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2016–17 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2016–17 Big Ten Conference men's basketball season
LeagueNCAA Division I
SportBasketball
Number of teams14
TV partner(s)Big Ten Network, ESPN, CBS
2017 NBA draft
2016–17 NCAA Division I men's basketball season
Regular season championsPurdue
  Runners-upWisconsin and Maryland
Season MVPCaleb Swanigan
Top scorerPeter Jok
Tournament
ChampionsMichigan
  Runners-upWisconsin
Finals MVPDerrick Walton Jr.
Basketball seasons
2016–17 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 15 Purdue 14 4   .778 27 8   .771
No. 25 Wisconsin 12 6   .667 27 10   .730
Maryland 12 6   .667 24 9   .727
Minnesota 11 7   .611 24 10   .706
No. 23 Michigan 10 8   .556 26 12   .684
Northwestern 10 8   .556 24 12   .667
Michigan State 10 8   .556 20 15   .571
Iowa 10 8   .556 19 15   .559
Illinois 8 10   .444 20 15   .571
Ohio State 7 11   .389 17 15   .531
Indiana 7 11   .389 18 16   .529
Penn State 6 12   .333 15 18   .455
Nebraska 6 12   .333 12 19   .387
Rutgers 3 15   .167 15 18   .455
2017 Big Ten tournament winner
Rankings from AP poll

The 2016–17 Big Ten men's basketball season began with practices in October 2016, followed by the start of the 2016–17 NCAA Division I men's basketball season in November. The Conference held its preseason media day on October 13 in Washington, D.C.[1] The season began on November 11 and conference play started on December 27.[2]

With a win over Indiana on February 28, 2017, Purdue clinched at least a share of the Big Ten regular season championship.[3] With Wisconsin's loss on March 2, Purdue clinched an outright championship, their 23rd championship, the most in Big Ten history.[4]

The Big Ten tournament was held from March 8 through March 12 at the Verizon Center in Washington, D.C.[5] It was the first Big Ten Conference tournament not held in Indianapolis or Chicago. Michigan won the Big Ten tournament over Wisconsin, becoming the first eight seed and lowest seeded team to win the conference tournament and marking their first win since their vacated win in the inaugural tournament. As a result, Michigan received the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA tournament.[6]

Purdue forward Caleb Swanigan was named Big Ten Player of the Year and a second team Academic All-America. Minnesota coach Richard Pitino was named Big Ten Coach of the Year. Swanigan earned consensus first team All-American recognition and Wisconsin forward Ethan Happ was a third team All-American by multiple media outlets.

Seven Big Ten schools (Maryland, Michigan, Michigan State, Minnesota, Northwestern, Purdue, and Wisconsin) were invited to the NCAA tournament, marking the seventh consecutive year the Big Ten had at least six teams in the Tournament.[7] Northwestern received a bid for the first time in school history.[8] Illinois, Indiana, and Iowa represented the conference in the National Invitation Tournament.[7] The conference achieved an 8–7 record in the NCAA tournament and a 3–3 record in the NIT,[9] highlighted by Michigan, Purdue, and Wisconsin reaching the NCAA Sweet Sixteen and Illinois making the NIT quarterfinals.[10]

Head coaches

[edit]

Coaching changes

[edit]

Wisconsin

[edit]

On December 15, 2015, Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan announced he would retire effective immediately leaving associate head coach Greg Gard as interim head coach. Shortly after the regular season, Greg Gard had the interim tag removed as he was announced as the permanent head coach.[11]

Rutgers

[edit]

On March 20, 2016, the school fired head coach Eddie Jordan after three years at Rutgers.[12] On March 19, the school hired Steve Pikiell, former head coach at Stony Brook, as head coach.[13]

