2003–04 Syracuse Orangemen basketball team

2003–04 Syracuse Orange men's basketball
Conference Big East Conference (1979–2013)
Ranking
Coaches No. 19
AP No. 20
2003–04 record 23–8 (11–5 Big East)
Head coach Jim Boeheim
Assistant coach Bernie Fine
Assistant coach Mike Hopkins
Assistant coach Rob Murphy
Home arena Carrier Dome
2003–04 Big East men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
#9 Pittsburgh133 .813  315  .861
#7 Connecticut124 .750  336  .846
#21 Providence115 .688  209  .690
#20 Syracuse115 .688  238  .742
#25 Boston College106 .625  2410  .706
Seton Hall106 .625  2112  .636
Notre Dame97 .563  1913  .594
Virginia Tech79 .438  1514  .517
Rutgers79 .438  2013  .606
West Virginia79 .438  1714  .548
Villanova610 .375  1817  .514
Georgetown412 .250  1315  .464
Miami*412 .250  1416  .467
St. John's*115 .063  621  .222
2004 Big East Tournament winner
As of April 5, 2004[1]; Rankings from AP Poll
*Did not qualify for 2004 Big East Tournament

The 2003–04 Syracuse Orangemen basketball team represented Syracuse University in NCAA men's basketball competition in the 2003–04 Division I season. The head coach was Jim Boeheim, serving for his 28th year. The team played its home games at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, New York. The team finished with a 23–8 (11–5) record, while making it to the Sweet 16 round of the NCAA tournament. The team was led by junior Hakim Warrick and sophomore Gerry McNamara. Senior Jeremy McNeil, juniors Craig Forth and Josh Pace and sophomore Billy Edelin were also major contributors.

This was the last season for Syracuse men's basketball under the Orangemen nickname. (At that time, women's teams and athletes were known as "Orangewomen".) Effective with the 2004–05 academic year, the school nickname became "Orange" for both men and women.

Roster

Developments

  • Syracuse would eventually lose in the Sweet 16 round to Alabama.[2]
  • McNamara scored 43 points on 11-of-17 shooting from the floor, as Syracuse topped Brigham Young, 80–75, in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.[3]
  • Syracuse handed Pittsburgh its first ever loss at the Peterson Center, 46–49 (OT), on a buzzer-beater in overtime by McNamara,[4] and also concluded its regular season by topping Connecticut, 67–56, which would go on to win the National Championship.[5]
  • Billy Edelin played just 17 games and left the team for undisclosed reasons in January.[6]
  • Syracuse lost would-be sophomore Carmelo Anthony to the NBA Draft (3rd to the Denver Nuggets) and Kueth Duany to graduation.[7]

References

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