Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball
Kent State Golden Flashes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
|
||||
University | Kent State University | |||
Conference | Mid-American (MAC) East Division |
|||
Location | Kent, Ohio | |||
Head coach | Rob Senderoff (5th year) | |||
Arena | Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center (Capacity: 6,327) |
|||
Nickname | Golden Flashes | |||
Colors | Navy blue and Gold |
|||
Uniforms | ||||
|
||||
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight | ||||
2002 | ||||
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen | ||||
2002 | ||||
NCAA Tournament Round of 32 | ||||
2001, 2002 | ||||
NCAA Tournament appearances | ||||
1999, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2008 | ||||
Conference tournament champions | ||||
1999, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2008 | ||||
Conference regular season champions | ||||
2002, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2015 | ||||
Conference division season champions | ||||
2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011, 2015 |
The Kent State Golden Flashes men's basketball team represents Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, United States. The Golden Flashes compete in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the Division I level as a member of the Mid-American Conference (MAC) East Division. The team was founded in 1913 and played their first intercollegiate game in January 1915. They joined the Mid-American Conference in 1951 and have played in the East division since the MAC went to the divisional format in 1997. Home games are held at the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center, which opened in 1950 and is one of the oldest arenas in college basketball. Rob Senderoff was hired as head coach in 2011, the 24th coach in the program's history.
The Flashes gained national attention in the late 1990s and early 2000s after earning their first bid to the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament in 1999. Two years later, Kent State picked up their first tournament win, followed the next year by their run to the Elite Eight in 2002 as a 10th seed where the Flashes finished the reason ranked 12th nationally. The 2002 Golden Flashes also set a team record with 30 wins along with a MAC single-season record of 17 conference wins. Through the 2014β15 season, Kent State has five total appearances in the NCAA Tournament, the most recent being in 2008, along with eight appearances in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) four in the CollegeInsider.com Tournament (CIT). In MAC play, the Flashes have six regular-season titles, nine East division titles, and five MAC Tournament championships.
History
The men's basketball team is Kent State's oldest collegiate team, founded in 1913 during the first fall semester at the new Kent State Normal School campus.[1] The team was organized, though only five men were enrolled out of the initial enrollment of 140 at the beginning of the term, as the new school was a teacher training college and thus had a predominately female student body. More men would arrive at the school in the coming weeks.[2] They played and won their first game against Kent High School and competed against local company and high school teams for that first season, going 7β2. During the following season, Kent State played its first intercollegiate game, a 56β6 loss to Otterbein College, on January 22, 1915. An additional intercollegiate game, a 54β18 home loss to Muskingum College, was played that year along with three other games against local teams.[3] Kent State's first intercollegiate win was recorded March 10, 1916, a 27β17 home win over Ashland College, played in the former heating plant and manual training building.[4] A shortage of men during both World Wars prevented teams from being formed for the 1917β18, 1918β19, and 1943β44 seasons. Beginning in 1932, Kent State played as a member of the Ohio Athletic Conference before joining the Mid-American Conference and beginning league play in 1951. Kent State was placed in the East Division when the MAC went to a divisional alignment in 1997.[5]
During their first years of existence, a variety of different venues were used for home games including on-campus facilities at what is now Cartwright Hall and the old heating plant, as well as off-campus facilities at the local Congregational Church gymnasium and Theodore Roosevelt High School, until Wills Gymnasium opened in 1925.[6] In 1950, the team moved to their current home, the Memorial Athletic and Convocation Center, known originally as the Men's Physical Education Building until 1956 and later as Memorial Gym until 1992.
