Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball

Virginia Cavaliers
2018–19 Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball team
University University of Virginia
First season 1905–06
All-time record 1597–1165–1 (.578)
Head coach Tony Bennett (9th season)
Conference Atlantic Coast Conference
Location Charlottesville, Virginia
Arena John Paul Jones Arena
(Capacity: 14,593)
Nickname Cavaliers (official)
Wahoos (unofficial)
Student section Hoo Crew
Colors Orange and Blue[1]
         
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
NCAA Tournament Final Four
1981, 1984
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight
1981, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1995, 2016
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1993, 1995, 2014, 2016
NCAA Tournament Round of 32
1976, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017
NCAA Tournament appearances
1976, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, 2001, 2007, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018
Conference tournament champions
1976, 2014, 2018
Conference regular season champions
1922, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1995, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2018

The Virginia Cavaliers men's basketball program represents the University of Virginia in the Atlantic Coast Conference in Division I of the NCAA. The team is coached by Tony Bennett. Since 2006 the team has played at John Paul Jones Arena, an on-campus arena on the North Grounds of the university, in front of 14,593 spectators whom ESPN College Gameday has called some of the most responsive and engaged fans in college basketball.

Virginia has been ranked AP No. 1 on 17 occasions, first in January 1981 and most recently in March 2018.[2]

The Cavaliers have a total of eight ACC regular season championship seasons, third best (behind Duke and North Carolina) all-time. UVA won those titles outright (no ties) in 1981, 2014, 2015 and 2018; won the 1976, 2014, and 2018 ACC Tournaments, and are six-time Runners-Up of the ACC Tournament.

The Wahoos, as they are unofficially known, have appeared in the NCAA Tournament twenty-two times, advancing to the Elite Eight six times (1981, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1995, 2016). They further advanced to the 1981 and 1984 Final Fours; in the former winning the last NCAA third place game ever played, defeating No. 1 LSU 7874. The Cavaliers won the post-season NIT Tournaments of 1980 and 1992.

Statistics

Overall[3]
Years of basketball113
First season1905–06
Head coaches (all-time)11
All Games[3]
All-time record1597–1165–1 (.578)
20+ win seasons24 (1928, 1972, 1978, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 2001, 2007, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018)
30+ win seasons4 (1982, 2014, 2015, 2018)
Home Games[3]
John Paul Jones Arena (2006–present)166–41 (.802)
University Hall (1965–2006)402–143 (.738)
Memorial Gymnasium (1924–1965)279–157 (.640)
Fayerweather Gymnasium (1905–1924)134–19 (.876)
Conference Games[3]
Southern Conference Record (1921–1937)73–79 (.480)
SoCon Regular Season Championship1 (1922)
ACC Record (1953–present)429–522 (.451)
ACC Regular Season Championships8 (1981, 1982, 1983, 1995, 2007, 2014, 2015, 2018)
ACC Tournament Championships3 (1976, 2014, 2018)
ACC Players of the Year5 (Parkhill 1972; Sampson 1981, 1982, 1983; Brogdon 2016)
NCAA Tournament
NCAA Appearances22
NCAA W–L record29–22 (.569)
Sweet Sixteen9 (1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1993, 1995, 2014, 2016)
Elite Eight6 (1981, 1983, 1984, 1989, 1995, 2016)
Final Four2 (1981, 1984)
National Invitation Tournament
NIT Appearances13
NIT W–L record17–11 (.607)
NIT Championships2 (1980, 1992)
Accurate through March 28, 2018

