The VCU Rams men's basketball team is the intercollegiate men's basketball team that represents Virginia Commonwealth University. The Rams joined the Atlantic 10 Conference in the 2012âÂÂ13 season after previously competing in the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA). The team is currently coached by Phil Martelli Jr.
Since 1999, the team has played home basketball games at the E.J. Wade Arena at the Stuart C. Siegel Center in Richmond, Virginia on the university's Monroe Park campus. Virginia Commonwealth has made it to the NCAA Final Four once in its program's history, in 2011. Additionally, the Rams won the 2010 CBI tournament and have won twelve conference tournaments; three being in the Sun Belt Conference, five being in the Colonial Athletic Association, and four in the Atlantic 10 Conference. The Rams have also won fourteen regular season championships; four in the Sun Belt, five in the CAA, and five in the Atlantic 10. The official student supporter group is known as the Rowdy Rams.
The team is known for its Final Four run in the 2011 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. While the team had made nine NCAA tournament appearances beforehand, never had the Rams made it beyond the second round of the tournament. In 2011, the Rams' journey to the Final Four began in one of the four opening round games, commonly called "play-in" games, intended to narrow the field from 68 to 64 teams. Thus, VCU became the first team to advance from the "First Four" to the Final Four.
In another NCAA tournament-first, VCU became the first team ever to forfeit a game in the NCAA tournament when their First Round game in the 2021 NCAA tournament was declared a no-contest due to several positive COVID-19 tests in the VCU program.
VCU reached the NCAA tournament a state record seven consecutive times from 2011 to 2017.
The VCU Rams men's basketball program was founded in 1968, at the same time as the merger of the Richmond Professional Institute and the Medical College of Virginia. In the 1968âÂÂ69 season as an independent team, the program played its first ever season. The Rams were coached by Benny Dees and assisted by Landy Watson and Vann Brackin for their first two seasons, Dees led the team to two winning records, before being replaced by Chuck Noe. It would take ten more seasons before the Rams appeared in a postseason tournament, earning a berth into the 1978 National Invitation Tournament being eliminated in the first round by University of Detroit Mercy.
Under the coaching of J.D. Barnett, the Rams earned fourth berths into the NCAA tournament, each being their first four berths, the first coming in 1980. During Barnett's six years coaching the team, only twice did the Rams not win the Sun Belt Conference.
The Rams became the first team to sweep the best of three championship series in the College Basketball Invitational post-season tournament on their way to becoming the 2010 CBI champions. It is the first post-season tournament championship, excluding conference tournaments, in the history of the program.
VCU received their first bid to the NCAA tournament in the 1979âÂÂ80 season with an 18âÂÂ12 overall record and Sun Belt Conference tournament championship led by then first-year head coach J.D. Barnett in VCU's first season in the Sun Belt. They entered the tournament as a No. 12 seed in the East Region and were eliminated in the first round by No. 5 Iowa.
It would not be long before the Rams returned to the tournament. The following year the Rams posted a 24âÂÂ5 record on their way to the Sun Belt conference regular season and conference tournament championships. The Rams entered the tournament as the No. 5 seed in the East region and defeated No. 12 Long Island before being eliminated by No. 4 Tennessee in overtime in the second round 58âÂÂ56.
The Rams would return to the tournament in 1983. The Rams, the No. 5 seed in the East region, defeated No. 12 seed La Salle in the first round and were eliminated in the second round by No. 4 seed Georgia 56âÂÂ54, which was a similar margin to their loss in the 1981 tournament. The 1984 tournament held similar results for the Rams squad. They entered the tournament as a No. 6 seed in the East Region and defeated No. 11 Northeastern before being eliminated by No. 3 Syracuse. The second-round losses in the NCAA tournament by VCU in 1981, 1983, and 1984 were to teams with first-round byes before the tournament expanded to 64 teams for the 1984âÂÂ85 season and byes were eliminated.
