Undefeated Ncaa Basketball Teams 2017

Undefeated Ncaa Basketball Teams 2017 Rating: 4,7/5 2182 votes

Note: In 1917, 1918, 1943, and 1944, football teams from military training facilities competed alongside college programs note: In 1996, the NCAA eliminated ties with a new overtime system Teams with multiple undefeated seasons. Teams ordered by the number of undefeated seasons in the top division. The 2017–18 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 10, 2017. The first tournament was the 2K Sports Classic and the season ended with the Final Four in San Antonio on April 2, 2018. Practices officially began on September 29, 2017. Other NFL perfect regular seasons. Apart from the 1972 Dolphins, three NFL teams have completed undefeated and untied regular seasons: the 1934 Chicago Bears, the 1942 Chicago Bears, and the 2007 New England Patriots. In 1934, the Bears played a 13–0–0 regular season and became the first NFL team to complete an undefeated regular season without tied games, but lost the 1934 NFL. If they advance and win the championship game on Saturday, they'll be the first team since the 2017-2018 UConn Huskies to go undefeated and win a conference tournament. If the Lancers win the WAC.

Gonzaga remains at the top of the Ferris Mowers Men’s Basketball Coaches Poll

With a 62-46 win over Seattle University on Saturday, California Baptist women's basketball became the first team since 2018 and 24th team since 1982 to finish the regular season undefeated.

However, as they enter the WAC Tournament as the No. 1 seed, they will not be able to enter the NCAA Tournament even with a conference tournament title.

California Baptist University, a private Christian school located in Riverside, California, is in year three of a four-year transition phase to become an official Division I school. The Lancers left Division II in 2018, which means they are not eligible for an NCAA tournament in any sport until the 2022-23 season.

“Everyone’s big thing is going to the big dance and seeing how far they get in March. And it feels like a bit of a punch in the face knowing that we can only go so far,” senior guard Georgia Dale said to the Associated Press earlier this week.

PERFECTION.

Entering the season, only 23 teams in women's college basketball had gone undefeated in the regular season since 1982.

Make it 24.#LanceUp⚔️ pic.twitter.com/knUfnGBgK5

— CBU Lancers (@CBULancers) March 7, 2021

As the conference's regular season champions, they are set to play in the WAC semifinals on Friday. If they advance and win the championship game on Saturday, they'll be the first team since the 2017-2018 UConn Huskies to go undefeated and win a conference tournament.

If the Lancers win the WAC Tournament title, they'd be the first undefeated team since 1983 to not make the NCAA Tournament. However the team does still have postseason plans, as they will play in the Women's National Invitational Tournament that begins on March 19, two days before the NCAA Tournament.

Last undefeated college basketball team

Utah Valley, which finished second in the conference regular season standings, is projected to take the WAC's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament, according to ESPN.

Part of the transition to become a Division I school is that all statistics are not recognized by the NCAA, meaning that senior guard Ane Olaeta's 7.7 assists a game is not recognized as best in the nation.

The Lancers went 22-0 with a 16-0 conference record. They dominated WAC play, as they outscored conference opponents by an average on 18.6 points a game. They'll play the winner of Seattle and New Mexico State in the tournament semifinals on Friday.

Contact Jordan Mendoza at jamendoza@usatoday.com or on Twitter @jord_mendoza

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: California Baptist women's basketball team has perfect record but won't make NCAA Tournament

At best, it is patronizing. At worst, it is polite racism. The National Collegiate Athletic Associationlast monthreleasedthe list of 17 Division I sports teams that face postseason bans for the 2017-18 school year because of low graduation rates.

As in the past, the list was utterly dominated by historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs), which accounted for 15 of the 17 squads. Alabama A&M and Southern University each had four teams banned. Grambling had three, Savannah State had two, and Howard and Morgan State each had one team knocked out. The only non-HBCU teams banned were the Southeast Missouri State men’s basketball team and the Illinois-Chicago men’s cross-country team.

Last undefeated college basketball team

In keeping with its penchant for protecting the image of the so-called “student-athlete,” the NCAA sugarcoated the bans to the sweetest degree possible. The 15 HBCU teams banned were less than last year’s 22. The NCAA’s press release on this improvement centered on Southern, which had nine teams banned last year. Praising how his athletes weathered the bans, Southern athletic director Roman Banks told the NCAA:

“They pulled their pants on, put their shirt on and came back to work to help lead us out of this process. They still won basketball games and football games and track meets. They gave me a lot of motivation. They’ve been so resilient. … We can’t fail the student-athletes anymore. We must do everything in our power to give them a chance to come to Southern to get an education and be the best they can be in their sport. That’s our mission.”

Seconding that mission was Southern’s associate athletic director for institutional compliance, Trayvean Scott. “We’re trying to be the model of how to get out of infractions,” Scott said. “You don’t just fold the tent and run. You are accountable, regardless of whether you were there when they happened or not.”

The NCAA still runs from demanding full accountability from majority-white Division I sports programs. Even though public pressure has forced most universities to work harder to keep athletes in the classroom, the NCAA still refuses to sanction schools that fool the system with overall graduation rates that appear acceptable but harbor vast and unacceptable disparities between white and black players.

In an Undefeated commentary during the last football bowl season, I cited 24 big-time men’s basketball and football programs that have African-American graduation rates under 50 percent. But that list is hardly exhaustive. If you include not-so-big-time Division I programs, the landscape is littered with many more schools from California to Florida that are below 50 percent for African-American athletes in either men’s basketball or football or women’s track.

Such schools include East Tennessee State, Tennessee Chattanooga, University of California Santa Barbara, University of California Riverside, Kennesaw State, Florida Gulf Coast, Indiana State, Southern Illinois, Liberty, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Eastern Kentucky, Moorhead State and Southeast Missouri State.

At Southern, Scott said, according to the NCAA press release, “I had to have some honest conversations with leadership. Sitting across from a coach and talking about what’s going on with the whole athletics department and how to fix his individual program … it’s difficult.” Banks said, “I’m driven to make Southern the best it can be from a holistic side, not just through basketball. From where we came from, if we stay on this path, we’re on the right one.”

Good for the Southern staff to not take sanctions lying down. But it is hypocritical, almost plantationlike, for the NCAA to demand such holistic improvement from historically black colleges when teams representing predominantly white colleges and universities fear no penalties for grossly disparate academic performance. The postseason bans were based on a team’s Academic Progress Rate (APR), a rough predictor of a 50 percent graduation rate. But while the NCAA has racial breakdowns for its Graduation Success Rates, it does not provide racial breakdowns on its website for APRs.

Undefeated Ncaa Basketball Teams 2017 Nba


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Undefeated Ncaa Basketball Champions

So why the difference?

Ncaa Men's Basketball Undefeated Teams

In last season’s NCAA basketball tournament, nine men’s teams played for the national championship with black graduation rates under 50 percent. The NCAA shows no sign of cracking down on the likes of UCLA, Oklahoma State and Northern Kentucky, which were at the bottom of the list with respective rates of 17 percent, 25 percent and 29 percent for black basketball players. The respective white graduation rates for those three teams were 80 percent, 100 percent and 71 percent.

The notion that UCLA and Oklahoma State took the court with respective graduation rate disparities of 63 percentage points and 75 percentage points tells you how much more work the NCAA needs to do. For now, it pats less-resourced HBCUs on the head for hard work, all but saying, “Good boy,” while the bad boys at predominantly white universities display utter disinterest in graduating their African-American players.