2003 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament

2003 Big East Men's
Basketball Tournament
Classification Division I
Season 2002–03
Teams 12
Site Madison Square Garden
New York City
Champions Pittsburgh (1st title)
Winning coach Ben Howland (1st title)
MVP Julius Page Pittsburgh
Top scorers Carmelo Anthony Syracuse
Ben Gordon Connecticut
(50 points)
Post-Big East
tournament(s)
2003 NIT, 2003 NCAA
Big East Men's
Basketball Tournaments
«2002  2004»

The 2003 Big East Men's Basketball Tournament, a part of the 2002–03 NCAA Division I men's basketball season, took place from March 12 – March 15, 2003 at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Its winner will receive the Big East Conference's automatic bid to the 2003 NCAA Tournament. It was a single-elimination tournament with four rounds and the four highest seeds (two from each Big East division) receive byes in the first round. The 6 Big East teams with the best conference records from both the East and West Divisions of the Big East Conference were invited to participate. Boston College, who had an identical 10–6 record as Connecticut, received the #1 seed from the East Division due to a tie breaker. Likewise, Syracuse, who had an identical 13–3 conference record to Pitt, received the #1 seed from West Division due to tiebreakers. Virginia Tech from the East Division and Rutgers from the West Division failed to make the tournament.[1]
Pittsburgh defeated Connecticut, 74–56, in the finals to earn their first Big East Tournament Championship.

Contents

Final conference standings

2002–03 Big East men's basketball final standings
  Conf Overall
Team W L PCT W L PCT
#1 Syracuse 13   3   .813     30   5   .857
#8 Pittsburgh 13   3   .813     28   5   .848
#15 Notre Dame 10   6   .625     24   10   .706
#11 Connecticut 10   6   .625     23   10   .697
Boston College 10   6   .625     19   12   .613
Seton Hall 10   6   .625     17   13   .567
Providence 8   8   .500     18   14   .563
Villanova 8   8   .500     15   16   .484
St. John's 8   9   .471     21   13   .618
Georgetown 6   11   .353     19   15   .559
West Virginia 5   11   .313     14   15   .483
Rutgers 4   12   .250     12   16   .429
Miami 4   12   .250     11   17   .393
Virginia Tech 4   12   .250     11   18   .379
† 2003 Big East Tournament winner
As of March 31, 2003 • Rankings from Coaches' Poll

Bracket

  First Round
March 12, 2003
Quarterfinals
March 13, 2003
Semifinals
March 14, 2003
Championship Game
March 15, 2003
                                     
        
  W1  Syracuse 74  
    W5  Georgetown 69  
W5  Georgetown 46
E4  Villanova 41  
  W1  Syracuse 67  
  E2  Connecticut 80  
        
        
  E2  Connecticut 83
    W3  Seton Hall 70  
E6  Miami 52
W3  Seton Hall 67  
  E2  Connecticut 56
  W2  Pittsburgh 74
        
        
  E1  Boston College 82*
    E5  St. John's 75  
E5  St. John's 83
W4  Notre Dame 80  
  E1  Boston College 48
  W2  Pittsburgh 74  
        
        
  W2  Pittsburgh 67
    E3  Providence 57  
W6  West Virginia 50
E3  Providence 73  

* denotes an overtime (OT) period

Championship Game

On March 15, Pittsburgh won their first-ever Big East Tournament, defeating Connecticut 74–56. They led by one at half-time, but quickly extended their lead in the second half. Jaron Brown led the Panthers with a career-high 19 points. Brown converted all six of his free throw attempts and was 6-of-9 from the field. He added ten rebounds to notch his fourth career double-double. Julius Page and Brandin Knight finished with 16 points apiece, and Chevon Troutman had 12. Page, a junior, averaged 13.3 points and 3.7 rebounds on 47.1 percent shooting (16-for-37) in the three tournament games. He won the Tournament MVP award. Knight averaged 12.0 points, 5.3 assists, 3.3 steals, and 3.3 rebounds in the tournament.

It was the third straight title game reached for Pittsburgh. Howland and the Panthers lost to Uconn in double overtime in 2002. It tied the largest margin of victory for a Panther team in the Big East Tournament. They also defeated Boston College by eighteen, winning 88–70 on March 8, 2000. The win was Pittsburgh's ninth in a row, tying their season high. They also won nine in a row to begin the season.[2]

Awards

Dave Gavitt Trophy (Most Outstanding Player): Julius Page, Pittsburgh

All-Tournament Team

References

External links