Gulf South Conference men's basketball tournament
Appearance
(Redirected from Gulf South Conference Men's Basketball Tournament)
Gulf South Conference men's basketball tournament | |
---|---|
Conference basketball championship | |
Sport | Basketball |
Conference | Gulf South Conference |
Number of teams | 8 |
Format | Single-elimination tournament |
Current stadium | Pete Hanna Center |
Current location | Homewood, Alabama |
Played | 1981–present |
Current champion | West Georgia (4th) |
Most championships | Delta State (6) North Alabama (6) |
Official website | GSC men's basketball |
The Gulf South Conference men's basketball tournament is the annual conference basketball championship tournament for the Gulf South Conference. The tournament has been held annually since 1981. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records.[1]
The winner, declared conference champion, receives the Gulf South's automatic bid to the NCAA Men's Division II Basketball Championship.
Results
[edit]Year | Champions | Score | Runner-up | MVP | Venue |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1981 | North Alabama | 81–70 | Jacksonville State | Johnny Buckmon, North Alabama | Flowers Hall (Florence, AL) |
1982 | Livingston | 49–47 | Tennessee–Martin | Will Cotchery, Livingston | Pruitt Hall (Livingston, AL) |
1983 | Jacksonville State | 79–74 | Valdosta State | Robert Spurgeon, Jacksonville St. | Pete Mathews Coliseum (Jacksonville, AL) |
1984 | North Alabama | 82–78 | Jacksonville State | Melvin Allen, Jacksonville St. | Flowers Hall (Florence, AL) |
1985 | Jacksonville State | 86–73 | Delta State | Keith McKeller, Jacksonville St. | Pete Mathews Coliseum (Jacksonville, AL) |
1986 | Delta State | 83–66 | Jacksonville State | Carl Brown, Delta St. | Walter Sillers Coliseum (Cleveland, MS) |
1987 | West Georgia | 83–75 | Delta State | Rodney Roberts, West Georgia | UWG Coliseum (Carrollton, GA) |
1988 | North Alabama | 79–75 | Troy State | Louis Newsome, North Alabama | Sartain Hall (Troy, AL) |
1989 | Jacksonville State | 85–74 | Livingston | Robert Lee Sanders, Jacksonville St. | Pete Mathews Coliseum (Jacksonville, AL) |
1990 | Not held | ||||
1991 | Not held | ||||
1992 | Jacksonville State | 90–77 | Mississippi College | Dave Edmond, Jacksonville St. | Pete Mathews Coliseum (Jacksonville, AL) |
1993 | Delta State | 72–66 | Jacksonville State | Todd Mundt, Delta St. | Walter Sillers Coliseum (Cleveland, MS) |
1994 | North Alabama | 66–62OT | Livingston | Curtis Davis, North Alabama | A. E. Wood Coliseum (Clinton, MS) |
1995 | Mississippi College | 86–84 | Delta State | Corey Speech, Mississippi Coll. | Flowers Hall (Florence, AL) |
1996 | North Alabama | 80–65 | Delta State | Corey Williams, North Alabama | Walter Sillers Coliseum (Cleveland, MS) |
1997 | Delta State | 75–70 | West Georgia | Chris Sykes, Delta St. | UWG Coliseum (Carrollton, GA) |
1998 | Delta State | 84–65 | Central Arkansas | Rodney Dean, Central Arkansas | Walter Sillers Coliseum (Cleveland, MS) |
1999 | Henderson State | 57–49 | Delta State | David Lewis, Henderson St. | Tex Turner Arena (Harrogate, TN) |
2000 | Henderson State | 67–61 | North Alabama | Andre Kerr, Henderson St. | Walter Sillers Coliseum (Cleveland, MS) |
2001 | Henderson State | 63–53 | Delta State | Niki Arinze, Henderson St. | BancorpSouth Arena (Tupelo, MS) |
2002 | West Georgia | 72–50 | Valdosta State | Chezley Watson, West Georgia | BancorpSouth Arena (Tupelo, MS) |
2003 | Henderson State | 54–39 | Alabama–Huntsville | Steve Parillon, Henderson St. | BancorpSouth Arena (Tupelo, MS) |
2004 | Montevallo | 77–65 | West Georgia | D. J. Towns, Montevallo | BancorpSouth Arena (Tupelo, MS) |