The team played in relative anonymity for most of its existence. They made their first appearance in the MAC Tournament Championship game (which began in 1980) in 1984, losing a close 42-40[7] game. They would make the title game again in 1987[7] and 1989,[7] losing both 64-63 and 67-65 respectively. The Flashes made their first post-season appearance in the 1985 National Invitation Tournament, losing in the first round. They returned to the NIT in 1989 and 1990, losing in the first round both times.[5]
Beginnings of success
In 1996, Gary Waters was hired as head coach and began to build what would become the longest run of success in Mid-American Conference history. In 1999 the Flashes won over 20 games and defeated the Miami RedHawks in the MAC Tournament Championship game in Toledo to win their first MAC Tournament title and make their first-ever NCAA Tournament appearance,[8] where they were defeated by Temple[9] in the opening round at FleetCenter in Boston. The following season, the Flashes again won over 20 games and finished second in the MAC East, but failed to win the conference tournament and received their first NIT invitation since 1990. The Flashes hosted the first round game against Rutgers and recorded their first-ever post-season win, a 73-62 victory. Kent State would win their second-round match-up at Villanova before falling in the quarterfinals at Penn State. The 2000-2001 season saw the Flashes win their first-ever MAC East title[8] and their second tournament title to return to the NCAA Tournament. The experience in the NIT proved to be valuable as Kent State scored their first win, a 77-73 [10] upset over the fourth-seeded Indiana Hoosiers, before falling to the Cincinnati Bearcats in the second round in San Diego.[11] At the end of the 2000β01 season, Waters accepted the head coaching job at Rutgers. While at KSU, Waters overall record was 92-60. He was succeeded at Kent State by Stan Heath.
2001β02 season
Kent State enjoyed its best season in 2001-2002, led by seniors Trevor Huffman, Andrew Mitchell, Demetric Shaw, and Eric Thomas and junior transfer (and future NFL star) Antonio Gates. The season saw MAC records set in overall wins (30), conference wins (17), and longest winning streak (21).[8] After beginning the season a mediocre 4-4, Kent State dramatically turned their season around by winning 20 of their next 21 games. Following their only MAC loss of the season (a 66-65 loss at Buffalo), they proceeded to win 15-straight games to close the regular season at 24-5 with a 17-1 record in the MAC and winning their first-ever MAC regular season title. After winning the MAC Tournament, the Flashes found themselves seeded tenth in the South regional bracket.[12] After scoring a mild upset of the seventh-seeded Oklahoma State Cowboys,[13] the Flashes gained national attention by defeating second-seeded SEC champion Alabama 71-58[14] to advance to the Sweet Sixteen. The Flashes followed that win with a 78-73 overtime win[15] over third-seeded Pitt to become the first MAC team to advance to the Elite Eight since Ohio in 1964, when the tournament contained only 22 teams. The Flashes 21-game winning streak and dream season came to an end in the Elite Eight with an 81-69 loss[16] to Indiana. The Flashes finished the season at 30-6 and were ranked twelfth in the final ESPN/USA Today Coaches poll released after the tournament.[17] Following the season, Stan Heath accepted the head coaching job at the University of Arkansas, leaving after just one season and a record of 30-6. Assistant coach Jim Christian was hired later that year as the next head coach.
