The Heartland Conference men's basketball tournament was the annual event that concluded the men's basketball season of the Heartland Conference, an NCAA Division II league that began play in 1999 and disbanded after the 2018–19 school year. The tournament, first held in 2003 and continuing through the conference's final basketball season of 2018–19, was a single-elimination tournament, with seeding based on regular-season records.[1]
Heartland Conference men's basketball tournament (defunct) | |
---|---|
Conference basketball championship | |
Sport | Basketball |
Conference | Heartland Conference |
Number of teams | 8 |
Format | Single-elimination tournament |
Current stadium | Union Multipurpose Activities Center |
Current location | Tulsa, OK |
Played | 2003–2019 |
Final champion | St. Edward's (3) |
Most championships | St. Mary's (TX) (6) |
Official website | Heartland men's basketball |
The winner, declared conference champion, received the Heartland's automatic bid to the NCAA Division II men's basketball tournament.
Following the 2018–19 school year, seven of the nine Heartland members joined the Lone Star Conference, with the other two joining the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association.
Tournament format
editFrom its establishment in 2003, the Heartland Conference tournament typically featured a simple four-team single-elimination tournament featuring the top four teams from the conference regular season standings. An additional opening round game, featuring the fourth and fifth best teams, was played only in 2006 and 2012. In 2010, two opening round games were played, with the third-seed playing the sixth-seed and the fourth-seed playing the fifth-seed.
In most years, the tournament was held in a gymnasium on the campus of one of the Heartland Conference member schools. The only exceptions were the 2007 and 2008 tournaments, played in the home arena of North Texas from Division I.
Results
editYear | Champions | Score | Runner-up | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | St. Mary's (TX) | 57–47 | Incarnate Word | Bill Greehey Arena (San Antonio, TX) |
2004 | Drury | 62–58 | St. Mary's (TX) | Weiser Gym (Springfield, MO) |
2005 | St. Mary's (TX) | 59–52 | Rockhurst | Bill Greehey Arena (San Antonio, TX) |
2006 | St. Edward's | 83–77 | Montana State–Billings | Recreation and Convocation Center (Austin, TX) |
2007 | St. Edward's | 85–73 | Incarnate Word | UNT Coliseum (Denton, TX) |
2008 | St. Mary's (TX) | 79–70 OT | St. Edward's | UNT Coliseum (Denton, TX) |
2009 | Incarnate Word | 67–55 | Dallas Baptist | Bill Greehey Arena (San Antonio, TX) |
2010 | Incarnate Word | 65–63 | St. Mary's (TX) | Bill Greehey Arena (San Antonio, TX) |
2011 | Texas A&M International | 86–67 | UT Permian Basin | Bill Greehey Arena (San Antonio, TX) |
2012 | St. Mary's (TX) | 84–70 | Arkansas–Fort Smith | Kinesiology and Convocation Building (Laredo, TX) |
2013 | St. Mary's (TX) | 85–76 | Arkansas–Fort Smith | Stubblefield Center (Fort Smith, AR) |
2014 | Texas A&M International | 76–72 | Texas–Permian Basin | Stubblefield Center (Fort Smith, AR) |
2015 | St. Mary's (TX) | 63–60 | St. Edward's | Bill Greehey Arena (San Antonio, TX) |
2016 | Dallas Baptist | 95–87 (OT) | Arkansas–Fort Smith | Union Multipurpose Activities Center (Tulsa, OK) |
2017 | Arkansas–Fort Smith | 68–59[2] | Dallas Baptist | Union Multipurpose Activities Center (Tulsa, OK) |
2018 | Dallas Baptist | 77–57 | Oklahoma Christian | Union Multipurpose Activities Center (Tulsa, OK) |
2019 | St. Edward's | 69–59 | Dallas Baptist | Union Multipurpose Activities Center (Tulsa, OK) |
Championship appearances by school
editSchool | Finals Record | Finals Appearances | Years |
---|---|---|---|
St. Mary's (TX) | 6–2 | 8 | 2003, 2005, 2008, 2012, 2013, 2015 |
Texas A&M International | 2–0 | 2 | 2011, 2014 |
St. Edward's | 3–2 | 5 | 2006, 2007, 2019 |
Incarnate Word | 2–2 | 4 | 2009, 2010 |
Dallas Baptist | 2–3 | 5 | 2016, 2018 |
Arkansas–Fort Smith | 1–3 | 4 | 2017 |
Drury | 1–0 | 1 | 2004 |
UT Permian Basin | 0–2 | 2 | |
Oklahoma Christian | 0–1 | 1 | |
Montana State–Billings | 0–1 | 1 | |
Rockhurst | 0–1 | 1 |
- Among the nine final members of the Heartland Conference, Lubbock Christian, Newman, and Rogers State never reached the tournament final.
- Among teams that left before the league's final 2018–19 season, Lincoln (MO), McMurry, Oklahoma Panhandle State, and Western New Mexico never reached the finals of the Heartland Conference tournament before departing the league.
- Schools highlighted in red left the Heartland Conference prior to its final 2018–19 season.
References
edit- ^ "Heartland Conference men's basketball tournament History" (PDF). Year-by-year records. Heartland Conference. 2016. Retrieved February 27, 2016.
- ^ "UA Fort Smith claims first Heartland Tournament title". Heartland Conference. 2017. Retrieved March 29, 2017.