23–11

Tournament Champion
No. 6

West Virginia

Big East

John Beilein
20–10
At-Large Bid
No. 7

California

Pac-10

Ben Braun
20–10
At-Large Bid
No. 8

George Washington

Atlantic 10

Karl Hobbs
26–2
At-Large Bid
No. 9

UNC Wilmington

CAA

Brad Brownell
25–7
Tournament Champion
No. 10

North Carolina State

ACC

Herb Sendek
21–9
At-Large Bid
No. 11

Southern Illinois

Missouri Valley

Chris Lowery
22–10
Tournament Champion
No. 12

Texas A&M

Big 12

Billy Gillispie
21–8
At-Large Bid
No. 13

Iona

MAAC

Jeff Ruland
23–7
Tournament Champion
No. 14

Northwestern State

Southland

Mike McConathy
25–7
Tournament Champion
No. 15

Pennsylvania

Ivy

Fran Dunphy
20–8
Regular Season Champion
No. 16

Southern

SWAC

Rob Spivery
19–12
Tournament Champion











































































































































Oakland Regional
Seed
School
Conference
Coach
Record
Berth Type
No. 1

Memphis

C-USA

John Calipari
30–3
Tournament Champion
No. 2

UCLA

Pac-10

Ben Howland
27–6

Tournament Champion
No. 3

Gonzaga

WCC

Mark Few
27–3
Tournament Champion
No. 4

Kansas

Big 12

Bill Self
25–7

Tournament Champion
No. 5

Pittsburgh

Big East

Jamie Dixon
24–7
At-Large Bid
No. 6

Indiana

Big Ten

Mike Davis
18–11
At-Large Bid
No. 7

Marquette

Big East

Tom Crean
20–10
At-Large Bid
No. 8

Arkansas

SEC

Stan Heath
22–9
At-Large Bid
No. 9

Bucknell

Patriot

Pat Flannery
26–4
Tournament Champion
No. 10

Alabama

SEC

Mark Gottfried
17–12
At-Large Bid
No. 11

San Diego State

Mountain West

Steve Fisher
24–8
Tournament Champion
No. 12

Kent State

Mid-American

Jim Christian
25–8
Tournament Champion
No. 13

Bradley

Missouri Valley

Jim Les
20–10
At-Large Bid
No. 14

Xavier

Atlantic 10

Sean Miller
21–10
Tournament Champion
No. 15

Belmont

Atlantic Sun

Rick Byrd
20–10
Tournament Champion
No. 16

Oral Roberts

Mid-Continent

Scott Sutton
21–11
Tournament Champion











































































































































Washington, D.C. Regional
Seed
School
Conference
Coach
Record
Berth Type
No. 1

Connecticut

Big East

Jim Calhoun
27–3
At-Large Bid
No. 2

Tennessee

SEC

Bruce Pearl
21–7
At-Large Bid
No. 3

North Carolina

ACC

Roy Williams
23–8
At-Large Bid
No. 4

Illinois

Big Ten

Bruce Weber
25–6
At-Large Bid
No. 5

Washington

Pac-10

Lorenzo Romar
24–6
At-Large Bid
No. 6

Michigan State

Big Ten

Tom Izzo
22–11
At-Large Bid
No. 7

Wichita State

Missouri Valley

Mark Turgeon
24–8
At-Large Bid
No. 8

Kentucky

SEC

Tubby Smith
21–12
At-Large Bid
No. 9

UAB

C-USA

Mike Anderson
24–6
At-Large Bid
No. 10

Seton Hall

Big East

Louis Orr
18–11
At-Large Bid
No. 11

George Mason

CAA

Jim Larranaga
25–7
At-Large Bid
No. 12

Utah State

WAC

Stew Morrill
23–8
At-Large Bid
No. 13

Air Force

Mountain West

Jeff Bzdelik
24–6
At-Large Bid
No. 14

Murray State

Ohio Valley

Mick Cronin
24–6

Tournament Champion
No. 15

Winthrop

Big South

Gregg Marshall
23–7
Tournament Champion
No. 16

Albany

America East

Will Brown
21–10
Tournament Champion



















































































































































Minneapolis Regional
Seed
School
Conference
Coach
Record
Berth Type
No. 1

Villanova

Big East

Jay Wright
25–4
At-Large Bid
No. 2

Ohio State

Big Ten

Thad Matta
25–5
At-Large Bid
No. 3

Florida

SEC

Billy Donovan
27–6

Tournament Champion
No. 4

Boston College

ACC

Al Skinner
26–7
At-Large Bid
No. 5

Nevada

WAC

Mark Fox
27–5
Tournament Champion
No. 6

Oklahoma

Big 12

Kelvin Sampson
20–8
At-Large Bid
No. 7

Georgetown

Big East

John Thompson III
21–9
At-Large Bid
No. 8

Arizona

Pac-10

Lute Olson
19–12
At-Large Bid
No. 9

Wisconsin

Big Ten

Bo Ryan
19–11
At-Large Bid
No. 10

Northern Iowa

Missouri Valley

Greg McDermott
23–9
At-Large Bid
No. 11

UW-Milwaukee

Horizon

Rob Jeter
21–8
Tournament Champion
No. 12

Montana

Big Sky

Larry Krystkowiak
23–6
Tournament Champion
No. 13

Pacific

Big West

Bob Thomason
24–7
Tournament Champion
No. 14

South Alabama

Sun Belt

John Pelphrey
24–6
Tournament Champion
No. 15

Davidson

Southern

Bob McKillop
18–10
Tournament Champion
No. 16*

Monmouth

Northeast

Dave Calloway
18–14
Tournament Champion
No. 16*

Hampton

MEAC

Bobby Collins
16–15
Tournament Champion

*Opening Round participants



Bids by conference




























Bids by Conference
Bids
Conference(s)
8

Big East
6

SEC, Big Ten
4

ACC, Big 12, Pac-10, Missouri Valley
2

Atlantic 10, CAA, C-USA, Mountain West, WAC
1
19 others


Bracket


(*) – Number of asterisks denotes number of overtimes.



Opening Round game – Dayton, Ohio


Winner advances to Minneapolis Regional vs. No. 1 Villanova.

































