2002 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament
















































2002 NCAA Division I
Men's Basketball Tournament

2002FinalFour.png
2002 Final Four Logo

Season 2001–02
Teams 65
Finals site
Georgia Dome
Atlanta
Champions
Maryland Terrapins (1st title, 1st title game,
2nd Final Four)
Runner-up
Indiana Hoosiers (6th title game,
8th Final Four)
Semifinalists


  • Kansas Jayhawks (11th Final Four)


  • Oklahoma Sooners (4th Final Four)

Winning coach
Gary Williams (1st title)
MOP
Juan Dixon (Maryland)
Attendance 720,433
Top scorers Juan Dixon Maryland
Jared Jeffries Indiana
(155 points)






NCAA Division I Men's Tournaments
«2001

2003»

The 2002 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament involved 65 schools playing in single-elimination play to determine the national champion of men's NCAA Division I college basketball. It began on March 12, 2002, and ended with the championship game on April 1 in Atlanta at the Georgia Dome. A total of 64 games were played.


This was the first year that the tournament used the so-called "pod" system, in which the eight first- and second-round sites are distributed around the four regionals. Teams were assigned to first round spots in order to minimize travel for as many teams as possible. The top seeds at each site were:




  • Sacramento: Oregon (M2), USC (S4)


  • Albuquerque: Arizona (W3), Ohio State (W4)


  • Dallas: Oklahoma (W2), Mississippi State (M3)


  • St. Louis: Kansas (M1), Kentucky (E4)


  • Chicago: Georgia (E3), Illinois (M4)


  • Pittsburgh: Cincinnati (W1), Pittsburgh (S3)

  • Washington, D.C.: Maryland (E1), Connecticut (E2)


  • Greenville: Duke (S1), Alabama (S2)


The Final Four consisted of Maryland, making their second consecutive appearance, Kansas, making their first appearance since 1993, Indiana, making their first appearance since 1992, and Oklahoma, making their first appearance since their national runner-up finish in 1988.


Maryland defeated Indiana 64-52 in the championship game to win their first ever national championship.


Juan Dixon of Maryland was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player.


For the second straight tournament, the Elite Eight featured at least one double-digit seed. South Region tenth-seed Kent State and West Region twelfth-seed Missouri played in their respective regional finals, with Kent State losing to Indiana and Missouri losing to Oklahoma.


This also marked the first time since 1987 that no team from the states of North Carolina nor Kentucky reached the Final Four.






2002 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament is located in the US

Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C.



Pittsburgh

Pittsburgh



Greenville

Greenville



Chicago

Chicago



St. Louis

St. Louis



Dallas

Dallas



Albuquerque

Albuquerque



Sacramento

Sacramento




2002 first and second rounds (note: the play-in game was held in Dayton, Ohio)




2002 NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament is located in the US

San Jose

San Jose



Madison

Madison



Lexington

Lexington



Syracuse

Syracuse



Atlanta

Atlanta




2002 Regionals (blue) and Final Four (red)


The following are the sites selected to host each round of the 2002 tournament:




Contents






  • 1 Opening Round


  • 2 First and second rounds


  • 3 Regionals


  • 4 Final Four


  • 5 Teams


  • 6 Bids by conference


  • 7 Final four


    • 7.1 National Semifinals


    • 7.2 Championship Game




  • 8 Bracket


    • 8.1 East Regional — Syracuse, New York


      • 8.1.1 Regional Final Summary




    • 8.2 Midwest Regional — Madison, Wisconsin


      • 8.2.1 Regional Final Summary




    • 8.3 South Regional — Lexington, Kentucky


      • 8.3.1 First Round summary


      • 8.3.2 Second Round summary


      • 8.3.3 Regional Semifinal summary


      • 8.3.4 Regional Final Summary




    • 8.4 West Regional — San Jose, California


      • 8.4.1 Regional Final Summary




    • 8.5 Final Four — Atlanta, Georgia




  • 9 Broadcast information


    • 9.1 CBS Sports announcers


    • 9.2 Westwood One announcers


    • 9.3 Local announcers


    • 9.4 Local announcers




  • 10 References





Opening Round



March 12



University of Dayton Arena, Dayton, Ohio (Host: University of Dayton)



