2002 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament

2002 ACC Men's Basketball Tournament

2002 ACC Tournament logo
Classification Division I
Season 200102
Teams 9
Site Charlotte Coliseum
Charlotte, North Carolina
Champions Duke (13th title)
Winning coach Mike Krzyzewski (7th title)
MVP Carlos Boozer ((Duke))
ACC Men's Basketball Tournaments
«2001  2003»

The 2002 Atlantic Coast Conference Men's Basketball Tournament took place from March 7–10 in Charlotte, North Carolina, at the second Charlotte Coliseum. Duke won the tournament for the fourth year in a row, defeating NC State in the championship game. Duke's Carlos Boozer won the tournament's most valuable player award.

The University of Maryland finished in first place during the regular season but lost to NC State in the semifinal round. Maryland went on to win the NCAA Championship for the first time.

Duke defeated all three of their in-state rivals on their way to the tournament championship, beating North Carolina in the quarterfinal round, Wake Forest in the semifinal, and NC State in the championship game.

The 2002 tournament was the last one held at Charlotte Coliseum. Shortly after the ACC Tournament, the NBA Hornets moved to New Orleans. The NBA subsequently awarded Charlotte an expansion team, who requested a new arena be constructed in central Charlotte. The Coliseum therefore closed in 2005 and was imploded in 2007. Future ACC Tournaments in Charlotte have been played at the considerably smaller Time Warner Cable Arena.

Bracket

  First Round
March 7, 2002
Quarterfinals
March 8, 2002
Semifinals
March 9, 2002
Championship Game
March 10, 2002
                                     
        
  1  #2 Maryland 85  
    8  Florida State 59  
8  Florida State 91
9  Clemson 84  
  1  #2 Maryland 82  
  4  NC State 86  
        
        
  4  NC State 92
    5  Virginia 72  
      
        
  4  NC State 61
  2  #3 Duke 91
        
        
  2  #3 Duke 60
    7  North Carolina 48  
      
        
  2  #3 Duke 79
  3  Wake Forest 54  
        
        
  3  Wake Forest 92
    6  Georgia Tech 83  
      

AP Rankings at time of tournament

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/19/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.