Play-In Game
March 13
     
16

Monmouth
71
16

Hampton
49


Atlanta Regional












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Semifinals
Finals
                       
1

Duke

70
16

Southern
54
1

Duke

74

Greensboro
8
George Washington
61
8

George Washington

88*
9

UNC-Wilmington
85
1
Duke
54

4

LSU

62
5

Syracuse
58
12

Texas A&M

66
12
Texas A&M
57

Jacksonville
4

LSU

58
4

LSU

80
13

Iona
64
4

LSU

70*

2
Texas
60
6

West Virginia

64
11

Southern Illinois
46
6

West Virginia

67

Auburn Hills
14
Northwestern State
54
3

Iowa
63
14

Northwestern State

64
6
West Virginia
71

2

Texas

74
7

California
52
10

North Carolina State

58
10
North Carolina State
54

Dallas
2

Texas

75
2

Texas

60
15

Pennsylvania
52


Oakland Regional












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Semifinals
Finals
                       
1

Memphis

94
16

Oral Roberts
78
1

Memphis

72

Dallas
9
Bucknell
56
8

Arkansas
55
9

Bucknell

59
1

Memphis

80

13
Bradley
64
5

Pittsburgh

79
12

Kent State
64
5
Pittsburgh
66

Auburn Hills
13

Bradley

72
4

Kansas
73
13

Bradley

77
1
Memphis
45

2

UCLA

50
6

Indiana

87
11

San Diego State
83
6
Indiana
80

Salt Lake City
3

Gonzaga

90
3

Gonzaga

79
14

Xavier
75
3
Gonzaga
71

2

UCLA

73
7

Marquette
85
10

Alabama

90
10
Alabama
59

San Diego
2

UCLA

62
2

UCLA

78
15

Belmont
44


Minneapolis Regional












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Semifinals
Finals
                       
1

Villanova

58
16

Monmouth
45
1

Villanova

82

Philadelphia
8
Arizona
78
8

Arizona

94
9

Wisconsin
75
1

Villanova

60*

4
Boston College
59
5

Nevada
79
12

Montana

87
12
Montana
56

Salt Lake City
4

Boston College

69
4

Boston College

88**
13

Pacific
76
1
Villanova
62

3

Florida

75
6

Oklahoma
74
11

UW–Milwaukee

82
11
UW–Milwaukee
60

Jacksonville
3

Florida

82
3

Florida

76
14

South Alabama
50
3

Florida

57

7
Georgetown
53
7

Georgetown

54
10

Northern Iowa
49
7

Georgetown

70

Dayton
2
Ohio State
52
2

Ohio State

70
15

Davidson
62


Washington, D.C. Regional












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Semifinals
Finals
                       
1

Connecticut

72
16

Albany
59
1

Connecticut

87

Philadelphia
8
Kentucky
83
8

Kentucky

69
9

UAB
64
1

Connecticut

98*

5
Washington
92
5

Washington

75
12

Utah State
61
5

Washington

67

San Diego
4
Illinois
64
4

Illinois

78
13

Air Force
69
1
Connecticut
84

11

George Mason

86*
6

Michigan State
65
11

George Mason

75
11

George Mason

65

Dayton
3
North Carolina
60
3

North Carolina

69
14

Murray State
65
11

George Mason

63

7
Wichita State
55
7

Wichita State

86
10

Seton Hall
66
7

Wichita State

80

Greensboro
2
Tennessee
73
2

Tennessee

63
15

Winthrop
61


Final Four – Indianapolis, Indiana





RCA Dome during the Final Four


















































































National Semifinals

National Championship Game
           
AT4
LSU
45
OA2

UCLA

59
OA2
UCLA
57

MI3

Florida

73
MI3

Florida

73
WA11
George Mason
58


Record by conference




















































































































































































































Conference
# of Bids
Record
Win %
R32
S16
E8
F4
CG

Big East
8
11–8
