2016 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship Game

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2016 NCAA Tournament Championship Game
National Championship Game
1 2 Total
Villanova 34 43 77
North Carolina 39 35 74
Date April 4, 2016
Arena NRG Stadium
Location Houston, Texas
Favorite North Carolina by 2
Referee Michael Stephens, John Higgins, Terry Wymer
Attendance 74,340
United States TV coverage
Network TBS
Announcers Jim Nantz (play-by-play)
Bill Raftery and Grant Hill  (color)
Tracy Wolfson (sideline)
Nielsen Ratings 12.0 (17.8 million)

The 2016 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Championship Game was the final game of the 2016 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament and determined the national champion for the 2015–16 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The game was played on Monday, April 4, 2016, at NRG Stadium in Houston, Texas, between the Villanova Wildcats and the North Carolina Tar Heels.

The first half was closely fought, with neither team leading by more than five points in the first 19 minutes. After North Carolina briefly took a seven point lead in the final minute, a field goal by Phil Booth for Villanova cut the lead to 39–34 at the break. Villanova started to gain the upper hand in the second half, taking their largest lead of the game, 67–57, with 4:47 remaining. North Carolina then surged back, setting up a heroic comeback in the final minutes. With just over 1:30 remaining, Marcus Paige hit a three pointer to cut the lead to three points. After Villanova turned over the ball, Brice Johnson cut the lead to one point. Booth was fouled and hit two free throws to retake a three-point lead. With 13 seconds remaining, the lead was again three points for Villanova. On the ensuing possession, Paige sunk an off-balance three-point field goal to tie the game with 4.7 seconds left. However, Ryan Arcidiacono found Kris Jenkins for a buzzer-beating, championship-winning three-point shot, with Villanova defeating North Carolina by a final score of 77–74.

Participants

Villanova

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After a 27–4 regular season and winning the 2016 Big East Conference regular season championship, Villanova beat Georgetown and Providence en route to the 2016 Big East Tournament Finals, where they would lose to Seton Hall. They were the #2 seed in the South Regional of the 2016 NCAA Tournament.[1]

Villanova cruised past UNC Asheville in the first round of the 2016 NCAA Tournament with a 86–56 victory.[2] In the second round, Villanova routed Iowa by a score of 87–68 to reach the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2009.[3] In the South Regional Semifinals, Villanova blew out Miami by a score of 92–69.[4] In the South regional Final, with Villanova leading 62–59, Mikal Bridges made a steal before Frank Mason III could shoot a potential game-tying three-pointer, and Jalen Brunson made the ensuing free throws and Villanova beat the #1-overall seed Kansas 64–59 to advance to the Final Four for the first time since 2009.[5] In the 2016 Final Four, Villanova had the biggest blowout in Final Four history, beating Oklahoma, 95–51, to advance to the National Championship Game for the first time since their 1985 National Championship run.[6] The game also featured the second-best shooting percentage in a Final Four game, behind only Villanova's 1985 Championship Game performance of 78.6% (22-for-28).[7]

North Carolina

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After a 25–6 regular season and winning the 2016 ACC regular season championship, North Carolina beat Pittsburgh, Notre Dame, and Virginia en route to the ACC Tournament Championship. They were rewarded with the top seed in the East Regional of the 2016 NCAA Tournament.[8]

North Carolina opened the 2016 NCAA Tournament with a 83–67 win over Florida Gulf Coast, outscoring FGCU 42–27 in the second half.[9] North Carolina would again use a big second half to beat Providence, 85–66, in the second round, outscoring the Friars 51–36 in the second half to advance to the Sweet 16.[10] In the Sweet 16, Marcus Paige would have 21 points and Brice Johnson would have 20 points to power UNC to a 101–86 victory over Indiana.[11] In the Elite Eight, North Carolina beat fellow ACC foe Notre Dame, 88–74, to advance to an NCAA Tournament-record 19th Final Four.[12] In the Final Four, North Carolina beat another ACC foe, Syracuse, 83–66, to make their 10th appearance in the National Title game in hopes of winning their sixth national title. UNC became one of only four schools to do so, along with Duke, UCLA, and Kentucky.[13]

Game summary

TBS logo 2016.svg
Monday, April 4
8:19 pm CDT
#2 Villanova Wildcats 77, #1 North Carolina Tar Heels 74
Scoring by half: 34–39, 43–35
Pts: P. Booth 20
Rebs: J. Hart 8
Asts: R. Arcidiacono & D. Ochefu 2
Pts: M. Paige 21
Rebs: B. Johnson 8
Asts: M. Paige 6
NRG Stadium – Houston, TX
Attendance: 74,340
Referees: Michael Stephens, John Higgins, Terry Wymer

The first half of the National Championship game was tightly fought, with neither team taking a lead larger than five points in the first 19 minutes.[14] In the last minute of the half, North Carolina briefly went up by seven points, and had a chance to go up by nine. However, Villanova's Josh Hart blocked a layup attempt, which led to a Phil Booth jump shot at the other end of the court, cutting the deficit to 39–34 as the clock expired.[15] At halftime, Joel Berry II of the Tar Heels led all players with 15 points.[7] Despite entering the game ranked only 294th out of all 351 Division I teams in three-point shooting, North Carolina hit seven of their nine three-point attempt in the first half. However, the Tar Heels hit just 32% of their two-point attempts. Villanova had the edge in points the paint by a 18–12 margin, connecting on 65% on their two-point shots. The Tar Heels led in fast break points by a 10–2 margin and collected five offensive rebounds compared to only one for Villanova.[14] Villanova's Kris Jenkins played just four minutes in the half after getting into early foul trouble.[15]