Coaches

[edit]
Team Head coach Previous job Years at school Overall record Big Ten record Big Ten titles NCAA tournaments NCAA Final Fours NCAA Championships
Illinois John Groce Ohio 5 95–75 37–53 0 1 0 0
Indiana Tom Crean Marquette 9 166–135 71–91 2 4 0 0
Iowa Fran McCaffery Siena 7 137–101 64–62 0 4 0 0
Maryland Mark Turgeon Texas A&M 6 138–68 38–18* 0 3 0 0
Michigan John Beilein West Virginia 10 215–135 98–82 2 7 1 0
Michigan State Tom Izzo Michigan State (Asst.) 22 544–220 256–119 7 20 7 1
Minnesota Richard Pitino Florida International 4 66–55 27–45 0 0 0 0
Nebraska Tim Miles Colorado State 5 72–75 33–57 0 1 0 0
Northwestern Chris Collins Duke (Asst.) 4 75–61 30–42 0 0 0 0
Ohio State Thad Matta Xavier 13 337–123 150–78 5 9 2 0
Penn State Pat Chambers Boston University 6 87–109 29–78 0 0 0 0
Purdue Matt Painter Purdue (Assoc.) 12 265–142 127–85 3 9 0 0
Rutgers Steve Pikiell Stony Brook 1 15–18 3–15 0 0 0 0
Wisconsin Greg Gard Wisconsin (Assoc.) 2 42–18 24–12 0 2 0 0

Notes:

  • Year at school includes 2016–17 season.
  • Overall and Big Ten records are from time at current school and are through the end the 2016–17 season.
  • Turgeon's ACC conference record excluded since Maryland began Big Ten Conference play in 2014–15.
  • Following the conclusion of the Big Ten tournament, Illinois fired head coach John Groce.[14] Assistant coach Jamall Walker will coach the team in the NIT.[15]
  • Source for Media Guides.[16]

Preseason

[edit]
Joshua Langford, Michigan State
Miles Bridges, Michigan State

Preseason All-Big Ten

[edit]

On October 11, 2016, a panel of conference media selected a 10-member preseason All-Big Ten Team and Player of the Year.[17]

Honor Recipient
Preseason Player of the Year Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin
Preseason All-Big Ten Team Malcolm Hill, Illinois
James Blackmon Jr., Indiana
Thomas Bryant, Indiana
Peter Jok, Iowa
Melo Trimble, Maryland
Derrick Walton Jr., Michigan
Caleb Swanigan, Purdue
Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin
Bronson Koenig, Wisconsin

Preseason watchlists

[edit]

Below is a table of notable preseason watch lists.

Wooden Naismith Robertson Cousy West Erving Malone Abdul-Jabbar Olson Tisdale Notes
OG Anunoby Green tickY [18]
James Blackmon Jr. Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [19][20][21][22]
Miles Bridges Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [23][21][22]
Thomas Bryant Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [24][20][21][22]
Vincent Edwards Green tickY [18]
Isaac Haas Green tickY [24]
Ethan Happ Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [24][21][22]
Eron Harris Green tickY [19]
Nigel Hayes Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [23][20][21][22]
Malcolm Hill Green tickY Green tickY [19][22]
Peter Jok Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [19][20][21][22]
Bronson Koenig Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [25][20][21][22]
Caleb Swanigan Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [23][21][22]
Jae'Sean Tate Green tickY [18]
Melo Trimble Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY Green tickY [25][20][21][22]

Preseason All-American teams

[edit]
CBS[26] AP TSN USA
Today
SB
Nation
Blue
Ribbon
[27]
Athlon
Sports
[28]
Bleacher
Report
NBC
Sports
[29]
Sporting
News
[30]
BigTen.org BTN Sports
Illustrated
[31]
Lindy's
Sports
OG Anunoby 3rd 2nd 3rd
Miles Bridges 2nd
Thomas Bryant 3rd 1st 3rd 2nd
Nigel Hayes 3rd 1st 2nd
Melo Trimble 2nd 1st 2nd 1st