Individual honors

Notable alumni


Name Position Year Notes
Cory AlexanderPG19951995 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—San Antonio Spurs (29th), Denver Nuggets, Orlando Magic, Charlotte Bobcats
Justin AndersonG20152015 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Dallas Mavericks (21st), Texas Legends, Philadelphia 76ers
Darion AtkinsF2015New York Knicks, Westchester Knicks, Hapoel Holon, SIG Basket
Malcolm BrogdonG20162016 NBA draft 2nd Round Pick–Milwaukee Bucks (36th). 2016-2017 NBA Rookie of the Year
Junior BurroughSF1995Boston Celtics, Charlotte Hornets
Herb BuschC1959New York Knicks
Rick CarlislePG1984Player: Boston Celtics, New York Knicks, New Jersey Nets; Coach: Dallas Mavericks, Indiana Pacers
Steve CastellanC1979Boston Celtics
John CrottyPG1991Charlotte Hornets, Utah Jazz, Cleveland Cavaliers, Miami Heat, Portland Trail Blazers, Seattle SuperSonics, Detroit Pistons
Frank DeWittF1972Buffalo Braves
Kenton EdelinC1984Indiana Pacers
Mustapha Farrakhan Jr.G2011Bakersfield Jam, Iowa Energy, Sioux Falls Skyforce, Idaho Stampede, Melbourne Tigers, Oklahoma City Blue
Gus GerardC1974Carolina Cougars, St Louis Spirits, Denver Nuggets, Buffalo Braves, Detroit Pistons, Kansas City Kings, San Antonio Spurs
Anthony GillF2016Yeşilgiresun Belediye, BC Khimki
Joe HarrisG20142014 NBA draft 2nd Round Pick—Cleveland Cavaliers (33rd), Canton Charge, Brooklyn Nets
Marc IavaroniPF1978Player: New York Knicks, Portland Trail Blazers, Philadelphia 76ers, San Antonio Spurs, Utah Jazz; Coach: Memphis Grizzlies
Jeff JonesPG1982Player: Indiana Pacers, Golden State Warriors; Coach: Virginia, American, Old Dominion
Andrew KennedyF1987Philadelphia 76ers
Jeff LampSG19811981 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Portland Trail Blazers (5th), Indiana Pacers, Milwaukee Bucks, Los Angeles Lakers, San Antonio Spurs
Bill LanglohG1977Boston Celtics
Lewis LattimoreF1981Milwaukee Bucks
Roger MasonSG2002Chicago Bulls, Toronto Raptors, Washington Wizards, San Antonio Spurs, Currently a member of the New York Knicks
Scott McCandlishC1972Portland Trail Blazers
Jim MillerF1985Utah Jazz
Akil MitchellF2014Houston Rockets, Rio Grande Valley Vipers, Olympique Antibes, New Zealand Breakers, Long Island Nets
Cornel ParkerG1994Golden State Warriors
Barry ParkhillG19731973 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Portland Trail Blazers (15th), Virginia Squires, St Louis Spirits
London PerrantesG2017San Antonio Spurs, Cleveland Cavaliers
Olden PolyniceC19871987 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Chicago Bulls (11th), Seattle SuperSonics, Los Angeles Clippers, Detroit Pistons, Sacramento Kings, Utah Jazz, Philadelphia 76ers
Lee RakerF1981San Diego Clippers
Craig RobinsonF1983Boston Celtics
Jamal RobinsonSF/SG1997Portland Trail Blazers, Miami Heat
Ralph SampsonC19831983 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Houston Rockets (1st), Golden State Warriors, Sacramento Kings, Washington Bullets
Mike ScottPF20122012 NBA draft 2nd Round Pick—Atlanta Hawks (43rd), Washington Wizards
Tom SheeheyF1987Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls
Sean SingletaryPG20082008 NBA draft 2nd Round Pick—Sacramento Kings (42nd), Phoenix Suns, Charlotte Bobcats
Curtis StaplesSG1998Player: United States men's national basketball team (1997 Summer Universiade); Coach: Virginia Episcopal School
Bryant StithSF19921992 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Denver Nuggets (13th), Boston Celtics, Cleveland Cavaliers, Los Angeles Clippers
Ricky StokesPG1984Coach: Virginia Tech, East Carolina
Mike TobeyC2016Greensboro Swarm, Charlotte Hornets, Valencia BC, CB 1939 Canarias
Wally WalkerSF19761976 NBA draft 1st Round Pick—Portland Trail Blazers (5th), Seattle SuperSonics, Houston Rockets
Buzzy WilkinsonG1955Boston Celtics
Othell WilsonPG1984Golden State Warriors, Sacramento Kings

National honors

University Hall, UVA's home court from 1965 until 2006
Ralph Sampson, Virginia's most decorated player
Naismith College Player of the Year
1981Ralph Sampson
1982Ralph Sampson
1983Ralph Sampson
Oscar Robertson Trophy
1981Ralph Sampson
1982Ralph Sampson
1983Ralph Sampson
John R. Wooden Award
1982Ralph Sampson
1983Ralph Sampson
Adolph Rupp Trophy
1981Ralph Sampson
1982Ralph Sampson
1983Ralph Sampson
NABC Defensive Player of the Year
2016Malcolm Brogdon
Lefty Driesell Award
2015Darion Atkins
All-American
1915William Strickling
1955Buzzy Wilkinson
1972Barry Parkhill
1973Barry Parkhill
1980Jeff Lamp
1980Ralph Sampson
1981Jeff Lamp
1981Ralph Sampson*
1982Ralph Sampson*
1983Ralph Sampson*
2008Sean Singletary**
2012Mike Scott
2015Malcolm Brogdon
2015Justin Anderson
2016Malcolm Brogdon*
2018Kyle Guy
Academic All-American
1973Jim Hobgood
1976Wally Walker
1980Lee Raker
1981Jeff Lamp
1981Lee Raker
^* Consensus First-Team All-American.
^** AP Honorable-Mention All-American.