First and second rounds



March 14 and 16



ARCO Arena, Sacramento, California (Host: University of the Pacific)


BI-LO Center, Greenville, South Carolina (Hosts: Southern Conference and Furman University)


Edward Jones Dome, St. Louis, Missouri (Host: Missouri Valley Conference)


University Arena, Albuquerque, New Mexico (Host: University of New Mexico)



March 15 and 17



American Airlines Center, Dallas (Host: Big 12 Conference)


MCI Center, Washington, D.C. (Host: Georgetown University)


Mellon Arena, Pittsburgh (Host: Duquesne University)


United Center, Chicago (Host: Big Ten Conference)



Regionals



March 21 and 23



South Regional, Rupp Arena, Lexington, Kentucky (Host: University of Kentucky)


West Regional, Compaq Center at San Jose, San Jose, California (Host: Santa Clara University)

March 22 and 24



East Regional, Carrier Dome, Syracuse, New York (Host: Syracuse University)


Midwest Regional, Kohl Center, Madison, Wisconsin (Host: University of Wisconsin–Madison)



Final Four



March 30 and April 1



Georgia Dome, Atlanta (Host: Georgia Institute of Technology)


For the second time, Atlanta was the host city of the Final Four, with the Georgia Dome becoming the 33rd host venue. The Georgia Dome also currently holds the distinction of being the most recent Final Four venue to close and be demolished, as it did so in 2017 after the opening of Mercedes-Benz Stadium, which will host the Final Four in 2020. The tournament included three new venues and two new host cities. The American Airlines Center in Dallas, which opened in 2001, replaced Reunion Arena as the city's primary winter sports venue. The Kohl Center on the campus of the University of Wisconsin brought the tournament back to Wisconsin's capital city for the first time since 1969, although it has not returned since. And the city of Greenville, South Carolina's Bi-Lo Center hosted for the first time in 2002; however, due to the Confederate flag controversy at the South Carolina State Capitol, the NCAA chose not to return to the arena until 2017, two years after the flag was removed. The 2002 tournament was the last time that the Pittsburgh Civic Arena (then called Mellon Arena) hosted the tournament; it closed in 2010 and games have since been played at its replacement, PPG Paints Arena.



Teams



















































































































































East Regional – Syracuse
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Maryland

Gary Williams

ACC
26-4
At-Large
#2

Connecticut

Jim Calhoun

Big East
24-6

Automatic
#3

Georgia

Jim Harrick

SEC
21-9
At-Large
#4

Kentucky

Tubby Smith

SEC
20-9
At-Large
#5

Marquette

Tom Crean

Conference USA
26-6
At-Large
#6

Texas Tech

Bob Knight

Big 12
23-8
At-Large
#7

North Carolina State

Herb Sendek

ACC
22-10
At-Large
#8

Wisconsin

Bo Ryan

Big Ten
18-12
At-Large
#9

St. John's

Mike Jarvis

Big East
20-11
At-Large
#10

Michigan State

Tom Izzo

Big Ten
19-11
At-Large
#11

Southern Illinois

Bruce Weber

Missouri Valley
26-7
At-Large
#12

Tulsa

John Phillips

WAC
26-6
At-Large
#13

Valparaiso

Homer Drew

Mid-Continent
25-7
Automatic
#14

Murray State

Tevester Anderson

OVC
19-12
Automatic
#15

Hampton

Steve Merfeld

MEAC
26-6
Automatic
#16

Siena

Rob Lanier

MAAC
16-18
Automatic

Alcorn State

Davey Whitney

SWAC
21-9
Automatic











































































































































Midwest Regional – Madison
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Kansas

