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The Ivy League men's basketball is the conference college basketball championship of the NCAA Division I Ivy League. The eight schools compete annually in men's basketball.
Ivy League Men's Basketball Champions | |
---|---|
Conference | Ivy League |
Number of teams | 8 |
Last contest | 2023–24 |
Current champion | Princeton |
Most championships | Princeton (29)[1] |
Official website | ivyleague.com/mbball |
The following is a list of past conference champions and a list of notable players. At the conclusion of the regular season the team with the best league record is crowned league champion. If two or more teams are tied for first place at the end of the season the league title is shared. Prior to 2017, the league champion received the league's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.
In the event of a shared title a playoff would be held to determine the league's automatic bid. Beginning in 2017 a tournament consisting of the top four teams in the standings is held to determine the recipient of the automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. However, the league championship is still based on regular season standings. The Ivy League was the last Division I conference without a tournament following the regular season.[2]
Princeton was the 2023-2024 league regular season champions, and Yale won in the 2023-2024 tournament,[3]
Championships by season
editIvy League Champions
editSource:[4]
Season | Champion/s | Notes |
---|---|---|
2023–24 | Princeton | Yale won tournament |
2022–23 | Princeton and Yale | Princeton won tournament |
2021–22 | Princeton | Yale won the tournament |
2020–21 | none | Ivy League Men's Basketball season was canceled due to COVID-19 |
2019–20 | Yale | Ivy League Men's Basketball Tournament was canceled due to COVID-19 |
2018–19 | Yale and Harvard | Yale won tournament |
2017–18 | Penn and Harvard | Penn won tournament |
2016–17 | Princeton | |
2015–16 | Yale | |
2014–15 | Harvard and Yale | Harvard won playoff game for league's automatic bid to NCAA tournament |
2013–14 | Harvard | |
2012–13 | Harvard | |
2011–12 | Harvard | |
2010–11 | Harvard and Princeton | Princeton won playoff game for league's automatic bid to NCAA tournament |
2009–10 | Cornell | |
2008–09 | Cornell | |
2007–08 | Cornell | |
2006–07 | Pennsylvania | |
2005–06 | Pennsylvania | |
2004–05 | Pennsylvania | |
2003–04 | Princeton | |
2002–03 | Pennsylvania | |
2001–02 | Pennsylvania, Yale, Princeton | Penn won playoff for league's automatic bid to NCAA tournament |
2000–01 | Princeton | |
1999–00 | Pennsylvania | |
1998–99 | Pennsylvania | |
1997–98 | Princeton | |
1996–97 | Princeton | |
1995–96 | Princeton and Pennsylvania | Princeton won playoff game for league's automatic bid to NCAA tournament |
1994–95 | Pennsylvania | |
1993–94 | Pennsylvania | |
1992–93 | Pennsylvania | |
1991–92 | Princeton | |
1990-91 | Princeton | |
1989-90 | Princeton | |
1988-89 | Princeton | |
1987-88 | Cornell |
Ivy League tournament champions
editThe Ivy League began a post-season tournament in 2017. The winner receives the league's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament. In 2020, the Ivy League canceled its tournament during the COVID-19 pandemic and awarded Yale an automatic bid to the NCAA tournament, the latter of which was later also cancelled. In 2021, the Ivy League did not play regular season matchups during the COVID-19 pandemic. The 2020 and 2021 seasons thus are omitted.
Year | Champion | Seed | Score | Runner-up | Seed | MVP | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Princeton | 1 | 71-59 | Yale | 3 | Myles Stephens, Princeton | Palestra, University of Pennsylvania |
2018 | Pennsylvania | 2 | 68-65 | Harvard | 1 | A.J. Brodeur, Penn | Palestra, University of Pennsylvania |
2019 | Yale | 2 | 97-85 | Harvard | 1 | Alex Copeland, Yale | Payne Whitney Gymnasium, Yale University |
2022 | Yale | 2 | 66-64 | Princeton | 1 | Azar Swain, Yale | Lavietes Pavilion, Harvard University |
2023 | Princeton | 2 | 74-65 | Yale | 1 | Tosan Evbuomwan, Princeton | Jadwin Gymnasium, Princeton University |
2024 | Yale | 2 | 62-61 | Brown | 4 | Danny Wolf, Yale | Levien Gymnasium, Columbia University |
NCAA Tournament Bids
editBids | School | Last bid | Last win | Last Sweet 16 |
Last Elite 8 |
Last Final 4 |
Last final |
Last champ. |
Record |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
26 | Princeton | 2023 | 2023 | 2023 | 1965 | 1965 | 14-29 | ||
24 | Pennsylvania | 2018 | 1994 | 1979 | 1979 | 1979 | 13-26 | ||
7 | Dartmouth | 1959 | 1958 | 1958 | 1958 | 1944 | 1944 | 10-7 | |
7 | Yale | 2024 | 2024 | 2-5 | |||||
5 | Cornell | 2010 | 2010 | 2010 | 2-6 | ||||
5 | Harvard | 2015 | 2014 | 2-6 | |||||
3 | Columbia | 1968 | 1968 | 1968 | 2-4 | ||||
2 | Brown | 1986 | 0-2 | ||||||
Total: 76 | 43-85 |
Ivy League NBA players
editThese players attended one of the eight Ivy League institutions and had professional careers in the National Basketball Association.[5]
References
edit- ^ 2023-24 Men's basketball record book on Ivy League
- ^ "The Ivy League Adds Men's, Women's Basketball Tournaments Beginning in 2017 - Ivy League". Ivyleaguesports.com. 2016-03-10. Archived from the original on 2016-12-30. Retrieved 2017-01-22.
- ^ https://ivyleague.com/news/2024/3/9/mens-basketball-tigers-win-third-straight-ivy-title.aspx [bare URL]
- ^ "Ivy League" (PDF). Ivyleaguesports.com. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
- ^ Plutnicki, Ken (2017-02-07). "For Lin, a Rare Harvard Career Path". The New York Times.