Retired numbers

Malcolm Brogdon is the most recent Cavalier to have his number retired.

The Cavaliers have retired eight numbers to date:[4]

Virginia Cavaliers retired numbers
No. Player Pos. Career
3Jeff LampSG1977–81
14Buzzy WilkinsonG1951–54
15Malcolm BrogdonG2011–16
20Bryant StithSG1988–92
40Barry ParkhillG1969–73
41Wally WalkerF1972–76
44Sean SingletaryPG2004–08
50Ralph SampsonC1979–83

Retired jerseys

The University of Virginia's athletic department has issued the following statement distinguishing "retired jerseys" from "retired numbers": "Jersey retirement honors Virginia players who have significantly impacted the program. Individuals recognized in this way will have their jerseys retired, but their number will remain active."[5]

Rivalries

Louisville Cardinals

Following conference realignment, the Cardinals moved from the Big East to the ACC and were designated UVA's rival, replacing Maryland. While the two schools had little previous history, having met only 8 times prior to becoming conference rivals, the series has been characterized by tight games and blowouts since 2014. The rivalry has taken on a similar feel to the old Maryland series, as both teams have acted as spoilers to the other with a Cardinal win in 2015 and a 2017 Cavalier win delaying or preventing an ACC regular season title, while an injury to star player Justin Anderson during the 2015 matchup derailed UVA's national championship aspirations. The March 2018 matchup between the two teams ended with Virginia scoring 5 points in the final 0.9 seconds and dealing what proved to be a mortal blow to Louisville's NCAA tournament hopes. Virginia leads the all-time series 11-4.

The most recent matchup was a 75–58 Virginia win in the ACC Tournament on March 8, 2018.

Maryland Terrapins

Thanks to the proximity of these two long-time ACC members, and their status as Tobacco Road outsiders, Maryland and Virginia have a long-standing rivalry that spans many decades. Traditionally, these two schools would meet in the last game of the season, and they both acted as spoilers to the other as they sought conference championships and NCAA tournament appearances. This rivalry has been dormant in recent years however, thanks to Maryland's move to the Big Ten Conference, though they did match up in the 2014 ACC-Big Ten Challenge.

The most recent matchup was 76-65 win for the Cavaliers on December 3, 2014 in College Park, Maryland.

North Carolina Tar Heels

As two of the ACC's oldest and most successful members, the UVA-UNC rivalry spans all sports and has persisted since the late 1800s. The 1980s were a particular highlight for this series as All-time greats like Ralph Sampson and Michael Jordan leading both programs to national prominence. While the Tar Heels have a significant lead in the All-Time series, the resurgence of both programs under Roy Williams and Tony Bennett has rekindled this once-fierce rivalry, as both schools have regularly found themselves at or near the top of national and conference polls during the 2010s.

The most recent matchup came in the ACC Tournament championship on March 10, 2018, where Virginia beat UNC 71-63.

Virginia Tech Hokies

As the two Power Conference teams in the Commonwealth, the Cavaliers and Hokies have a long-standing rivalry. While the intensity has picked up since Virginia Tech joined the ACC in 2004, the series has long been dominated by UVA, with the Cavaliers leading the series 91-55 (.623 winning percentage).

The most recent matchup occurred at John Paul Jones Arena in Charlottesville, with UVA falling in overtime 61-60 on February 10, 2018.

Coaches

Memorial Gym, UVA's home court from 1924 until 1965
Head Coach Years Win–Loss Pct.
Henry Lannigan1905–29254–95–1.727
Roy Randall1929–303–12.200
Gus Tebell1930–51241–190.559
Evan "Bus" Male1951–5767–88.432
Billy McCann1957–6340–106.274
Bill Gibson1963–74120–158.432
Terry Holland1974–90326–173.653
Jeff Jones1990–98146–104.584
Pete Gillen1998–2005118–93.559
Dave Leitao2005–0963–60.512
Tony Bennett2009–present219–86.718

[6]

Postseason

NCAA tournament results

The Cavaliers have appeared in the NCAA Tournament twenty two times. Their combined record is 29–21.