Jim Christian
The Flashes continued their success under Jim Christian, winning over twenty games every season he was coach along with MAC East titles in 2003, 2004, 2006, and 2008; MAC overall titles in 2006 and 2008; and winning the MAC Tournament again in 2006 and 2008. In both 2003 and 2004, Kent State lost in the MAC Tournament championship game and received bids to the NIT.[8] Following their 2006 MAC Tournament title, they advanced to the 2006 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament as a twelfth seed where they lost in the opening round.[18] In 2004, Kent State broke the MAC record for consecutive seasons with twenty or more wins by posting their sixth consecutive season. The streak is currently at ten as the 2007-2008 team won their twentieth game on February 12, 2008 at Central Michigan University.[19] In addition, Kent State broke the record for consecutive seasons with ten or more conference wins in a season by posting their ninth consecutive season of ten or more conference wins in 2006-2007, breaking the previous record of eight. The 2007-2008 season has seen several firsts and milestones for the program. On February 19, 2008, the Flashes recorded their 1,000th win in program history, a 76-66 win over the Buffalo Bulls at Buffalo's Alumni Arena.[20] On February 24, the Flashes scored their first-ever win against a ranked team in the regular season, defeating the Saint Mary's Gaels 65-57 in Moraga, California.[21] This was followed by Kent State's first-ever regular season ranking, rising to twenty-third in the Associated Press poll and twenty-fourth in the ESPN/USA Today Coaches Poll.[22] With their 61-58 win at Akron on March 9 to close out the regular season, Kent State set a program record for wins in the regular season with twenty-five, breaking the previous record of twenty-four set in the 2001-2002 season.[23] Following their fifth conference tournament title, Kent State earned the highest seed in school history,[24] a ninth seed in the Midwestern region of the 2008 NCAA Tournament, where they fell to the UNLV Runnin' Rebels in the opening round.[25] On March 29 Jim Christian resigned to take the head coaching job at Texas Christian University. He finished with a career record of 138-58 at Kent State.[26] Christian was replaced by his top assistant coach Geno Ford, who officially took over the program on 2 April.[27]
Geno Ford
Geno Ford took over the program in 2008 and led the team to three winning seasons, including two regular season MAC Championships in the 2009β10 and 2010β11 seasons. It was the first time a team had won successive MAC regular season championships since Miami in 1991 and 1992 and the first time a team had won two consecutive outright titles since Ball State in 1989 and 1990. In 2011, KSU appeared in their 11th MAC Tournament Championship game, but fell in overtime. Although the team failed to advance to the NCAA Tournament during Ford's tenure, they did have three consecutive post-season appearances including the 2009 CollegeInsider.com Tournament and the 2010 and 2011 NITs. Kent State advanced to the second round of the 2010 NIT, winning their first post-season game since the 2002 Elite Eight run, and advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2011 NIT with two road wins. Ford left the team to take the head coaching job at Bradley University on March 27, 2011. Ford finished with a 68β37 record at Kent State.[28]
Rob Senderoff
Rob Senderoff, succeeded Ford as head coach on April 7, 2011 after briefly serving as interim head coach after Ford's departure.[29] Senderoff had worked as an assistant at Kent State with Ford under Jim Christian from 2002β06 before joining the staff of Kelvin Sampson at Indiana as an assistant. Following the Kelvin Sampson recruiting controversy, Senderoff was issued a three-year show-cause penalty by the NCAA and forced to resign at Indiana. He was rehired at Kent State in 2008 as associate head coach.[30] In his first two seasons as head coach, the Flashes continued some of their recent success, winning 20 games in each season and advancing to the CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament in 2012. The 2012β13 season was Kent State's first season not winning at least 10 MAC games since the 1997β98 season, though the team did advance to the 2013 CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament where they finished 1β1. The 2013-14 team struggled to a 16β16 record and 7β11 record in MAC play, the team's worst season since a 13β17 overall record in 1997β98 and worst MAC record since a 7β11 mark in 1996β97.[5]
