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The 1940–41 NCAA men's basketball season began in December 1940, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded with the 1941 NCAA basketball tournament championship game on March 29, 1941, at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Missouri. The Wisconsin Badgers won their first NCAA national championship with a 39–34 victory over the Washington State Cougars.

Season headlines

Conference membership changes

School Former conference New conference
Sewanee Tigers Southeastern Conference Independent

Regular season

Conferences

Conference winners and tournaments

Conference Regular
season winner[5]
Conference
player of the year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (City)
Tournament
winner
Big Six Conference Iowa State & Kansas None selected No Tournament
Big Ten Conference Wisconsin None selected No Tournament
Border Conference Did not play as conference
Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League Dartmouth None selected No Tournament
Metropolitan New York Conference Did not play as conference
Missouri Valley Conference Creighton None selected No Tournament
Mountain States (Skyline) Conference Wyoming No Tournament
New England Conference Connecticut & Rhode Island State No Tournament
Pacific Coast Conference Washington State (North); Stanford (South) No Tournament;
Washington State defeated Stanford in best-of-three conference championship playoff series
Southeastern Conference Tennessee None selected 1941 SEC men's basketball tournament Jefferson County Armory,
(Louisville, Kentucky)
Tennessee
Southern Conference North Carolina None selected 1941 Southern Conference men's basketball tournament Thompson Gym
(Raleigh, North Carolina)
Duke[6]
Southwest Conference Arkansas None selected No Tournament

Conference standings

1940–41 Big Six Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Iowa State 7 3   .700 15 4   .789
Kansas 7 3   .700 12 6   .667
Nebraska 6 4   .600 8 10   .444
Oklahoma 5 5   .500 6 12   .333
Kansas State 3 7   .300 6 12   .333
Missouri 2 8   .200 6 10   .375
1940–41 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Wisconsin 11 1   .917 20 3   .870
Indiana 10 2   .833 17 3   .850
Illinois 7 5   .583 13 7   .650
Minnesota 7 5   .583 11 9   .550
Ohio State 7 5   .583 10 10   .500
Purdue 6 6   .500 13 7   .650
Michigan 5 7   .417 9 10   .474
Iowa 4 8   .333 12 8   .600
Northwestern 3 9   .250 7 11   .389
Chicago 0 12   .000 4 16   .200
1940–41 Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Dartmouth 10 2   .833 19 5   .792
Cornell 9 3   .750 17 6   .739
Columbia 8 4   .667 11 5   .688
Harvard 4 8   .333 10 9   .526
Yale 4 8   .333 10 12   .455
Princeton 4 8   .333 10 13   .435
Penn 3 9   .250 5 12   .294
1940–41 Missouri Valley Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Creighton 9 3   .750 18 7   .720
Oklahoma A&M 8 4   .667 18 7   .720
Tulsa 7 5   .583 12 9   .571
Washington University 6 6   .500 9 8   .529
Drake 6 6   .500 9 11   .450
Washburn 4 8   .333 7 12   .368
Saint Louis 2 10   .167 3 14   .176
1940–41 Mountain States Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Wyoming 10 2   .833 14 6   .700
Utah 9 3   .750 14 7   .667
Colorado 7 5   .583 10 6   .625
BYU 6 6   .500 14 9   .609
Colorado State 4 8   .333 10 9   .526
Denver 4 8   .333 8 9   .471
Utah State 2 10   .167 5 16   .238
1940–41 New England Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Connecticut 7 1   .875 14 2   .875
Rhode Island State 7 1   .875 21 4   .840
New Hampshire 3 5   .375 10 8   .556
Maine 2 6   .250 4 8   .333
Northeastern 1 7   .125 3 13   .188
1940–41 Pacific Coast Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
North
Washington State 13 3   .813 26 6   .813
Oregon State 9 7   .563 19 9   .679
Oregon 7 9   .438 18 18   .500
Washington 7 9   .438 12 13   .480
Idaho 4 12   .250 14 15   .483
South
Stanford 10 2   .833 21 5   .808
California 6 6   .500 15 12   .556
USC 6 6   .500 15 10   .600
UCLA 2 10   .167 6 20   .231
† Conference playoff series winner
1940–41 Southeastern Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Kentucky 8 1   .889 17 8   .680
Florida 6 2   .750 15 9   .625
Tennessee 8 3   .727 17 5   .773
Alabama 11 7   .611 14 8   .636
LSU 7 5   .583 9 9   .500
Auburn 6 5   .545 13 6   .684
Tulane 6 5   .545 8 6   .571
Mississippi State 6 6   .500 12 10   .545
Georgia 6 7   .462 13 11   .542
Georgia Tech 4 8   .333 8 11   .421
Vanderbilt 3 9   .250 8 9   .471
Ole Miss 2 15   .118 2 18   .100
† Regular-season championship and SEC Tournament winner
1940–41 Southern Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
North Carolina 14 1   .933 19 9   .679
South Carolina 8 3   .727 15 9   .625
William & Mary 8 3   .727 15 10   .600
Washington and Lee 9 4   .692 11 11   .500
Duke 8 4   .667 14 8   .636
VMI 8 4   .667 10 6   .625
Richmond 7 5   .583 11 10   .524
Wake Forest 7 6   .538 9 9   .500
Clemson 7 8   .467 8 14   .364
Davidson 5 7   .417 11 12   .478
North Carolina State 6 9   .400 6 9   .400
Virginia Tech 4 8   .333 8 13   .381
The Citadel 1 8   .111 5 13   .278
Furman 1 10   .091 4 13   .235
Maryland 0 13   .000 1 21   .045
Southern Conference Tournament winner
1940–41 Southwest Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Arkansas 12 0   1.000 20 3   .870
Rice 8 4   .667 18 6   .750
Texas 7 5   .583 14 10   .583
SMU 6 6   .500 10 10   .500
Baylor 6 6   .500 10 12   .455
Texas A&M 3 9   .250 7 13   .350
TCU 0 12   .000 5 16   .238

