The 1972–73 NCAA University Division men's basketball season was a historic season in college basketball, marked by the dominance of the UCLA Bruins, coached by the legendary John Wooden. Here’s an overview of the key highlights and milestones:
UCLA won its seventh consecutive NCAA Championship and its ninth overall under John Wooden.
The Bruins completed the season with a 30–0 record, extending their winning streak to 75 games, a record that remains one of the most remarkable in sports history.
The team was led by Bill Walton, who was named the NCAA Tournament's Most Outstanding Player.
NCAA Tournament:
The 1973 NCAA Tournament featured 25 teams.
The Final Four was held at St. Louis Arena in St. Louis, Missouri.
UCLA defeated the Memphis State Tigers (now the University of Memphis) in the championship game, 87–66.
Bill Walton delivered an iconic performance in the championship game, scoring 44 points on 21-of-22 shooting, one of the greatest individual performances in NCAA history.
Rule Changes:
The 1972–73 season was the first in which the NCAA allowed freshmen to play varsity basketball at all schools, except in the University Division's football and basketball programs.
Awards:
Naismith College Player of the Year: Bill Walton (UCLA).
Freshmen became eligible to play on varsity teams.[3] Previously, they had played on separate freshman teams.
The free throw on a common foul for the first six personal fouls in a half was eliminated. Instead, the team that was fouled threw the ball in from out of bounds after each such foul.[3]
UCLA went undefeated (30–0) for the second straight season and won its seventh NCAA championship in a row, ninth overall, and ninth in 10 seasons. In the Pacific 8 Conference, it also won its seventh of what would ultimately be 13 consecutive conference titles.
This was the last season for the NCAA University Division as the subdivision of the NCAA made up of colleges and universities competing at the highest level of college sports, as well as for the NCAA College Division for colleges and universities competing at a lower level. After the season, the NCAA replaced the University Division with Division I and the College Division with Division II for schools awarding limited athletic scholarships and Division III for schools offering no athletic scholarships.[4]
The Final Four was played on Saturday and Monday for the first time.[5]
The NCAA title game was televised during prime time for the first time. NBC aired the game on March 26, 1973.[5]
For the first time, television broadcast rights fees for an NCAA tournament totaled more than $1 million.[5]
† Regular-season championship winner * – Played as non-major program; conference record adjusted to 10–2. ** – Played as non-major program; conference record adjusted to 10–2. *** – Disputed conference record 6–6. **** – Disputed conference record 4–8. ***** – Disputed conference record 2–10. ****** – Disputed conference record 2–10. ******* – Disputed record 12–0 conference, 24–5 overall. Rankings from AP Poll[19]