Arizona Wildcats Featuring future NBA stars
Richard Jefferson and
Gilbert Arenas along with Wake Forest transfer
Loren Woods, future NBA player and coach
Luke Walton and future
Harlem Globetrotter Eugene "Wildkat" Edgerson, Arizona entered the season ranked #1 and entered the tournament as the #2 seed in the Midwest Regional. The Wildcats would crush
Eastern Illinois and
Butler to reach the Sweet 16. Arizona would beat #3
Ole Miss 66–56 and #1
Illinois to reach the Final Four. In an emotional season in which coach
Lute Olson suffered the loss of his wife Bobbi, he would be just 40 minutes away from a second national championship after his Wildcats blew out defending national champion Michigan State. The game was close at halftime with Arizona leading by just 2. However, Arizona outscored Michigan State 48–31 in the second half en route to the 19-point victory.
Duke Blue Devils Featuring
Carlos Boozer,
Jay Williams and national and Defensive Player of the Year
Shane Battier, the Blue Devils would travel the same path they took nine years ago when they claimed their last championship in
1992 and became the first team since
UCLA in 1972 and 1973 to repeat as national champions, from
Greensboro to
Philadelphia to
Minneapolis. In their first four games of the tournament, Duke bested
Monmouth,
Missouri (coached by Duke player and assistant and future NBA coach
Quin Snyder) and Los Angeles rivals UCLA and
USC all by double digits. In the Final Four, they met ACC rival
Maryland for the fourth time that season after both road teams won during the ACC regular season before Duke won 84–82 in the
ACC tournament semifinals in Atlanta en route to winning the tournament. Finding themselves down 39–17 with 6:57 to play in the first half and down 49–38 at the half, Duke went on to stage a comeback against the Terrapins and win
95–84 to advance to the championship game. Duke's 22-point deficit and 11-point halftime deficit marked the largest comeback in Final Four history. ==Starting lineups==