Basketball Wiki
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'''College basketball''' most often refers to the USA [[basketball]] competitive governance structure established by the [[National Collegiate Athletic Association]] (NCAA). Basketball in the NCAA is divided into three divisions: [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]], [[Division II (NCAA)|Division II]] and [[Division III (NCAA)|Division III]].
 
   
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==Conferences==
 
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|+ style="text-align: center; font-size: 125%; color:#000000; background-color:#ffffff" colspan="2" |'''{{PAGENAME}}'''
===Division I===
 
 
|-
 
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| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" |
{{See also|NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship|NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship}}
 
There are 346 schools in 32 [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]] basketball conferences. Each conference, except for the newly formed [[Great West Conference]], receives an automatic bid to the [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship]]. The conferences are as follows:
 
 
{|width="100%"
 
 
|-
 
|-
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! style="vertical-align: top;" |Governing Body
| width="50%" |
 
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| style="vertical-align: top;" |[[NCAA]], [[ICAA]], [[NCSA]]
*[[America East Conference]]
 
 
|-
*[[Atlantic 10 Conference]]
 
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! style="vertical-align: top;" |First formed
*[[Atlantic Coast Conference]]
 
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| style="vertical-align: top;" |1906
*[[Atlantic Sun Conference]]
 
 
|-
*[[Big 12 Conference]]
 
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! style="vertical-align: top;" |Level of competition
*[[Big East Conference]]
 
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| style="vertical-align: top;" |Intermediate
*[[Big South Conference]]
 
*[[Big Sky Conference]]
 
*[[Big Ten Conference]]
 
*[[Big West Conference]]
 
*[[Colonial Athletic Association]]
 
*[[Conference USA]]
 
*[[Great West Conference]]
 
*[[Horizon League]]
 
*[[Ivy League]]
 
*[[Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference]]
 
||
 
*[[Mid-American Conference]]
 
*[[Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference]]
 
*[[Missouri Valley Conference]]
 
*[[Mountain West Conference]]
 
*[[Northeast Conference]]
 
*[[Ohio Valley Conference]]
 
*[[Pacific 10 Conference]]
 
*[[Patriot League]]
 
*[[Southeastern Conference]]
 
*[[Southern Conference]]
 
*[[Southland Conference]]
 
*[[Southwestern Athletic Conference]]
 
*[[Sun Belt Conference]]
 
*[[The Summit League]]
 
*[[West Coast Conference]]
 
*[[Western Athletic Conference]]
 
|}
 
   
There are also 4 [[NCAA Division I independent schools (basketball)|independent]] Division I schools without conference affiliation, for the 2010-11 season.
 
 
===Division II===
 
 
{{See also|NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship|NCAA Women's Division II Basketball Championship}}
 
There are 22 [[Division II (NCAA)|Division II]] basketball conferences. The conferences are as follows:
 
 
{|widht="100%"
 
 
|-
 
|-
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! style="vertical-align: top;" | Salary
| width="50% |
 
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| style="vertical-align: top;" |no
*[[California Collegiate Athletic Association]]
 
 
|-
*[[Central Atlantic Collegiate Conference]]
 
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! style="vertical-align: top;" |Age range:
*[[Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association]]
 
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| style="vertical-align: top;" |18-early 20's
*[[Conference Carolinas]]
 
 
|-
*[[East Coast Conference]]
 
  +
! style="vertical-align: top;" |Entries
*[[Great Lakes Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
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| style="vertical-align: top;" | College students thru sign up<br />or Scholarship
*[[Great Lakes Valley Conference]]
 
*[[Great Northwest Athletic Conference]]
 
*[[Gulf South Conference]]
 
*[[Heartland Conference]]
 
*[[Lone Star Conference]]
 
||
 
*[[Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletic Association]]
 
*[[Northeast Ten Conference]]
 
*[[Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference]]
 
*[[Pacific West Conference]]
 
*[[Peach Belt Conference]]
 
*[[Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference]]
 
*[[Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference]]
 
*[[South Atlantic Conference]]
 
*[[Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
*[[Sunshine State Conference]]
 
*[[West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
 
|}
 
|}
   
 
'''College basketball''' (or '''Collegiate basketball''') refers to the USA [[basketball]] competitive governance structure established by the [[National Collegiate Athletic Association]] (NCAA), [[Independent Collegiate Athletic Association]] (ICAA), the [[National Collegiate Sports Association]] (NCSA), and the [[National Intercollegiate Athletics Organization]] (NIAO). Basketball in the NCAA is divided into three divisions: [[Division I (NCAA)|Division I]], [[Division II (NCAA)|Division II]] and [[Division III (NCAA)|Division III]].
There are also 22 [[NCAA Division II independent schools|independent]] Division II schools without conference affiliation, for the 2010-11 season.
 