Roy Williams

Big 12
29-3
At-Large
#2

Oregon

Ernie Kent

Pac-10
23-8
At-Large
#3

Mississippi State

Rick Stansbury

SEC
26-7

Automatic
#4

Illinois

Bill Self

Big Ten
24-8
At-Large
#5

Florida

Billy Donovan

SEC
22-8
At-Large
#6

Texas

Rick Barnes

Big 12
20-11
At-Large
#7

Wake Forest

Skip Prosser

ACC
20-12
At-Large
#8

Stanford

Mike Montgomery

Pac-10
19-9
At-Large
#9

Western Kentucky

Dennis Felton

Sun Belt
28-3
Automatic
#10

Pepperdine

Paul Westphal

WCC
22-8
At-Large
#11

Boston College

Al Skinner

Big East
20-11
At-Large
#12

Creighton

Dana Altman

Missouri Valley
22-8
Automatic
#13

San Diego State

Steve Fisher

Mountain West
21-11
Automatic
#14

McNeese State

Tic Price

Southland
21-8
Automatic
#15

Montana

Don Holst

Big Sky
16-14
Automatic
#16

Holy Cross

Ralph Willard

Patriot
18-14
Automatic











































































































































South Regional – Lexington
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Duke

Mike Krzyzewski

ACC
29-3

Automatic
#2

Alabama

Mark Gottfried

SEC
26-7
At-Large
#3

Pittsburgh

Ben Howland

Big East
27-5
At-Large
#4

USC

Henry Bibby

Pac-10
22-9
At-Large
#5

Indiana

Mike Davis

Big Ten
20-11
At-Large
#6

California

Ben Braun

Pac-10
22-8
At-Large
#7

Oklahoma State

Eddie Sutton

Big 12
23-8
At-Large
#8

Notre Dame

Mike Brey

Big East
21-10
At-Large
#9

Charlotte

Bobby Lutz

Conference USA
18-11
At-Large
#10

Kent State

Stan Heath

MAC
27-5
Automatic
#11

Pennsylvania

Fran Dunphy

Ivy League
25-6
Automatic
#12

Utah

Rick Majerus

Mountain West
21-8
At-Large
#13

UNC Wilmington

Jerry Wainwright

CAA
22-9
Automatic
#14

Central Connecticut State

Howie Dickenman

NEC
27-4
Automatic
#15

Florida Atlantic

Sidney Green

Atlantic Sun
19-11
Automatic
#16

Winthrop

Gregg Marshall

Big South
19-11
Automatic











































































































































West Regional – San Jose
Seed
School
Coach
Conference
Record
Bid Type
#1

Cincinnati

Bob Huggins

Conference USA
30-3
Automatic
#2

Oklahoma

Kelvin Sampson

Big 12
27-4

Automatic
#3

Arizona

Lute Olson

Pac-10
22-9

Automatic
#4

Ohio State

Jim O'Brien

Big Ten
23-7

Automatic
#5

Miami (FL)

Perry Clark

Big East
24-7
At-Large
#6

Gonzaga

Mark Few

WCC
29-3
Automatic
#7

Xavier

Thad Matta

Atlantic 10
25-5
Automatic
#8

UCLA

Steve Lavin

Pac-10
19-11
At-Large
#9

Ole Miss

Rod Barnes

SEC
20-10
At-Large
#10

Hawaii

Riley Wallace

WAC
27-5
Automatic
#11

Wyoming

Steve McClain

Mountain West
21-8
At-Large
#12

Missouri

Quin Snyder

Big 12
21-11
At-Large
#13

Davidson

Bob McKillop

Southern
21-9
Automatic
#14

UC Santa Barbara

Bob Williams

Big West
20-10
Automatic
#15

Illinois-Chicago

Jimmy Collins

Horizon
20-13
Automatic
#16

Boston University

Dennis Wolff

America East
22-9
Automatic


Bids by conference
































Bids by Conference
Bids
Conference(s)
6

Big 12, Big East, Pac-10, SEC
5

Big Ten
4

ACC
3

C-USA, Mountain West
2

Missouri Valley, WAC, WCC
1
20 others


Final four


At Georgia Dome, Atlanta



National Semifinals


  • March 30, 2002

    • Maryland (E1) 97, Kansas (M1) 88

    For the second straight year the Maryland Terrapins earned a bid to the Final Four. This time they would take advantage of their trip. After falling behind 13-2 to the Kansas Jayhawks to begin the game, Maryland stormed to a 44-37 lead at halftime. They expanded their lead to 20, 83-63, with 6:11 left in the game. Roy Williams' Kansas squad did not quit and closed the gap to 4 with under a minute remaining, but the Terps survived to advance to the championship, 97-88. Maryland senior Juan Dixon led the contest in scoring with 33.[1]


