The 1990 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament involved 64 schools playing in a single-elimination tournament to determine the NCAA Division I men's basketball national champion for the 1989-1990 season. The 52nd annual edition of the tournament began on March 15, 1990, and ended with the championship game on April 2 at the McNichols Sports Arena in Denver, Colorado. A total of 63 games were played.
UNLV won the national title with a 103âÂÂ73 victory in the final game over Duke. In doing so, UNLV set the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament record for largest margin of victory in a championship game. UNLV's championship win marks the last time a school from a non-power conference has won the tournament. Anderson Hunt of UNLV was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
This tournament is also remembered for an emotional run by the Loyola Marymount Lions (LMU) in the West region. In the quarterfinals of the West Coast Conference tournament against the Portland Pilots, Lions star forward Hank Gathers collapsed and died due to a heart condition. The WCC tournament was immediately suspended and LMU, the regular-season champion, was given the conference's automatic bid to the tournament. The team defeated New Mexico State, then laid a 34-point thrashing on defending national champion Michigan, and defeated Alabama in the Sweet Sixteen (the only game in which LMU did not score 100 or more points in the tournament) before running into eventual champion UNLV in the regional final. Gathers' childhood friend, Bo Kimble, the team's undisputed floor leader in the wake of the tragedy, paid tribute to his friend by attempting his first free throw in each game left-handed despite being right-handed (Gathers was right-handed, but struggled so much with free throws that he tried shooting them left-handed for a time.) Kimble made all of his left-handed attempts in the tournament.
The tournament employed a new timing system borrowed from FIBA & the NBA: when the game was played in an NBA arena, the final minute of the period is measured in tenths-seconds, rather than whole seconds as in previous years.
Schedule and venues
The following are the sites that were selected to host each round of the 1990 tournament, and their host(s):
First and Second Rounds
- March 15 and 17
- East Region
- Hartford Civic Center, Hartford, Connecticut (Host: University of Connecticut)
- Midwest Region
- Frank Erwin Center, Austin, Texas (Host: University of Texas at Austin)
- Southeast Region
- ThompsonâÂÂBoling Arena, Knoxville, Tennessee (Host: University of Tennessee)
- West Region
- Jon M. Huntsman Center, Salt Lake City, Utah (Host: University of Utah)
- March 16 and 18
- East Region
- Omni Coliseum, Atlanta, Georgia (Host: Georgia Institute of Technology)
- Midwest Region
- Hoosier Dome, Indianapolis, Indiana (Hosts: Butler University, Midwestern Collegiate Conference)
- Southeast Region
- Richmond Coliseum, Richmond, Virginia (Hosts: University of Richmond, Virginia Commonwealth University)
- West Region
- Long Beach Arena, Long Beach, California (Host: Long Beach State University)
Regional semifinals and finals (Sweet Sixteen and Elite Eight)
- March 22 and 24
- East Regional, Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, New Jersey (Hosts: Seton Hall University, Big East Conference)
- Midwest Regional, Reunion Arena, Dallas, Texas (Host: Southwest Conference)
- March 23 and 25
- Southeast Regional, Louisiana Superdome, New Orleans, Louisiana (Hosts: Tulane University, University of New Orleans)
- West Regional, OaklandâÂÂAlameda County Coliseum Arena, Oakland, California (Host: University of California, Berkeley)
National semifinals and championship (Final Four and championship)
Teams
Bracket
East Regional â East Rutherford, New Jersey
Regional Final summary
Midwest Regional â Dallas, Texas
Regional Final summary
Southeast Regional â New Orleans, Louisiana
Regional Final summary
West Regional â Oakland, California
Regional Final summary
Final Four â Denver, Colorado
Game summaries
National Championship
Announcers
CBS
CBS and NCAA Productions broadcast all tournament games.
- Jim Nantz and James Brown served as hosts for the first-round games, while Mike Francesca served as analyst for the remaining rounds of the tournament.
- Brent Musburger and Billy Packer â First round (Ohio StateâÂÂProvidence) at Salt Lake City, Utah; Second Round at Austin, Texas and Richmond, Virginia; West Regional at Oakland, California; Final Four at Denver, Colorado. Musburger's final games for CBS.
- Dick Stockton and Hubie Brown â Second Round at Atlanta, Georgia; East Regional at East Rutherford, New Jersey
- James Brown and Bill Raftery â Second Round at Hartford, Connecticut and Indianapolis, Indiana; Midwest Regional at Dallas, Texas
- Greg Gumbel and Quinn Buckner â First round (New Mexico StateâÂÂLoyola-Marymount) and Second Round at Long Beach, California; Southeast Regional at New Orleans, Louisiana
- Brad Nessler and Tom Heinsohn â Second Round at Knoxville, Tennessee
- Tim Brant and Len Elmore â Second Round at Salt Lake City, Utah
ESPN/NCAA Productions
This would be the last year that ESPN would be involved in broadcasting games of the tournament, as CBS took over exclusive coverage of the tournament the following year.
