I think now is the time to capitalize with name changes and attempt to upgrade our conference....where was Cinncinati 15 years ago? Believe or not the Underdog is on the way to the top.....
I would be willing to contibute some seed $$$ if there were some students who had the time to promote......i am very short on time but would like to participate...send me a message if interested.....
The University of Cincinnati stands among the nation's elite in college basketball.
Six Final Four appearances, and back-to-back national championships, are accomplishments only a handful of programs can boast.
In fact, UC is the 10th-winningest team in NCAA tournament history. The Bearcats have compiled a 37-20 record in NCAA play for a .649 percentage.
Cincinnati's 1,449-836 record (.634), compiled over 102 seasons, places the school among the top 30 winningest programs. Since post-World War II, the beginning of modern day college basketball, UC has a 1,111-518 ledger (.682), an average of over 19 wins per year. The Bearcats have advanced to post-season play 29 times and have been conference champions in 28 seasons.
UC's losses in tournament play have also been noteworthy. Cincinnati has been eliminated from the NCAA playoffs five times by teams which eventually won the title and lost once to the eventual champ in NIT competition.
The Bearcats' excellence is not portrayed in numbers alone. UC is the alma mater of several of college basketball's greats-29 Bearcats have earned All-America honors, two went on to become Olympic Gold Medalists and two are enshrined in the National Basketball Hall of Fame.
One of the first of Cincinnati's long list of standouts was Jack Twyman, who earned All-America status in 1954-55. He went on to NBA stardom and is in the Basketball Hall of Fame.
Oscar Robertson is still widely-recognized as one of the greatest to ever play the sport-college or professional. A unanimous three-time All-American, he was college basketball's all-time leading scorer at the close of his career. His 33.8 scoring average today ranks third on the NCAA career charts, and he has the NBA's second most career assists. The Hall of Famer led the U.S. Olympic team to the 1960 Gold Medal.
Sparked by the exploits of Robertson, who became the first player to lead the nation in scoring in three consecutive seasons, Cincinnati advanced to the Final Four in 1958-59 and 1959-60, settling for third place both years.
With a rookie head coach and without Robertson, the Bearcats won their first national title in 1960-61. Then to prove that its 1961 championship was no fluke, UC repeated as champion in 1961-62.
Cincinnati made a then-unprecedented fifth straight trip to the Final Four in 1962-63, and narrowly missed capturing a third-straight national crown when Loyola (Ill.) overcame a 15-point deficit and defeated the Bearcats by a basket, 60-58, in overtime.
During those five seasons, UC recorded a 37-game win streak and posted a 161-16 ledger. The five straight Final Four appearances is a feat topped only by UCLA.
Connie Dierking (1958), Ralph Davis (1960), Bob Wiesenhahn (1961), Paul Hogue (1961, 1962), Tom Thacker (1963), Tony Yates (1963), Ron Bonham (1963, 1964) and George Wilson (1963) were accorded All-American recognition with Wilson playing on the U.S. 1964 Olympic gold medal team.
The Bearcats success continued in the 1970's, during which UC compiled a 170-85 record (.667). Cincinnati inaugurated the Metro Conference by winning the league's first two tournament championships and made four post-season appearances. Jim Ard (1970), Lloyd Batts (1973), Steve Collier (1976), Gary Yoder (1977), Bob Miller (1978) and Pat Cummings (1979) earned All-American recognition.
Cummings closed his illustrious career as UC's No. 2 leading scorer of all-time. The 1980's saw Roger McClendon, capitalizing on the new 3-point field goal rule, take over as the No. 2 career scorer.
While UC made only one postseason appearance, groundwork was laid which would make Cincinnati a dominant team in the 1990's.
UC's Winning Tradition Continues Under Bob Huggins
The Bob Huggins era at the University of Cincinnati has made the last dozen seasons one of the brightest periods in the school's rich basketball history.
In fact, only the late 1950's and early1960's, during which the Bearcats made five straight trips to the Final Four and won back-to-back national championsips, shines brighter.
Huggins rekindled those national championship expectations in only his third season at the helm, when he directed UC to the Final Four.
The Bearcats have advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA tournament three times and have reached the Sweet 16 four times.
Cincinnati has won its conference season and/or tournament title in 11 of the past 12 seasons. UC has claimed seven league tournament titles and nine regular season crowns during this span.
The Bearcats have finished in the Top 10 of the final polls in six of the past 12 years. During this time, Cincinnati has ranked among the nation's top 10 winningest programs both in terms of winning percentage and victories.
Cincinnati's record over the past eight seasons is even more impressive. The Bearcats have compiled a 210-55 ledger, posting the sixth-highest winning percentage (.792) and sixth-most victories in NCAA Division I.
Fifteen Bearcats have garnered first team all-conference honors during the Huggins era. Danny Fortson, a three-time first team all-league choice, was tabbed Most Outstanding Player in Conference USA in both 1995-96 and 1996-97. Kenyon Martin was the unanimous choice as C-USA Player of the Year in 1999-00 and garnered three straight league Defensive Player of the Year award. Steve Logan followed suit by earning C-USA Player of the Year honors in 2000-01 and 2001-02
Fortson, Nick Van Exel, Ruben Patterson, Bobby Brannen, Melvin Levett, Logan, Martin and Pete Mickeal have joined Cincinnati's list of All-Americans. Fortson was a consensus first team All-American in 1996-97 after receiving second team recognition in 1995-96. Van Exel was a third team All-American in 1992-93. Patterson garnered third team honors in 1997-98 while Levett, Mickeal and Logan earned honorable mention recognition in 1998-99, 1999-00 and 2000-01, respectively.
Martin was college basketball's top player of the 1999-2000 season, making a clean sweep of the national player of the year awards. Logan was a consensus All-American in 2001-02 and a finalist for every national player of the year award, earning the Francis Pomeroy Naismith Award as the top player six foot or under.
As further evidence of Cincinnati's excellence, 10 Bearcats have been selected in the NBA draft, three of whom were top 10 picks.
The headliner of this list is Martin who was the No. 1 pick of the entire 2000 draft by the New Jersey Nets.
DerMarr Johnson was the No. 6 pick of the 2000 draft by the Atlanta Hawks. Fortson was the No. 10 selection of the 1997 draft.