.579
5
4
2



SEC
6
13–5
.722
5
2
2
2
1

Big Ten
6
3–6
.333
3





ACC
4
6–4
.600
4
2




Big 12
4
4–4
.500
2
1
1



Pac-10
4
8–4
.667
3
2
1
1
1

Missouri Valley
4
4–4
.500
2
2




Atlantic 10
2
1–2
.333
1

0




CAA
2
4–2
.667
1
1
1
1

0

C–USA
2
3–2
.600
1
1
1

0


MWC
2
0–2
.000

0





WAC
2
0–2
.000

0

0




Southland Conference
1
1–1
.500
1

0




WCC
1
2–1
.667
1
1




Patriot League
1
1–1
.500
1

0




Horizon League
1
1–1
.500
1

0




Big Sky Conference
1
1–1
.500
1

0




Northeast Conference
1
1–1*
.500






*Monmouth University won the Opening Round game.


The America East, Atlantic Sun, Big South, Big West, Ivy, MAAC, MAC, MEAC, Ohio Valley, SoCon, SWAC, Mid-Continent, and Sun Belt conferences all went 0–1.


The columns R32, S16, E8, F4, and CG respectively stand for the Round of 32, Sweet Sixteen, Elite Eight, Final Four, and Championship Game.



Announcers




  • Jim Nantz and Billy Packer – First & Second Round at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Minneapolis Regional at the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome; Final Four at Indianapolis, Indiana


  • Dick Enberg and Jay Bilas – First & Second Round at San Diego, California; Atlanta Regional at the Georgia Dome


  • Verne Lundquist and Bill Raftery – First & Second Round at Auburn Hills, Michigan; Washington, D.C. Regional at the Verizon Center


  • Gus Johnson and Len Elmore – First & Second Round at Dayton, Ohio; Oakland Regional at the Oakland Arena


  • Kevin Harlan and Dan Bonner – First & Second Round at Greensboro, North Carolina


  • Ian Eagle and Jim Spanarkel – First & Second Round at Salt Lake City, Utah


  • Craig Bolerjack and Bob Wenzel – First & Second Round at Dallas, Texas


  • Tim Brando, Stephen Bardo, and Mike Gminski – First & Second Round at Jacksonville, Florida


Greg Gumbel once again served as the studio host, joined by analysts Clark Kellogg and Seth Davis.



See also



  • 2006 NCAA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NCAA Division III Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NCAA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NCAA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 National Invitation Tournament

  • 2006 Women's National Invitation Tournament

  • 2006 NAIA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NAIA Division II Men's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NAIA Division I Women's Basketball Tournament

  • 2006 NAIA Division II Women's Basketball Tournament



Notes



  • The futures of two of this year's Final Four teams would be polar opposites of the other two in 2007. Both George Mason and LSU would fail to receive a bid to either the NCAA Tournament or the NIT, while both Florida and UCLA would return to the Final Four (the two teams would have a rematch, this time in the semifinals, with the same result, a Florida victory).

  • George Mason became the first team from a "mid-major" conference to reach the Final Four since UNLV's loss to Duke in 1991.

  • This was the second of three Final Fours to feature no No. 1 seeds (1980 and 2011 being the others).

  • Duke was the last team before Florida to win back-to-back titles, and like Florida, they won their first of the two in Indianapolis at the RCA Dome.



References





  1. ^ UConn, 'Nova No. 1 seeds











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