2016 National Invitation Tournament

The 2016 National Invitation Tournament was a single-elimination tournament of 32 NCAA Division I teams that were not selected to participate in the 2016 NCAA tournament. The annual tournament was played on campus sites for the first three rounds, with the Final Four and championship game being held at Madison Square Garden in New York City. The tournament began on Tuesday, March 15 and ended on Thursday, March 31. An experimental rule allowing players six personal fouls instead of five was approved for use in all national postseason tournaments except for the NCAA Tournament. The NIT Selection Show aired at 8:30 PM EDT on Sunday, March 13, 2016, on ESPNU. George Washington were the champions over Valparaiso 76–60. The Colonials victory was their first-ever NIT title.

2016 National Invitation Tournament
Season2015–16
Teams32
Finals siteMadison Square Garden
New York City
ChampionsGeorge Washington Colonials (1st title)
Runner-upValparaiso Crusaders (1st title game)
Semifinalists
Winning coachMike Lonergan (1st title)
MVPTyler Cavanaugh (George Washington)
National Invitation Tournaments
«20152017»

Participants

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Automatic qualifiers

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The following 15 teams earned automatic berths into the 2016 NIT field by virtue of having won their respective conference's regular season championship but failing to win their conference tournaments or receive an at-large NCAA bid.

TeamConferenceRecordAppearanceLast bid
AkronMAC26–84th2012
BelmontOhio Valley20–113rd2014
BucknellPatriot17–133rd2015
High PointBig South21–102nd2014
HofstraCAA24–95th2007
IPFWSummit24–91stNever
MonmouthMAAC27–71stNever
New Mexico StateWAC23–105th2000
North FloridaAtlantic Sun22–111stNever
Saint Mary'sWCC27–55th2015
San Diego StateMountain West25–96th2009
Texas SouthernSWAC18–142nd2011
UABC-USA26–612th2010
ValparaisoHorizon26–63rd2012
WagnerNEC22–103rd2002

At-large bids

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The following 17 teams were also awarded NIT berths.

TeamConferenceRecordAppearanceLast bid
AlabamaSEC18–1414th2015
BYUWest Coast23–1012th2013
CreightonBig East18–1411th2011
DavidsonAtlantic 1020–127th2014
FloridaSEC19–1410th2009
Florida StateACC19–1310th2014
George WashingtonAtlantic 1023–106th2015
GeorgiaSEC19–1313th2014
Georgia TechACC19–148th2003
HoustonAmerican22–910th2006
Long Beach StateBig West20–148th2013
Ohio StateBig Ten20–139th2008
PrincetonIvy22–66th2002
South CarolinaSEC24–812th2009
St. BonaventureAtlantic 1022–816th2002
Virginia TechACC19–1413th2011
WashingtonPac-1218–148th2013

Seeds

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The first four teams left out of the NCAA tournament were the top seeds in the four regions, as in last year's tournament. They were St. Bonaventure, South Carolina, Monmouth and Valparaiso.[1]

St. Bonaventure Bracket
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1St. BonaventureAtlantic 1022–8At-large
2BYUWest Coast23–10At-large
3Virginia TechACC19–14At-large
4CreightonBig East18–14At-large
5AlabamaSEC18–14At-large
6PrincetonIvy22–6At-large
7UABC-USA26–6Automatic
8WagnerNortheast22–10Automatic
South Carolina Bracket
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1South CarolinaSEC24–8At-large
2San Diego StateMountain West25–9Automatic
3WashingtonPac-1218–14At-large
4Georgia TechACC19–14At-large
5HoustonAmerican22–9At-large
6Long Beach StateBig West20–14At-large
7IPFWSummit24–9Automatic
8High PointBig South21–10Automatic
Valparaiso Bracket
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1ValparaisoHorizon26–6Automatic
2Saint Mary'sWest Coast27–5Automatic
3GeorgiaSEC19–13At-large
4Florida StateACC19–13At-large
5DavidsonAtlantic 1020–12At-large
6BelmontOhio Valley20–11Automatic
7New Mexico StateWAC23–10Automatic
8Texas SouthernSWAC18–14Automatic
Monmouth Bracket
SeedSchoolConferenceRecordBerth type
1MonmouthMAAC27–7Automatic
2FloridaSEC19–14At-large
3Ohio StateBig Ten20–13At-large
4George WashingtonAtlantic 1023–10At-large
5HofstraColonial24–9Automatic
6AkronMAC26–8Automatic
7North FloridaAtlantic Sun22–11Automatic
8BucknellPatriot17–13Automatic

Schedule

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The NIT began on Tuesday March 15. The first three rounds were played on campus sites. The Final Four began on Tuesday, March 29 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, and ended there with the championship game on Thursday, March 31.

Bracket

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^Florida was not able to host home games at the O'Connell Center due to arena renovations.[2]

First roundSecond roundQuarterfinals
         
1Monmouth90
8Bucknell80
1Monmouth71
4George Washington87
4George Washington82
5Hofstra80
4George Washington82
2Florida^77
2Florida^97
7North Florida68
2Florida^74
3Ohio State66
3Ohio State72*
6Akron63
First roundSecond roundQuarterfinals
         
1St. Bonaventure75
8Wagner79
8Wagner54
4Creighton87
4Creighton72
5Alabama54
4Creighton82
2BYU88
2BYU97
7UAB79
2BYU80
3Virginia Tech77
3Virginia Tech86*
6Princeton81
First roundSecond roundQuarterfinals
         
1South Carolina88
8High Point66
1South Carolina66
4Georgia Tech83
4Georgia Tech81
5Houston62
4Georgia Tech56
2San Diego State72
2San Diego State79
7IPFW55
2San Diego State93
3Washington78
3Washington107
6Long Beach State102
First roundSecond roundQuarterfinals
         
1Valparaiso84
8Texas Southern73
1Valparaiso81
4Florida State69
4Florida State84
5Davidson74
1Valparaiso60
2Saint Mary's44
2Saint Mary's58
7New Mexico State56
2Saint Mary's77
3Georgia65
3Georgia93
6Belmont84
Semifinals
March 29
Final
March 31
      
1Valparaiso72
2BYU70
1Valparaiso60
4George Washington76
2San Diego State46
4George Washington65

* Denotes overtime period

Media

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ESPN, Inc. had exclusive television rights to all NIT games. It will telecast every game across ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, and ESPN3 (ESPNews was used for the Valparaiso–Florida State game). Since 2011, Westwood One had exclusive radio rights to the semifinals and championship. In 2016 Scott Graham and Kelly Tripucka provided the call.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "2016 NIT bracket". cbssports.com. CBS Sports. Retrieved March 5, 2017.
  2. ^ "Florida/UNF Game Notes" (PDF). GatorZone.com. SideArm Sports. Retrieved March 15, 2016.