2004 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament

The 2004 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 11–14 in Greensboro, North Carolina, at the Greensboro Coliseum. The Maryland Terrapins won the tournament as the #6 seed, upsetting #3 seed Wake Forest, #2 seed NC State, and top seed Duke in succession on their way to the championship. It was Maryland's third tournament title, and their first since 1984. Maryland's John Gilchrist won the Most Valuable Player award. Maryland's championship ended Duke's streak of five straight ACC championships.

2004 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament
2004 ACC Tournament logo
ClassificationDivision I
Season200304
Teams9
SiteGreensboro Coliseum
Greensboro, North Carolina
ChampionsMaryland (3rd title)
Winning coachGary Williams (1st title)
MVPJohn Gilchrist (Maryland)
2003–04 ACC men's basketball standings
Conf  Overall
TeamW L PCT  W L PCT
No. 6 Duke133 .813  316  .838
No. 15 NC State115 .688  2110  .677
No. 17 Wake Forest97 .563  2110  .677
No. 14 Georgia Tech97 .563  2810  .737
No. 18 North Carolina88 .500  1911  .633
No. 19 Maryland79 .438  2012  .625
Florida State610 .375  1914  .576
Virginia610 .375  1813  .581
Clemson313 .188  1018  .357
2004 ACC Tournament winner
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2004 ACC Tournament was the final event with nine participating teams. Virginia Tech and University of Miami from the Big East Conference joined the ACC for the 2004–2005 season.

Bracket

  First Round
March 11, 2004
Quarterfinals
March 12, 2004
Semifinals
March 13, 2004
Championship Game
March 14, 2004
                                     
       
  1 #5 Duke 84  
    8 Virginia 74  
8 Virginia 83*
9 Clemson 79  
  1 #5 Duke 85  
  4 #14 Georgia Tech 71  
       
       
  4 #14 Georgia Tech 83
    5 #16 North Carolina 82  
     
       
  1 #5 Duke 87
  6 Maryland 95*
       
       
  2 #17 NC State 78
    7 Florida State 71  
     
       
  2 #17 NC State 82
  6 Maryland 85  
       
       
  3 #15 Wake Forest 86
    6 Maryland 87  
     

* Denotes overtime game

AP Rankings at time of tournament

  • "2008–09 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Media Guide". Atlantic Coast Conference. 2008. p. 110. Archived from the original on January 1, 2011. Retrieved April 11, 2020.
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