1934–35 NCAA men's basketball season

The 1934–35 NCAA men's basketball season began in December 1934, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded in March 1935.

Rules changes

The regulation basketball was reduced in circumference, from 32 inches (81 cm) to between 29.5 and 30.25 inches (74.9 and 76.8 cm).[1]

Season headlines

  • Ned Irish began to promote college basketball doubleheaders between New York City-area teams at Madison Square Garden and intersectional games there between New York City-area teams and teams from other regions.[2] The first intersectional game — an NYU 25–18 victory over Notre Dame on December 29, 1934 — drew 16,138 fans, a world record for attendance at a college basketball game.[2] In the next game on January 5, 1935, NYU defeated Kentucky 23–22 before another new world record crowd of 16,539.[2][3] After the NYU–Kentucky game, Kentucky head coach Adolph Rupp called for the creation of a round-robin national championship college basketball tournament.[2]
  • The American Legion Bowl, promoted as a basketball game "for the national collegiate championship," took place in Atlantic City, New Jersey, at the end of the season.[2] LSU defeated Pittsburgh 41–37 and called itself the national collegiate basketball champion for the 1934–35 season, although this assertion was unofficial.[2]
  • In February 1943, the Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively selected NYU as its national champion for the 1934–35 season.[2]
  • In 1995, the Premo-Porretta Power Poll retroactively selected NYU as its national champion for the 1934–35 season.[4]

Conference membership changes

School Former conference New conference
Brooklyn Bulldogs Metropolitan New York Conference Non-major basketball program
Bucknell Bison Eastern Intercollegiate Conference Independent
Butler Bulldogs Missouri Valley Conference Independent
CCNY Beavers Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
Fordham Rams Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
Long Island Blackbirds Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
Manhattan Jaspers Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
NYU Violets Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
Pratt Cannoneers Metropolitan New York Conference Non-major basketball program
St. Francis (NY) Terriers Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
St. John's Redmen Metropolitan New York Conference Independent
Tulsa Golden Hurricane Independent Missouri Valley Conference
Washburn Ichabods Independent Missouri Valley Conference

Regular season

Conference winners and tournaments

Conference Regular
season winner[5]
Conference
player of the year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (City)
Tournament
winner
Big Six ConferenceIowa StateNone selectedNo Tournament
Big Ten ConferenceIllinois, Purdue, & WisconsiinNone selectedNo Tournament
Border ConferenceTexas TechNone selectedNo Tournament
Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball LeaguePennNone selectedNo Tournament
Eastern Intercollegiate ConferencePittsburgh & West VirginiaNone selectedNo Tournament;
Pittsburgh defeated West Virginia in a single-game conference playoff
Metropolitan New York ConferenceDid not play as a conference
Missouri Valley ConferenceCreighton & DrakeNone selectedNo Tournament
Pacific Coast ConferenceOregon State (North);
USC (South)
No Tournament;
USC defeated Oregon State in best-of-three conference championship playoff series
Rocky Mountain Athletic ConferenceColorado State College (Eastern); Utah State (Western)No Tournament
Southeastern ConferenceKentucky & LSUNone selectedNo Tournament
Southern ConferenceNorth CarolinaNone selected1935 Southern Conference men's basketball tournamentThompson Gym
(Raleigh, North Carolina)
North Carolina[6]
Southwest ConferenceArkansas, Rice, & SMUNone selectedNo Tournament

Statistical leaders

Awards

Consensus All-American team

Consensus Team
Player Class Team
Omar Browning Senior Oklahoma
Claire Cribbs Senior Pittsburgh
Leroy Edwards Sophomore Kentucky
Jack Gray Senior Texas
Lee Guttero Senior USC

Major player of the year awards

Coaching changes

A number of teams changed coaches during the season and after it ended.

Team Former
Coach
Interim
Coach
New
Coach
Reason
Oregon William Reinhart Howard Hobson
Yale Elmer Ripley Ken Loeffler

References

  1. Schleyer, Claudia, "The Rules of Basketball: Boy How They've Changed!", Youth Hoops 101 Accessed 15 May 2021
  2. Scott, Jon (November 9, 2010). "The truth behind the Helms Committee". Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  3. Kentucky vs. New York University (January 5, 1935) bigbluehistory.net Accessed May 6, 2021
  4. ESPN, ed. (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. New York, NY: ESPN Books. pp. 526, 529–587. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
  5. "2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book – Conferences Section" (PDF). NCAA. 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  6. 2008–09 SoCon Men's Basketball Media Guide – Postseason Section, Southern Conference, retrieved 2009-02-09
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.