 
[[Category:College basketball lists]]
 
===Division III===
 
:''See: [[NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship]] and [[NCAA Women's Division III Basketball Championship]]''
 
 
{| width="100%"
 
|-valign="top"
 
| width="50%" |
 
* [[Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference]]
 
* [[American Southwest Conference]]
 
* [[Capital Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Centennial Conference]]
 
* [[College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin]]
 
* [[Colonial States Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Commonwealth Coast Conference]]
 
* [[Empire]]
 
* [[Great South Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Landmark Conference]]
 
* [[Liberty League]]
 
* [[Michigan Intercollegiate Athletic Association]]
 
* [[Middle Atlantic Conferences]]
 
* [[Midwest Conference]]
 
* [[Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[National Christian College Athletic Association]]
 
* [[New England Small College Athletic Conference]]
 
||
 
* [[New Jersey Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[North Atlantic Conference]]
 
* [[North Coast Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[North Eastern Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Northern Athletics Conference]]
 
* [[Northwest Conference]]
 
* [[Ohio Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Old Dominion Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Presidents' Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Skyline Conference]]
 
* [[Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[State University of New York Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[USA South Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[University Athletic Association]]
 
* [[Upper Midwest Athletic Conference]]
 
* [[Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference]]
 
|}
 
 
There are also 18 Division III schools without conference affiliation, for the 2010-11 season.
 
 
==Relationship to professional basketball==
 
In past decades, the [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] held to tradition and drafted players who had graduated from college. This was a mutually beneficial relationship for the NBA and colleges&mdash;the colleges held onto players who would otherwise go professional, and the NBA did not have to fund a minor league. As the college game became commercialized, though, it became increasingly difficult for "student athletes" to be students. Specifically, a growing number of poor, under-educated, highly talented teenage basketball players found the system exploitative&mdash;they brought in funds to schools where they learned little and played without income.
 
 
The [[American Basketball Association (1967-1976)|American Basketball Association]] began to employ players who had not yet graduated. After a season of [[junior college]], a season at the [[University of Detroit Mercy|University of Detroit]], and an [[Basketball at the 1968 Summer Olympics|Olympic gold medal]], [[Spencer Haywood]] played the 1969-70 season with the ABA's [[Denver Rockets]]. He signed with the NBA's [[Seattle SuperSonics]] in 1970, before his college class graduation, defying NBA rules. Haywood pleaded that, as his family's sole wage earner, he should be allowed to earn a living in the NBA or else his family would face destitution. The [[Haywood v. National Basketball Association|ensuing legal battle]] went to the [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]] which ruled in 1971 that the NBA does not have the same [[United States antitrust law|antitrust]] exemption enjoyed by [[Major League Baseball]]. Thereafter, collegiate players demonstrating economic hardship were allowed early entry into the [[NBA Draft]]. The hardship requirement was eliminated in 1976.
 
 
In 1974, [[Moses Malone]] joined the [[Utah Stars]] of the [[American Basketball Association]] (which became part of the [[NBA]] after the [[ABA-NBA merger]] in 1976) straight out of high school and went on to a [[Basketball Hall of Fame|Hall of Fame]] career. The past 30 years have seen a remarkable change in the college game. The best international players routinely skip college entirely, many American stars skip college ([[Shawn Kemp]], [[Kevin Garnett]], [[Kobe Bryant]], [[Tracy McGrady]], [[Dwight Howard]], [[Amar'e Stoudemire]] and [[LeBron James]]) or only play one year ([[Carmelo Anthony]], [[Chris Bosh]], [[Kevin Durant]], [[Greg Oden]]) and only a dozen or so college graduates are now among the 60 players selected in the annual [[NBA Draft]]. Fewer high schoolers will progress directly to the NBA without at least one year of college basketball beginning in 2006; citing maturity concerns after several incidents involving young players, the labor agreement between players and owners now specifies that players must turn 19 years of age during the calendar year of the draft to be eligible. Additionally, U.S. players must be at least one year removed from their high school graduation.
 