Preseason polls

[edit]
AP[32] Coaches[33] CBS[34] NBC[35] Sporting
News
[30]
Sports
Illustrated
[36]
Blue Ribbon
Yearbook
[37]
Bleacher
Report
[38]
Athlon
Sports
[39]
Lindy's
Sports
[40]
ESPN[41] USBWA[42]
Illinois
Indiana 11 12 9 14 13 15 18 9 12 14 13
Iowa
Maryland 25 21 25 24
Michigan
Michigan State 12 9 15 10 11 11 14 11 11 13 11
Minnesota
Nebraska
Northwestern
Ohio State
Penn State
Purdue 15 15 20 15 10 11 9 14 14 12 21 14
Rutgers
Wisconsin 9 10 11 11 8 8 6 7 10 6 12 8

Regular season

[edit]

2016 ACC–Big Ten Challenge (ACC 9–5)

[edit]
Date Time ACC team B1G team Score Location Television Attendance Challenge
leader
Nov 28 7:00 pm Florida State Minnesota 75–67 Donald L. Tucker Civic CenterTallahassee, Florida ESPNU 5,993 ACC (1–0)
9:00 pm Wake Forest Northwestern 65–58 Welsh-Ryan ArenaEvanston, Illinois ESPNU 6,386 Tied (1–1)
Nov 29 7:00 pm Pittsburgh Maryland 73–59 Xfinity CenterCollege Park, Maryland ESPN2 17,144 ACC (2–1)
7:00 pm Georgia Tech Penn State 67–60 Bryce Jordan CenterUniversity Park, Pennsylvania ESPNU 6,032 Tied (2–2)
7:30 pm No. 22 Syracuse No. 17 Wisconsin 77–60 Kohl CenterMadison, Wisconsin ESPN 17,287 B1G (3–2)
9:00 pm Notre Dame Iowa 92–78 Edmund P. Joyce CenterNotre Dame, Indiana ESPN2 7,660 Tied (3–3)
9:00 pm NC State Illinois 88–74 State Farm CenterChampaign, Illinois ESPNU 13,481 B1G (4–3)
9:30 pm No. 5 Duke Michigan State 78–69 Cameron Indoor StadiumDurham, North Carolina ESPN 9,314 Tied (4–4)
Nov 30 7:00 pm No. 14 Louisville No. 15 Purdue 71–64 KFC Yum! CenterLouisville, Kentucky ESPN 21,841 ACC (5–4)
7:00 pm Virginia Tech Michigan 73–70 Crisler CenterAnn Arbor, Michigan ESPN2 9,981 ACC (6–4)
7:00 pm Miami Rutgers 73–61 Watsco CenterCoral Gables, Florida ESPNU 7,064 ACC (7–4)
9:00 pm Clemson Nebraska 60–58 Littlejohn ColiseumClemson, South Carolina ESPNU 6,545 ACC (8–4)
9:00 pm No. 6 Virginia Ohio State 63–61 John Paul Jones ArenaCharlottesville, Virginia ESPN2 14,566 ACC (9–4)
9:00 pm No. 3 North Carolina No. 13 Indiana 76–67 Simon Skjodt Assembly HallBloomington, Indiana ESPN 17,222 ACC (9–5)
Winners are in bold
Game times in EST. Rankings from AP Poll (Nov 28).[43]
Boston College did not play due to the ACC having one more team than the B1G.

Source[44][45][46]