Year Seed/Region Round Opponent Result
1976EastFirst RoundDePaulL 60–69
1981#1 EastSecond Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
National Third Place
#9 Villanova
#4 Tennessee
#6 BYU
#2 (W) North Carolina
#1 (MW) LSU
W 54–40
W 62–48
W 74–60
L 65–78
W 78–74
1982#1 MideastSecond Round
Sweet Sixteen
#9 Tennessee
#4 UAB
W 54–51
L 66–68
1983#1 WestSecond Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#8 Washington State
#4 Boston College
#6 NC State
W 54–49
W 95–92
L 62–63
1984#7 EastFirst Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
Final Four
#10 Iona
#2 Arkansas
#3 Syracuse
#4 Indiana
#2 (MW) Houston
W 58–57
W 53–51OT
W 63–55
W 50–48
L 47–49OT
1986#5 EastFirst Round#12 DePaulL 68–72
1987#5 WestFirst Round#12 WyomingL 60–64
1989#5 SoutheastFirst Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#12 Providence
#13 Middle Tennessee
#1 Oklahoma
#3 Michigan
W 100–97
W 104–88
W 86–80
L 65–102
1990#7 SoutheastFirst Round
Second Round
#10 Notre Dame
#2 Syracuse
W 75–67
L 61–63
1991#7 WestFirst Round#10 BYUL 48–61
1993#6 EastFirst Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
#11 Manhattan
#3 Massachusetts
#2 Cincinnati
W 78–66
W 71–56
L 54–71
1994#7 WestFirst Round
Second Round
#10 New Mexico
#2 Arizona
W 57–54
L 58–71
1995#4 MidwestFirst Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#13 Nicholls State
#12 Miami (OH)
#1 Kansas
#2 Arkansas
W 96–72
W 60–54OT
W 67–58
L 61–68
1997#9 WestFirst Round#8 IowaL 60–73
2001#5 SouthFirst Round#12 GonzagaL 85–86
2007#4 SouthFirst Round
Second Round
#13 Albany
#5 Tennessee
W 84–57
L 74–77
2012#10 WestSecond Round#7 FloridaL 45–71
2014#1 EastSecond Round
Third Round
Sweet Sixteen
#16 Coastal Carolina
#8 Memphis
#4 Michigan State
W 70–59
W 78–60
L 59–61
2015#2 EastSecond Round
Third Round
#15 Belmont
#7 Michigan State
W 79–67
L 54–60
2016#1 MidwestFirst Round
Second Round
Sweet Sixteen
Elite Eight
#16 Hampton
#9 Butler
#4 Iowa State
#10 Syracuse
W 81–45
W 77–69
W 84–71
L 62–68
2017#5 EastFirst Round
Second Round
#12 UNC Wilmington
#4 Florida
W 76–71
L 39–65
2018#1 SouthFirst Round#16 UMBCL 54–74

NIT results

The Cavaliers have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) 13 times. Their combined record is 17–11. They were NIT champions in 1980 and 1992.

Year Round Opponent Result
1941QuarterfinalsCCNYL 35–64
1972First RoundLafayetteL 71–72
1978First RoundGeorgetownL 68–70OT
1979First Round
Second Round
Northeast Louisiana
Alabama
W 79–78
L 88–90
1980First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
Lafayette
Boston College
Michigan
UNLV
Minnesota
W 67–56
W 57–55
W 79–68
W 90–71
W 58–55
1985First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
West Virginia
Saint Joseph's
Tennessee
W 56–55
W 68–61
L 54–61
1992First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Finals
Villanova
Tennessee
New Mexico
Florida
Notre Dame
W 83–80
W 77–52
W 76–71
W 62–56
W 81–76OT
2000First RoundGeorgetownL 111–1153OT
2002First RoundSouth CarolinaL 74–67
2003First Round
Second Round
Brown
St. John's
W 89–73
L 63–73
2004First Round
Second Round
George Washington
Villanova
W 79–66
L 63–73
2006Opening RoundStanfordL 49–65
2013First Round
Second Round
Quarterfinals
Norfolk State
St. John's
Iowa
W 67–56
W 68–50
L 64–75

CBI results

The Cavaliers have appeared in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) once, in 2008. Their record is 2–1.