In the 1984âÂÂ85 season the Rams once again made it to the newly expanded 1985 NCAA tournament. The Rams entered the tournament as the No. 2 seed in the West region, the highest seeding they have ever received in the tournament. The Rams defeated No. 15 Marshall in the first round, but unfortunately their luck had not changed in the second-round and they were upset by No. 7 Alabama 63âÂÂ59.
During his tenure, head coach J.D. Barnett from 1979 to 1985, led the Rams to five NCAA tournament appearances (1980, 1981, 1983, 1984, and 1985) while capturing four Sun Belt regular season conference championships (1981, 1983, 1984, and 1985) and three Sun Belt Conference tournament championships (1980, 1981, and 1985). He was 132âÂÂ48 overall and 59âÂÂ19 in conference play during his time at VCU.
The Rams next stint in the post-season came under head coach Mike Pollio in the 1988 NIT where they would reach the quarterfinals before ultimately falling to Conneticut 69âÂÂ60. The Rams posted wins over Marshall and Southern Miss in the first and second rounds, respectively.
The Rams remained in the Sun Belt Conference until 1991 when they joined the Metro Conference. VCU was left out of the 1995 merger of the Metro and Great Midwest Conference that created Conference USA. They instead joined the Colonial Athletic Association (CAA) for the 1995âÂÂ96 season.
In their first season as members of the CAA, the Rams posted a 24âÂÂ9 overall record, going 14âÂÂ2 in conference play en route to the CAA regular season and conference tournament championships. The Rams earned the right to go dancing in the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1985, but fell in the first round as the No. 12 seed in the Southeast Region to No. 5 Mississippi State.
The VCU men's basketball team would return to prominence in the 2003âÂÂ04 season under then second-year head coach Jeff Capel. Following a second place conference finish in his debut season, Capel led the Rams to a 23âÂÂ8 overall record, going 14âÂÂ4 in conference play and capturing the CAA regular season and conference tournament championships. In the 2004 NCAA tournament, the Rams were awarded the No. 13 seed in the East region and faced No. 4 Wake Forest in the first round. The Rams led for much of the second half and had a chance to win towards the end despite the Wake Forest comeback, but ultimately fell 79âÂÂ78.
Jeff Capel originally joined VCU as an assistant in 2001 and at the time of his promotion to the head coaching position in 2002 was the youngest head coach in NCAA Division I basketball at 27 years old. During his time as the head coach with VCU, Capel compiled a 79âÂÂ41 record. In April 2006, Capel resigned as head coach to accept the same position with Oklahoma. He was replaced by Anthony Grant, formerly an assistant and associate head coach for several years to Billy Donovan, including the 2006 NCAA champions Florida Gators.
In his first year as head coach, Anthony Grant led the Rams to a school-record 28 wins. The Rams finished the season 28âÂÂ7, also setting a school and CAA conference record with 16 wins in conference play. Grant, who also set a school record for most wins by a first-year head coach, was named the CAA Coach of the Year. The Rams were 16âÂÂ2 in conference play and captured the CAA regular season championship before capturing the CAA conference tournament championship in thrilling fashion as Eric Maynor burst onto the national scene by scoring 9 points in the final 1:55 to bury the George Mason Patriots, finishing with 14 of his 20 points in the second half. Maynor also had 7 rebounds, 4 assists and 3 steals in the victory.
The Rams entered the 2007 NCAA tournament as the No. 11 seed in the West Region and upset the No. 6 seed Duke 79âÂÂ77 on a game-winning bucket from just beyond the free-throw line by Eric Maynor in the final seconds of the game.
The Rams good fortune did not continue into the next round, however, where they were eliminated by the No. 3 seed Pittsburgh Panthers. The Rams squad showed outstanding poise in the second-half by forcing overtime after trailing 41âÂÂ26 at halftime. They would go on to lose by a score of 84âÂÂ79.
