1973–74 NC State Wolfpack men's basketball team

1973–74 North Carolina State Wolfpack men's basketball
National Champions
ACC Tournament Champions
ACC Regular Season Champions
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
Ranking
Coaches No. 1
AP No. 1
1973–74 record 30–1 (12–0 ACC)
Head coach Norm Sloan
Assistant coach Ed Biedenbach
Assistant coach Sam Esposito
Assistant coach Art Musselman
Captain Game captains
Home arena Reynolds Coliseum

The 1973–74 North Carolina State Wolfpack men's basketball team represented North Carolina State University. The Wolfpack were a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The team finished undefeated in the ACC regular season, then won the ACC Tournament. The Wolfpack then won the NCAA tournament, finishing the season as the national champions.

Season summary

N.C. State had it all: a star high-jumping forward David Thompson, a towering center in 7-foot-4 Tom Burleson, a great point guard in Monte Towe and several complementary players, including guard Moe Rivers and forward Phil Spence. The Wolfpack began the season ranked #2 in the nation, behind UCLA. On December 15, 1973 the two teams met in St. Louis, with UCLA beating NC State by 84-66 after trailing by one at halftime. It would be the only loss for the Wolfpack that season. NC State avenged that loss by beating the Bruins 80-77 in two overtimes in the NCAA Tournament semi-final game and ending their streak of seven straight national championships. Two nights later NC State captured its first NCAA championship by beating Marquette 76-64.

Roster

Name # Height Year Home Town
Tommy Burleson 24 7–4 Senior Newland, NC
Mike Buurma 50 6–10 Freshman Willard, OH
Bruce Dayhuff 32 6–5 Freshman Walkerton, IN
Ken Gehring 54 6–9 Freshman Akron, OH
Greg Hawkins 14 6–5 Senior Huntington, WV
Jerry Hunt 12 6–5 Sophomore Shelby, NC
Dwight Johnson 22 6–0 Sophomore Raleigh, NC
Craig Kuszmaul 34 6–5 Junior Warren, OH
Bill Lake 35 6–11 Freshman Carmel, IN
Mark Moeller 40 6–3 Junior Canfield, OH
Steve Nuce 52 6–8 Senior Rockville, MD
Moe Rivers 10 6–1 Junior Brooklyn, NY
Steve Smith 12 6–10 Sophomore East McDowell, KY
Phil Spence 30 6–8 Sophomore Raleigh, NC
Tim Stoddard 42 6–7 Junior Hammond, IN
David Thompson 44 6–4 Junior Shelby, NC
Monte Towe 25 5–7 Junior Converse, IN

Schedule

Date
Time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site
City, State

December 5*
No. 2 East Carolina W 79–47  1–0
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

December 7*
No. 2 Vermont W 97–42  2–0
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

December 15*
No. 2 vs. No. 1 UCLA L 66–84  2–1
St. Louis Arena 
St. Louis, MO

December 18*
No. 5 Georgia W 94–60  3–1
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

December 28*
No. 5 vs. Villanova
Sugar Bowl Tournament
W 97–82  4–1
 
New Orleans, LA

December 29*
No. 5 vs. No. 18 Memphis State
Sugar Bowl Tournament
W 98–83  5–1
 
New Orleans, LA

January 4*
No. 5 No. 4 North Carolina
Big Four Tournament
W 78–77  6–1
Greensboro Coliseum 
Greensboro, NC

January 5*
No. 5 vs. Wake Forest
Big Four Tournament
W 91–73  7–1
Greensboro Coliseum 
Greensboro, NC

January 12
No. 4 Clemson W 96–68  8–1
(1–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

January 13
No. 4 No. 3 Maryland W 80–74  9–1
(2–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

January 17
No. 3 at Virginia W 90–70  10–1
(3–0)
 
Charlottesville, VA

January 19*
No. 3 UNC-Charlotte W 104–72  11–1
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

January 22
No. 3 at No. 4 North Carolina W 83–80  12–1
(4–0)
Carmichael Auditorium 
Chapel Hill, NC

January 26*
No. 3 at Purdue W 86–81  13–1
Mackey Arena 
West Lafayette, IN

January 30
No. 2 at No. 6 Maryland W 86–80  14–1
(5–0)
Cole Field House 
College Park, MD

February 2
No. 2 Virginia W 105–93  15–1
(6–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

February 4
No. 2 at Duke W 92–78  16–1
(7–0)
Cameron Indoor Stadium 
Durham, NC

February 8*
No. 2 vs. Georgia Tech
North-South Doubleheader
W 98–54  17–1
 
Charlotte, NC

February 9*
No. 2 vs. Furman
North-South Doubleheader
W 111–91  18–1
 
Charlotte, NC

February 13*
No. 2 Davidson W 105–78  19–1
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

February 16
No. 2 Wake Forest W 111–96  20–1
(8–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

February 20
No. 1 Duke W 113–87  21–1
(9–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

February 23
No. 1 at Clemson W 80–75  22–1
(10–0)
 
Clemson, SC

February 26
No. 1 No. 4 North Carolina W 83–72  23–1
(11–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

March 2
No. 1 Wake Forest W 72–63  24–1
(12–0)
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

March 8*
No. 1 vs. Virginia
ACC Tournament
W 87–66  25–1
Greensboro Coliseum 
Greensboro, NC

March 9*
No. 1 vs. No. 5 Maryland
ACC Tournament
W 103–100 OT 26–1
Greensboro Coliseum 
Greensboro, NC

March 14*
No. 1 vs. No. 5 Providence
NCAA Tournament • Regional Semifinals
W 92–78  27–1
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

March 16*
No. 1 vs. No. 13 Pittsburgh
NCAA Tournament • Regional Final
W 100–72  28–1
Reynolds Coliseum 
Raleigh, NC

March 23*
No. 1 vs. No. 2 UCLA
NCAA Tournament • National Semifinals
W 80–77 2OT 29–1
Greensboro Coliseum 
Greensboro, NC

March 25*
No. 1 vs. No. 3 Marquette
NCAA Tournament • National Final
W 76–64  30–1
Greensboro Coliseum 
Greensboro, NC
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses. E=East.

[1]

ACC Tournament

The 1974 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held in Greensboro, North Carolina at the Greensboro Coliseum from March 7–9. North Carolina State defeated Maryland 103–100 in overtime to claim the championship.

The Final pitted two of the top teams in the country. It has been regarded by many to be the greatest ACC game in history — and one of the greatest college games ever. The game was instrumental in forcing the expansion of the NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship to 32 teams, allowing more than one bid from a conference.

NCAA Tournament

1974 NCAA Tournament Championship Game Box Score
PlayerMinFGFTREBASTPFPTS
D. Thompson407–127–872321
M. Towe375–106–732116
T. Burleson366–92–6110414
M. Rivers404–96–925214
T. Stoddard253–42–27258
P. Spence191–21–23323
M. Moeller30–00–00000
Totals20026–4624–3434141776

[2]

Awards and honors

Team players drafted into the NBA

Round Pick Player NBA Club
13 Tommy Burleson Seattle SuperSonics

[4]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.