    • Indiana (S5) 73, Oklahoma (W2) 64


    Mike Davis's Indiana Hoosiers continued their Cinderella ride in the NCAA Tournament by defeating another higher ranked team, the Oklahoma Sooners. Oklahoma led most of the first half, and took a 34-30 lead into halftime. However, with the score 60-60 late in the 2nd half Indiana broke ahead for good with an easy bucket from Jeff Newton, who led the Hoosiers with 19 points. The Hoosiers outscored the Sooners by 13 in the 2nd half and advanced to the championship game with a 73-64 victory. Oklahoma was coached by Kelvin Sampson, who later in his career would succeed Davis as IU head coach.[2]



Championship Game



  • April 1, 2002

    • Maryland (E1) 64, Indiana (S5) 52

    The Maryland Terrapins completed the task they set out to do one year earlier by defeating the Indiana Hoosiers 64-52. Maryland led virtually the entire game except for a brief point with 9:52 left in the basketball game when Indiana took a 44-42 lead. Maryland answered the Hoosier run and ended the game with a 22-8 run to bring home the school's first and coach Gary Williams' only men's basketball National Championship. Senior Juan Dixon was named the tournament's Most Outstanding Player (MOP).[3]



Bracket



East Regional — Syracuse, New York












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
                       
1

Maryland

85
16
Siena
70
1

Maryland

87

Washington, D.C.
8
Wisconsin
57
8

Wisconsin

80
9
St. John's
70
1

Maryland

78

4
Kentucky
68
5
Marquette
69
12

Tulsa

71
12
Tulsa
82

St. Louis
4

Kentucky

87
4

Kentucky

83
13
Valparaiso
68
1

Maryland

90

2
Connecticut
82
6
Texas Tech
68
11

Southern Illinois

76
11

Southern Illinois

77

Chicago
3
Georgia
75
3

Georgia

85
14
Murray State
68
11
Southern Illinois
59

2

Connecticut

71
7

North Carolina State

69
10
Michigan State
58
7
North Carolina State
74

Washington, D.C.
2

Connecticut

77
2

Connecticut

78
15
Hampton
67


Regional Final Summary




CBS



Sunday, March 24



box score










#1 Maryland Terrapins 90, #2 Connecticut Huskies 82

Pts: L. Baxter – 29
Rebs: L. Baxter – 9
Asts: S. Blake – 6

Pts: C. Butler – 33
Rebs: C. Butler – 7
Asts: C. Butler – 4
Halftime Score: Maryland, 44-37


Carrier Dome – Syracuse, New York
Attendance: 29,252





Midwest Regional — Madison, Wisconsin












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
                       
1

Kansas

70
16
Holy Cross
59
1

Kansas

86

St. Louis
8
Stanford
63
8

Stanford

84
9
Western Kentucky
68
1

Kansas

73

4
Illinois
69
5
Florida
82
12

Creighton

83**
12
Creighton
60

Chicago
4

Illinois

72
4

Illinois

93
13
San Diego State
64
1

Kansas

104

2
Oregon
86
6

Texas

70
11
Boston College
57
6

Texas

68

Dallas
3
Mississippi State
64
3

Mississippi State

70
14
McNeese State
58
6
Texas
70

2

Oregon

72
7

Wake Forest

83
10
Pepperdine
74
7
Wake Forest
87

Sacramento
2

Oregon

92
2

Oregon

81
15
Montana
62


Regional Final Summary




CBS



Sunday, March 24



box score










#1 Kansas Jayhawks 104, #2 Oregon Ducks 86

Pts: N. Collison – 25
Rebs: D. Gooden – 20
Asts: A. Miles – 8

Pts: F. Jones – 32
Rebs: R. Johnson – 10
Asts: L. Ridnour – 7
Halftime Score: Kansas, 48-42