Major independents

A total of 73 college teams played as major independents. LIU (25–2) had the best winning percentage (.926) and finished with the most wins.[8]

1940–41 NCAA men's basketball independents standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
LIU   25 2   .926
Seton Hall   20 2   .909
Toledo   21 3   .875
Duquesne   17 3   .850
Western Kentucky State   22 4   .846
George Washington   18 4   .818
Loyola (Md.)   18 4   .818
Ohio   18 4   .818
Boston University   13 3   .813
Villanova   13 3   .813
Bradley   16 4   .800
Georgetown   16 4   .800
CCNY   17 5   .773
Notre Dame   17 5   .773
Texas Tech   19 6   .760
Penn State   15 5   .750
Virginia   18 6   .750
Syracuse   14 5   .737
St. Bonaventure   12 5   .706
NYU   13 6   .684
Pittsburgh   13 6   .684
Santa Clara   15 7   .682
St. Joseph's   12 6   .667
Niagara   13 7   .650
Brooklyn   11 6   .647
Michigan State Normal   11 6   .647
St. John's   11 6   .647
Navy   9 5   .643
DePaul   13 8   .619
Loyola (Ill.)   13 8   .619
Arizona   11 7   .611
Manhattan   11 7   .611
Marshall   14 9   .609
Texas State M&M   14 9   .609
Colgate   9 6   .600
Butler   13 9   .591
Xavier   13 9   .591
Bucknell   10 7   .588
Miami (Ohio)   10 7   .588
Indiana State   11 8   .579
La Salle   11 8   .579
Fordham   12 9   .571
Temple   12 9   .571
Muhlenberg   13 10   .565
West Virginia   13 10   .565
Western State Teachers   10 8   .556
Kent State   12 10   .545
New Mexico A&M   14 12   .538
Canisius   10 9   .526
Detroit   11 10   .524
Montana State   13 12   .520
Brown   10 10   .500
Montana   14 14   .500
Arizona State–Flagstaff   9 9   .500
Siena   9 9   .500
St. Francis (NY)   9 9   .500
Bowling Green State   10 11   .476
Wichita Municipal   9 11   .450
Lafayette   8 10   .444
Rutgers   8 10   .444
Arizona State–Tempe   8 11   .421
Dayton   9 14   .391
Holy Cross   4 7   .364
Cincinnati   6 12   .333
Saint Mary's   6 13   .316
Army   5 11   .313
Lehigh   5 12   .294
Valparaiso   4 12   .250
New Mexico   5 18   .217
Marquette   2 13   .133
San Francisco   2 13   .133
Louisville   2 14   .125
Sewanee   1 14   .067

Statistical leaders

Post-season tournaments

NCAA tournament

Semifinals & finals

National semifinals National Finals
      
Wisconsin 36
  Pittsburgh 30
  Wisconsin 39
  Washington State 34
  Arkansas 53
  Washington State 64

National Invitation tournament

Semifinals & finals

Semifinals Finals
      
  CCNY 43
  Ohio 45
  Ohio 42
  Long Island 56
  Seton Hall 26
  Long Island 49
  • Third Place – CCNY 42, Seton Hall 27

Awards

Consensus All-American teams

Consensus First Team
Player Class Team
John Adams Senior Arkansas
Gus Broberg Senior Dartmouth
Howard Engleman Senior Kansas
Gene Englund Senior Wisconsin
George Glamack Senior North Carolina


Consensus Second Team
Player Class Team
Frank Baumholtz Senior Ohio
Bob Kinney Junior Rice
Paul Lindemann Senior Washington State
Stan Modzelewski Junior Rhode Island State
Oscar Schectman Senior Long Island

Major player of the year awards

Other major awards

Coaching changes

References

  1. ^ Anonymous, "How the NCAA Overtook Its Rival, the NIT," Sport History Weekly, March 24, 2019 Accessed May 4, 2021
  2. ^ "Playing Rules History" (PDF). ncaa.org. NCAA. p. 11. Retrieved June 25, 2024.
  3. ^ Scott, Jon (November 9, 2010). "The truth behind the Helms Committee". Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  4. ^ ESPN, ed. (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. New York, NY: ESPN Books. pp. 526, 529–587. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
  5. ^ "2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book – Conferences Section" (PDF). NCAA. 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  6. ^ 2008–09 SoCon Men's Basketball Media Guide – Postseason Section, Southern Conference, retrieved 2009-02-09
  7. ^ "2017-18 Men's Basketball Media Guide". Pac-12 Conference. p. 72. Retrieved February 16, 2018.
  8. ^ "1940-41 Men's Independent Season Summary". Sports Reference. Retrieved August 2, 2024.
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