| 1957–58 NCAA University Division men's basketball season | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| NCAA Tournament | 1958 | ||
| Tournament dates | March 11, 1958– March 22, 1958 |
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| National Championship | Freedom Hall Louisville, Kentucky |
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| NCAA Champions | Kentucky Wildcats | ||
| Helms National Champions | Kentucky Wildcats | ||
| Other champions | Xavier Musketeers (NIT) | ||
| Player of the Year (Helms) |
Elgin Baylor, Seattle | ||
NCAA Division I basketball seasons
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Contents
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Beginning in 1957–58, the following rules changes were implemented:
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| Player | School | PPG | Player | School | REB% | Player | School | FG% | Player | School | FT% | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oscar Robertson | Cincinnati | 35.1 | Boo Ellis | Niagara | .262 | Ralph Crosthwaite | W. Kentucky St. | 61.0 | Semi Mintz | Davidson | 88.2 | |||
| Elgin Baylor | Seattle | 32.5 | Al Inniss | St. Francis (NY) | .248 | Oscar Robertson | Cincinnati | 57.1 | Gerald Myers | Texas Tech | 87.0 | |||
| Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | 30.1 | Elgin Baylor | Seattle | .235 | Pete Brunone | Manhattan | 56.2 | Arlen Clark | Oklahoma St. | 86.5 | |||
| Bailey Howell | Mississippi St. | 27.8 | Wilt Chamberlain | Kansas | .216 | Bob Goodall | Tulsa | 55.7 | Joe Hobbs | Florida | 86.0 | |||
| Red Murrell | Drake | 26.7 | Joe Cincebox | Syracuse | .206 | Hal Greer | Marshall | 54.6 | Hub Reed | Oklahoma City | 85.1 | |||
The final top 20 from the AP and Coaches Polls.[10]
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Adolph Rupp's Kentucky Wildcats won their fourth National Championship by defeating the Seattle Chieftains 84–72 on March 22 at Freedom Hall in Louisville, Kentucky[10] . Seattle's Elgin Baylor led all tournament scorers and was named the tournament Most Outstanding Player.
| National Semifinals | National Championship Game | |||||||
| M2 | Kentucky | 61 | ||||||
| W1 | Temple | 60 | ||||||
| 2 | Seattle | 72 | ||||||
| 1 | Kentucky | 84 | ||||||
| S1 | Seattle | 73 | ||||||
| E3 | Kansas State | 51 | ||||||
The Xavier Musketeers entered the National Invitation Tournament with a 15–11 record, but surprised the field, defeating fellow Ohio school Dayton 78–74 to win the NIT.[11] The Musketeers' Hank Stein was named tournament MVP.
Played at Madison Square Garden in New York City
| Semifinals | Final | |||||||
| 1 | St. John’s | 56 | ||||||
| 3 | Dayton | 80 | ||||||
| 3 | Dayton | 74 | ||||||
| 2 | Xavier | 78 | ||||||
| 2 | St. Bonaventure | 53 | ||||||
| 2 | Xavier | 72 | ||||||
| Player | Position | Class | Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elgin Baylor | F | Junior | Seattle |
| Bob Boozer | F | Junior | Kansas State |
| Wilt Chamberlain | C | Junior | Kansas |
| Don Hennon | G | Junior | Pittsburgh |
| Oscar Robertson | G | Sophomore | Cincinnati |
| Guy Rodgers | G | Senior | Temple |
| Player | Position | Class | Team |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pete Brennan | F | Senior | North Carolina |
| Archie Dees | F/C | Senior | Indiana |
| Mike Farmer | F | Senior | San Francisco |
| Dave Gambee | F | Senior | Oregon State |
| Bailey Howell | F | Junior | Mississippi State |
A number of teams changed coaches throughout the season and after the season ended.
| Team | Former Coach |
Interim Coach |
New Coach |
Reason |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Columbia | Lou Rossini | Archie Oldham | ||
| Drake | John E. Benington | Maury John | ||
| Duquesne | Dudey Moore | Red Manning | ||
| Iowa | Bucky O'Connor | Sharm Scheuerman | O'Connor died in an auto accident on April 22, 1958 [12] | |
| La Salle | Jim Pollard | Dudey Moore | ||
| Marquette | Jack Nagle | Eddie Hickey | ||
| Memphis State | Eugene Lambert | Bob Vanatta | ||
| New Mexico | Bill Stockton | Bob Sweeney | ||
| NYU | Howard Cann | Lou Rossini | ||
| Ohio State | Floyd Stahl | Fred Taylor | ||
| Saint Louis | Eddie Hickey | John E. Benington | ||
| Seattle | John Castellani | Vincent Cazzetta | After taking the Chieftains to the NCAA title game, Castellani resigned amid recruiting violations that resulted in a two-year post-season ban for the University.[13] | |
| South Carolina | Frank Johnson | Walt Hambrick | ||
| Vanderbilt | Bob Polk | Roy Skinner (interim) | Assistant coach Skinner served as interim for the season as Polk suffered a heart attack in the Fall[14] | |
| Western Michigan | Joe Hoy | Don Boven |
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