 
The pervasiveness of college basketball throughout the nation, the large population of graduates from "major conference" universities, and the NCAA's marketing of "March Madness" (officially the [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship]]), have kept the college game alive and well. Some commentators have argued that the higher turnover of players has increased the importance of good coaches. Many teams have been highly successful, for instance, by emphasizing personality in their recruiting efforts, with the goal of creating a cohesive group that, while lacking stars, plays together for all 4 years and thus develops a higher level of sophistication than less stable teams could achieve.
 
 
==Distinctions with NBA and WNBA play==
 
The NCAA Men's Basketball Rules Committee, consisting of coaches from all three divisions of the NCAA, sets the rules for college men's basketball play. A parallel committee sets rules for college women's play. Although many of the [[National Basketball Association|NBA]] and [[Women's National Basketball Association|WNBA]] rules apply in NCAA play, there are differences that make NCAA play unique.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://collegebasketball.about.com/od/collegebasketball101/a/nbavsncaa.htm|title=NBA vs. NCAA|publisher=About.com|accessdate=2008-03-29|author=Zegers, Charlie}}</ref>
 
 
An NCAA game is divided into two halves, each 20 minutes long, while NBA games are played in four quarters of 12 minutes each and WNBA games are played in 10-minute quarters. The NCAA [[shot clock]] gives a men's team 35 seconds to shoot and a women's team 30 seconds, while the shot clock used in both the NBA and WNBA gives teams 24 seconds. Also, NCAA men's teams are allowed 10 seconds to move the ball past the [[Basketball court|halfcourt]] line, and NCAA women's teams have no time limit on moving the ball past the halfcourt line, while NBA and WNBA rules allow only 8 seconds. However, like the NBA and WNBA (and high school basketball), during the last minute of each half, the game clock keeps time remaining in the period measured in tenths of a second, rather than full seconds.
 
 
Though the height of the basket, the foul line's distance from the backboard, and the court dimensions are the same, the distance between the three point line and the backboard is different. The NBA three-point line measures {{convert|23|ft|9|in|m}} at the top of the circle, or 22 feet (6.7 m) in the corners or baseline.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.themercury.com/K-StateSports/article.aspx?articleId=6a90a116d9094337ad8db1aa425721d7|title=Wildcats off the mark from behind the arc}}</ref> On the NCAA court, the three point line had been a constant {{convert|19|ft|9|in|m}}, but the NCAA Rules Committee voted in May 2007 to extend it a foot more to {{convert|20|ft|9|in|m}}, which became effective beginning the 2008–09 season.<ref>{{cite press release|url=http://www.ncaa.org/library/rules/2008/2008_m_w_basketball_rules.pdf|title=2008 NCAA MEN’S AND WOMEN’S BASKETBALL RULES AND INTERPRETATIONS|publisher=NCAA|accessdate=2008-03-29|pages=10}}</ref> The WNBA uses the FIBA three-point line of {{height|m=6.25|precision=2}}. The NCAA lane measures {{convert|12|ft|m}} in width, while the NBA and WNBA lane is {{convert|16|ft|m}}.
 
 
NCAA players are allowed five [[Personal foul (basketball)|personal fouls]] before fouling out, as opposed to their NBA counterparts, who are allowed six. This maintains the same ratio of minutes of play per foul allowed, eight. However, the WNBA allows players six personal fouls despite playing the same number of minutes as the NCAA. The number of team fouls allotted is also different. In all three competitions, team fouls can be categorized as shooting or non-shooting. A shooting foul occurs when a player gets fouled in the act of shooting (while airborne), giving him the chance to shoot [[free throws]]. A common foul (non-shooting foul) consists of all other fouls, including making contact with the opposing player while "reaching in" to steal the ball.
 