MAC season results
<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>
As Mid-American Conference member[31] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Season | Overall record* | MAC tournament record** | Postseason record | Head coach[32] |
1951β52 | 14β10 (3β7) | -- | -- | Clarence Haerr |
1952β53 | 7β15 (3β9) | -- | -- | |
1953β54 | 8β13 (3β9) | -- | -- | |
1954β55 | 8β14 (5β9) | -- | -- | |
1955β56 | 10-11 (5-7) | -- | -- | Dave McDowell |
1956β57 | 5β18 (2β10) | -- | -- | |
1957β58 | 9β14 (3β9) | -- | -- | Bill Bertka |
1958β59 | 11β13 (6β6) | -- | -- | |
1959β60 | 7β16 (2β10) | -- | -- | |
1960β61 | 9β14 (4β8) | -- | -- | |
1961β62 | 2β19 (1β11) | -- | -- | Bob Doll |
1962-63 | 3-18 (1-11) | -- | -- | |
1963β64 | 11β13 (5β7) | -- | -- | |
1964β65 | 9β11 (4β8) | -- | -- | |
1965β66 | 8β16 (3β9) | -- | -- | |
1966β67 | 5β18 (1β11) | -- | -- | Frank Truitt |
1967β68 | 9β15 (3β9) | -- | -- | |
1968β69 | 14β10 (6β6) | -- | -- | |
1969β70 | 7β17 (2β8) | -- | -- | |
1970β71 | 13β11 (4β6) | -- | -- | |
1971β72 | 7β17 (6β4) | -- | -- | |
1972β73 | 10β16 (5β7) | -- | -- | |
1973β74 | 9β17 (1β11) | -- | -- | |
1974β75 | 6β20 (3β11) | -- | -- | Rex Hughes |
1975β76 | 12β14 (7β9) | -- | -- | |
1976β77 | 8β19 (4β12) | -- | -- | |
1977β78 | 6β21 (4β12) | -- | -- | Rex Hughes/Mike Boyd |
1978β79 | 13β14 (7β9) | -- | -- | Ed Douma |
1979β80 | 10β17 (7β9) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1980β81 | 7β19 (5β11) | Did not qualify | -- | |
1981β82 | 10β16 (6β10) | Did not qualify | -- | |
1982β83 | 15β13 (9β9) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | Jim McDonald |
1983β84 | 15β14 (8β10) | 2β1; Lost in final | -- | |
1984β85 | 17β13 (11β7) | 1β1; Lost in semifinal | 0β1 in NIT | |
1985β86 | 11β16 (7β11) | Did not qualify | -- | |
1986β87 | 19β10 (11β5) | 2β1; Lost in final | -- | |
1987β88 | 10β18 (6β10) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1988β89 | 21β10 (12β4) | 2β1; Lost in final | 0β1 in NIT | |
1989β90 | 21β8 (12β4) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | 0β1 in NIT | |
1990β91 | 10β18 (4β12) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1991β92 | 9β19 (6β10) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1992β93 | 10β17 (7β11) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | Dave Grube |
1993β94 | 13β14 (8β10) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1994β95 | 8β19 (5β13) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1995β96 | 8β10 (14β13) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | |
1996β97 | 9β18 (7β11) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | -- | Gary Waters |
1997β98 | 13β17 (9β9) | 1β1; Lost in semifinal | -- | |
1998β99 | 23β7 (13β5) | 3β0; Won tournament | 0β1 in NCAA Tournament | |
1999β2000 | 23β8 (13β5) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinal | 2β1 in NIT | |
2000β01 | 24β10 (13β5) | 3β0; Won tournament | 1β1 in NCAA Tournament | |
2001β02 | 30β6 (17β1) | 3β0; Won tournament | 3β1 in NCAA Tournament | Stan Heath |
2002β03 | 22β9 (12β6) | 2β1; Lost in final | 0β1 in NIT | Jim Christian |
2003β04 | 22β8 (13β5) | 2β1; Lost in final | 0β1 in NIT | |
2004-05 | 20β13 (11β7) | 1β1; Lost in quarterfinal | 0β1 in NIT | |
2005β06 | 25β9 (15β3) | 3β0; Won tournament | 0β1 in NCAA Tournament | |
2006β07 | 21β11 (12β4) | 1β1; Lost in semifinal | -- | |
2007β08 | 28β7 (13β3) | 3β0; Won tournament | 0β1 in NCAA Tournament | |
2008-09 | 19β15 (10β6) | 1β1; Lost in quarterfinals | 0β1 in CIT | Geno Ford |
2009β10 | 24β10 (13β3) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinals | 1β1 in NIT | |
2010β11 | 25β12 (12β4) | 2β1; Lost in final | 2β1 in NIT | |
2011β12 | 21β12 (10β6) | 1β1; Lost in semifinals | 0β1 in CIT | Rob Senderoff |
2012β13 | 21β14 (9β7) | 1β1; Lost in semifinals | 1β1 in CIT | |
2013β14 | 16β16 (7β11) | 0β1; Lost in first round | -- | |
2014β15 | 23β12 (12β6) | 0β1; Lost in quarterfinals | 2β1 in CIT |
Overall conference titles shaded in ββ gold. East division titles shaded in ββ light yellow.
