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The tournament field included 30 teams and took place during March 1975, with the national championship rounds taking place in Reading, Pennsylvania. [2] LeMoyne–Owen defeated Glassboro State, 57–54, to win their first national championship.
The Huskies were members of the Yankee Conference, where they ended the season with a 9–3 record. They made it to the first round in the 1975 National Invitation Tournament . The Huskies played their home games at Hugh S. Greer Field House in Storrs, Connecticut , and were led by sixth-year head coach Dee Rowe .
The 1974–75 San Diego Conquistadors season was the 3rd and final season of the Conquistadors in the American Basketball Association. The team floundered, on the court and in the box office, with Wilt Chamberlain having left the team after the previous season. They finished 5th in points per game at 109.9, but dead last in points allowed at ...
Following the contentious regular season game, Indiana and Kentucky met in the 1975 NCAA Mideast Regional Final in Dayton, Ohio. Coming into that game, the Hoosiers were on a 34-game winning streak, and the number one ranked team in America. Kentucky was ranked number five.
The 1975–76 Connecticut Huskies men's basketball team represented the University of Connecticut in the 1975–76 collegiate men's basketball season. The Huskies completed the season with a 19–10 overall record. The Huskies were members of the Yankee Conference, where they ended the season with a 7–5
The franchise was founded by Leonard Bloom in 1972 as the ABA's first—and as it turned out, only—expansion team. The team was slated to play at the San Diego Sports Arena, but a feud between Bloom and Peter Graham, operator and lease-holder of the city-owned 14,400-seat arena, led Graham to lock the newborn team out of the facility for two years.
The 1975 Atlantic Coast Conference men's basketball tournament was held in Greensboro, North Carolina, at the Greensboro Coliseum from March 6–8. North Carolina defeated NC State, 70–66 to win the championship. Phil Ford of North Carolina was named the tournament MVP.
1975 National Invitation Tournament; Season: 1974–75: Teams: 16: Finals site: Madison Square Garden New York City: Champions: Princeton Tigers (1st title) Runner-up: Providence Friars (4th title game) Semifinalists