 
A team may make a certain number of non-shooting fouls per period before the opposing team is awarded free throws. In the NBA and WNBA, the fifth team foul in a quarter places the team in penalty. For every foul starting with the fifth, whether it's shooting or non-shooting, the opposing team receives two free throws. In addition, if an NBA or WNBA team has not entered the penalty in the last two minutes of a period, its team foul count is reset; the second team foul in the last two minutes triggers the penalty. In the NCAA, the penalty begins with the seventh team foul in a half. However, the fouled player must make the first free throw in order to get the second. This is called a "one and one" or "one and the bonus" situation. On the tenth team foul, the "double bonus" situation comes into play, meaning that every subsequent team foul results in two free throws for the opposing team. It should be noted that no free throws are shot at either level for a player control foul, which is an offensive foul (usually a charge). Unlike NBA/WNBA rules, the team foul count does not reset in the last two minutes of a half. Overtime periods are considered an extension of the second half under NCAA rules, but not under NBA/WNBA rules; in those leagues, the fourth team foul in any overtime period, or the second in the last two minutes, triggers the penalty.
 
 
When a dispute over ball possession arises, the [[jump ball]] is used in the NBA and WNBA. In the NCAA, once the first possession has been established from the opening tip, no further jump balls occur except to begin an overtime period. Since 1981, a possession arrow on the scorer's table has dictated which team should possess the ball, with the arrow switching directions after each use.
 
 
NCAA teams can call a timeout after they made a basket (Indiana scores a 3 point field goal and calls a timeout); in the NBA and WNBA, only the opposing team can call a timeout after a basket is made.
 
 
In addition, the NBA limits what types of defense a team can play, primarily in an effort to prevent coaches from slowing down the pace of the game by using [[zone defense]]s. Zone defense is permitted in the NBA and WNBA; however, players cannot stand in the lane for more than three seconds if they are not guarding anyone. In NCAA basketball, no such restriction exists, and coaches are free to design a variety of defensive techniques.
 
 
In college basketball, it is required by rule that the home team wears their white or light-colored jerseys while the visiting team wears their darker jersey color. The NBA, like most other [[professional sports]] leagues, lets the home team decide which uniform to wear, but with a few exceptions the home team has continued the tradition of the college game and wears white (or in the case of the [[Los Angeles Lakers]] for non-Sunday home games, gold) at home. This is for regular season play only; home teams always wear white during the playoffs. The WNBA, however, follows the college rule for all games.
 
 
The NBA introduced a new dress code rule in 2005. Now players are required to wear business casual attire whenever they are engaged in team or league business. This includes a long or short-sleeved dress shirt (collared or turtleneck), and/or a sweater; dress slacks, khaki pants, or dress jeans, and appropriate shoes and socks, including dress shoes, dress boots, or other presentable shoes, but not including sneakers, sandals, flip-flops, or work boots. The WNBA has a similar dress code, adjusted for standard women's attire. NCAA rules have no set dress code rule, leaving it up to individual teams or conferences.
 
 
The organizations also have different rules for [[squad number|jersey numbers]]. While the NBA and WNBA allow players to wear any number from 0-99, including 00, so long as it is available, the NCAA disallows any jersey number with a 6, 7, 8, or 9 in it. This is done to allow the [[Official (basketball)|referee]] to report [[Basketball#Fouls|fouls]] using hand signals with one hand, as each [[hand]] has only five fingers. [[High school]] basketball, whose rules are set by the [[National Federation of State High School Associations]], also follows the NCAA's convention on jersey numbering.
 
 
==Other divisions==
 
While less commercialized than Division I, [[Division II (NCAA)|Division II]] and [[Division III (NCAA)|Division III]] are both highly successful college basketball organizations. Women's Division I is often televised, but to smaller audiences than Men's Division I. Generally, small colleges join Division II, while colleges of all sizes that choose not to offer athletic scholarships join Division III. D-II and D-III games, understandably, are almost never televised, although CBS televises the Championship Final of Division II, while [[CBS College Sports Network]] televises the semifinals as well as the Division III Final.
 
 
The [[National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics|NAIA]] also sponsors men and women's college-level basketball. The [[NAIA national men's basketball championship|NAIA Men's Basketball National Championship]] has been held annually since [[1937 NAIA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1937]] (with the exception of [[1944 NAIA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|1944]]), when it was established by [[James Naismith]] to crown a national champion for smaller colleges and universities. Unlike the [[National Collegiate Athletic Association|NCAA]] [[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship|Tournament]], the NAIA Tournament features only 32 teams, and the entire tournament is contested in one week instead of three weekends. Since [[2002 NAIA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|2002]] the NAIA National Tournament has been played in [[Municipal Auditorium (Kansas City)|Municipal Auditorium]] in [[Kansas City, Missouri]]. (From 1994-[[2001 NAIA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament|2001]] it was held in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and from 1937-1999 it was held at Municipal then [[Kemper Arena]] in Kansas City).
 