2005 | Montevallo | 72–60 | Delta State | James Hall, Montevallo | BancorpSouth Arena (Tupelo, MS) |
2006 | Delta State | 71–67 | Montevallo | Jasper Johnson, Delta St. | BancorpSouth Arena (Tupelo, MS) |
2007 | Montevallo | 66–62 | Henderson State | Marcus Kennedy, Montevallo | DeSoto Civic Center (Southaven, MS) |
2008 | Christian Brothers | 93–89 | Harding | Nick Kohs, Christian Brothers | DeSoto Civic Center (Southaven, MS) |
2009 | Arkansas Tech | 79–66 | Valdosta State | Renard Allen, Arkansas Tech | DeSoto Civic Center (Southaven, MS) |
2010 | Arkansas Tech | 64–63 | Alabama–Huntsville | Marcus Pillow, Arkansas Tech | DeSoto Civic Center (Southaven, MS) |
2011 | Harding | 80–61 | Arkansas Tech | Stephen Blake, Harding | DeSoto Civic Center (Southaven, MS) |
2012 | Alabama–Huntsville | 58–43 | Christian Brothers | Josh Magette, Alabama–Huntsville | Arena at NWFSC (Niceville, FL) |
2013 | Christian Brothers | 65–62 | Valdosta State | Trey Casey, Christian Brothers | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2014 | North Alabama | 79–73 | Christian Brothers | Rashaun Claiborne, North Alabama | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2015 | Alabama–Huntsville | 73–68 | West Alabama | Seab Webster, Alabama–Huntsville | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2016 | West Georgia | 99–82 | Alabama–Huntsville | Iakeem Alstin, Alabama–Huntsville | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2017 | Alabama–Huntsville | 94–91 | Valdosta State | Seab Webster, Alabama–Huntsville | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2018 | West Florida | 71–65 | Delta State | Marvin Jones, West Florida | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2019 | Delta State | 64-60 | Alabama–Huntsville | Matthew Wilson, Delta State | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2020 | Alabama–Huntsville | 91–82 | Valdosta State | JJ Kaplan, Alabama—Huntsville | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2021 | Valdosta State | 75–70 | Alabama–Huntsville | Burke Putnam, Valdosta State | Trustmark Arena (Montevallo, AL) |
2022 | Alabama–Huntsville | 86–72 | Union (TN) | CJ Williamson, Alabama–Huntsville | Pete Hanna Center (Birmingham, AL) |
2023 | West Alabama | 67–65 | West Georgia | Justin Allison, West Alabama | |
2024 | West Georgia | 75–69 | Alabama–Huntsville | Zawdie Jackson, West Georgia |
Championship records
[edit]School | Finals Record | Finals Appearances | Years |
---|---|---|---|
North Alabama | 6–1 | 7 | 1981, 1984, 1998, 1994, 1996, 2014 |
Delta State | 6–8 | 14 | 1986, 1993, 1997, 1998, 2006, 2019 |
Alabama–Huntsville | 5–6 | 11 | 2012, 2015, 2017, 2020, 2022 |
Jacksonville State | 4–4 | 8 | 1983, 1985, 1989, 1992 |
West Georgia | 4–3 | 7 | 1987, 2002, 2016, 2024 |
Henderson State | 4–1 | 5 | 1999, 2000, 2001, 2003 |
Montevallo | 3–1 | 4 | 2004, 2005, 2007 |
West Alabama (Livingston) |
2–3 | 5 | 1982, 2023 |
Christian Brothers | 2–2 | 4 | 2008, 2013 |
Arkansas Tech | 2–1 | 3 | 2009, 2010 |
Valdosta State | 1–6 | 7 | 2021 |
Harding | 1–1 | 2 | 2011 |
Mississippi College | 1–1 | 2 | 1995 |
West Florida | 1–0 | 1 | 2018 |
Central Arkansas | 0–1 | 1 | |
Troy (Troy State) |
0–1 | 1 | |
Tennessee–Martin | 0–1 | 1 | |
Union (TN) | 0–1 | 1 |
- Auburn–Montgomery, Lee, and Shorter have not yet qualified for the tournament finals.
- Arkansas–Monticello, Lincoln Memorial, Ouachita Baptist, and Southern Arkansas never reached the tournament finals before departing the Gulf South.
- Schools highlighted in pink are former members of the Gulf South Conference
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Gulf South Conference Men's Basketball History" (PDF). Year-by-year records. Gulf South Conference. 2017. Retrieved April 13, 2017.