2008 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament

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2008 SEC Men's
Basketball Tournament
Teams 12
Site Georgia Dome and
Alexander Memorial Coliseum[1]
Atlanta, Georgia
Champions Georgia Bulldogs (2nd title)
Winning Coach Dennis Felton (1st title)
MVP Sundiata Gaines Georgia[1]
Top scorer Sundiata Gaines Georgia[1]
(69 points)
SEC Men's
Basketball Tournaments
«2007  2009»

The 2008 SEC Men's Basketball Tournament took place on March 13-16, 2008 in Atlanta, Georgia. The first, quarterfinal, and semifinal rounds were televised by Raycom/LF Sports, and the SEC Championship Game was produced by CBS and televised by ESPN2. The University of Georgia, the improbable winner of the tournament, earned the Southeastern Conference's automatic bid to the 2008 NCAA Tournament.

The tournament was originally scheduled to be played at the Georgia Dome, but a tornado struck downtown Atlanta on the night of March 14, while the third of four quarterfinal games was in overtime. While that game was completed, SEC officials decided not to risk playing the fourth game, between the University of Kentucky and University of Georgia.[2] That quarterfinal was subsequently postponed until Saturday morning. That game and all subsequent games were played at Alexander Memorial Coliseum on the campus of the Georgia Tech. Due to the smaller capacity, only the players' families, credentialed media, school officials and 400 fans from each school were allowed to attend the rest of the tournament.[3]

Georgia, which had a sub-.500 record going into the tournament and had to win the title outright to secure an NCAA bid, was forced to play and win three games in the space of 30 hours, including two games on Saturday — the original quarterfinal game against Kentucky that was postponed by the tornado and venue change, and the subsequent semifinal game. Ironically, Georgia won the SEC championship on the home court of its bitter rival, Georgia Tech. This was Georgia's first SEC men's basketball championship since 1983.

Contents

[edit] Final SEC Regular Season Standings and Awards

[edit] Standings

SEC East
School Coach W L Seed
Tennessee Bruce Pearl 14 2 E1
Kentucky Billy Gillispie 12 4 E2
Vanderbilt Kevin Stallings 10 6 E3
Florida Billy Donovan 8 8 E4
South Carolina Dave Odom 5 11 E5
Georgia Dennis Felton 4 12 E6
SEC West
School Coach W L Seed
Mississippi State Rick Stansbury 12 4 W1
Arkansas John Pelphrey 9 7 W2
Mississippi Andy Kennedy 7 9 W3
LSU Butch Pierre 6 10 W4
Alabama Mark Gottfried 5 11 W5
Auburn Jeff Lebo 4 12 W6


[edit] 2008 SEC Tournament

  First round
March 13
Second round
March 14, 15 †
Semifinals
March 15
SEC Championship Game
March 16 ‡
                                     
W4  LSU 73  
E5  South Carolina 77  
  E1  Tennessee 89  
    E5  South Carolina 87  
      
        
  E1  Tennessee 91  
  W2  Arkansas 92  
        
        
  W2  Arkansas 81
    E3  Vanderbilt 75  
E3  Vanderbilt 93
W6  Auburn 82  
  W2  Arkansas 57
  E6  Georgia 66
E4  Florida 69  
W5  Alabama 80  
  W1  Mississippi State 69*
    W5  Alabama 67  
      
        
  W1  Mississippi State 60
  E6  Georgia 64  
        
        
  E2  Kentucky 56
    E6  Georgia 60*  
W3  Ole Miss 95
E6  Georgia 97*  

* Denotes game ended in overtime.
† Game originally scheduled for 9:45 p.m. the day before. Postponed due to tornado.
‡ - Game was originally to have been telecast on CBS.

[edit] All-Tournament Team

Sundiata Gaines, Georgia (Most Valuable Player)
Terrance Woodbury, Georgia
Charles Thomas, Arkansas
Darian Townes, Arkansas
Mykal Riley, Alabama

[edit] Game delays and relocation

A hiatus in the Alabama vs. Mississippi State quarterfinal on March 14, 2008. The team returned to the court at 10:30 p.m. the same night, and Mississippi State defeated Alabama 69–67 in overtime.
A hiatus in the Alabama vs. Mississippi State quarterfinal on March 14, 2008. The team returned to the court at 10:30 p.m. the same night, and Mississippi State defeated Alabama 69–67 in overtime.

During overtime of the Friday night quarterfinal between Mississippi State and Alabama, a windstorm hit the Georgia Dome at 9:40 p.m.[4] The National Weather Service had issued a tornado warning at 9:26 p.m., because radar indicated a thunderstorm capable of producing a tornado.[5] The storm tore open a panel on the north side of the dome; sheared bolts and insulation fell into the arena. After the storm passed, the teams returned to the court at 10:30 and completed the game.[4]

The Kentucky–Georgia basketball game, originally scheduled for Friday night, was postponed.[6] It was rescheduled for Saturday at noon, and due to damage suffered by the Georgia Dome, it was moved to Alexander Memorial Coliseum on the Georgia Tech campus. The semifinals began at 6:00pm Saturday night in Alexander Memorial Coliseum. Because the games were moved to a significantly smaller arena, only players' families, bands, cheerleaders, and persons with working credentials were admitted.[7][8] The SEC looked at several possible scenarios; one specifically mentioned by media involved playing only the Kentucky-Georgia game on Saturday, playing both semifinals on Sunday, and declaring the semifinal winners co-champions. However, tournament officials were told by the NCAA tournament selection committee (which included SEC commissioner Michael Slive) that it had to finish the tournament in order to preserve the league's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.[8]

The championship game was originally slated to be televised by CBS but was bumped to ESPN2 after the SEC opted to move the tip time to 3:30 p.m. (EDT). The move to ESPN2 was because CBS televised the Big Ten tournament final at 3:30 p.m. However, CBS still produced the game, with announcers Verne Lundquist and Bill Raftery, and CBS affiliates in the finalists' home markets carried the game.[9]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links