* - Overall record includes tournament and postseason results; Regular-season conference record contained in parentheses.
** - The MAC Tournament was first held in 1980. Beginning in 2000, it included all conference members.[31]
Post-season tournament results
MAC Tournament
Kent State has appeared in all but three Mid-American Conference tournaments since the tournament began in 1980 and through 2014 has an overall record of 34β28 in tournament play.[31] Through 2015, the Flashes have appeared in eleven MAC title games, winning five. The five tournament championships are third-most in conference history behind Ball State's seven and Ohio's six titles. The 11 title game appearances are tied for the most with Miami.[7]
Year | Seed | Location | Round | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1980 | 4th | Memorial Gym Β· Kent, Ohio | Quarterfinal | L 73β71 to (5) Ball State | ||
1983 | 6th | Centennial Hall Β· Toledo, Ohio | Quarterfinal | L 79β64 to (3) Toledo | ||
1984 | 7th | Rockford MetroCentre Β· Rockford, Illinois | Quarterfinal | W 57β53 over (2) Ohio | ||
Semifinal | W 67β58 over (6) Eastern Michigan | |||||
Final | L 42β40 to (1) Miami | |||||
1985 | 4th | Centennial Hall Β· Toledo, Ohio | Quarterfinal | W 85β74 over (2) Eastern Michigan | ||
Semifinal | L 57β55 to (1) Ohio | |||||
1987 | 2nd | Centennial Hall Β· Toledo, Ohio | Quarterfinal | W 84β75 over (2) Western Michigan | ||
Semifinal | W 66β59 over (3) Bowling Green | |||||
Final | L 64β63 to (1) Central Michigan | |||||
1988 | 7th | Rose Arena Β· Mt. Pleasant, Michigan | Quarterfinal | L 66β56 to (2) Central Michigan | ||
1989 | 2nd | Savage Hall Β· Toledo, Ohio | Quarterfinal | W 65β56 over (7) Bowling Green | ||
Semifinal | W 88β43 over (3) Toledo | |||||
Final | L 67β65 to (1) Ball State | |||||
1990 | 2nd | Cobo Arena Β· Detroit | Quarterfinal | L 82β65 to (7) Central Michigan | ||
1991 | 8th | Cobo Arena Β· Detroit | Quarterfinal | L 66β47 to (1) Eastern Michigan | ||
1992 | 6th | Cobo Arena Β· Detroit | Quarterfinal | L 61β57 to (3) Western Michigan | ||
1993 | 8th | Battelle Hall Β· Columbus, Ohio | Quarterfinal | L 77β57 to (1) Ball State | ||
1994 | 7th | Anderson Arena Β· Bowling Green, Ohio | Quarterfinal | L 68β58 to (2) Bowling Green | ||
1995 | 8th | Millett Hall Β· Oxford, Ohio | Quarterfinal | L 77β49 to (1) Miami | ||
1996 | 8th | Bowen Field House Β· Ypsilanti, Michigan | Quarterfinal | L 84β72 to (1) Eastern Michigan | ||
1997 | 7th | Millett Hall Β· Oxford, Ohio | Quarterfinal | L 75β65 to (2) Miami | ||
1998 | 6th | James A. Rhodes Arena Β· Akron, Ohio | Quarterfinal | W 95β88 over (3) Akron | ||
SeaGate Centre Β· Toledo, Ohio | Semifinal | L 64β59 to (7) Miami | ||||
1999 | 2nd | MAC Center Β· Kent, Ohio | Quarterfinal | W 79β76 over (7) Marshall | ||
SeaGate Centre Β· Toledo, Ohio | Semifinal | W 68β57 over (3) Ohio | ||||
Final | W 49β43 over (1) Miami | |||||
2000 | 3rd | Gund Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | L 69β68 to (6) Ohio | ||
2001 | 2nd | Gund Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 71β64 over (7) Bowling Green | ||
Semifinal | W 67β55 over (6) Ball State | |||||
Final | W 67β61 over (8) Miami | |||||
