• June 11 – The NCAA releases its annual
Academic Progress Rate report. Three Division I men's basketball programs will be ineligible for postseason play in 2013–14; three others are ineligible pending appeals and NCAA review of data. The penalized programs are: •
Arkansas–Pine Bluff (pending review) •
FIU •
Grambling State •
Mississippi Valley State (pending review) •
New Orleans •
Southern (pending review) • November 4 – The
Associated Press preseason
All-America team is released.
Oklahoma State guard
Marcus Smart was the only unanimous choice, gaining all 65 votes. He was joined by
Doug McDermott of
Creighton (63 votes),
Louisville guard
Russ Smith (52),
Kansas freshman
Andrew Wiggins (42) and
Michigan forward
Mitch McGary (34). • November 12 – Freshmen and transfers are eligible for the preseason
Wooden Award watch list for the first time in the trophy's history. Nine freshmen made the 50-member list, including three each from Kentucky (
Andrew Harrison,
Julius Randle and
James Young) and Kansas (
Andrew Wiggins,
Wayne Selden, Jr. and
Joel Embiid).
Jabari Parker of Duke,
Aaron Gordon of Arizona and
Noah Vonleh of Indiana were the other three freshmen named. • February 27 – Shortly after the end of
Utah Valley's 66–61
home win over
New Mexico State in a battle between the
WAC co-leaders, NMSU guard K.C. Ross-Miller throws a basketball at Utah Valley's Holton Hunsaker (son of UVU head coach
Dick Hunsaker), hitting him in the leg. The incident triggers a brawl between players and fans who had
stormed the court, The next day, the WAC suspends two NMSU players—Ross-Miller for two games and Renaldo Dixon for one—for their involvement in the brawl. • April 7 – Manhattan announces that it will retain Masiello as head coach, contingent on him earning his bachelor's degree from UK. At the time, he was about 10 credit hours short of a degree, and was expected to complete the needed courses during the summer term. UK announced on May 29 that Masiello had completed the required coursework and would receive his degree in August. • April 9 –
UMass sophomore guard
Derrick Gordon becomes the first active Division I men's college player to
come out as
gay.
Milestones and records •
Oakland guard
Travis Bader,
Devon Saddler of
Delaware,
Anthony Ireland of
Loyola Marymount,
USC Upstate forward
Torrey Craig,
Bryant forward
Alex Francis,
Cincinnati guard
Sean Kilpatrick,
Nevada guard
Deonte Burton,
Iowa State guard
DeAndre Kane,
Buffalo forward
Javon McCrea and North Dakota swingman
Troy Huff each passed the 2,000 point mark for their careers. • November 19 –
Wisconsin junior forward
Frank Kaminsky broke the school's single-game scoring record. Kaminsky scored 43 points in a win over
North Dakota. The previous record of 42 points was held by Ken Barnes and
Michael Finley. • December 14 –
Aaron Craft broke
Ohio State's career assist record (previously held by
Jamar Butler) in a game against
North Dakota State. • December 18 –
Texas Southern's
Aaric Murray scored 48 points against
Temple in the
Liacouras Center, setting records for the most points scored against Temple by one player as well as a new arena record. • January 25 –
Duke head coach
Mike Krzyzewski records his 900th career win at the school, becoming just the second Division I men's coach to achieve 900+ wins at one university (
Jim Boeheim at
Syracuse was the first; both were preceded in the women's game by
Pat Summitt at
Tennessee). •
Vermont forward
Brian Voelkel became the first player in NCAA Division I history to record at least 1,000 career rebounds and 600 career assists. • February 1 –
Syracuse defeats
Duke 91–89 in overtime before a record-setting crowd of 35,446, the largest basketball crowd in the
Carrier Dome's history and an all-time NCAA record for an on-campus game. • February 2 – Oakland's Travis Bader surpassed
JJ Redick for the most NCAA Division I career
three-point field goals made. Redick's 457 made three-pointers record had stood since 2007. • February 8 –
Melvin Ejim of
Iowa State scores a Big 12-record 48 points in an 84–69 win over
TCU, surpassing
Michael Beasley and
Denis Clemente, both of
Kansas State, who had 44 points in 2008 and 2009, respectively. • February 10 –
SMU enters the
Associated Press Top 25 poll for the first time since the next-to-last poll of 1984–85, a span of 30 seasons. • February 21 – Oakland's Travis Bader eclipsed
Keydren Clark's career three-point
attempts record of 1,192, which was set in 2006, almost three weeks after setting the new career three-pointers made mark. He finished his career with 1,246. • March 8 –
Doug McDermott of
Creighton became just the eighth Division I men's player to surpass 3,000 career points. He scored a career-high 45 points against
Providence on Creighton's senior night to give him 3,011 at the time. • March 9: • Wichita State beats
Indiana State 83–69 in the final of the
Missouri Valley Conference tournament in
St. Louis, becoming the first Division I men's team to enter the NCAA tournament unbeaten since
UNLV in 1991. •
Coastal Carolina, led by head coach
Cliff Ellis, beats
Winthrop 76–61 in the final of the
Big South Conference tournament. With the win, Ellis became just the 10th head coach to take four different schools to the NCAA tournament (he previously took
South Alabama,
Clemson, and
Auburn). • March 19 –
East Carolina guard
Akeem Richmond finished his career with 416 made three-pointers, good for sixth all-time in Division I history. ==Conference membership changes==