Kohl Center – Madison, Wisconsin
Attendance: 16,310
Referees: Jim Burr, Leslie Jones, Tom Lopes





South Regional — Lexington, Kentucky












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
                       
1

Duke

84
16
Winthrop
37
1

Duke

84

Greenville
8
Notre Dame
77
8

Notre Dame

82
9
Charlotte
63
1
Duke
73

5

Indiana

74
5

Indiana

75
12
Utah
56
5

Indiana

76

Sacramento
13
UNC-Wilmington
67
4
Southern California
89
13

UNC-Wilmington

93*
5

Indiana

81

10
Kent State
69
6

California

82
11
Pennsylvania
75
6
California
50

Pittsburgh
3

Pittsburgh

63
3

Pittsburgh

71
14
Central Connecticut State
54
3
Pittsburgh
73

10

Kent State

78
7
Oklahoma State
61
10

Kent State

69
10

Kent State

71

Greenville
2
Alabama
58
2

Alabama

86
15
Florida Atlantic
78


First Round summary




CBS



Thursday, March 14
12:20 p.m. EST



box score










#10 Kent State Golden Flashes 69, #7 Oklahoma State Cowboys 61

Pts: D. Shaw – 21
Rebs: A. Mitchell – 8
Asts: A. Mitchell – 5

Pts: F. Jonzen – 19
Rebs: I. McFarlin – 11
Asts: C. Gadsen – 5
Halftime Score: Kent State, 36-27


BI-LO Center – Greenville, South Carolina
Attendance: 13,194
Referees: Tim Higgins, Chris Rastatter, Bob Staffen





Second Round summary




CBS



Saturday, March 16
3:36 p.m. EST



box score










#10 Kent State Golden Flashes 71, #2 Alabama Crimson Tide 58

Pts: T. Huffman – 20
Rebs: A. Gates – 9
Asts: T. Huffman – 5

Pts: R. Grizzard – 17
Rebs: E. Dudley – 10
Asts: M. Williams – 4
Halftime Score: Kent State, 36-24


BI-LO Center – Greenville, South Carolina
Attendance: 13,962
Referees: Mark Whitehead, Reggie Greenwood, Rick Hartzell





Regional Semifinal summary




CBS



Thursday, March 21
10:15 p.m. EST



box score










#10 Kent State Golden Flashes 78, #3 Pittsburgh Panthers 73 (OT)

Pts: A. Gates – 22
Rebs: A. Gates – 8
Asts: A. Gates – 4

Pts: B. Knight, J. Page – 18
Rebs: J. Brown, C. Troutman – 8
Asts: B. Knight – 6
Halftime Score: Kent State, 29-23
End of Regulation: 66-66


Rupp Arena – Lexington, Kentucky
Attendance: 22,338
Referees: Stanley Reynolds, Duke Edsall, John Higgins





Regional Final Summary




CBS



Saturday, March 23
7:00 p.m. EST



box score










#5 Indiana Hoosiers 81, #10 Kent State Golden Flashes 69

Pts: D. Fife – 17
Rebs: J. Jeffries – 7
Asts: T. Coverdale, K. Hornsby – 7

Pts: A. Gates – 22
Rebs: A. Gates, D. Shaw – 8
Asts: T. Huffman – 4
Halftime Score: Indiana, 40-28


Rupp Arena – Lexington, Kentucky
Attendance: 22,435
Referees: Mark Whitehead, Scott Thornley, Tom Nunez