The next year the Rams would win their second straight CAA regular season championship, posting a 24âÂÂ8 overall record, 15âÂÂ3 in conference play, but fall short in the conference tournament in a heartbreaking upset to William & Mary in the semi-finals. The Rams missed an at-large bid for the NCAA tournament but instead received an invitation to play in the NIT. The Rams heartbreak continued as they were upset on their home court in the first round by old-time Sun Belt Conference rival, UAB 80âÂÂ77 as a late comeback fell just short.
The 2008âÂÂ09 season was another successful one for the VCU program. The Rams finished the season with a mark of 24âÂÂ10 overall, going 14âÂÂ4 in a hotly contested CAA and sealing the deal on a three-peat as CAA regular season champions for only the second time in CAA conference history and the second time in school history, the first coming during the Rams time in the Sun Belt Conference. The Rams would not fall short again and captured the CAA Conference tournament championship for the fourth time since joining the conference capped by a 71âÂÂ50 rout of rival George Mason in the final. The 21-point margin was the largest margin of victory in a CAA conference tournament championship game. Larry Sanders set CAA conference tournament championship records for the Rams with 20 rebounds and 7 blocks in the victory.
So once again, the Rams headed to the NCAA tournament as a No. 11 seed in the East Region. The Rams were eliminated by the No. 6 seed UCLA Bruins in a hard-fought game 65âÂÂ64.
Anthony Grant posted an impressive 76âÂÂ25 record in his three seasons as the head coach at VCU. He was 52âÂÂ10 versus CAA opponents, including conference tournaments, capturing three straight CAA regular season conference championships and two CAA conference tournament championships. He led VCU to two NCAA tournament berths and one NIT berth before departing the program to take over the head coaching position at Alabama. Eric Maynor would go on to be drafted No. 20 in the 2009 NBA draft by the Utah Jazz.
From 2009 to 2015, the Rams were led by Shaka Smart, who had been previously an assistant coach for Florida. Prior to Florida, Smart served as an assistant coach at Clemson, Akron and California (Pa.) and a director of operations at Dayton. During his introductory press conference, he promised that his teams would "wreak havoc on our opponents [sic] psyche and their plan of attack." Smart's teams have employed a basketball philosophy nicknamed Havoc since that point.
In Smart's first year as the Rams head coach, the team posted a 27âÂÂ9 record, going 11âÂÂ7 in the CAA, finishing fifth in the conference. As fifth seeds, the Rams made it to the semi-finals of the 2010 CAA men's basketball tournament before falling to their conference rivals, Old Dominion, who would go on to win the CAA championship. Despite reaching the semifinals of the CAA Tournament, the Rams did not earn a berth into either the NCAA or NIT tournaments. However, the Rams earned a berth into the 2010 College Basketball Invitational, where they would finish as the eventual champions, defeating Saint Louis 2âÂÂ0 in the series final. Their sweep of Saint Louis made it the first time in CBI history a team won the best two-out-of-three championship series in two games. Additionally, it was VCU's first postseason tournament, other than the Sun Belt and CAA tournaments, that the program won.
On Selection Sunday 2011, the VCU Rams received an at-large bid to the 2011 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament to start off the newly created 68-team field. VCU found itself as one of the last teams in the tournament and was scheduled to play in the newly formed "First Four" against USC on March 16 for a spot as the 11th seed in the tournament. The inclusion of VCU in the tournament was widely criticized by pundits and the ESPN network, in particular Jay Bilas and Dick Vitale. In the first round of the NCAA tournament, dubbed by many as "The First Four", The Rams succeeded in knocking off USC by the score of 59âÂÂ46. The Rams blew out Georgetown 74âÂÂ56 in Chicago to reach the Round of 32 and followed this win up with a 94âÂÂ76 rout of third-seeded Purdue to advance to VCU's first-ever Sweet Sixteen appearance. VCU then beat Florida State 72âÂÂ71 in overtime on a last second shot by Bradford Burgess to advance to the school's first ever Elite Eight appearance.