2002 | 1st | Gund Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 82β70 over (8) Marshall | ||
Semifinal | W 86β61 over (4) Toledo | |||||
Final | W 70β59 over (3) Bowling Green | |||||
2003 | 2nd | Gund Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 79β57 over (7) Marshall | ||
Semifinal | W 73β70 over (11) Ohio | |||||
Final | L 77β72 to (1) Central Michigan | |||||
2004 | 2nd | Gund Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 79β66 over (7) Bowling Green | ||
Semifinal | W 66β56 over (3) Miami | |||||
Final | L 77β66 to (1) Western Michigan | |||||
2005 | 5th | MAC Center Β· Kent, Ohio | Opening | W 91β60 over (12) Central Michigan | ||
Gund Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | L 62β55 to (4) Ohio | ||||
2006 | 1st | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 76β67 over (8) Buffalo | ||
Semifinal | W 72β59 over (5) Ohio | |||||
Final | W 71β66 over (7) Toledo | |||||
2007 | 3rd | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 75β66 over (6) Western Michigan | ||
Semifinal | L 61β54 to (2) Akron | |||||
2008 | 1st | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 77β57 over (8) Toledo | ||
Semifinal | W 49β47 over (5) Miami | |||||
Final | W 74β55 over (3) Akron | |||||
2009 | 6th | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Opening | W 64β61 over (11) Northern Illinois | ||
Quarterfinal | L 65β62 to (3) Buffalo | |||||
2010 | 1st | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | L 81β64 to (9) Ohio | ||
2011 | 1st | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 73β62 over (8) Buffalo | ||
Semifinal | W 79β68 over (4) Ball State | |||||
Final | L 66β65 (OT) to (6) Akron | |||||
2012 | 4th | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 76β72 over (8) Western Michigan | ||
Semifinal | L 78β74 to (1) Akron | |||||
2013 | 4th | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | W 70β68 over (8) Buffalo | ||
Semifinal | L 62β59 to (1) Akron | |||||
2014 | 9th | Millett Hall Β· Oxford, Ohio | First round | L 71β64 to (8) Miami | ||
2015 | 3rd | Quicken Loans Arena Β· Cleveland | Quarterfinal | L 53β51 to (7) Akron | ||
Totals: 11 finals appearances, 5 championships, 34β28 record in tournament |
NCAA Tournament
The Golden Flashes have appeared in five NCAA Tournaments. Their combined record is 4β5.
Year | Seed | Location | Region | Round | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1999 | 11th | FleetCenter Β· Boston | East | First | L 61β54 to (6) Temple |
2001 | 13th | Cox Arena Β· San Diego | West | First | W 77β73 over (4) Indiana |
Second | L 66β43 to (5) Cincinnati | ||||
2002 | 10th | BI-LO Center Β· Greenville, South Carolina | South | First | W 69β61 over (7) Oklahoma State |
Second | W 71β58 over (2) Alabama | ||||
Rupp Arena Β· Lexington, Kentucky | Sweet Sixteen | W 78β73 (OT) over (3) Pitt | |||
Elite Eight | L 81β69 to (5) Indiana | ||||
2006 | 12th | The Palace of Auburn Hills Β· Auburn Hills, Michigan | Oakland | First | L 79β64 to (5) Pitt |
2008 | 9th | Qwest Center Omaha Β· Omaha, Nebraska | Midwest | First | L 71β58 to (8) UNLV |
NIT
Kent State has appeared in nine National Invitation Tournaments. Their combined record is 5β9.
