The Kansas State Wildcats men's basketball team represents Kansas State University in college basketball competition. The program is classified in the NCAA Division I, and is a member of the Big 12 Conference. The current head coach is Bruce Weber.
The program began competition in 1902, and has a long history of success. The first two major-conference titles captured by the school were won in the sport, in 1917 and 1919 (in the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association). Kansas State has gone on to capture 18 regular season conference crowns in the sport. Street & Smith ranked K-State 22nd in its 2005 list of the greatest college basketball programs of all time, while Jeff Sagarin listed the program 27th in his all-time rankings in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia. Following the 2015â"2016 season, the Wildcats had a record of 1612â"1121.
History
Through the years Kansas State University has appeared in 29 NCAA basketball tournaments, most recently in 2017. The team's all-time record in the NCAA tournament is 34â"32 (.508). Kansas State's best finish at the tournament came in 1951, when it lost to Kentucky in the national championship game. The school has reached the Final Four 4 times, the Elite Eight 12 times, and the Sweet Sixteen 16 times. Included among K-State's tournament wins are some all-time classics, including an 83â"80 win over Oscar Robertson's Cincinnati team in 1958, which Sports Illustrated called "the most exciting game of the 1958 season," and a 50â"48 win over second-ranked Oregon State in 1981, which USA Today listed as one of the greatest games in NCAA tournament history.
The team also had some notably successful seasons before the creation of the NIT (1938) and the NCAA tournament (1939), including conference titles in 1917 and 1919 under coach Zora G. Clevenger. The Helms Athletic Foundation named Frank Reynolds the program's first All-American player in 1917, and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll retroactively ranked Kansas State #12 in 1910, #18 in 1916, #8 in 1917 and #7 in 1919.
The best season in the school's history may have been 1959, when the team finished the season ranked #1 in the final Associated Press Poll and Coaches Poll. K-State has finished ranked in the Top 10 of one of the two polls on ten occasions (most recently in 2010), and in the final top 25 polls nineteen total times. The team has also posted a winning record at home every year since 1946.
After a lengthy period with little success during the 1990s and 2000s, the team returned to prominence under head coach Frank Martin. Following a twelve-year absence, the team returned to the NCAA tournament after the 2007â"08 season. Following that season, Kansas State freshman Michael Beasley was named an All-American and Big 12 Conference Player of the Year. In the 2009â"10 season, the team spent much of the year ranked in the Top 10 of the AP Poll and finished second in the Big 12 with an 11â"5 record. The team received a #2 seed in the 2010 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament, and beat North Texas and BYU to advance to the Sweet Sixteen, where the Wildcats faced Xavier. The game was a double-overtime thriller won by Kansas State 101â"96, which CBSSports.com called "one of the best games in the history of the Sweet 16." Kansas State lost in the next round to Butler, the eventual national runner-up.
On March 31, 2012, Bruce Weber was announced as head coach after Frank Martin left for South Carolina. During the 2012â"2013 season, Weber's first in Manhattan, Kansas State won its first regular season conference title since 1977 and advanced to the NCAA tournament. K-State has appeared in the NCAA tournament three times in Weber's five seasons.
Kansas State has a total of 36 All-Americans, 18 regular-season conference championships and nine conference tournament championships.
Top 25 rankings
Kansas State University has finished in the final rankings of the AP Poll or Coaches Poll on nineteen occasions throughout its history, including one season at #1 in the final polls (pre-NCAA Tournament). The AP Poll first appeared in 1948, and has been published continuously since 1950â"51. The Coaches Poll began in the 1950â"51 season. Currently, the final AP Poll is released before the tournament and the final Coaches Poll is released after the tournament.
Current Roster:
Barry Brown #5
Cartier Diarra #2
Kade Kinnamon #40
James Love III #21
Makol Mawien #14
Pierson Mcatee #24
Mike Mcguirl #00
Patrick Muldoon #35
Brian Patrick #11
Mawdo Sallah #1
Mason Schoen #12
Nigel Shadd #45
Xavier Sneed #20
Levi Stockard III #34
Kamau Stokes #3
Dean Wade #32
Amaad Wainwright #23
Rivalries
Kansas: Sunflower Showdown
Kansas State's main rivalry is with the Kansas Jayhawks. The rivalry peaked in the 1950s when both teams were annually national title contenders. The 1987â"88 season also proved to be momentous in the rivalry. In the first matchup of the season, on January 30, 1988, Mitch Richmond scored 35 points to lead Kansas State to a 72â"61 win to halt KU's then-record 55-game home winning streak. On February 18, KU turned the tables, prevailing 64â"63 at Ahearn Field House in Manhattan to deny K-State a victory over KU in the old field house's last year. In what was supposed to be the rubber game, in the 1988 Big Eight Conference Men's Basketball Tournament, Kansas State won a decisive victory by a 69â"54 score. However, the biggest was yet to come. Both teams qualified for the NCAA tournament, and after three wins each in the tournament they faced each other on March 27 in Pontiac, Michigan, for the right to advance to the Final Four. Led by Danny Manning's 20 points, KU turned a tight game into a runaway and prevailed 71â"58. Kansas would go on to win the national championship.