Year Seed Round Opponent Result
2008#1First Round
Quarterfinals
Semifinals
Richmond
Old Dominion
Bradley
W 66–64
W 80–76
L 85–96

Yearly records

Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Henry Lannigan (Independent) (1905–1907)
1905–06 Henry Lannigan 8–2
1906–07 Henry Lannigan 5–3
Henry Lannigan (South Atlantic Intercollegiate Athletic Association) (1907–1921)
1907–08 Henry Lannigan 5–5
1908–09 Henry Lannigan 6–3
1909–10 Henry Lannigan 12–4
1910–11 Henry Lannigan 10–5
1911–12 Henry Lannigan 7–4
1912–13 Henry Lannigan 11–4
1913–14 Henry Lannigan 12–1–1
1914–15 Henry Lannigan 17–0
1915–16 Henry Lannigan 11–2
1916–17 Henry Lannigan 7–5
1917–18 Henry Lannigan 7–1
1918–19 Henry Lannigan 11–4
1919–20 Henry Lannigan 10–3
1920–21 Henry Lannigan 13–5
Henry Lannigan (Southern Conference) (1921–1929)
1921–22 Henry Lannigan 17–15–0
1922–23 Henry Lannigan 12–51–3
1923–24 Henry Lannigan 12–33–2
1924–25 Henry Lannigan 14–34–2
1925–26 Henry Lannigan 9–64–4
1926–27 Henry Lannigan 9–105–7
1927–28 Henry Lannigan 20–610–5
1928–29 Henry Lannigan 9–105–7
Henry Lannigan: 254–95–1 (.727)
Roy Randall (Southern Conference) (1929–1930)
1929–30 Roy Randall 3–122–8
Roy Randall: 3–12 (.200)
Gus Tebell (Southern Conference) (1930–1937)
1930–31 Gus Tebell 11–95–6
1931–32 Gus Tebell 13–86–3
1932–33 Gus Tebell 12–65–3
1933–34 Gus Tebell 7–111–9
1934–35 Gus Tebell 13–97–5
1935–36 Gus Tebell 11–134–8
1936–37 Gus Tebell 9–106–7
Gus Tebell (Independent) (1937–1951)
1937–38 Gus Tebell 6–10
1938–39 Gus Tebell 15–5
1939–40 Gus Tebell 16–5
1940–41 Gus Tebell 18–6
1941–42 Gus Tebell 7–10NIT Quarterfinals
1942–43 Gus Tebell 8–13
1943–44 Gus Tebell 11–8
1944–45 Gus Tebell 13–4
1945–46 Gus Tebell 12–5
1946–47 Gus Tebell 10–11
1947–48 Gus Tebell 16–10
1948–49 Gus Tebell 13–10
1949–50 Gus Tebell 12–13
1950–51 Gus Tebell 8–14
Gus Tebell: 241–190 (.559)
Evan Male (Independent) (1951–1953)
1951–52 Evan Male 11–13
1952–53 Evan Male 10–13
Evan Male (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1953–1957)
1953–54 Evan Male 16–111–47th
1954–55 Evan Male 14–155–96th
1955–56 Evan Male 10–173–117th
1956–57 Evan Male 6–193–117th
Evan Male: 67–88 (.432)12–35 (.255)
Billy McCann (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1957–1963)
1957–58 Billy McCann 10–136–85th
1958–59 Billy McCann 11–146–85th
1959–60 Billy McCann 6–181–138th
1960–61 Billy McCann 3–232–128th
1961–62 Billy McCann 5–182–128th
1962–63 Billy McCann 5–203–118th
Billy McCann: 40–106 (.274)20–64 (.238)
Bill Gibson (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1963–1974)
1963–64 Bill Gibson 8–164–107th
1964–65 Bill Gibson 7–183–117th
1965–66 Bill Gibson 7–154–107th
1966–67 Bill Gibson 9–174–107th
1967–68 Bill Gibson 9–165–95th
1968–69 Bill Gibson 10–155–96th
1969–70 Bill Gibson 10–153–117th
1970–71 Bill Gibson 15–116–85th
1971–72 Bill Gibson 21–78–43rdNIT First Round
1972–73 Bill Gibson 13–124–85th
1973–74 Bill Gibson 11–164–84th
Bill Gibson: 120–158 (.432)50–98 (.338)
Terry Holland (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1974–1990)
1974–75 Terry Holland 12–134–85th
1975–76 Terry Holland 18–124–86thNCAA First Round
1976–77 Terry Holland 12–172–107th
1977–78 Terry Holland 20–86–64thNIT First Round
1978–79 Terry Holland 19–107–53rdNIT Second Round
