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2006 Big East men's basketball tournament

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2006 Big East men's basketball tournament
ClassificationDivision I
Season2005–06
Teams12
SiteMadison Square Garden
New York City
ChampionsSyracuse (5th title)
Winning coachJim Boeheim (5th title)
MVPGerry McNamara (Syracuse)
Top scorerGerry McNamara (Syracuse)
(65 points)
← 2005
2007 →
2005–06 Big East men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 2 Connecticut 14 2   .875 30 4   .882
No. 3 Villanova 14 2   .875 28 5   .848
No. 22 West Virginia 11 5   .688 22 11   .667
Marquette 10 6   .625 20 11   .645
No. 23 Georgetown 10 6   .625 23 10   .697
No. 16 Pittsburgh 10 6   .625 25 8   .758
Seton Hall 9 7   .563 18 12   .600
Cincinnati 8 8   .500 21 13   .618
No. 21 Syracuse 7 9   .438 23 12   .657
Rutgers 7 9   .438 19 14   .576
Louisville 6 10   .375 21 13   .618
Notre Dame 6 10   .375 16 14   .533
DePaul* 5 11   .313 12 15   .444
Providence* 5 11   .313 12 15   .444
St. John's* 5 11   .313 12 15   .444
South Florida* 1 15   .063 7 22   .241
2006 Big East tournament winner
As of April 3, 2006[1]
Rankings from AP Poll
*Did not qualify for 2006 Big East tournament.


The 2006 Big East Men's Basketball Championship was played from March 8 to March 11, 2006. The tournament took place at Madison Square Garden in New York City. It was a single-elimination tournament with four rounds. Villanova and Connecticut tied for the best regular season conference record. Based on tie-breakers, Connecticut was awarded the #1 seed.
The Syracuse Orange won the tournament for the second consecutive season and fifth time overall, and were awarded an automatic bid to the 2006 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament. As a 9-seed, the Orange are the lowest seeded team to win the Big East tournament, and became the first school to win four games in the tournament.[2] Gerry McNamara of Syracuse was given the Dave Gavitt Trophy, awarded to the tournament's most outstanding player.

Syracuse's Run

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This tournament is best remembered for Syracuse's improbable run to the championship as a #9 seed, with McNamara pulling off excellent 3-point shooting and some improbable buzzer beaters and last-second shots to lead them. In the first game, after Devan Downey of Cincinnati stole the inbounds pass with ten seconds left and was fouled, he made one of two to put the Bearcats up two points. However, with just a half second left, McNamara made a running one-handed three-pointer to secure the victory, 74–73.

After jumping out to a big lead against Connecticut in the second game, Uconn battled back for much of the game until they finally took their first lead of the game with 30 seconds to play. Incredibly, McNamara was the hero for Syracuse again, hitting a 30-foot three-pointer with 5 seconds left to send the game into overtime. The Orange went on to win 86–84, holding off the Huskies on a last-second effort. McNamara finished with thirteen assists, ten in the first half alone.

They faced Georgetown in the semifinals in their attempt to become the first team to win the Big East tournament as one of the teams forced to play on the first day, requiring four wins in a row. The Hoyas went up early, holding a fifteen-point lead at the half. McNamara sat out for ten minutes because of a nagging groin injury. Surprising everyone, McNamara came out in the second half and drained five three-pointers, including one with 45 seconds left and the Orange down four. Demetris Nichols knocked away the inbounds pass for Georgetown, allowing McNamara to take possession and rush down the floor with time running out. He passed to an open Eric Devendorf who laid the winning shot in with 1.5 seconds to go. The Orange had advanced to the finals, beating Georgetown, 58–57.

After improbably winning three straight games either in overtime or by one point, they got a slightly easier win in the finals against Pittsburgh, winning 65–61. The Orange led most of the game, but midway through the second half, the Panthers had taken the lead. McNamara quickly made a three-point shot after that and Josh Wright made four clutch free throws in the final minute to secure the historic championship. Syracuse had finished just 7–9 in the Big East that year, and would have likely been left out of the NCAA tournament had they not pulled off at least two of the four wins. They would go on to lose to Texas A&M in the first round of the tournament.[3]

Bracket

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First round
Wednesday, March 8
Quarterfinals
Thursday, March 9
Semifinals
Friday, March 10
Final
Saturday, March 11
            
1 #1 Connecticut 84
9 Syracuse 86*
8 Cincinnati 73
9 Syracuse 74
9 Syracuse 58
5 #23 Georgetown 57
4 Marquette 59
5 #23 Georgetown 62
5 #23 Georgetown 67
12 Notre Dame 63
9 Syracuse 65
6 #15 Pittsburgh 61
2 #2 Villanova 87
10 Rutgers 55
7 Seton Hall 48
10 Rutgers 61
2 #2 Villanova 54
6 #15 Pittsburgh 68
3 #19 West Virginia 57
6 #15 Pittsburgh 68
6 #15 Pittsburgh 61
11 Louisville 56

* – Overtime

Note: By finishing below twelfth place during the regular season, DePaul, Providence, St. John's, and South Florida did not qualify for the tournament.

Games

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  • 1st round: Wednesday, March 8
Noon
Team 1 2 Tot.
Syracuse (9 seed) 39 35 74
Cincinnati (8 seed) 34 39 73
2PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Georgetown (5 seed) 27 40 67
Notre Dame (12 seed) 30 33 63
7PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Seton Hall (7 seed) 19 29 48
Rutgers (10 seed) 23 38 61
9PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Pittsburgh (6 seed) 39 22 61
Louisville (11 seed) 16 40 56
  • Quarterfinals: Thursday, March 9
Noon
Team 1 2 OT Tot.
Syracuse (9 seed) 39 35 12 86
Connecticut (1 seed) 28 46 10 84
2 PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Georgetown (5 seed) 22 40 62
Marquette (4 seed) 22 37 59
7 PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Villanova (2 seed) 34 53 87
Rutgers (10 seed) 33 22 55
9 PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
West Virginia (3 seed) 31 26 57
Pittsburgh (6 seed) 24 44 68
  • Semifinals: Friday, March 10
7 PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Syracuse (9 seed) 21 37 58
Georgetown (5 seed) 36 21 57
9 PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Pittsburgh (6 seed) 32 36 68
Villanova (2 seed) 21 33 54
  • Finals: Saturday, March 11
8 PM
Team 1 2 Tot.
Syracuse (9 seed) 34 31 65
Pittsburgh (6 seed) 25 36 61

Awards

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Dave Gavitt Trophy (Most Outstanding Player): Gerry McNamara, Syracuse

All-Tournament Team

References

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  1. ^ "2005-06 Big East Conference Season Summary: Standings" sports-reference.com. Retrieved 11-14-2013.
  2. ^ "Syracuse completes improbable run to Big East title". ESPN.com. March 11, 2006. Archived from the original on March 14, 2006. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
  3. ^ Orange Hoops 2006 season recap