- Bob Carpenter and Clark Kellogg â First round (IndianaâÂÂCalifornia, ClemsonâÂÂBrigham Young) at Hartford, Connecticut
- Mike Gorman and Ron Perry â First round (La SalleâÂÂSouthern Mississippi) at Hartford, Connecticut
- Fred White and Larry Conley â First round (St. John'sâÂÂTemple, KansasâÂÂRobert Morris) at Atlanta, Georgia
- Ralph Hacker and Dan Belluomini â First round (UCLAâÂÂUAB) at Atlanta, Georgia
- Ron Franklin and Bob Ortegel â First round (North CarolinaâÂÂSW Missouri State, ArkansasâÂÂPrinceton) at Austin, Texas
- Frank Fallon and Jack Corrigan â First Round (DaytonâÂÂIllinois) at Austin, Texas
- Tom Hammond and Gary Thompson â First round (GeorgetownâÂÂTexas Southern, GeorgiaâÂÂTexas) at Indianapolis, Indiana
- Mick Hubert and Jim Gibbons â First round (XavierâÂÂKansas State) at Indianapolis, Indiana; First round (ArizonaâÂÂSouth Florida) at Long Beach, California
- Mike Patrick and Dan Bonner â First round (MissouriâÂÂNorthern Iowa, SyracuseâÂÂCoppin State) at Richmond, Virginia
- Bob Rathbun and Bucky Waters â First round (MinnesotaâÂÂUTEP) at Richmond, Virginia
- Bob Rathbun and Mimi Griffin â First round (VirginiaâÂÂNotre Dame) at Richmond, Virginia
- John Sanders and Bruce Larson â First round (UNLVâÂÂArkansas-Little Rock, Oregon StateâÂÂBall State) at Salt Lake City, Utah
- John Rooney and Bob Weltlich â First Round (Michigan StâÂÂMurray State, LSUâÂÂVillanova) at Knoxville, Tennessee
- Brad Nessler and Jack Givens â First Round (UCSBâÂÂHouston, Georgia TechâÂÂEast Tennessee State) at Knoxville, Tennessee
- John Sanders and Len Elmore â First round (LouisvilleâÂÂIdaho) at Salt Lake City, Utah
- Barry Tompkins and Mike Rice â First round (AlabamaâÂÂColorado State, MichiganâÂÂIllinois State) at Long Beach, California
Tournament notes
- Loyola Marymount's Jeff Fryer made 11 of his 15 three-point attempts against Michigan to set the NCAA tournament record.
- Loyola Marymount's 149âÂÂ115 win over Michigan set a new tournament record for most combined points (264).
- UNLV at the time had the largest accumulated victory margin (112 points), over the entire tournament by a championship team that played 6 games. To date, it is the fifth-largest.
- UNLV's 103âÂÂ73 win over Duke marked the first (and to date, only) time in the history of the tournament that at least 100 points were scored by one team in the championship game.
- UNLV's 571 points over six games set the record for most points scored by a single team in any one year of the tournament.
- UNLV is the only team in tournament history to average more than 95 points per game, over six games. In six tournament games, they won three by exactly 30 points, while scoring more than 100 points in each 30-point victory.
- UNLV and UCLA in 1965 are the only teams in tournament history to win three games all while scoring at least 100 points in each win. (Loyola Marymount also scored at least 100 points in three games in the 1990 tournament, but lost their last game, where they scored 101 points, to UNLV, by 30 points. UNLV also scored at least 100 points in three victories in the 1977 tournament, but their last one was in the Final Four consolation game.)
- UNLV's 30-point margin of victory in the championship game is also a tournament record. ESPN called it the 36th âÂÂworst blowout in sports history.âÂÂ
- , UNLV remains the only team from a non-power conference (AAC, ACC, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Pac-12, and SEC) to win the national championship, since Louisville in 1986. Louisville was in the Metro Conference in 1986, which was considered a major basketball conference throughout its history, 1975âÂÂ1995.)
- The championship game was UNLV's eleventh consecutive win. They would eventually run the win streak to 45 games. That is the fourth-longest win streak in NCAA Division I basketball history, and the longest win streak since the longest ever, by UCLA from 1971 to 1974.
See also
References