After the halftime break, Villanova went on a 13–2 run and reclaimed the lead.[15] With 6:13 left in the second half, Ryan Arcidiacono of the Wildcats hit a three-point field goal to give his team a lead of six points.[16] With 4:47 to go, Villanova was up by a game-high 10 points, leading 67–57. However, North Carolina fought back with two straight field goals. With 1:38 remaining, Villanova led 70–64 before Marcus Paige of the Tar Heels cut the lead to three points. After a Villanova turnover, Brice Johnson hit a bank shot to cut the Wildcats' lead to one point. Phil Booth of the Wildcats was fouled by Isaiah Hicks with 35.7 seconds left. He hit both free throws to put the lead back to three points. Paige missed a layup attempt on the ensuing possession, but North Carolina got the rebound and Paige made a reverse layup to cut the lead back to one.[14] Villanova's Josh Hart was then fouled and hit both free throws.[17]

Down by three points, North Carolina tied the game on an "unbelievable" double-clutch three-pointer by Paige with 4.7 seconds remaining.[14] After the game, North Carolina Coach Roy Williams remarked "he turned a broken play into a great play."[15] Villanova then called a time-out to set up their final play, one that they had practiced "every single day" during the season, called "Nova."[18] After receiving the in-bounds pass, Arcidiacono passed with less than two seconds to Jenkins, who hit a game-winning, buzzer-beating three-point shot. It was the first buzzer-beating shot to win an NCAA men’s national title since Lorenzo Charles' dunk for North Carolina State University in 1983, and the first title game ever to end on a buzzer-beating three-pointer.[18] "Kris Jenkins lives for that moment," remarked his coach Jay Wright.[15]

Paige finished with a game-high 21 points and a game-high 6 assists for North Carolina. Berry added 20 points for the Tar Heels and Johnson scored 14 while collecting a game-high 8 rebounds.[19] Booth came off the bench to lead Villanova with a career-high 20 points.[14] Arcidiacono scored 16, Jenkins added 14, and Hart had 12 points and 8 rebounds.[19] As a team, Villanova finished 28 of 48 from the field (58%) and 8 of 14 from three (57%). North Carolina made 11 of 17 three-point attempts (65%) and was 27 of 63 overall (43%). The Tar Heels won the rebounding battle 33-23, including 14 offensive rebounds to just two for Villanova. The teams combined for just 21 turnovers.[19]

It was Villanova's second NCAA championship. Their first championship was in the 1985 Championship Game, when they defeated the Georgetown Hoyas in what is often considered one of the greatest upsets of all time.[7] Rollie Massimino, the head coach of the 1985 Wildcats, was on hand to watch the 2016 Championship Game.[20] The Wildcats finished the tournament with the second-largest average margin of victory in tournament history, behind only the 1996 Kentucky team.[7]

Reaction

Villanova coach Jay Wright called the victory "one of the greatest college basketball games we've ever been a part of".

In his post-game press conference, Jay Wright remarked, "That was one of the greatest college basketball games we've ever been a part of. I just couldn't be prouder, couldn't be happier to see them fulfill this. This is what it's all about as a coach."[15] He added, "I can’t wait to see that look (on my face), because I was just shocked" by the final play. "We beat a class program. Great coach and great team. We have a lot of respect for North Carolina."[7] Roy Williams, who was in tears after the game, described his reaction as the final shot went in: "It was helpless. It was not a good feeling."[20] He added, "I'm not very good because I can't take away the hurt ... I told them I loved them. I told them I wish I could have helped them more."[20]

CBS sportswriter Matt Norlander described the game as "a thrilling, undeniably heart-stopping, instant classic of a title game".[14] ESPN staff writer Eamonn Brennan also called the game an "instant classic" and said both teams "were flying around the floor, playing high-level, pinpoint basketball and trading great plays."[16] The Associated Press called the final basket "as memorable as any [points] that have been scored in the history of this tournament."[20]

Writing for USA Today, Nicole Auerbach called Villanova's performance "one of the most improbable and offensively insane NCAA tournament runs", ending with "one of the most thrilling championship games in tournament history."[7] Villanova's championship win was so unexpected that more contestants in ESPN's Tournament Challenge bracket contest picked Villanova to lose in the first round than picked them to win the championship.[20]

In response to the historic win and to combat absenteeism the following day, classes at Villanova were canceled.[21][22]

Broadcast

The National Championship game was broadcast in the United States by TBS, marking the first time the game aired on cable-only and ending a 34-year run on CBS (CBS and TBS will alternate telecasting the championship game every other year through 2024; thus, the game will return to CBS in 2017). TBS's sister channels TNT and truTV aired separate telecasts, each focusing on one team. Known as "Team Streams," these special telecasts had been used for the National Semifinals since TBS first aired them in 2014; with TBS airing the Championship Game, the Team Streams was extended to the Championship game as well. Jim Nantz did the play-by-play broadcast, with Bill Raftery and Grant Hill providing on-court commentary. Tracy Wolfson was the on-court reporter.[23] Greg Gumbel and Ernie Johnson Jr. served as the studio hosts. Charles Barkley, Seth Davis, Reggie Miller, Clark Kellogg, Kenny Smith and Steve Smith provided studio commentary.[24]

ESPN International owned the international broadcast rights. Sean McDonough served as the play-by-play announcer for the international audience, with Dick Vitale providing commentary. In Canada, the game aired on TSN.[25]

Radio coverage in the United States was provided by Westwood One. The Championship Game was also streamed live on NCAA.com free of charge.[23]

With the switch from broadcast television to cable television, ratings in the United States sharply declined from the 2015 title contest between Duke and Wisconsin. The three cable channels airing the game, TBS, TNT and TruTV, had a combined broadcast average of 17.8 million viewers. That total is down from the 28.3 million who watched the previous year's Championship Game, which aired exclusively on CBS.[26][27]

References

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