2003 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament

2003 Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament
Classification Division I
Season 200203
Teams 8
Site Staples Center
Los Angeles, California
Champions Oregon (1st title)
Winning coach Ernie Kent (1st title)
2002–03 Pacific-10 Conference men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
#5 Arizona171 .944  284  .875
#20 Stanford144 .778  249  .727
California135 .722  229  .710
Arizona State117 .611  2012  .625
Oregon108 .556  2310  .697
Oregon State612 .333  1315  .464
USC612 .333  1317  .433
UCLA612 .333  1019  .345
Washington513 .278  1017  .370
Washington State216 .111  720  .259
2003 Pacific-10 Tournament winner
As of July 10, 2011[1]; Rankings from Coaches Poll[2]

The 2003 Pacific Life Pacific-10 Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was played between March 13 and March 15, 2003 at Staples Center in Los Angeles, California. The champion of the tournament was Oregon, which received the Pac-10's automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Upsets defined this tournament, and for the first time, neither Arizona nor UCLA were in the final game. The Most Outstanding Player was Luke Ridnour of Oregon.[3] It was also the first year that longtime sponsor of the tournament, Pacific Life, sponsored the event.[4]

Seeds

The top eight Pacific-10 schools play in the tournament. Teams are seeded by conference record, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records.

Seed School Conference Record Tiebreaker
1 Arizona 17–1
2 Stanford 14–4
3 California 13–5
4 Arizona State 11–7
5 Oregon 10–8
6 Oregon State 6–12
7 USC 6–12
8 UCLA 6–12

Bracket

First Round (March 13) Semifinals (March 14) Finals (March 15)
         
1 Arizona 89*
8 UCLA 96
8 UCLA 74
5 Oregon 75
4 Arizona State 82
5 Oregon 83
5 Oregon 74
7 USC 66
3 California 69
6 Oregon State 46
3 California 62
7 USC 79
2 Stanford 74
7 USC 79

Tournament notes

  • This tournament opened with the lowest seed, UCLA, stunning top seed and No. 1 ranked Arizona 96–89 in overtime. The second game had another upset with 5 seed Oregon beating 4 seed Arizona State. The upsets continued into the next session with the 7 seed USC beating 2 seed Stanford 79–74. The fourth upset was when USC defeated 3 seed California.
  • The championship game featured 5 seed Oregon defeating 7 seed USC 74–66. Oregon, had then become the lowest seed ever to win this tournament (although in later tournaments the 6 seed would win).
  • 7 seed USC became the lowest seed ever to make the championship game of the Pac-10 Tournament (still the lowest to date).
  • Also of note, this was the first time that neither of the top two seeds were in the final game, and in fact both the 1 and 2 seeds were knocked out in the first round.
  • This is the only Pac-10 Tournament in which neither school from Washington participated.
  • Arizona set a record for most field goal attempts in one game with 88 vs. UCLA. (33-of-88) (OT). This tournament record still stands.
  • Five teams were invited to the 2003 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament
  1. Arizona – 17 1 .944 28–4
  2. Stanford – 14 4 .778 24–9
  3. California – 13 5 .722 22–9
  4. Arizona State – 11 7 .611 20–12
  5. Oregon – 10 8 .556 23–10

Arizona was the #1 seed in the West Regional bracket.

All Tournament Team

References

  1. "Pacific 10 conference 2002–03 standings". Retrieved July 10, 2011.
  2. "2003 NCAA Men's Basketball Rankings". ESPN. Retrieved July 10, 2011.
  3. 2007–08 Pac-10 Men's Basketball Media Guide pages 50–60 (PDF copy available at 2007–08 Pac-10 Men's Basketball Media Guide Archived 2009-05-08 at WebCite)
  4. http://www.pacificlife.com/About+Pacific+Life/General+Information/sponsorship.htm

2007–08 Pac-10 Men's Basketball Media Guide pages 50–60 (PDF copy available at 2007–08 Pac-10 Men's Basketball Media Guide)

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