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The 2024–25 Gonzaga Bulldogs men's basketball team represents Gonzaga University, located in Spokane, Washington, in the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The team, also unofficially nicknamed the "Zags", is led by head coach Mark Few , in his 26th season as head coach, and plays home games at the on-campus McCarthey Athletic ...
The 2025 West Coast Conference men's basketball Tournament will be the postseason men's basketball tournament for the West Coast Conference for the 2024–25 season. All tournament games will be played at Orleans Arena in the Las Vegas-area community of Paradise, Nevada, from March 6–11, 2025.
Two human polls make up the 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball rankings, the AP poll and the Coaches Poll, in addition to various publications' preseason polls. Legend [ edit ]
The 2024–25 NCAA Division I men's basketball season began on November 4, 2024. The regular season will end on March 16, 2025, with the 2025 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament beginning with the First Four on March 18 and ending with the championship game at the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, on April 7.
While Gonzaga and UCF shined and Cooper Flagg got off to a strong start, the SEC stumbled out of the starting blocks. ... but it does raise the question whether 2024-25 could finally be Gonzaga ...
This will the 71st season of Atlantic Coast Conference basketball. This will be the first season where eighteen teams compete in the conference, after the additions of California, SMU, and Stanford on July 1, 2024. [2] The top 15 teams from regular season play earn postseason bids to the 2025 ACC Men's basketball tournament. [3]
FILE - Gonzaga head coach Mark Few signals from the sideline during the first half of a Sweet 16 college basketball game against Purdue in the NCAA Tournament, March 29, 2024, in Detroit.
[9] [10] As part of a cycle that began in 2016, TBS televised the 2024 Final Four and the National Championship Game. This was the first tournament with Ian Eagle as the lead play-by-play announcer. For the first time since 1997, longtime studio host Greg Gumbel was not part of this year's March Madness coverage due to family health issues. [ 11 ]