1979–80 Terry Holland 24–107–75thNIT Championship
1980–81 Terry Holland 29–413–11stNCAA Final Four
1981–82 Terry Holland 30–412–2T–1stNCAA Sweet Sixteen
1982–83 Terry Holland 29–512–2T–1stNCAA Elite Eight
1983–84 Terry Holland 21–126–86thNCAA Final Four
1984–85 Terry Holland 17–163–118thNIT Quarterfinals
1985–86 Terry Holland 19–117–75thNCAA First Round
1986–87 Terry Holland 21–108–64thNCAA First Round
1987–88 Terry Holland 13–185–96th
1988–89 Terry Holland 22–119–53rdNCAA Elite Eight
1989–90 Terry Holland 20–126–85thNCAA Second Round
Terry Holland: 326–173 (.653)111–103 (.519)
Jeff Jones (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1990–1998)
1990–91 Jeff Jones 21–126–86thNCAA First Round
1991–92 Jeff Jones 20–138–85thNIT Championship
1992–93 Jeff Jones 21–109–75thNCAA Sweet Sixteen
1993–94 Jeff Jones 18–138–84thNCAA Second Round
1994–95 Jeff Jones 25–912–4T–1stNCAA Elite Eight
1995–96 Jeff Jones 12–156–107th
1996–97 Jeff Jones 18–137–96thNCAA First Round
1997–98 Jeff Jones 11–193–139th
Jeff Jones: 146–104 (.584)59–67 (.468)
Pete Gillen (Atlantic Coast Conference) (1998–2005)
1998–99 Pete Gillen 14–164–129th
1999–00 Pete Gillen 19–129–73rdNIT First Round
2000–01 Pete Gillen 20–99–74thNCAA First Round
2001–02 Pete Gillen 17–127–95thNIT First Round
2002–03 Pete Gillen 16–166–106thNIT Second Round
2003–04 Pete Gillen 18–136–108thNIT Second Round
2004–05 Pete Gillen 14–154–1211th
Pete Gillen: 118–93 (.559)45–67 (.402)
Dave Leitao (Atlantic Coast Conference) (2005–2009)
2005–06 Dave Leitao 15–157–97thNIT First Round
2006–07 Dave Leitao 21–1111–5T–1stNCAA Second Round
2007–08 Dave Leitao 17–165–1110thCBI Semifinals
2008–09 Dave Leitao 10–184–1211th
Dave Leitao: 63–60 (.512)27–37 (.422)
Tony Bennett (Atlantic Coast Conference) (2009–present)
2009–10 Tony Bennett 15–165–119th
2010–11 Tony Bennett 16–157–98th
2011–12 Tony Bennett 22–109–74thNCAA First Round
2012–13 Tony Bennett 23–1211–74thNIT Quarterfinals
2013–14 Tony Bennett 30–716–21stNCAA Sweet Sixteen
2014–15 Tony Bennett 30–416–21stNCAA Second Round
2015–16 Tony Bennett 29–813–52ndNCAA Elite Eight
2016–17 Tony Bennett 23–1111–7T–5thNCAA Second Round
2017–18 Tony Bennett 31–317–11stNCAA First Round
Tony Bennett: 219–86 (.718)105–51 (.673)
Total:1597–1165–1 (.578)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

[6]

References

  1. University of Virginia Athletics Current Logo Sheet (PDF). June 28, 2017. Retrieved August 29, 2017.
  2. Virginia Cavaliers AP Poll History, accessed March 12, 2018
  3. 1 2 3 4 "2014–15 Virginia Men's Basketball Factbook" (PDF). VIRGINIASPORTS.COM – The University of Virginia Official Athletic Site. pp. 52–53. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  4. "Malcolm Brogdon's Number To Be Retired" (Press release). Virginia Cavaliers. December 15, 2016. Retrieved December 15, 2016.
  5. 2008 Virginia Football Media Guide, page 175. The University of Virginia has not released a similar policy statement regarding basketball jerseys, but the same "retired jerseys" terminology is being used as to both the football and basketball programs.
  6. 1 2 "All-Time Results". VirginiaSports.com. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
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