Florida Gators men's basketball

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Florida Gators
Florida Gators athletic logo

University University of Florida
Conference SEC
Location Gainesville, FL
Head Coach Billy Donovan (12th year)
Arena Stephen C. O'Connell Center
(Capacity: 12,000)
Nickname Gators
Student Section Rowdy Reptiles
Colors Orange and Blue

             

Uniforms
 
Home jersey
Home jersey
 
Home shorts
Home
 
Away jersey
Away jersey
 
Away shorts
Away
 
Alternate jersey
Alternate jersey
 
Alternate shorts
Alternate
NCAA Tournament Champions
2006, 2007
NCAA Tournament Runner Up
2000
NCAA Tournament Final Four
1994, 2000, 2006, 2007
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight
1994, 2000, 2006, 2007
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
1987, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2006, 2007
NCAA Tournament Second Round
1987, 1988, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007
NCAA Tournament Appearances
1987, 1988, 1989, 1994, 1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
Conference Tournament Champions
2005, 2006, 2007
Conference Regular Season Champions
1989, 2000, 2001, 2007

The Florida Gators men's basketball team represents the (University of Florida) in NCAA Division I competition, in which they are a member of the Southeastern Conference's Eastern Division. They play their home games at the Stephen C. O'Connell Center in Gainesville, Florida, USA. Billy Donovan has been the head coach of the Gators since the 1996-97 season.

The Gators have two national championships, having won the 2006 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament and 2007 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament back-to-back, the first team since the 1991-1992 Duke team to accomplish this feat and the first to do it with the same starting lineup.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The Florida Gators men's team annually plays a 16-game conference schedule that is preceded by an out of conference schedule against few annual opponents except for Florida State. Their conference schedule consists of a pair of home-and-home games against the other five SEC Eastern Division teams, plus one game against each of the six Western Division teams, with home games alternating each season. The Gators have seldom had rivals in basketball until recently, when their success found them competing against Kentucky and Tennessee.

[edit] History

Florida began play in basketball in 1915-16 under head coach C.J. McCoy. The team went 5-1 its first year, but the following three seasons were all canceled due to World War I. The team started back up in the 1919-20 season without a head coach at all, though they did have a new venue—the newly-built University Gymnasium. W.G. Kline took over coaching duties from 1920-1922.

The 1920-21 UF basketball team.
The 1920-21 UF basketball team.

By the mid-1920's the team outgrew the University Gymnasium (now called the Women's Gymnasium), so the university built another gym to hold the crowds of the fast-growing student population. Dubbed the New Gym, the Gators played there until 1949, when Florida Gymnasium opened.

In 1932, Florida joined the Southeastern Conference as a charter member.

The team moved from the Florida Gym to the Stephen C. O'Connell Center during the 1980-81 season.

Under the tenure of Norm Sloan, Vernon Maxwell led the team to the NCAA Tournament's Sweet Sixteen in 1987, and Sloan coached the team to the tournament again the following two years, winning the first SEC Championship outright in the 1988-1989 season. After a drug scandal involving Maxwell, Sloan left and the program went on probation. Don DeVoe coached the team for the 1989-90 season.

Lon Kruger was hired as the coach before the 1990-91 season. Despite the probation he inherited, Kruger slowly brought the team to increased success and reached the NIT final four in his second year as coach. In 1993-94, the pieces fell into place for Florida to have their best season ever at that time. Behind Andrew DeClercq and Dametri Hill, the Gators went to their first Final Four following a dramatic victory over UConn where Donyell Marshall missed two free throws with no time on the clock to force overtime, where the Gators eventually prevailed. They lost to Duke in the national semifinal, 70-65. The next year, they returned to the NCAA tournament, but were eliminated in the first round. Kruger's final season in 1995-96 resulted in a losing record, and he left to coach at Illinois.

Florida's Athletic Director, Jeremy Foley, looking for a young coach with a proven track record, hired Billy Donovan, then at Marshall, as Kruger's replacement. His recruiting prowess was evident early, bringing future NBA star Jason Williams with him from Marshall and having early recruiting classes with future NBA players Mike Miller, Udonis Haslem, and Matt Bonner, among others. The Gators have made the NCAA Tournament every year since Donovan's third season with the team, a nine-year streak that is easily the school record, and currently the sixth longest NCAA Tournament streak in the nation.

