ASUN men's basketball tournament
American college basketball tournament
The ASUN Conference men's basketball tournament (formerly known as the Trans America Athletic Conference men's basketball tournament between 1979 and 2001) is the conference championship tournament in basketball for the ASUN Conference , formerly known as the Trans America Athletic Conference (TAAC) and Atlantic Sun Conference. The tournament has been held every year since 1979, except for 1992–93.
It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records. The winner, declared conference champion, receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA men's basketball tournament , as long as it is eligible for NCAA-sponsored postseason play. The eligibility issue applied in both 2021 and 2022, with each final featuring a team representing a transitional member of Division I (North Alabama in 2021[ 1] and Bellarmine in 2022[ 2] ). Under NCAA rules, a school transitioning from NCAA Division II is not eligible for NCAA-sponsored D-I postseason play (either the NCAA tournament or the NIT ) during its four-year transitional period.[ 3] North Alabama began its transition in July 2018 and was thus ineligible for the NCAA tournament or NIT through the 2021–22 season; Bellarmine began its transition in July 2020 and is thus ineligible for said events through 2023–24. Should a transitional school win the tournament, ASUN rules call for the regular-season champion to receive the automatic bid. North Alabama lost its final, making the issue moot for 2021, but Bellarmine won in 2022, giving Jacksonville State that season's automatic bid.
The Atlantic Sun tournament is the earliest of the NCAA Division I men's tournaments and its champion is the first to lock in an NCAA bid.
History
Trans America Athletic Conference
Year
Champion
Score
Runner-up
MVP
Location
1979
Northeast Louisiana
90–69
Mercer
Calvin Natt , Northeast Louisiana[ 4]
Fant–Ewing Coliseum • Monroe, Louisiana
1980
Centenary
79–77
Northeast Louisiana
George Lett , Centenary[ 4]
1981
Mercer
72–67
Houston Baptist
Tony Gattis, Mercer[ 4]
Hirsch Coliseum • Shreveport, Louisiana
1982
Northeast Louisiana
98–85
Centenary
Donald Wilson, Northeast Louisiana[ 4]
Fant–Ewing Coliseum • Monroe, Louisiana
1983
Georgia Southern
68–67
Arkansas–Little Rock
Jim Lampley , UALR[ 4]
Barton Coliseum • Little Rock, Arkansas
1984
Houston Baptist
81–76
Samford
Craig Beard, Samford[ 4]
Spring Branch Coliseum • Houston, Texas
1985
Mercer
105–96
Arkansas–Little Rock
Sam Mitchell , Mercer[ 4]
Hanner Fieldhouse • Statesboro, Georgia
1986
Arkansas–Little Rock
85–63
Centenary
Michael Clarke, UALR[ 4]
Barton Coliseum • Little Rock, Arkansas
1987
Georgia Southern
49–46
Stetson
Jeff Sanders , Georgia Southern[ 4]
1988
Texas–San Antonio
76–69
Georgia Southern
Frank Hampton, UTSA[ 4]
Ocean Center • Daytona Beach, Florida
1989
Arkansas–Little Rock
100–72
Centenary
Jeff Cummings, UALR[ 4]
Barton Coliseum • Little Rock, Arkansas
1990
Arkansas–Little Rock
105–95
Centenary
Derrick Owens, UALR[ 4]
1991
Georgia State
80–60
Arkansas–Little Rock
Chris Collier, Georgia State[ 4]
Edmunds Center • DeLand, Florida
1992
Georgia Southern
95–82
Georgia State
Charlton Young , Georgia Southern[ 4]
Hanner Fieldhouse • Statesboro, Georgia
1993
No tournament
1994
Central Florida
70–67
Stetson
Victor Saxton, UCF[ 4]
UCF Arena • Orlando, Florida
1995
Florida International
68–57
Mercer
James Mazyck, FIU[ 4]
1996
Central Florida
86–77
Mercer
Harry Kennedy, UCF[ 4]
Edmunds Center • DeLand, Florida
1997
College of Charleston
83–73
Florida International
Anthony Johnson , C of C[ 4]
John Kresse Arena • Charleston, South Carolina
1998
College of Charleston
72–63
Florida International
Sedric Webber , C of C[ 4]
1999
Samford
89–61
Central Florida
Marc Salyers , Samford[ 4]
Jacksonville Coliseum • Jacksonville, Florida
2000
Samford
81–68
Central Florida
Marc Salyers , Samford[ 4]
2001
Georgia State
79–55
Troy State
Thomas Terrell , Georgia State[ 4]
GSU Sports Arena • Atlanta, Georgia
Atlantic Sun/ASUN Conference
Year
Champion
Score
Runner-up
MVP
Location
2002
Florida Atlantic
76–75
Georgia State
Thomas Terrell , Georgia State[ 4]
UCF Arena • Orlando, Florida
2003
Troy State
80–59
Central Florida
Ben Fletcher, Troy[ 4]
GSU Sports Arena • Atlanta
2004
Central Florida
60–55
Troy State
Dexter Lyons, UCF[ 4]
Curb Event Center • Nashville, Tennessee
2005
Central Florida
63–54
Gardner–Webb
Gary Johnson, UCF[ 4]
2006
Belmont
74–69OT
Lipscomb
Justin Hare, Belmont[ 4]
