2018 National Invitation Tournament

The 2018 National Invitation Tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 32 NCAA Division I college men's basketball teams that were not selected to participate in the 2018 NCAA tournament. The first three rounds of the annual tournament were played on campus sites (the host team being the higher-seeded team). The semifinals and championship game were held at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

2018 National Invitation Tournament
Season2017–18
Teams32
Finals siteMadison Square Garden
New York City
ChampionsPenn State Nittany Lions (2nd title)
Runner-upUtah Utes (3rd title game)
Semifinalists
Winning coachPat Chambers (1st title)
MVPLamar Stevens (Penn State)
National Invitation Tournaments
«20172019»

Experimental rules edit

In February 2018, the NCAA approved a number of experimental rule changes for use in this tournament:[1]

  • Games were played in 10-minute quarters instead of 20-minute halves. The NCAA has used this timing convention for women's basketball since the 2015–16 season.
  • As in NCAA women's basketball, as well as the 2017 NIT,[2] there were no "one-and-one" foul shots. Starting with the fifth foul in each quarter, non-shooting fouls by the defense resulted in two free throws, with the exception of administrative technical fouls (for which only one shot is awarded). The 2018 NIT, however, returned to the standard NCAA procedure of treating overtime periods as extensions of the final period of regulation for purposes of team foul accumulation.
  • The three-point line changed to the current FIBA distance of 6.75 metres (22 ft 2 in) from the center of the basket, except along the sidelines. Once the arc reaches a distance of 1.02 metres (3 ft 4 in) from the sideline, it becomes a straight line parallel to the sideline.[a]
  • The free-throw lane was 16 feet (4.9 m) wide, the same width as in (W)NBA and FIBA rules, instead of the 12 feet (3.7 m) in the current NCAA rules.
  • The shot clock was reset to 20 seconds after an offensive rebound.
Notes
  1. ^ FIBA's definition of the three-point arc calls for the line to be exactly 0.9 m (2 ft 11 in) from the sideline until it intersects the 6.75 m arc. However, the FIBA court is officially defined as 15 m (49 ft 3 in) wide, slightly narrower than the NCAA standard of 50 ft (15.24 m). On a FIBA court, the closest three-point distance, found along a line parallel to the baseline that passes through the center of the basket, is thus 6.6 m (21 ft 8 in) from the center of the basket. Translating this distance to the NCAA court dimensions results in the line being the stated 1.02 m from the sidelines.

Participants edit

Automatic qualifiers edit

The following teams were guaranteed berths into the 2018 NIT field by having the best regular-season record in their conference but failing to either win their conference tournament or earn an at-large berth in the 2018 NCAA tournament.

TeamConferenceRecordAppearanceLast bid
Florida Gulf CoastASUN23–112nd2014
HamptonMEAC19–151stNever
HarvardIvy18–132nd2011
LouisianaSun Belt27–66th2003
Middle TennesseeC-USA24–74th2012
Northern KentuckyHorizon22–91stNever
RiderMetro Atlantic22–92nd1998
Southeastern LouisianaSouthland22–111stNever
UC DavisBig West22–102nd2015
UNC AshevilleBig South21–122nd2008
VermontAmerica East27–74th2014
WagnerNortheast23–94th2016

Grambling State won the SWAC regular-season title but was banned from the postseason due to low graduation rates and did not participate in the conference tournament. There was thus no automatic qualifier from the SWAC.

At-large bids edit

The following 20 teams were also awarded NIT berths.

TeamConferenceRecordAppearanceLast bid
BaylorBig 1218–146th2013
Boise StateMountain West23–86th2017
Boston CollegeACC19–1512th2011
BYUWCC24–1014th2017
LouisvilleACC20–1315th2006
LSUSEC17–148th2014
MarquetteBig East19–1316th2005
Mississippi StateSEC22–119th2012
NebraskaBig Ten22–1018th2011
Notre DameACC20–1412th2009
Oklahoma StateBig 1219–1412th2011
OregonPac-1222–1211th2012
Penn StateBig Ten21–1311th2009
StanfordPac-1218–159th2015
Saint Mary'sWCC28–55th2016
TempleAmerican17–1519th2015
USCPac-1223–115th1999
UtahPac-1219–1114th2017
WashingtonPac-1220–129th2016
Western KentuckyC-USA24–1014th2006

Bids by conference edit

ConferenceBids
Pac-125
ACC3
Big 12, Big Ten, C-USA, SEC, West Coast2
America East, American, ASUN, Big East, Big South, Big West, Horizon,
Ivy, MAAC, MEAC, Mountain West, Northeast, Southland, Sun Belt
1
Atlantic 10, Big Sky, CAA, MAC, Missouri Valley, Ohio Valley, Patriot, Southern, SWAC, Summit, WAC0

Seeds edit

Schedule edit

The NIT began on Tuesday, March 13, 2018. Due to a conflict at Taco Bell Arena (with the NCAA tournament), Boise State travelled to the University of Washington for their first-round match.[3] The first three rounds were played on campus sites. The semifinals were held on Tuesday, March 27, and the championship game was held on Thursday, March 29, at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Bracket edit

First round
March 13–14
Second round
March 17–18
Quarterfinals
March 20
         
1Notre Dame84
8Hampton63
1Notre Dame63
4Penn State73
4Penn State63
5Temple57
4Penn State85
2Marquette80
3Oregon99
6Rider86
3Oregon92
2Marquette101
2Marquette67
7Harvard60
First round
March 13–14
Second round
March 18
Quarterfinals
March 20
         
1Baylor80
8Wagner59
1Baylor77
4Mississippi State78
4Mississippi State66
5Nebraska59
4Mississippi State79
2Louisville56
3Middle Tennessee91
6Vermont64
3Middle Tennessee68
2Louisville84
2Louisville66
7Northern Kentucky58
First round
March 13–14
Second round
March 19
Quarterfinals
March 21
         
1USC103**
8UNC Asheville98
1USC75
4Western Kentucky79
4Western Kentucky79
5Boston College62
4Western Kentucky92
2Oklahoma State84
3Stanford86
6BYU83
3Stanford65
2Oklahoma State71
2Oklahoma State80
7Florida Gulf Coast68
First round
March 13–14
Second round
March 19
Quarterfinals
March 21
         
1Saint Mary's89
8SE Louisiana45
1Saint Mary's85
5Washington81
4Boise State^74
5Washington77
1Saint Mary's58
2Utah67*
3LSU84
6Louisiana76
3LSU71
2Utah95
2Utah69
7UC Davis59

^ Game played at Washington due to Taco Bell Arena hosting first- and second-round 2018 NCAA tournament games.

Semifinals
March 27
Final
March 29
      
4Penn State75
4Mississippi State60
4Penn State82
2Utah66
4Western Kentucky64
2Utah69

* Denotes overtime period

Media edit

ESPN, Inc. had exclusive television rights to all of the NIT Games. It was telecast every game across ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, and ESPN3. Westwood One had exclusive radio rights to the semifinals and the championship.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bonagura, Kyle (February 27, 2018). "NIT to experiment with new rules this season". ESPN. Retrieved February 28, 2018.
  2. ^ Brown, C.L. (February 13, 2017). "NIT to experiment with resetting fouls every 10 minutes". ESPN. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  3. ^ Roberts, Rachel (March 10, 2018). "Boise State men's basketball lands NIT berth but must go on the road". Idaho Statesman. Retrieved October 30, 2023.