During the 1999-2000 season, the upstart Gators beat such traditional powerhouses as Duke, Illinois (led by former coach Lon Kruger), and North Carolina to advance to their first National Championship Game, before losing to heavily-favored Michigan State.

During the next few years the Gators went to the NCAA Tournament every year, but each year they lost in the first or second round. The Gators however repeated as SEC Champions during the 1999-2000 and 2000-2001 seasons.

The  2005-06 team at the White House following their national championship.
The 2005-06 team at the White House following their national championship.

The 2004-2005 team had the distinction of being the first to win an SEC Tournament Championship, when they beat rival Kentucky in the title game.

The 2005-2006 team began the season unranked and went on a 17-0 winning streak for the best start in school history, surprising many with a young (four sophomores and one junior) but selfless squad following the graduation of David Lee and the departures of Matt Walsh and Anthony Roberson to the NBA. The trio accounted for 60% of their offense in 2005. The team faded late in the regular season, losing its last 3 games in February and entering the postseason with a 24-6 record, yet still managed to win it's second consecutive SEC Tournament Championship.

The Gators entered the 2006 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament as a #3 seed with a 27-6 record and #10 national ranking. They beat South Alabama and Milwaukee to advance to the Minneapolis regional. There, the Gators defeated the Georgetown Hoyas and upset the top-seeded Villanova Wildcats 75-62 to avenge their loss in the previous year's tournament and move on to their second Final Four under Donovan.

Florida defeated the upstart George Mason Patriots 73-58 in the national semifinals in Indianapolis. On April 3, 2006, the Gators defeated the UCLA Bruins 73-57 in the National Finals to win the school's first men's basketball NCAA Championship. The University of Florida Athletic Association then purchased the floor used in Indianapolis for the Final Four, and installed it in the O'Connell Center.

The Gators returned all five starters from their championship team to begin the 2006-07 basketball season as the preseason #1 in both major media polls, a first for the university. The Gators locked up the SEC regular season Championship relatively early in the 06-07 season and were in possession of a 24-2 record before going on a late-February 1-3 skid that mirrored their 0-3 run a year earlier. For the second season in a row, the losses in February would be their last. Florida closed out Kentucky on Senior Night to end the regular season 26-5, and won their 3rd straight SEC Tournament Championship with relative ease, beating Georgia, Ole Miss, and Arkansas 77-56.

Florida entered the 2007 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament as the #1 overall seed in the tournament, and they advanced to the Final Four after wins in the regional against #5 seed Butler and #3 seed Oregon. In a rematch of the 2006 title game, the Gators again eliminated the UCLA Bruins. Florida defeated the Ohio State Buckeyes 84-75, in a rematch of a game they won 86-60 three months earlier, to become the first team since the 1991-92 Duke Blue Devils to win back-to-back National Championships and the first college team ever repeat as National Champions with the same starting lineup.

Billy Donovan is currently the head coach of the Gators. Having recently completed his 11th season as coach, agreed to coach for the NBA's Orlando Magic on May 31, 2007. It was revealed on June 3, however, that Donovan had done an about-face and asked to be freed from his contract with the Magic to return to Florida. He was soon thereafter released from his contract and reintroduced as the Gators coach on June 7.

[edit] Head Coaches

Head men's basketball coaches, including years coached:

  • C.J. McCoy, 1915–1916 (no team 1917-1918, no coach 1919-20)
  • W.G. Kline, 1920–1922
  • C.Y. Byrd, 1922–1923
  • J.L. White, 1923–1925
  • Brady Cowell, 1925–1933
  • Ben Clemmons, 1933–1936
  • Josh Cody, 1936–1937
  • Sam McAllister, 1937–1942
  • Spurgeon Cherry, 1942–1946 (no team 1943-44)
  • Sam McAllister, 1946–1951
  • John Mauer. 1951–1960
  • Norm Sloan, 1960–1966
  • Tommy Bartlett, 1966–1973
  • John Lotz, 1973–1980
  • Ed Visscher (interim), 1980–1980
  • Norm Sloan, 1980–1989
  • Don DeVoe (interim), 1989–1990
  • Lon Kruger, 1991–1996
  • Billy Donovan, 1996–present

[edit] Home Courts

[edit] Notable alumni

See also: List of University of Florida basketball players

[edit] 2006-2007 Basketball Championship starting five

[edit] All-Americans

[edit] Retired Numbers

[edit] See Also

[edit] External links