The Rams upset No. 1 seed Kansas Jayhawks 71âÂÂ61 to reach the Final Four for the first time ever. VCU, the Southwest Regional champions played in the national semifinal against the Southeast Region champion Butler Bulldogs, losing 70âÂÂ62. The VCU Rams finished sixth in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll at the end of the season. This was the highest ranking in VCU's history and the highest ranking of any team from the CAA. The 2011 NCAA tournament run by VCU is regarded as one of the best cinderella runs of all time. Their First Four appearance, combined with their run to the Final Four, gave VCU the distinction of being the first team to win five games in the men's NCAA tournament without reaching the championship game.
The major conference realignment of the early 2010s eventually gave VCU the opportunity for a major basketball upgrade. After A-10 mainstay Temple announced its departure for the Big East Conference and Charlotte announced it would return to Conference USA, the A-10 reloaded by adding Butler and VCU. The move placed VCU in a conference that regularly collected NCAA at-large bidsâÂÂthe A10 had 20 teams earn at-large bids from 2000 through 2012, including three in the 2012 tournament. By comparison, the CAA had only four at-large bids in the same period (one of them being VCU's 2011 Final Four team).
On Sunday, March 15, 2015, VCU won its first Atlantic 10 conference tournament championship.
On April 2, 2015, Smart left VCU to become the head coach at Texas.
After two seasons at Chattanooga, Will Wade returned to VCU to take the open head coaching position vacated by Shaka Smart. In his first season returning to VCU, Wade guided the team to their first ever A-10 Conference regular season championship and a 25âÂÂ11 overall record. VCU made it to the championship game of the A-10 conference tournament for the fourth straight season, falling to Saint Joseph's. The team won at least 24 games, a feat they share with Kansas for the last ten seasons. The Rams also made their sixth straight NCAA tournament, one of only eight teams in the country to do so. VCU made it to the Round of 32 where they fell to Oklahoma 85âÂÂ81. Wade finished second in voting for A-10 Coach Of The Year. Wade announced that he was leaving VCU after two years to accept the head coaching position at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
On March 21, 2017, VCU announced that the school had hired former associate head coach under Shaka Smart, Mike Rhoades, as the Rams' new head basketball coach. He was formerly the head coach at Rice in Houston. He is the twelfth coach in program history. On March 29, 2023, Mike Rhoades announced he was accepting an offer to coach at Penn State following six seasons at VCU and no NCAA tournament wins. Hours after his announced departure all key VCU players declared for the transfer portal leaving VCU with just 5 active roster players.
In March 2023, VCU named Utah State coach Ryan Odom as the Rams new head coach. In his two years at VCU he led the team to a 52âÂÂ21 record. In Odom's first season, the Rams finished 24âÂÂ14 and advanced to the 2024 NIT quarterfinals. In the Odom's second season, the Rams won both the Atlantic 10 regular-season and Atlantic 10 tournament championships, winning 18 of their final 20 games en route to a No. 11 seed in the NCAA tournament, where they lost to No. 6 seed Brigham Young in the first round. Odom was named the men's basketball coach for Virginia on March 21, 2025.
In the team's history, the Rams have had 12 different head coaches. Benny Dees coached the team for the first two seasons of existence. During Dees' tenure, the team achieved winning records both seasons, but barely pulled ahead of .500, resulting in Dees being fired. The second coach, Chuck Noe, led the team for the next six seasons.
Following Noe's departure as head coach in 1976, Dana Kirk became the third head coach in Rams basketball history. Kirk, formerly assistant to Denny Crum, was part of the University of Louisville team that reached the Final Four in 1976. In Kirk's second season with the team, he led them to a 24âÂÂ5 record, and a berth into the National Invitational Tournament, making it the first time the team reached any major tournament. Although the team was eliminated in the first round, the success of the program Kirk built continued into the following season. Kirk's success with the Rams resulted in him being hired as the head coach at Memphis State (now Memphis) in 1979.
