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The Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament, otherwise known as the Pac-12 tournament, was the annual concluding tournament for the NCAA college basketball in the Pac-12, taking place in Las Vegas at the T-Mobile Arena. The first tournament was held in 1987 for the Pac-10 conference. It ended after four seasons.
Beginning with the 1975 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, the Pac–10 would usually place at least one other at–large team in the tournament. By the 1985–86 season, the Pac–10 was one of three remaining conferences that gave their automatic NCAA tournament bid to the regular season round–robin champion.
Men's college basketball in the Pac-12 Conference began in 1915 with the formation of the Pacific Coast Conference (PCC). Principal members of the PCC founded the Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU) in 1959, and subsequently went by the names Big Five, Big Six, Pacific-8, and Pacific-10, becoming the Pac-12 in 2011.
The following is a list of NCAA and AIAW championships won by Pac-12 Conference members. The Pac-12 was the first conference to win 500 team titles and currently (as of May 22, 2024) Pac-12 members have won 514 team NCAA national championships, putting them ahead of the second place Big Ten Conference. [1] Since the 1999–2000 academic year ...
The Pac-12 moniker was adopted in 2011 with the addition of Colorado and Utah. Nicknamed the "Conference of Champions", the Pac-12 has won more NCAA national championships in team sports than any other conference in history. [1] Washington's national title in women's rowing in 2017 was the 500th NCAA championship won by a Pac-12 school. [2]
The 2024 Pac-12 Conference men's basketball tournament (branded as the 2024 Pac-12 Men's Basketball Tournament presented by Acura for sponsorship reasons) [1] was a postseason men's basketball tournament for the Pac-12 Conference held March 13–16, 2024, at T-Mobile Arena on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada.
Mar. 14—LAS VEGAS — For a brief moment in Washington State's win over Stanford, a 79-62 blowout Thursday for a spot in Friday's Pac-12 Tournament semifinals, Andrej Jakimovski disappeared like ...
The first three rounds was all broadcast on FSN with the championship game on CBS. [1] The Pac-12 announced, on March 1, that Men's and Women's tournament games that were not televised would be streamed on YouTube. [2] Also streamed live on YouTube was a post-game press conferences for the semifinals and championship games. [2]