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1923–24 NCAA men's basketball season

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The 1923–24 NCAA men's basketball season began in December 1923, progressed through the regular season and conference tournaments, and concluded in March 1924.

Rule changes

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A new rule required the player who was fouled to shoot his own free throws. Previously, a team could pick any player it wanted to shoot its free throws, and usually picked its best free-throw shooter to shoot all of them. The new rule thus brought to an end the practice of a team having a designated free-throw shooter.[1][2]

Season headlines

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Conference membership changes

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School Former conference New conference
Arkansas Razorbacks Non-major basketball program Southwest Conference
Maryland Terrapins Non-major basketball program Southern Conference
Sewanee Tigers Independent Southern Conference
TCU Horned Frogs Independent Southwest Conference
Western State Mountaineers Non-major basketball program Independent

Regular season

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Conferences

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Conference winners and tournaments

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Conference Regular
season winner[6]
Conference
player of the year
Conference
tournament
Tournament
venue (City)
Tournament
winner
Big Ten Conference Chicago, Illinois, & Wisconsin None selected No Tournament
Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League Cornell None selected No Tournament
Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association Kansas None selected No Tournament
Pacific Coast Conference Washington (North);
California (South)
No Tournament;
California defeated Washington in best-of-three conference championship playoff series
Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference Colorado College (Colorado);
BYU (Utah)
No Tournament;
Colorado College was conference champion
Southern Conference Tulane None selected 1924 Southern Conference men's basketball tournament Municipal Auditorium
(Atlanta, Georgia)
North Carolina[7]
Southwest Conference Texas None selected No Tournament

Conference standings

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1923–24 Big Ten Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Wisconsin 8 4   .667 11 5   .688
Chicago 8 4   .667 11 6   .647
Illinois 8 4   .667 11 6   .647
Ohio State 7 5   .583 12 5   .706
Purdue 7 5   .583 12 5   .706
Indiana 7 5   .583 11 6   .647
Michigan 6 6   .500 10 7   .588
Minnesota 5 7   .417 9 8   .529
Iowa 4 8   .333 7 10   .412
Northwestern 0 12   .000 0 16   .000
1923–24 Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Cornell 8 2   .800 13 3   .813
Columbia 6 4   .600 15 4   .789
Princeton 6 4   .600 11 6   .647
Dartmouth 4 6   .400 12 9   .571
Penn 3 7   .300 18 8   .692
Yale 3 7   .300 12 10   .545
1923–24 Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Kansas 15 1   .938 16 3   .842
Oklahoma 13 3   .813 15 3   .833
Nebraska 10 6   .625 11 7   .611
Washington University 8 8   .500 10 9   .526
Drake 8 8   .500 9 9   .500
Kansas State 8 8   .500 8 8   .500
Grinnell 4 12   .250 4 14   .222
Missouri 4 12   .250 4 14   .222
Iowa State 2 14   .125 2 16   .111
1923–24 Pacific Coast Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
North
Washington 7 2   .778 12 4   .750
Oregon Agricultural 6 2   .750 20 5   .800
Oregon 4 4   .500 15 5   .750
Idaho 4 6   .400 23 11   .676
Washington State 3 7   .300 17 11   .607
Montana 1 4   .200 7 8   .467
South
California 5 3   .625 14 4   .778
USC 4 4   .500 15 4   .789
Stanford 3 5   .375 10 5   .667
† Conference playoff series winner
As of 1924[8]
1923–24 Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Colorado
Colorado College 9 1   .900 15 2   .882
Colorado Mines 8 4   .667 8 4   .667
Colorado Agricultural 6 4   .600 6 5   .545
Colorado 3 5   .375 4 7   .364
Denver 3 7   .300 3 8   .273
Wyoming 1 7   .125 2 13   .133
Utah
BYU 7 1   .875 14 4   .778
Utah State 3 5   .375 6 6   .500
Utah 2 6   .250 2 6   .250
† Conference championship winner
1923–24 Southern Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Tulane 10 0   1.000 21 1   .955
North Carolina 7 0   1.000 26 0   1.000
Georgia 7 0   1.000 16 5   .762
Alabama 5 1   .833 12 4   .750
Kentucky 6 2   .750 13 3   .813
Mississippi A&M 8 4   .667 13 8   .619
Virginia 3 2   .600 12 3   .800
Tennessee 5 5   .500 10 8   .556
South Carolina 2 2   .500 11 9   .550
Georgia Tech 4 5   .444 9 13   .409
Mississippi 2 4   .333 16 6   .727
Washington and Lee 2 4   .333 9 5   .643
NC State 2 4   .333 7 16   .304
Maryland 1 2   .333 5 7   .417
Vanderbilt 1 3   .250 7 15   .318
Florida 0 2   .000 5 10   .333
Sewanee 0 2   .000 2 7   .222
Virginia Tech 0 4   .000 5 13   .278
Auburn 0 6   .000 4 9   .308
Clemson 0 6   .000 2 14   .125
LSU 0 7   .000 8 12   .400
Southern Conference Tournament winner
1923–24 Southwest Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Texas 20 0   1.000 23 0   1.000
TCU 15 4   .789 16 4   .800
Texas A&M 13 10   .565 13 10   .565
Oklahoma A&M 9 5   .643 14 6   .700
Baylor 7 17   .292 11 23   .324
SMU 7 15   .318 9 15   .375
Arkansas 3 9   .250 17 11   .607
Rice 3 17   .150 3 17   .150

Statistical leaders

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Awards

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Helms College Basketball All-Americans

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The practice of selecting a Consensus All-American Team did not begin until the 1928–29 season. The Helms Athletic Foundation later retroactively selected a list of All-Americans for the 1923–24 season.[9]

Player Team
Tusten Ackerman Kansas
Charlie T. Black Kansas
Cartwright Carmichael North Carolina
Jack Cobb North Carolina
Abb Curtis Texas
Amory Gill Oregon Agricultural
Harry Kipke Michigan
Hugh Latham Oregon
James Lovley Creighton
H. W. Middlesworth Butler

Major player of the year awards

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Coaching changes

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A number of teams changed coaches during the season and after it ended.

Team Former
Coach
Interim
Coach
New
Coach
Reason
Indiana Leslie Mann Everett Dean
Marshall Bill Strickling Russ Meredith

References

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  1. ^ orangehoops.org History of NCAA Basketball Rule Changes
  2. ^ Schleyer, Claudia, "The Rules of Basketball: Boy How They've Changed!", Youth Hoops 101 Accessed 15 May 2021
  3. ^ "1923-24 UNC Tar Heels Roster and Stats". College Basketball at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved September 11, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Scott, Jon (November 9, 2010). "The truth behind the Helms Committee". Retrieved December 14, 2015.
  5. ^ ESPN, ed. (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. New York, NY: ESPN Books. pp. 526, 529–587. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
  6. ^ "2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book – Conferences Section" (PDF). NCAA. 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  7. ^ 2008–09 SoCon Men's Basketball Media Guide – Postseason Section, Southern Conference, retrieved 2009-02-09
  8. ^ "2017-18 Men's Basketball Media Guide". Pac-12 Conference. p. 72. Retrieved April 10, 2019.
  9. ^ The Association for Professional Basketball Research "NCAA All-American Teams, 1919–20 to 1998–99"