Subsequently, the Rams earned an invitation to play in the Sun Belt Conference and hired J. D. Barnett as their head coach. Barnett, who coached the team from 1979 through 1985, immediately brought NCAA success to the team, earning berths into the NCAA tournament five of the six seasons in his tenure, as well as being the four-time Sun Belt champions. BarnettâÂÂs success eventually led to him being offered a contract to coach at Tulsa.
Mike Pollio became the fifth coach in Rams history. The head coach from 1985 until 1989, Pollio had a rather lackluster record with the team. During his four years as coach, Pollio had two seasons with losing records, the first in Rams history. During his four years, Pollio managed to get the team into the NIT quarterfinals.
Since the early 2000s, VCU has gained a reputation as the springboard for multiple successful coaches to be hired by a major program after achieving success with the Rams. The VCU administration has capitalized on this status by requiring schools who sign a VCU coach to play the Rams home and away as a condition of their compensation package. The only team thus far who did not fulfill this clause is Penn State, which elected to pay a $250,000 buyout in lieu of scheduling the Rams after hiring Mike Rhoades in 2023.
The Rams play at the E.J. Wade Arena, formerly Verizon Wireless Arena, the Stuart C. Siegel Center, located in the northwest corridor of the Monroe Park campus. University-owned, the Siegel Center broke ground for construction April 1996, and opened three years later, in May 1999. Since the 1999âÂÂ00 season, the venue has been the home arena for the Rams, as well as the women's basketball team and volleyball team.
Prior to the opening of the Siegel Center, the Rams spent a majority of their history playing their home basketball games in the Richmond Coliseum, which housed the team from 1971 until 1999. Prior to the Rams' long-term occupation of the Coliseum, the team played their home games in the Franklin Street Gym.
A $25 million practice facility located on the north side of Marshall Street adjacent to the Siegel Center was completed in November 2015. Replacing the decades-old Franklin Street Gym, it houses the Men's and Women's basketball teams. The building's size is about and features courts, players' lounges, dining areas, coaches' offices, retail spaces, and a hall of fame.
The Rams have three major rivals: Old Dominion, George Mason and their long-standing crosstown rival University of Richmond.
In the 1970s, their first six games were decided at the buzzer. For the past 35 years, the two schools have competed annually in the Capital City Classic (formerly Black & Blue Classic). The success of the two school's basketball programs was highlighted in the 2011 NCAA tournament, as Richmond and VCU respectively reached the Sweet Sixteen and Final Four.
VCU has honored six players by retiring their jerseys, although the numbers remained active:
<small>Source: https://web.archive.org/web/20120313081111/http://vcuathletics.tv/mbb/history/08-RECORD%20BOOK.pdf</small>
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The Rams have appeared in 21 NCAA tournaments. VCU's combined record is 14âÂÂ20 (with one no-contest).
^Oregon advanced due to positive COVID-19 tests in VCU's program
The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.
The Rams have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) six times. Their combined record is 5âÂÂ7.
The Rams have appeared in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) one time. Their record is 5âÂÂ0 and they were CBI champions in 2010.
Since the 2009âÂÂ10 season, VCU has played a total of 46 games against teams ranked in the AP Top 25 Poll. VCU has a record of 14âÂÂ32 against such teams. They have a record of 1âÂÂ5 against teams in the Top 5 during this span, the lone win coming against #2 Kansas during the 2011 NCAA tournament in which Kansas was a #1 seed. The Rams also hold a record of 6âÂÂ4 against ranked teams at the Siegel Center since the arena first opened in 1999.
From 2005 to 2012, VCU had participated in ESPN's BracketBusters series, in which the Rams would play against another team from a mid-major conference. VCU's record during this series was 5âÂÂ3, going 3âÂÂ1 at home. Scores in bold represent games in which VCU was the home team.