2016 Gavitt Tipoff Games (Tied 4–4)

[edit]
Date Time Big East team Big Ten team Score Location Television Attendance Leader
Mon., Nov. 14 7:00 PM No. 3 Villanova No. 15 Purdue 79–76 Mackey ArenaWest Lafayette, IN BTN 14,846 Big East (1–0)
Tue., Nov. 15 6:30 PM Georgetown Maryland 76–75 Verizon CenterWashington, D.C. FS1 13,145 Tied (1–1)
9:00 PM No. 22 Creighton No. 9 Wisconsin 79–67 CenturyLink CenterOmaha, NE FS1 17,879 Big East (2–1)
Wed., Nov. 16 7:00 PM Butler Northwestern 70–68 Hinkle FieldhouseIndianapolis, IN FS1 7,858 Big East (3–1)
Thu., Nov. 17 7:00 PM Providence Ohio State 72–67 Value City ArenaColumbus, OH BTN 11,089 Big East (3–2)
8:30 PM DePaul Rutgers 66–59 Allstate ArenaRosemont, IL FS1 4,057 Tied (3–3)
9:00 PM Seton Hall Iowa 91–83 Carver–Hawkeye ArenaIowa City, IA BTN 10,391 Big East (4–3)
Fri., Nov. 18 9:00 PM St. John's Minnesota 92–86 Williams ArenaMinneapolis, MN BTN 8,873 Tied (4–4)
WINNERS ARE IN BOLD.
Game Times in EST. Rankings from AP Poll (Nov 14). Sources:[47]
Did not participate: Marquette, Xavier (Big East); Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, Nebraska, Penn State (Big Ten)

Rankings

[edit]
Legend
    Improvement in ranking
  Drop in ranking
  Not ranked previous week
RV Received votes but were not ranked in Top 25 of poll
(Italics) Number of first place votes
  Pre/
Wk 1
Wk
2
Wk
3
Wk
4
Wk
5
Wk
6
Wk
7
Wk
8
Wk
9
Wk
10
Wk
11
Wk
12
Wk
13
Wk
14
Wk
15
Wk
16
Wk
17
Wk
18
Wk
19
Final
Illinois AP
C
Indiana AP 11 6 (1) 3 (2) 13 9 9 16 16 25T RV
C 12 5 5 (2) 10 9 9 16 16 25 RV RV RV RV
Iowa AP RV
C
Maryland AP 25 RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV 25 22 17 21 23 24 25
C 21 24 23 22 RV RV RV RV RV RV 25 23 17 22 24 24 RV RV RV RV
Michigan AP RV 25T RV RV RV RV 23
C RV RV 24 RV RV RV RV RV 17
Michigan State AP 12 13 24 RV RV RV RV RV
C 9 13 20 RV RV RV RV RV RV
Minnesota AP RV RV RV RV RV RV 24 RV RV RV RV
C RV RV RV RV 24 RV RV RV RV
Nebraska AP
C RV
Northwestern AP RV RV RV RV RV RV 25 RV RV RV RV
C RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV RV
Ohio State AP RV RV RV RV RV RV
C RV RV RV
Penn State AP
C
Purdue AP 15 15 17 15 18 15 15 15 20 17 21 20 23 16 16 14 16 13 15
C 15 15 19 16 19 16 15 15 20 19 22 20 24 18 16 14 16 12 15 15
Rutgers AP RV RV
C
Wisconsin AP 9 9 16 17 17 14 14 14 13 18 17 15 10 7 9 16 22 24 25
C 10 11 14 17 17 14 14 14 11 17 17 15 9 5 10 15 21 23 22 16

Player of the week

[edit]

Throughout the conference regular season, the Big Ten offices named one or two players of the week and one or two freshmen of the week each Monday.