The rivalry slipped in significance after the 1988 season, and from 1994 to 2005 KU won 31 straight games against K-State, the longest streak for either school in the series. KU also posted a 24-game win streak against the Wildcats in Manhattan, which ended on January 30, 2008, when #22 Kansas State upset #2 Kansas 84â"75.
Jeff Sagarin's rankings of the nation's top programs by decade in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia nicely track the history of the rivalry. In the 1950s, when the rivalry was at its peak, Kansas State finished the decade ranked as the #3 program in the nation and KU was ranked as #4. In the 1960s KU was ranked #9 for the decade and KSU was ranked #11. In the 1970s, the programs were again nearly even, with Kansas State ranked at #24 and KU at #25. In the 1980s some separation appeared, as KU finished the decade ranked at #19 and Kansas State at #31. The big difference appeared in the 1990s and 2000s when KU was ranked at #4 and #2 for the decades, while Kansas State does not appear anywhere in the top 40.
The rivalry has become more relevant again in recent years, with both teams ranked in the AP Top 25 for many of their match-ups.
Missouri
As of the 2014â"15 season, Missouri is Kansas State's second most-played rival, with 235 games dating back to 1907. Kansas State leads the series 119â"116. The series was last played in the 2011â"12 season, before Missouri moved to the Southeastern Conference. For nearly a century beforehand, the two schools shared conferences, beginning in the 1913â"14 season in the Missouri Valley Conference, then in the Big Eight Conference and its predecessors from 1928 to 1996, and finally the Big 12 Conference from 1996 to 2012.
Wichita State
Kansas State had an ongoing in-state, out-of-conference rivalry with Wichita State, dating back to 1932 and last played in 2003. Kansas State leads the series 20â"11. The series had six games from 1932 to 1964, then six games on a home-and-home rotation from the 1969â"70 to 1971â"72 seasons, and most recently 19 home-and-home games every season from 1985â"86 to 2003â"04.
When Wichita State became a Top 25 regular in the early 2010s, there came interest in reviving the series. In February 2013, Kansas state senator Michael O'Donnell introduced a bill requiring Kansas and Kansas State to schedule Wichita State.
Postseason
NCAA Tournament results
The Wildcats have appeared in the NCAA Tournament 29 times. Their overall record in the NCAA Tournament is 34â"33 (.507) through the 2017 tournament.
From 2011â"2015 the round of 64 was known as the Second Round, round of 32 was Third Round
NCAA Tournament seeding history
The NCAA began seeding the tournament with the 1979 edition.
NIT results
The Wildcats have appeared in the National Invitation Tournament (NIT) seven times. Their combined record is 6â"8.
NCIT results
The Wildcats appeared in one of the only two ever National Commissioners Invitational Tournaments. Their record is 0â"1.
Individual awards and accomplishments
Retired jerseys
The following players' jerseys have been retired by Kansas State. They represent the finest basketball players to come through Kansas State. The criteria for determining the honor includes statistical achievement, conference and national records, honors received (such as all-conference, All-American, Academic All-American), character and sportsmanship.
National honors
The following Kansas State players and coaches are in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (with induction year):
- Bob Boozer (2010) (as member of 1960 United States men's Olympic basketball team)
- Jack Gardner (1984)
- Mitch Richmond (2014)
- Tex Winter (2011)
The following Kansas State players and coaches are in the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame (with induction year):
- Bob Boozer (2016)
- Rolando Blackman (2015)
- Jack Gardner (2006)
- Tex Winter (2010)
Kansas State players and coaches have won the following national awards:
Conference honors
The Big Eight Conference established the Conference Player of the Year and Coach of the Year awards in 1957. These awards have continued into the Big 12 Conference era.
Wildcats to pros
The following former Wildcats have gone on to play professionally, either in the NBA or elsewhere. Kansas State University has had two overall #1 draft picks in the NBA since the draft began in 1947: Howie Shannon (1949) and Bob Boozer (1959).
Draft history
Former players as coaches
A number of former Wildcat players have gone to successful careers as head basketball coaches, including:
- Bob Chipman â" 20th-winningest coach in college basketball history
- Mike Evans
- Bill Guthridge â" National college coach of the year (1998)
- Tim Jankovich
- Gene Keady â" 4x national college coach of the year; National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame
- Lon Kruger â" Coached five Division I schools to the NCAA tournament
- Jim Molinari
- Brad Underwood
Coaches
Kansas State has had 23 head coaches. A number of notable and successful coaches have led the Wildcats through the years. Following are all the coaches that have been at Kansas State.
Conference membership history
- ?â"1912: Kansas Intercollegiate Athletic Association
- 1913â"1927: Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association
- 1928â"1947: Big 6 Conference
- 1948â"1957: Big 7 Conference
- 1958â"1995: Big 8 Conference
- 1996â"Present: Big 12 Conference
Series records
Record vs. Big 12 opponents
Record vs. former Big 12 opponents
See also
- List of teams with the most victories in NCAA Division I men's college basketball
- NCAA Men's Division I Final Four appearances by school
References
External links
- Official website