 
Since 1992, the NAIA has sponsored a [[NAIA national men's basketball championship|Division II championship]], similar to the NCAA Division I and II. There is also an [[NAIA national women's basketball championship|NAIA Women's Basketball Championship]].
 
 
The only school to have won national titles in both the NAIA and NCAA Division I is [[Louisville Cardinals men's basketball|Louisville]]; the Cardinals have also won the [[National Invitation Tournament|NIT]] title. [[Southern Illinois Salukis men's basketball|Southern Illinois]] has won NAIA and NIT titles. [[Central Missouri Mules and Jennies|Central Missouri]] and [[Fort Hays State University|Fort Hays State]] have won NAIA and NCAA Division II national titles.
 
 
==National Invitation Tournament (NIT)==
 
{{Main|National Invitation Tournament}}
 
 
==Awards==
 
*[[Template:College Basketball Awards|Men's College Basketball Awards]]
 
*[[Template:Women's College Basketball Awards|Women's College Basketball Awards]]
 
*[[National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame]]
 
*[[Sporting News#College Basketball Athlete of the Decade|''Sporting News'' College Basketball Athlete of the Decade]] (2000–09)
 
 
==Records and lists==
 
===Men's===
 
*[[List: Most All time victories in Men's College Basketball|NCAA Men's Division I Basketball all-time wins and losses]]
 
*[[NCAA men's basketball coaches win list]]
 
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Final Four appearances by school]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Final Four appearances by coaches]]
 
*[[List of the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament Final Four participants]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament all-time team records|NCAA Men's Division I Tournament all-time team records]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Tournament bids by school]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Tournament bids by school and conference]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship records]]
 
 
*[[NIT all-time team records]]
 
*[[NIT bids by school and conference]]
 
*[[NIT championships and semifinal appearances]]
 
 
*[[Template:NCAA Division I men's basketball statistical leaders|NCAA Men's Division I basketball statistical leaders]]
 
 
*[[List of NCAA Division I men's basketball coaches]]
 
 
===Women's===
 
*[[NCAA Women's Division I Tournament bids by school]]
 
*[[AIAW Champions|AIAW Women's Basketball Champions]]
 
*[[List of NCAA Division I women's basketball players with 3000 points]]
 
 
==See also==
 
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball alignment history]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[NCAA Women's Division II Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[NCAA Women's Division III Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women]] (AIAW)
 
*[[AIAW Women's Basketball Tournament]]
 
*[[Canadian Interuniversity Sport]] (CIS)
 
*[[Canadian Colleges Athletic Association]] (CCAA)
 
*[[National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics]] (NAIA)
 
*[[NAIA national men's basketball championship|NAIA Men's Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[NAIA national women's basketball championship|NAIA Women's Basketball Championship]]
 
*[[Black participation in college basketball]]
 
 
 
==References==
 
{{Reflist}}
 
 
==External links==
 
{{commons|College basketball}}
 
*[http://www.ncaa.org/stats/ NCAA Basketball Statistics]
 
*[http://www.naiahoopskc.org/ NAIA Men's Basketball]
 
*[http://www.herblondon.org/1383/why-big-time-college-basketball-players-dont-graduate Why Big Time College Basketball Players Don't Graduate], by Herb London, ''St. Croix Review''
 

Revision as of 18:38, 13 June 2020

College basketball
Governing Body NCAA, ICAA, NCSA
First formed 1906
Level of competition Intermediate
Salary no
Age range: 18-early 20's
Entries College students thru sign up
or Scholarship

College basketball (or Collegiate basketball) refers to the USA basketball competitive governance structure established by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), Independent Collegiate Athletic Association (ICAA), the National Collegiate Sports Association (NCSA), and the National Intercollegiate Athletics Organization (NIAO). Basketball in the NCAA is divided into three divisions: Division I, Division II and Division III.