CIT
Kent State has appeared in four CollegeInsider.com Tournaments. Their combined record is 3β4.
Year | Location | Round | Result |
---|---|---|---|
2009 | Athletics Center O'rena Β· Rochester, Michigan | First | L 80β74 to Oakland |
2012 | G. B. Hodge Center Β· Spartanburg, South Carolina | First | L 73β58 to USC Upstate |
2013 | MAC Center Β· Kent, Ohio | First | W 73β71 over Fairfield |
Reitz Arena Β· Baltimore | Second | L 73β59 to Loyola (MD) | |
2015 | Murphy Center Β· Murfreesboro, Tennessee | First | W 68β56 over Middle Tennessee |
American Bank Center Β· Corpus Christi, Texas | Second | W 69β65 over Texas A&MβCorpus Christi | |
Walkup Skydome Β· Flagstaff, Arizona | Quarterfinals | L 74β73 OT to Northern Arizona |
Awards
|
|
|
All-Americans
All-America[33] | ||
---|---|---|
Name | Year | Team |
Anthony Grier | 1985 | Honorable Mention |
Antonio Gates | 2003 | Honorable Mention |
DeAndre Haynes | 2006 | Honorable Mention |
Al Fisher | 2008 | Honorable Mention |
Justin Greene | 2011 | Honorable Mention |
Academic All-America | ||
Dennis Odle | 1974 | Second Team |
Retired numbers
Kent State Golden Flashes retired numbers
|
||||
File:Kent State Shaw 10.png | File:Kent State Mitchell 12.png | File:Kent State Huffman 24.png | File:Kent State Thomas 40.png | File:Kent State Gates 44.png |
Demetric Shaw G, 1999β2002 |
Andrew Mitchell G, 1998β2002 |
Trevor Huffman G, 1998β2002 |
Eric Thomas SG, 1998β2002 |
Antonio Gates PF, 2001β2003 |
Rivalries
Kent State's main rivalry is with the Akron Zips, who are located just 14 miles from Kent. The rivalry includes other sports within the MAC, most prominently in football, but has been most competitive between the schools' men's basketball squads in recent years. Games at campus sites usually sell out due to the schools' close proximity with each other and the stakes attached to each game. During the 2006β07 and 2007β08 seasons the two teams faced each other three times each seasonβincluding back-to-back conference tournamentsβwith Akron winning all three meetings in 2007 and Kent State taking all three in 2008. The Zips eliminated the Flashes from the 2007 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament with a 61β54 semifinal win in Cleveland and Kent State routed the Zips 74β55 in the 2008 MAC Championship game in Cleveland to gain an automatic berth in the NCAA tournament bracket after narrowly taking both meetings in the regular season. In 2009, a 67β63 Kent State win at the MAC Center on March 9 prevented Akron from winning its first-ever MAC regular season title. In 2010, the teams played each other in a nationally-televised game at the James A. Rhodes Arena in Akron to conclude the season with each team coming into the game with 12β3 conference records and tied for first place in the MAC East Division and overall MAC standings. Kent State defeated the Zips 74β61 to claim the overall MAC title and top seed in the 2010 MAC Men's Basketball Tournament.[34] The Flashes repeated the feat the following season, defeating the Zips March 4, 2011 at the MAC Center 79-68 in a nationally televised game to clinch the overall MAC regular season title and top seed in the tournament.[35]
References
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β 5.0 5.1 5.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Kent State website incorrectly lists the score of Kent State's win as 76-71
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β 31.0 31.1 31.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The MAC Tournament did not include all conference teams until the 2000 tournament
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.[dead link]
- β 33.0 33.1 33.2 33.3 33.4 33.5 33.6 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- β Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.