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Tulane Green Wave men's basketball

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University
  
Tulane University

Home
  
Away

Head coach
  
Mike Dunleavy Sr.

Division
  
Division I (NCAA)

Nickname
  
Green Wave

Away
  
Alternate

Arena/Stadium
  
Devlin Fieldhouse

Mascot
  
Riptide the Pelican

Tulane Green Wave men's basketball httpsiytimgcomviTmdZfsSbQ4maxresdefaultjpg

Colors
  
Olive Green and Sky Blue

Conference
  
American Athletic Conference

Location
  
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States

Former names
  
The Greenies, The Greenbacks, The Olive and Blue

Tulane men s basketball highlights vs uno


The Tulane Green Wave men's basketball team represents Tulane University in NCAA Division I college basketball. The team competes in the American Athletic Conference. They play home games on campus in Devlin Fieldhouse, the 9th-oldest active basketball venue in the nation. The team's last appearance in the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament was in 1995.

Contents

Tulane is the only school from the original Metro Conference that remained in the conference through its 1975 founding, the 1991 breakup that saw several schools form the Great Midwest Conference, the 1995 reunification that created today's Conference USA, and the 2004 realignment of conferences. It rejoined many of its previous conference mates when it became a member of the American Athletic Conference in 2014.

History

Tulane's men's basketball team played its first game on December 9, 1905.

The program fell victim to one of the biggest scandals of the 1980s in college sports when four players, including star forward "Hot Rod" Williams, were accused of taking money and cocaine to alter the final point spreads of games they played in. Clyde Eads and Jon Johnson were granted immunity to testify against Williams, the alleged ringleader. Although he was indicted, the judge eventually declared a mistrial, and no sentence was handed down. Williams spent the next nine years with the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers. Within days of Williams' indictment, the entire basketball coaching staff and the athletic director resigned. Shortly afterward school president Eamon Kelly disbanded the basketball program. He didn't intend to ever allow its return but relented in 1988 after several students convinced him that they were being punished for something that occurred when they weren't at Tulane.

New head coach Perry Clark rebuilt the program to unprecedented success, including a 1991–92 season that started 13–0 and ended in the second round of the NCAA Tournament. The 1992–93 and 1994–95 teams matched that team's success, but Tulane hasn't approached such heights since. Clark resigned in 2000 to coach the Miami Hurricanes. The Green Wave failed to make any postseason tournament under Clark's successor, Shawn Finney, or under former Maryland assistant Dave Dickerson.

Ed Conroy was hired as the new head coach in 2010. His teams have seen initial success against out-of-conference foes in each of its seasons but have done poorly in conference games. The 2010–11 team finished 13–17 after a 12–3 start, while his 2011–12 team finished 15–16 after starting 14–6.

On March 14, 2016, Tulane fired Ed Conroy after six years as head coach. He was replaced by Mike Dunleavy, Sr..

NCAA Tournament results

The Green Wave have appeared in three NCAA Tournaments. Their combined record is 3–3.

NIT results

The Green Wave have appeared in six National Invitation Tournaments (NIT). Their combined record is 7–6.

CBI results

The Green Wave have appeared in one College Basketball Invitational (CBI). Their combined record is 0–1.

CIT results

The Green Wave have appeared in one CollegeInsider.com Postseason Tournament (CIT). Their combined record is 1–1.

Green Wave in professional basketball

The following Green Wave players have played in the NBA:

  • Hot Rod Williams
  • Linton Johnson
  • Paul Thompson
  • Jerald Honeycutt
  • References

    Tulane Green Wave men's basketball Wikipedia