Week Player of the week Freshman of the week
November 14, 2016[48] Malcolm Hill, ILL Curtis Jones Jr., IND
James Blackmon Jr., IND Miles Bridges, MSU
November 21, 2016[49] Peter Jok, IOWA Amir Coffey, MINN
November 28, 2016[50] Melo Trimble, MD Miles Bridges (2), MSU
Caleb Swanigan, PUR
December 5, 2016[51] Nigel Hayes, WIS Nick Ward, MSU
December 12, 2016[52] Peter Jok (2), IOWA Isaiah Moss, IOWA
December 19, 2016[53] Caleb Swanigan (2), PUR Mike Watkins, PSU
December 26, 2016[54] Caleb Swanigan (3), PUR Nick Ward (2), MSU
January 2, 2017[55] Nate Mason, MINN Nick Ward (3), MSU
Tai Webster, NEB
January 9, 2017[56] Caleb Swanigan (4), PUR Amir Coffey (2), MINN
January 16, 2017[57] Scottie Lindsey, NW Miles Bridges (3), MSU
Mike Watkins (2), PSU
January 23, 2017[58] Ethan Happ, WIS Justin Jackson, MD
James Blackmon Jr. (2), IND Carsen Edwards, PUR
January 30, 2017[59] Ethan Happ (2), WIS Miles Bridges (4), MSU
February 6, 2017[60] Caleb Swanigan (5), PUR Jordan Bohannon, IOWA
February 13, 2017[61] Derrick Walton, Jr., MICH Lamar Stevens, PSU
Jordan Murphy, MINN
February 20, 2017[62] Melo Trimble (2), MD Miles Bridges (5), MSU
February 27, 2017[63] Nick Ward, MSU Nick Ward (4), MSU
March 6, 2017[64] Derrick Walton, Jr. (2), MICH Jordan Bohannon (2), IOWA
Caleb Swanigan (6), PUR

Conference matrix

[edit]

This table summarizes the head-to-head results between teams in conference play. Each team played 18 conference games, and at least 1 against each opponent.

Illinois Indiana Iowa Maryland Michigan Michigan St Minnesota Nebraska Northwestern Ohio St Penn St Purdue Rutgers Wisconsin
vs. Illinois 1–0 0–2 2–0 1–1 0–1 1–0 0–1 0–2 0–1 2–0 1–0 1–0 1–0
vs. Indiana 0–1 1–0 1–0 2–0 0–1 1–0 1–0 1–1 0–1 0–2 2–0 0–1 2–0
vs. Iowa 2–0 0–1 1–1 0–1 1–0 1–0 1–1 1–0 0–1 0–1 1–1 0–2 0–1
vs. Maryland 0–2 0–1 1–1 0–1 0–1 1–1 1–0 0–1 0–2 1–0 1–0 0–2 1–0
vs. Michigan 1–1 0–2 1–0 1–0 1–1 1–0 0–2 1–0 1–0 0–1 0–1 0–1 1–1
vs. Michigan St 1–0 1–0 0–1 1–0 1–1 0–2 0–2 0–1 1–1 1–0 2–0 0–1 0–1
vs. Minnesota 0–1 0–1 0–1 1–1 0–1 2–0 0–1 0–1 1–1 1–1 0–1 0–1 2–0
vs. Nebraska 1–0 0–1 1–1 0–1 2–0 2–0 1–0 2–0 1–1 0–1 0–1 1–0 1–0
vs. Northwestern 2–0 1–1 0–1 1–0 0–1 1–0 1–0 0–2 0–1 0–1 2–0 0–2 0–1
vs. Ohio State 1–0 1–0 1–0 2–0 0–1 1–1 1–1 1–1 1–0 0–1 1–0 0–1 1–1
vs. Penn State 0–2 2–0 1–0 0–1 1–0 0–1 1–1 1–0 1–0 1–0 2–0 1–1 1–0
vs. Purdue 0–1 0–2 1–1 0–1 1–0 0–2 1–0 1–0 0–2 0–1 0–1 0–1 0–1
vs. Rutgers 0–1 1–0 2–0 2–0 1–0 1–0 1–0 0–1 2–0 1–0 1–1 1–0 2–0
vs. Wisconsin 0–1 0–2 1–0 0–1 1–1 1–0 0–2 0–1 1–0 1–1 0–1 1–0 0–2
Total 8–10 7–11 10–8 12–6 10–8 10–8 11–7 6–10 10–8 7–11 6–12 14–4 3–15 12–6

The Big Ten conference led the nation in attendance for the 41st consecutive season with an average of 12,235 per game.[65] The margin over all other conferences was nearly 1000: ACC (11,257), SEC (11,080), Big 12 (10,427) and Big East (10,014). Of the 347 NCAA Division ! participants, several of the top average attendances were posted by Big Ten teams Wisconsin (6th, 17,286), Maryland (7th, 16,628), Indiana (9th, 16,363), Nebraska (11th, 15,427), Michigan State (13th, 14,797), Purdue (18th, 13,819) and Iowa (23rd, 12,547).[66]

