The Cougars were 22–6 overall in the regular season and 14–4 in conference play; runner-up to UCLA, who they split with in the season series. There was no conference tournament this season; it debuted four years later. They had a chance to tie the Bruins for the title,[3] but lost by a point to rival Washington in Seattle to end the regular season.[4][5]
After missing it the previous two seasons, WSU was invited to the 52-team NCAA tournament and were seeded eighth in the West region; they met ninth-seed Weber State, the Big Sky champion, in the first round in Boise. WSU's only two non-conference losses were to Big Sky teams, neighbor Idaho and Montana, on the road in December. The Cougars defeated Weber by ten points.[6][7]
The next opponent was the top seed in the West, #4 Virginia with center Ralph Sampson, who had a first-round bye. The Cougars stayed with the Cavaliers, but lost by five points.[8][9]
Washington State's 23–7 record was their best in 42 years, since the national runner-up team of 1941 went 26–6.[8]
A third-round selection the 1983 NBA draft, senior guard/forward Craig Ehlo had a fourteen-year career in the NBA.
WSU's next NCAA appearance was eleven years away in 1994, under head coach Kelvin Sampson.
The court surface at Beasley Coliseum was tartan (polyurethane) for its first decade and this was its final season;[17] a traditional hardwood floor debuted at the start of the next season.[18][19]