national championship trophy awarded by the
Veteran Athletes of Philadelphia The national championship of collegiate basketball that is officially recognized by the main governing body for collegiate athletics in the United States, the
NCAA, has been awarded to the champion of an annual national post-season tournament run by the NCAA since 1939. National post-season college basketball tournaments began in earnest with the
NAIA national men's basketball championship in 1937, the
National Invitation Tournament (NIT) in 1938, and the
NCAA tournament in 1939. The ''Official NCAA Men's Basketball Records Book'' lists title selections of pre-tournament era teams by the
Helms Athletic Foundation. The Helms Foundation's Bill Schroeder named a national champion from 1901 to 1982, with his selections from 1901 to 1941 being named retroactively in 1943 and 1957. Most recently, the retroactive end-of-year
Premo-Porretta Power Poll has provided the first national rankings of college basketball teams for the 1895–96 through the 1947–48 seasons. (No regular, recognized national polling took place prior to the establishment of the
Associated Press poll and the
coaches poll for college basketball prior to the 1948–49 and 1950–51 seasons, respectively.) The Premo-Porretta rankings were published in 2009 in the
ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia. The poll's top team selections differed from the results of the NCAA tournament in 1939, 1941, 1943, 1944, 1945, and 1947. During
World War II, from 1943 to 1945, the NCAA, NIT and
Madison Square Garden cooperated to host "mythical national championship games" between winners of each year's NCAA and NIT tournaments in order to benefit the
American Red Cross' War Fund. The series was described by
Ray Meyer, coach of the losing 1945 DePaul team, as "the games for the national championship". During the early years of the two tournaments, the NCAA and NIT competed against each other, giving rise to debate over their relative prowess. In 1939, the inaugural year of the NCAA tournament, the NIT was generally considered to be superior. In 1943, in a shrewd competitive move the NCAA tournament began sharing Madison Square Garden with the NIT. In 1950,
City College of New York won both the NIT and the NCAA tournaments in the same season, coincidentally defeating Bradley University in the championship game of both tournaments and thereby united the titles. In the
1952 Olympic Trials held immediately after the tournaments,
NCAA champion Kansas defeated
NAIA champion Southwest Missouri State in the collegiate semi-finals and then
NIT champion La Salle in the collegiate final. Kansas lost to the
AAU champion Peoria Caterpillars in the overall final. After the fall-out from the 1951 gambling and point-shaving scandals, the NCAA tournament pulled out of Madison Square Garden. The NCAA built on the momentum of three consecutive Red Cross "mythical national championship" game victories over the NIT, eventually outmaneuvering the NIT by adeptly avoiding permanent damage from the 1951 gambling and point-shaving scandals and by adding more teams. Purdue, Stanford, North Carolina, Pittsburgh, Wisconsin, Syracuse, and Washington State.
LSU claims the 1935 championship by virtue of winning the American Legion Bowl game against
Pittsburgh in a match-up of regional powers. Multiple schools claim a national championship based on their NIT championships: Temple (1938), Long Island (in 1939 and 1941), West Virginia (1942), DePaul (1945), Utah (1947), San Francisco (1949), BYU (1951 and 1966), La Salle (1952), Seton Hall (1953), Holy Cross (1954), Duquesne (1955), Louisville (1956), Xavier (1958), Providence (1961 and 1963), and Southern Illinois (1967). Long Island (1939) and Kentucky (1933 and 1954) also recognize their selections as national champion by the Helms Foundation's Bill Schroeder during seasons that a different NCAA champion was crowned. The following table is a partial list of schools that claim a national championship from the pre-NCAA tournament era of college basketball. See also
Helms Athletic Foundation basketball national titles. Not all schools recognize national championship honors bestowed by third-party selectors, although almost every school with a team named as a Helms national champion claims the title for the selected seasons.
Tournament/playoff winners Non-tournament selections ==Historically black colleges and universities==