Year: | 2017 |
Conference: | Big 12 |
Division: | I |
Gender: | Men's |
Teams: | 10 |
Arena: | Sprint Center |
City: | Kansas City, Missouri |
Champions: | Iowa State |
Titlecount: | 4th |
Coach: | Steve Prohm |
Coachcount: | 1st |
Mvp: | Monte Morris |
Mvpteam: | Iowa State |
Attendance: | 94,934 (overall) 18,972 (championship) |
Topscorer: | Deonte Burton |
Topscorerteam: | Iowa State |
Points: | 55 |
Television: | ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU |
The 2017 Phillips 66 Big 12 men's basketball tournament was a postseason men's basketball tournament for the Big 12 Conference. It was played from March 8 to 11, in Kansas City, Missouri at the Sprint Center. Iowa State received the conference's automatic bid to the 2017 NCAA tournament with an 80–74 win over West Virginia in the finals.
The Tournament consisted of a 10 team single-elimination tournament with the top 6 seeds receiving a bye.[1] Teams have been seeded by record within the conference, with a tiebreaker system used to seed teams with identical conference records.
2017 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament seeds | ||||||||||
Seed | School | Conf. | Over. | Tiebreaker | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kansas ‡# | 16–2 | 31–5 | |||||||
2 | West Virginia # | 12–6 | 28–9 | 3–1 vs. Baylor/Iowa State | ||||||
3 | Baylor # | 12–6 | 27–8 | 2–2 vs. West Virginia/Iowa State | ||||||
4 | Iowa State # | 12–6 | 24–11 | 1–3 vs. West Virginia/Baylor | ||||||
5 | Oklahoma State # | 9–9 | 20–13 | |||||||
6 | Kansas State # | 8–10 | 21–14 | |||||||
7 | 6–12 | 18–14 | 1–1 vs. TCU, 0–2 vs Kansas, 1–1 vs. West Virginia | |||||||
8 | 6–12 | 24–15 | 1–1 vs. Texas Tech, 0–2 vs. Kansas, 0–2 vs. West Virginia | |||||||
9 | 5–13 | 11–20 | ||||||||
10 | 4–14 | 11–22 | ||||||||
‡ – Big 12 Conference regular season champions, and tournament No. 1 seed. # – Received a single-bye in the conference tournament. Overall records include all games played in the Big 12 Conference tournament. |
Game times for games 2, 4, 6, and 8 are subject to change because the second game of each session begins 30 minutes after the conclusion of the first game.[2]
Session | Game | Time | Matchup | Television | Attendance | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First Round – Wednesday, March 8 | ||||||
1 | 1 | 6:00 pm |
| ESPNU | 18,972 | |
2 | 8:00 pm |
| ||||
Quarterfinals – Thursday, March 9 | ||||||
2 | 3 | 11:30 am |
| ESPN2 | 18,972 | |
4 | 1:30 pm |
| ||||
3 | 5 | 6:00 pm |
| ESPNU | 18,972 | |
6 | 8:00 pm |
| ||||
Semifinals – Friday, March 10 | ||||||
4 | 7 | 6:00 pm |
| ESPN2 | 18,972 | |
8 | 8:00 pm |
| ||||
Final – Saturday, March 11 | ||||||
5 | 9 | 5:00 pm |
| ESPN | 18,972 | |
Game times in CT. #-Rankings denote tournament seed[3] [4] |
Most Outstanding Player – Monte Morris, Iowa State[3]
Player | Team | Position | Class | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Monte Morris | Iowa State | 0 | 0 | |
Deonte Burton | Iowa State | 0 | 0 | |
Matt Thomas | Iowa State | 0 | 0 | |
Jevon Carter | West Virginia | 0 | 0 | |
Tarik Phillip | West Virginia | 0 | 0 |