basketball-men-d1 flag

Zach Pekale | NCAA.com | May 27, 2020

1942 NCAA tournament: Bracket, scores, stats, records

Everything you need to know about March Madness

Stanford won its first NCAA national championship in 1942. The Cardinal beat Dartmouth 53-38 in the title game, led by 15 points from Howie Dallmar. Stanford had both the tournament's Most Outstanding Player (Dallmar) and one of the two leading scorers in Jim Pollard, who finished with 43 points.

Kentucky and Colorado also participated in the national semifinals in 1942.

Pollard and Rice's Chet Palmer were the tournament's co-leading scorers with 43 points.

1942 NCAA tournament: Bracket

Click or tap here for a printable bracket.

Here is a printable version of the 1942 NCAA tournament bracket.

 

1942 NCAA tournament: Scores

  • Regional Semifinals
    • East Region
      • Dartmouth 44, Penn State 39
      • Kentucky 46, Illinois 44
    • West Region
      • Stanford 53, Rice 47
      • Colorado 46, Kansas 44
  • Regional Finals
    • East Region
      • Dartmouth 47, Kentucky 28
    • West Region
      • Stanford 46, Colorado 35
  • Regional Third-Place Games
    • East Region
      • Penn State 41, Illinois 34
    • West Region
      • Kansas 55, Rice 53
  • National championship (Kansas City, Missouri)
    • Stanford 53, Dartmouth 38

1942 NCAA tournament: Stats, records

Here are the 1942 NCAA tournament leaders (number of games in parentheses):

Individual scoring

  • Chet Palmer, Rice and Jim Pollard, Stanford (2 each) — 21.5

2023 Maui Invitational: Bracket, schedule, teams

The 2023 Maui Invitational will see eight teams play in Hawai'i from Nov. 20 through Nov. 22.
READ MORE

The complete history of Chaminade men's basketball at the Maui Invitational

Here is the complete history of the Silverswords' tournament runs as well as a look at some of the top college basketball teams that DII Chaminade faced on an annual basis at the Maui Invitational.
READ MORE

College basketball's milestone anniversaries, over the past 80 years

2023 is a year to celebrate the present state of college basketball, with more senior stars than ever and a burgeoning women's game, but also a fitting occasion to look back on its impactful anniversaries that helped build the game. Mike Lopresti looks back on 80 years of college basketball history:
READ MORE

Subscribe To Email Updates

Enter your information to receive emails about offers, promotions from NCAA.com and our partners