American Southwest Conference men's basketball tournament
Appearance
(Redirected from American Southwest Conference Men's Basketball Tournament)
American Southwest Conference men's basketball tournament | |
---|---|
Conference basketball championship | |
Sport | Basketball |
Conference | American Southwest Conference |
Number of teams | 8 |
Format | Single-elimination tournament |
Played | 1999–present |
Current champion | UT Dallas (6th) |
Most championships | Mississippi College UT Dallas (6) |
Official website | ASC men's basketball |
The American Southwest Conference men's basketball tournament is the annual conference basketball championship tournament for the NCAA Division III American Southwest Conference. The tournament has been held annually since 1999. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records.[1]
The winner, declared conference champion, receives the ASC's automatic bid to the NCAA Men's Division III Basketball Championship.
UT Dallas are the reigning tournament champions.
Results
[edit]Year | Champions | Score | Runner-up | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | Mississippi College | 69–54 | Austin | Clinton, MS |
2000 | McMurry | 105–81 | Mississippi College | Abilene, TX |
2001 | McMurry | 76–71 | Mississippi College | Clinton, MS |
2002 | Mississippi College | 88–75 | McMurry | Abilene, TX |
2003 | Mississippi College | 83–63 | McMurry | Marshall, TX |
2004 | Sul Ross State | 72–69 | Mississippi College | Alpine, TX |
2005 | UT Dallas | 73–55 | Mississippi College | Clinton, MS |
2006 | Mississippi College | 74–58 | Howard Payne | Brownwood, TX |
2007 | Mississippi College | 77–64 | Hardin–Simmons | Clinton, MS |
2008 | Mary Hardin–Baylor | 82–73 | Concordia Texas | Belton, TX |
2009 | UT Dallas | 85–72 | Mississippi College | Richardson, TX |
2010 | Mary Hardin–Baylor | 80–70 | UT Dallas | Belton, TX |
2011 | McMurry | 72–65 | Mary Hardin–Baylor | Richardson, TX |
2012 | McMurry | 86–81OT | Hardin–Simmons | Belton, TX |
2013 | Concordia Texas | 80–76 | Mary Hardin–Baylor | Richardson, TX |
2014 | UT Dallas | 78–69 | Hardin–Simmons | Richardson, TX |
2015 | East Texas Baptist | 82–71 | Concordia Texas | Marshall, TX |
2016 | Hardin–Simmons | 91–79 | Louisiana College | Alpine, TX |
2017 | Hardin–Simmons | 104–92 | LeTourneau | Longview, TX |
2018 | Sul Ross State | 68–65 | East Texas Baptist | Alpine, TX |
2019 | UT Dallas | 88–64 | Hardin–Simmons | Richardson, TX |
2020 | LeTourneau | 82–79 | East Texas Baptist | Alpine, TX |
2021 | Ozarks | 74–72 | Louisiana College | Clarksville, AR |
2022 | Mary Hardin–Baylor | 99–82 | LeTourneau | Belton, TX |
2023 | East Texas Baptist | 72–64 | Hardin–Simmons | Belton, TX |
2024 | UT Dallas | 78–77 | Mary Hardin-Baylor | Abilene, TX |
Championship records
[edit]School | Finals Record | Finals Appearances | Years |
---|---|---|---|
Mississippi College | 5–5 | 10 | 1999, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007 |
UT Dallas | 5–1 | 6 | 2005, 2009, 2014, 2019, 2024 |
McMurry | 4–2 | 6 | 2000, 2001, 2011, 2012 |
Mary Hardin–Baylor | 3–3 | 6 | 2008, 2010, 2022 |
Hardin–Simmons | 2–4 | 6 | 2016, 2017 |
East Texas Baptist | 2–2 | 4 | 2015, 2023 |
Sul Ross State | 2–0 | 2 | 2004, 2018 |
Concordia Texas | 1–2 | 3 | 2013 |
LeTourneau | 1–2 | 3 | 2020 |
University of the Ozarks | 1–0 | 1 | 2021 |
Louisiana College | 0–2 | 1 | |
Austin | 0–1 | 1 | |
Howard Payne | 0–1 | 1 |
- Belhaven, Dallas, Centenary, Schreiner, Texas Lutheran, and UT Tyler never reached the tournament finals before departing the ASC
- Schools highlighted in pink are former members of the American Southwest Conference
References
[edit]- ^ "ASC Championship Tournament History" (PDF). Year-by-year records. ASC. 2017. Retrieved April 23, 2017.