Teams
Region | Seed | Team | Coach | Finished | Final Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
East | ||||||
East | 1 | Syracuse | Jim Boeheim | Sweet Sixteen | 5 Iowa | L 88-77 |
East | 2 | Maryland | Lefty Driesell | Sweet Sixteen | 3 Georgetown | L 74-68 |
East | 3 | Georgetown | John Thompson | Regional Runner-up | 5 Iowa | L 81-80 |
East | 4 | North Carolina State | Norm Sloan | Round of 32 | 5 Iowa | L 77-64 |
East | 5 | Iowa | Lute Olson | Fourth Place | 2 Purdue | L 75-58 |
East | 6 | Iona | Jim Valvano | Round of 32 | 3 Georgetown | L 74-71 |
East | 7 | Tennessee | Don DeVoe | Round of 32 | 2 Maryland | L 86-75 |
East | 8 | Villanova | Rollie Massimino | Round of 32 | 1 Syracuse | L 97-83 |
East | 9 | Marquette | Hank Raymonds | Round of 48 | 8 Villanova | L 77-59 |
East | 10 | Furman | Eddie Holbrook | Round of 48 | 7 Tennessee | L 80-69 |
East | 11 | Holy Cross | George Blaney | Round of 48 | 6 Iona | L 84-78 |
East | 12 | Virginia Commonwealth | J. D. Barnett | Round of 48 | 5 Iowa | L 86-72 |
Mideast | ||||||
Mideast | 1 | Kentucky | Joe B. Hall | Sweet Sixteen | 4 Duke | L 55-54 |
Mideast | 2 | Indiana | Bob Knight | Sweet Sixteen | 6 Purdue | L 76-69 |
Mideast | 3 | St. John's | Lou Carnesecca | Round of 32 | 6 Purdue | L 87-72 |
Mideast | 4 | Duke | Bill E. Foster | Regional Runner-up | 6 Purdue | L 68-60 |
Mideast | 5 | Washington State | George Raveling | Round of 48 | 12 Penn | L 62-55 |
Mideast | 6 | Purdue | Lee Rose | Third Place | 8 Iowa | W 75-58 |
Mideast | 7 | Virginia Tech | Charles Moir | Round of 32 | 2 Indiana | L 68-59 |
Mideast | 8 | Florida State | Joe Williams | Round of 32 | 1 Kentucky | L 97-78 |
Mideast | 9 | Toledo | Bob Nichols | Round of 48 | 8 Florida State | L 94-91 |
Mideast | 10 | Western Kentucky | Gene Keady | Round of 48 | 7 Virginia Tech | L 89-85 |
Mideast | 11 | La Salle | Lefty Ervin | Round of 48 | 6 Purdue | L 90-82 |
Mideast | 12 | Penn | Bob Weinhauer | Round of 32 | 4 Duke | L 52-42 |
Midwest | ||||||
Midwest | 1 | LSU | Dale Brown | Regional Runner-up | 2 Louisville | L 86-66 |
Midwest | 2 | Louisville | Denny Crum | Champion | 8 UCLA | W 59-54 |
Midwest | 3 | North Carolina | Dean Smith | Round of 32 | 6 Texas A&M | L 78-61 |
Midwest | 4 | Notre Dame | Digger Phelps | Round of 32 | 5 Missouri | L 87-84 |
Midwest | 5 | Missouri | Norm Stewart | Sweet Sixteen | 1 LSU | L 68-63 |
Midwest | 6 | Texas A&M | Shelby Metcalf | Sweet Sixteen | 2 Louisville | L 66-55 |
Midwest | 7 | Kansas State | Jack Hartman | Round of 32 | 2 Louisville | L 71-69 |
Midwest | 8 | Alcorn State | Davey Whitney | Round of 32 | 1 LSU | L 98-88 |
Midwest | 9 | South Alabama | Cliff Ellis | Round of 48 | 8 Alcorn State | L 70-62 |
Midwest | 10 | Arkansas | Eddie Sutton | Round of 48 | 7 Kansas State | L 71-53 |
Midwest | 11 | Bradley | Dick Versace | Round of 48 | 6 Texas A&M | L 55-53 |
Midwest | 12 | San Jose State | Bill Berry | Round of 48 | 5 Missouri | L 61-51 |
West | ||||||
West | 1 | DePaul | Ray Meyer | Round of 32 | 8 UCLA | L 77-71 |
West | 2 | Oregon State | Ralph Miller | Round of 32 | 10 Lamar | L 81-77 |
West | 3 | BYU | Frank Arnold | Round of 32 | 6 Clemson | L 71-66 |
West | 4 | Ohio State | Eldon Miller | Sweet Sixteen | 8 UCLA | L 72-68 |
West | 5 | Arizona State | Ned Wulk | Round of 32 | 4 Ohio State | L 89-75 |
West | 6 | Clemson | Bill Foster | Regional Runner-up | 8 UCLA | L 85-74 |
West | 7 | Weber State | Neil McCarthy | Round of 48 | 10 Lamar | L 87-86 |
West | 8 | UCLA | Larry Brown | Runner Up | 2 Louisville | L 59-54 |
West | 9 | Old Dominion | Paul Webb | Round of 48 | 8 UCLA | L 87-74 |
West | 10 | Lamar | Billy Tubbs | Sweet Sixteen | 6 Clemson | L 74-66 |
West | 11 | Utah State | Rod Tueller | Round of 48 | 6 Clemson | L 76-73 |
West | 12 | Loyola Marymount | Ron Jacobs | Round of 48 | 5 Arizona State | L 99-71 |
Read more about this topic: 1980 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament
Famous quotes containing the word teams:
“A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not studying a profession, for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)