West Regional — San Jose, California












































































































































































































































































































































First round
Second round
Regional Semifinals
Regional Finals
                       
1

Cincinnati

90
16
Boston University
52
1
Cincinnati
101

Pittsburgh
8

UCLA

105
8

UCLA

80
9
Ole Miss
58
8
UCLA
73

12

Missouri

82
5
Miami (FL)
80
12

Missouri

93
12

Missouri

83

Albuquerque
4
Ohio State
67
4

Ohio State

69
13
Davidson
64
12
Missouri
75

2

Oklahoma

81
6
Gonzaga
66
11

Wyoming

73
11
Wyoming
60

Albuquerque
3

Arizona

68
3

Arizona

86
14
UC-Santa Barbara
81
3
Arizona
67

2

Oklahoma

88
7

Xavier

70
10
Hawaii
58
7
Xavier
65

Dallas
2

Oklahoma

78
2

Oklahoma

71
15
Illinois-Chicago
63


Regional Final Summary




CBS



Saturday, March 23



box score










#2 Oklahoma Sooners 81, #12 Missouri Tigers 75

Pts: H. Price – 18
Rebs: Q. White, D, Selvy – 7
Asts: Q. White – 7

Pts: R. Paulding – 22
Rebs: T. Bryant – 9
Asts: W. Stokes, R. Paulding – 4
Halftime Score: Oklahoma, 41-32


Compaq Center – San Jose, California
Attendance: 18,040





Final Four — Atlanta, Georgia


















































































National Semifinals
National Championship Game
           
E1

Maryland

97
M1
Kansas
88
E1

Maryland

64

S5
Indiana
52
S5

Indiana

73
W2
Oklahoma
64


Broadcast information


ESPN broadcast the opening-round game, then turned coverage over to CBS Sports for the remaining 63 games. They were carried on a regional basis until the "Elite Eight", at which point all games were shown nationally.


Westwood One had exclusive radio coverage.



CBS Sports announcers




  • Jim Nantz and Billy Packer – First & Second Round at Washington, D.C.; East Regional at Syracuse, New York; Final Four at Atlanta, Georgia


  • Dick Enberg and Matt Guokas – First & Second Round at St. Louis, Missouri; South Regional at Lexington, Kentucky


  • Verne Lundquist and Bill Raftery – First & Second Round at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Midwest Regional at Madison, Wisconsin


  • Gus Johnson and Dan Bonner – First & Second Round at Albuquerque, New Mexico; West Regional at San Jose, California


  • Kevin Harlan and Jon Sundvold – First & Second Round at Greenville, South Carolina


  • Ian Eagle and Jim Spanarkel – First & Second Round at Sacramento, California


  • Craig Bolerjack and Bob Wenzel – First & Second Round at Dallas, Texas


  • Tim Brando and Eddie Fogler – First & Second Round at Chicago, Illinois



Westwood One announcers



  • Marty Brennaman and Larry Conley, 1st and 2nd Rounds at Greenville, South Carolina and South Regionals at Lexington, Kentucky


Local announcers















































































Region
Seed
Teams
Flagship station
Play-by-play announcer
Color analyst(s)
S
1
S
2
S
3
S
4
S
5
S
6
S
7
S
8
S
9
S
10

Kent State

WNIR–FM 100.1
Bill Needle

S
11
S
12
S
13
S
14
S
15
S
16


Local announcers















































































Region
Seed
Teams
Flagship station
Play-by-play announcer
Color analyst(s)
S
1
S
2
S
3
S
4
S
5
S
6
S
7
S
8
S
9
S
10

Kent State

WNIR–FM 100.1
Bill Needle

S
11
S
12
S
13
S
14
S
15
S
16


References





  1. ^ CNN Sports Illustrated. "2002 NCAA National Semifinals: (E1) Maryland 97, (MW1) Kansas 88". CNNSI.com. Retrieved 2008-03-06..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ CNN Sports Illustrated. "2002 NCAA National Semifinals: (S5) Indiana 73, (W2) Oklahoma 64". CNNSI.com. Retrieved 2008-03-06.


  3. ^ CNN Sports Illustrated. "2002 NCAA National Championship: (E1) Maryland 64, (S5) Indiana 52". CNNSI.com. Retrieved 2008-03-06.











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