Honors and awards

[edit]

Caleb Swanigan was a unanimous first team All-American selection by Associated Press,[67] USBWA,[68] NABC[69] and Sporting News.[70] Ethan Happ was a third team selection by all but the NABC.[67][68][70]

All-Big Ten awards and teams

[edit]

On March 6, the Big Ten announced most of its conference awards.[71][72]

Honor Coaches Media
Player of the Year Caleb Swanigan, Purdue Caleb Swanigan, Purdue
Coach of the Year Richard Pitino, Minnesota Richard Pitino, Minnesota
Freshman of the Year Miles Bridges, Michigan State Miles Bridges, Michigan State
Defensive Player of the Year Reggie Lynch, Minnesota Not Selected
Sixth Man of the Year Nicholas Baer, Iowa Not Selected
All-Big Ten First Team Peter Jok, Iowa Peter Jok, Iowa
Melo Trimble, Maryland Melo Trimble, Maryland
Nate Mason, Minnesota Nate Mason, Minnesota
Caleb Swanigan, Purdue Caleb Swanigan, Purdue
Ethan Happ, Wisconsin Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
All-Big Ten Second Team Malcolm Hill, Illinois Malcolm Hill, Illinois
Derrick Walton Jr., Michigan Derrick Walton Jr., Michigan
Miles Bridges, Michigan State Miles Bridges, Michigan State
Bryant McIntosh, Northwestern Bryant McIntosh, Northwestern
Bronson Koenig, Wisconsin Tai Webster, Nebraska
All-Big Ten Third Team Tai Webster, Nebraska Bronson Koenig, Wisconsin
Thomas Bryant, Indiana Thomas Bryant, Indiana
Jordan Murphy, Minnesota Jordan Murphy, Minnesota
Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin Nigel Hayes, Wisconsin
Scottie Lindsey, Northwestern Vincent Edwards, Purdue
Not Selected James Blackmon Jr., Indiana
All-Big Ten Honorable Mention Vincent Edwards, Purdue Scottie Lindsey, Northwestern
James Blackmon Jr., Indiana Not Selected
Moritz Wagner, Michigan Moritz Wagner, Michigan
Nick Ward, Michigan State Nick Ward, Michigan State
Jae'Sean Tate, Ohio State Jae'Sean Tate, Ohio State
Isaac Haas, Purdue Isaac Haas, Purdue
Corey Sanders, Rutgers Corey Sanders, Rutgers
Dakota Mathias, Purdue Dakota Mathias, Purdue
Not Selected Trevor Thompson, Ohio State
Not Selected Tony Carr, Penn State
Not Selected Zak Irvin, Michigan
All-Freshman Team Jordan Bohannon, Iowa Not Selected
Tyler Cook, Iowa
Miles Bridges, Michigan State
Amir Coffey, Minnesota
Tony Carr, Penn State
All-Defensive Team Reggie Lynch, Minnesota Not Selected
Vic Law, Northwestern
Dakota Mathias, Purdue
Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
Zak Showalter, Wisconsin

AP All-Big Ten awards and teams

[edit]
Honor Winner
Player of the Year Caleb Swanigan, Purdue*
Coach of the Year Richard Pitino, Minnesota
Newcomer of the Year Miles Bridges, Michigan State*
Defensive Player of the Year Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
All Big Ten First Team Nate Mason, Minnesota
Melo Trimble, Maryland
Peter Jok, Iowa
Caleb Swanigan, Purdue*
Ethan Happ, Wisconsin
All Big Ten Second Team Derrick Walton Jr., Michigan
Bryant McIntosh, Northwestern
Malcolm Hill, Illinois
Miles Bridges, Michigan State
Jordan Murphy, Minnesota

