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2003 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament

The 2003 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 65 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 18, 2003, and ended with the championship game on April 7 in New Orleans, Louisiana at the Superdome. A total of 64 games were played.

The Final Four consisted of Kansas, making its second straight appearance; Marquette, making its first appearance since they won the national championship in 1977; Syracuse, making its first appearance since 1996; and Texas, making its first appearance since 1947. Texas was the only top seed to advance to the Final Four; the other three (Arizona, Kentucky, and Oklahoma) advanced as far as the Elite Eight but fell.

Syracuse won its first national championship in three tries under 27th-year head coach Jim Boeheim, who would ultimately retire after the 2022–2023 season. This was also Roy Williams’s final game as Kansas head coach; he would depart after the season to become the head coach at North Carolina.

Carmelo Anthony of Syracuse was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.

Syracuse beat four Big 12 teams on its way to the title: Oklahoma State, Oklahoma, Texas, and Kansas.

Schedule and venues

2003 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
Dayton
Dayton
Spokane
Spokane
Salt Lake City
Salt Lake City
Oklahoma City
Oklahoma City
Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Tampa
Tampa
Boston
Boston
Nashville
Nashville
Birmingham
Birmingham
2003 play-in game (orange) and first and second rounds (green)
2003 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament is located in the United States
Anaheim
Anaheim
Minneapolis
Minneapolis
San Antonio
San Antonio
Albany
Albany
New Orleans
New Orleans
2003 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)

The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 2003 tournament:

Opening Round

First and Second Rounds

Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)

National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)

Qualifying teams

Automatic bids

The following teams were automatic qualifiers for the 2003 NCAA field by virtue of winning their conference's tournament (except for the Ivy League, whose regular-season champion received the automatic bid).

Listed by region and seeding

BYU bracketing switch

When the bracket was first revealed, it contained a mistake that would have forced BYU, a Mormon-run school, to play its potential Elite 8 game on a Sunday, which is against school policy. As a solution, the selection committee had a plan to switch BYU, the 12 seed in the Friday-Sunday South regional, with the team that reached the Sweet 16 in the Thursday-Saturday Midwest regional (either Wisconsin, Weber State, Dayton, or Tulsa) should the Cougars advance to the Sweet 16.[1] BYU lost its first-round game to Connecticut, which meant no switches were necessary.

Bids by conference

Final Four

The Louisiana Superdome was host of the Final Four and National Championship in 2003.

At Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans

National semifinals

Championship game

2003 NCAA Men's Basketball National Championship Trophy

Bracket

Opening Round game

Winner advances to 16th seed in South Regional vs. (1) Texas.

East Regional – Albany, New York

South Regional – San Antonio, Texas

Midwest Regional – Minneapolis, Minnesota

West Regional – Anaheim, California

Final Four – New Orleans, Louisiana

Broadcast information

Originally, CBS Sports was to have shown all 63 games of the tournament following the opening round, which was on ESPN. However, because of the start of the Iraq War the night before, the afternoon games on Thursday and Friday were moved to ESPN while retaining CBS graphics and production. CBS News then joined other broadcast and non-broadcast outlets in showing extended news coverage.

Thursday and Friday night's games were shown on CBS, albeit with frequent news updates. To make up for lost advertising revenue, an additional time slot was opened the following Sunday evening for more CBS telecasts.

2003 also marked the debut of Mega March Madness as an exclusive package on DirecTV. This offered additional game broadcasts not available to the viewer's home market during the first three rounds of the tournament. All games from the 4th round (Elite Eight) onward were national telecasts.

Westwood One had exclusive national radio coverage.

CBS Sports announcers

Westwood One announcers

First and second rounds

Doug Kennedy and Richard Larsen

Regionals

Final Four

See also

References

  1. ^ Katz, Andy (March 16, 2003). "BYU would switch regionals if it wins two". ESPN.com. Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  2. ^ "2003 NCAA National semifinals: (E3) Syracuse 95, (S1) Texas 84". CNN Sports Illustrated. CNNSI.com. Archived from the original on October 17, 2003. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  3. ^ "2003 NCAA National semifinals: (W2) Kansas 94, (MW3) Marquette 61". CNN Sports Illustrated. CNNSI.com. Archived from the original on April 22, 2003. Retrieved March 6, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c Wojciechowski, Gene (April 6, 2003). "Boeheim, Williams say title won't define careers". ESPN.com. ESPN the Magazine. Archived from the original on June 4, 2003. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  5. ^ "2003 NCAA national championship: (E3) Syracuse 81, (W2) Kansas 78". CNN Sports Illustrated. CNNSI.com. Archived from the original on June 5, 2003. Retrieved March 6, 2008.