Memorial Center • Johnson City, Tennessee
2007
Belmont
94–67
East Tennessee State
Justin Hare, Belmont[ 4]
2008
Belmont
79–61
Jacksonville
Shane Dansby, Belmont[ 4]
Allen Arena • Nashville, Tennessee
2009
East Tennessee State
85–68
Jacksonville
Kevin Tiggs , ETSU[ 4]
2010
East Tennessee State
72–66
Mercer
Micah Williams, ETSU[ 4]
University Center • Macon, Georgia
2011
Belmont
87–46
North Florida
Mick Hedgepeth, Belmont[ 4]
2012
Belmont
83–69
Florida Gulf Coast
Kerron Johnson , Belmont[ 4]
2013
Florida Gulf Coast
88–75
Mercer
Brett Comer , FGCU[ 4]
2014
Mercer
68–60
Florida Gulf Coast
Langston Hall , Mercer
Alico Arena • Fort Myers, Florida
2015
North Florida
63–57
USC Upstate
Demarcus Daniels, North Florida
UNF Arena • Jacksonville, Florida
2016
Florida Gulf Coast
80–78OT
Stetson
Marc-Eddy Norelia , FGCU
Alico Arena • Fort Myers, Florida
2017
Florida Gulf Coast
77–61
North Florida
Brandon Goodwin , FGCU
2018
Lipscomb
108–96
Florida Gulf Coast
Garrison Mathews , Lipscomb
2019
Liberty
74–68
Lipscomb
Scottie James , Liberty
Allen Arena • Nashville, Tennessee
2020
Liberty
73–57
Lipscomb
Caleb Homesley , Liberty
Vines Center • Lynchburg, Virginia
2021
Liberty
79–75
North Alabama
Darius McGhee , Liberty
UNF Arena • Jacksonville, Florida
2022
Bellarmine
77–72
Jacksonville
Dylan Penn, Bellarmine
Freedom Hall • Louisville, Kentucky
2023
Kennesaw State
67–66
Liberty
Terrell Burden, Kennesaw State
KSU Convocation Center • Kennesaw, Georgia
2024
Stetson
94–91
Austin Peay
Jalen Blackmon, Stetson
Edmunds Center • DeLand, Florida
Broadcasters
School
Championships
Years
Belmont [ a]
5
2006, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2012
UCF [ a]
4
1994, 1996, 2004, 2005
Arkansas-Little Rock [ a] [ b]
3
1986, 1989, 1990
Georgia Southern [ a]
3
1983, 1987, 1992
Florida Gulf Coast
3
2013, 2016, 2017
Liberty [ a]
3
2019, 2020, 2021
Mercer [ a]
3
1981, 1985, 2014
College of Charleston [ a] [ c]
2
1997, 1998
East Tennessee State [ a]
2
2009, 2010
Georgia State [ a]
2
1991, 2001
Northeast Louisiana [ a] [ d]
2
1979, 1982
Samford [ a]
2
1999, 2000
Bellarmine
1
2022
Centenary [ a]
1
1980
Florida Atlantic [ a]
1
2002
Florida International [ a] [ e]
1
1995
Houston Baptist [ a] [ f]
1
1984
Kennesaw State
1
2023
Lipscomb
1
2018
North Florida
1
2015
Stetson
1
2024
Troy [ a]
1
2003
UTSA [ a]
1
1988
TOTAL
45
Teams in bold are ASUN members as of the upcoming 2024–25 NCAA basketball season.
Among other current ASUN members:
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q No longer a conference member.
^ Branded athletically as Little Rock since the 2015–16 school year.
^ Now athletically branded as Charleston.
^ Known since 1999 as Louisiana–Monroe (in full, the University of Louisiana at Monroe). For athletic branding purposes, the school typically uses "ULM", but accepts "Louisiana–Monroe".
^ Now athletically branded as FIU.
^ Known as Houston Christian since September 21, 2022.
See also
References
^ "Liberty claims first tournament berth of 2021 as opponent is ineligible" NBC Sports . Retrieved 2022-03-08.
^ "Division I newcomer Bellarmine wins Atlantic Sun championship but ineligible for NCAA tournament" . ESPN.com . March 8, 2022. Retrieved March 9, 2022 .
^ "Why Merrimack must sit out March Madness in its historic season and is in first place in its conference" CBS Sports . Retrieved 2022-03-08.
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah "2013-14 Atlantic Sun Record book, page 6" (PDF) . ASUN Conference .
^ "Championship Week Presented by DICK'S Sporting Goods Schedule" . March 4, 2013.
^ "Championship Week: Coverage of a Record 137 Men's Games Begins March 1 | ESPN MediaZone" . Archived from the original on March 1, 2012. Retrieved February 29, 2012 .
^ Dick's Sporting Goods Schedule
^ "Championship Week Begins Thursday, March 4 | ESPN MediaZone" . Archived from the original on April 12, 2010. Retrieved December 17, 2010 .
^ "20090226_ChampionshipWeekBeginsMarch5" . Archived from the original on March 7, 2009. Retrieved March 1, 2009 .
^ "What to Watch: College basketball lovers rejoice" . Archived from the original on February 7, 2009. Retrieved March 1, 2009 .
Current teams Championships & awards Seasons
NCAA men's college basketball tournaments
Division I
Early season Defunct Early season Conference postseason Defunct Conference postseason Postseason Defunct Postseason
Division II
Conference postseason Defunct Conference postseason Postseason
Division III
Conference postseason Defunct Conference postseason Postseason