Source[73]
*unanimous selection

USBWA

[edit]

On March 7, the U.S. Basketball Writers Association released its 2016–17 Men's All-District Teams, based upon voting from its national membership. There were nine regions from coast to coast, and a player and coach of the year were selected in each. The following lists all the Big Ten representatives selected within their respective regions.[74]

NABC

[edit]

The National Association of Basketball Coaches announced their Division I All-District teams on March 22, recognizing the nation's best men's collegiate basketball student-athletes. Selected and voted on by member coaches of the NABC, the selections on this list were then eligible for NABC Coaches' All-America Honors. The following list represented the District 7 players chosen to the list.[75]

Other awards

[edit]

Nicolas Baer, Zak Irvin, Sanjay Lumpkin, Keita Bates-Diop, Payton Banks, Isaac Haas and Vitto Brown were nominees for the Allstate Good Works Team in honor of their volunteerism and civic involvement.[76] On January 6, 2017, Malcolm Hill, Peter Jok, Derrick Walton, Nigel Hayes and Bronson Koenig were included on the 30-man Senior CLASS Award candidate list.[77] Melo Trimble was the only returning selection among the January 11 Wooden Award top 25. He was joined by Ethan Happ, Nigel Hayes and Caleb Swanigan.[78] Happ and Swanigan were on the Robertson midseason 19-man watchlist.[79] Trimble was named to the Cousy Award Final 10 on January 30.[80][81] Swanigan and Miles Bridges were named Malone Award top 10 finalists on February 2.[82][83] Happ was named as a Jabbar Award top 10 finalist the following day.[84][83] Swanigan, Trimble and Happ were named to both the February 9 Wooden Top 20 and the February 9 Naismith Top 30 lists.[85][86] Swanigan and Moritz Wagner were named to the February 9, 2016–17 NCAA Division I Academic All-District Men's Basketball Team for District 5 (IL, IN, MI, OH), placing them among the 40 finalists for the Academic All-American 15-man team.[87] Hayes and Jok were named to the 10-man Senior CLASS Award finalist list.[88] Swanigan was named a second team Academic All-America selection on March 2.[89]

Postseason

[edit]

Big Ten tournament

[edit]
First round
Wednesday, March 8
ESPN2/BTN
Second round
Thursday, March 9
ESPN2/BTN
Quarterfinals
Friday, March 10
ESPN/BTN
Semifinals
Saturday, March 11
CBS
Championship
Sunday, March 12
CBS
1Purdue70
8Michigan758Michigan74*
9Illinois558Michigan84
4Minnesota77
4Minnesota63
5Michigan State785Michigan State58
12Nebraska6713Penn State518Michigan71
13Penn State76*2Wisconsin56
2Wisconsin70
7Iowa7310Indiana60
10Indiana952Wisconsin76
6Northwestern48
3Maryland64
6Northwestern836Northwestern72
11Ohio State5714Rutgers61
14Rutgers66

* denotes overtime period

NCAA tournament

[edit]

The winner of the Big Ten tournament, Michigan, received the conference's automatic bid to the 2017 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. Six other conference school received at-large bids to the Tournament: Purdue, Minnesota, Maryland, Northwestern, Wisconsin, and Michigan State.

Seed Region School First Four First round Second round Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four Championship
4 Midwest Purdue N/A defeated (13) Vermont 80–70 defeated (5) Iowa State 80–76 eliminated by (1) Kansas 66–98
5 South Minnesota N/A eliminated by (12) Middle Tennessee 72–81
6 West Maryland N/A eliminated by (11) Xavier 65–76
7 Midwest Michigan N/A defeated (10) Oklahoma State 92–91 defeated (2) Louisville 73–69 eliminated by (3) Oregon 68–69
8 West Northwestern N/A defeated (9) Vanderbilt 68–66 eliminated by (1) Gonzaga 73–79
8 East Wisconsin N/A defeated (9) Virginia Tech 84–74 defeated (1) Villanova 65–62 eliminated by (4) Florida 83–84OT
9 Midwest Michigan State N/A defeated (8) Miami 78–58 eliminated by (1) Kansas 70–90
W–L (%): 0–0 (–) 5–2 (.714) 3–2 (.600) 0–3 (.000) 0–0 (–) 0–0 (–) 0–0 (–) Total: 8–7 (.533)

National Invitation tournament

[edit]

Three Big Ten teams received invitations to the National Invitation Tournament: Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana.

Seed Bracket School First round Second round Quarterfinals Semifinals Finals
1 Iowa Iowa defeated South Dakota 87–75 eliminated by TCU 92–94
2 Illinois St. Illinois defeated Valparaiso 82–57 defeated Boise State 71–56 eliminated by UCF 58–68
3 Syracuse Indiana eliminated by Georgia Tech 63–75
W–L (%): 2–1 (.667) 1–1 (.500) 0–1 (.000) 0–0 (–) 0–0 (–) Total: 3–3 (.500)

2017 NBA draft

[edit]

The following all-conference selections were listed as seniors or graduate students: Peter Jok, Malcolm Hill, Derrick Walton, Bronson Koenig, Tai Webster, and Nigel Hayes. The following players were invited to the NBA Draft Combine: OG Anunoby, Thomas Bryant, Justin Jackson, Caleb Swanigan, Melo Trimble, Moritz Wagner, and D. J. Wilson, while Derrick Walton was named as an alternate.[90] Eventually, Walton, Jok and Hayes accepted invitations as alternates.[91][92] Wilson (17th), Anunoby (23rd), Swanigan (26th) and Bryant (42nd) were selected in the draft.[93][94]

Rnd. Pick Player Pos. Team School
1 17 D. J. Wilson PF Milwaukee Bucks Michigan (Jr.)
1 23 OG Anunoby SG Toronto Raptors (from L.A. Clippers via Milwaukee)[A] Indiana (So.)
1 26 Caleb Swanigan PF Portland Trail Blazers (from Cleveland)[B] Purdue (So.)
2 42 Thomas Bryant PF Utah Jazz (from Detroit,[C] traded to Los Angeles Lakers)[a] Indiana (So.)

Pre-draft trades

[edit]

Prior to the day of the draft, the following trades were made and resulted in exchanges of draft picks between the teams.

  1. ^ August 26, 2014:Los Angeles Clippers to Milwaukee Bucks[95] June 25, 2015: Milwaukee Bucks to Toronto Raptors[96]
  2. ^ February 18, 2016: Cleveland Cavaliers to Portland Trail Blazers[97]
    • Cleveland acquired a future second-round pick (2018)
    • Portland acquired Anderson Varejão and a future first-round pick
    January 6, 2017: Cleveland Cavaliers to Portland Trail Blazers[98]
    • Cleveland reacquired its own 2018 first-round pick
    • Portland acquired a first-round pick
  3. ^ February 19, 2015: Detroit Pistons to Utah Jazz (three-team trade with Oklahoma City Thunder)[99]
    • Detroit acquired Reggie Jackson from Oklahoma City
    • Oklahoma City acquired Enes Kanter and Steve Novak from Utah; D. J. Augustin and Kyle Singler from Detroit, and Detroit's 2019 second-round pick
    • Utah acquired Kendrick Perkins, Grant Jerrett and draft rights to Tibor Pleiß from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City's protected first-round pick (conveyance minimum of two years after first-round pick sent to Philadelphia, which happened in 2016), and Detroit's 2017 second-round pick

Draft-day trades

[edit]

Draft-day trades occurred on June 22, 2017, the day of the draft.

  1. ^ June 22, 2017: Los Angeles Lakers to Utah Jazz[100]
    • Utah acquired Los Angeles' first-round pick (No. 28)
    • Los Angeles Lakers acquired Utah's first-round pick (No. 30) and second-round pick (No. 42)

References

[edit]
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