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He won ten NCAA national championships in a 12-year period, including a run of seven in a row that shattered the previous record of only two consecutive titles; to this day, no other team has won more than two straight titles. [10] [11] Within this period, his teams won a men's basketball-record 88 consecutive games.
The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) has been the most successful college in the NCAA Tournament, winning 11 national titles. Ten of those championships came during a 12-year stretch from 1964 to 1975. UCLA also holds the record for the most consecutive championships, winning seven in a row from 1967 to 1973.
Statistics overview Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason Fred W. Cozens (1919–1921): 1919–20: Fred Cozens 12–2: 8–2: 2nd: 1920–21: Fred Cozens
As noted earlier, assists, steals, and blocks were not kept on a national basis until well into the 1980s; the current array of national statistics did not fully take shape until the 1986–87 season. [3] B.H. Born, Kansas vs. Indiana, CH, 3-18-1953: 26 pts., 15 rebs. & 13 blocked shots. [10]
The 1963–64 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team won its first NCAA National Basketball Championship under head coach John R. Wooden in his 16th year at UCLA. Assistant coach Jerry Norman convinced a reluctant Wooden to use the zone press, which the team had never utilized before.
The UCLA Bruins have won more NCAA men's basketball championships than any other school. But it's been awhile. How many times has the UCLA men's basketball team won an NCAA title?
The 1964–65 UCLA Bruins men's basketball team won its second NCAA national championship under head coach John Wooden. [ 2 ] At Memorial Coliseum in Portland, Oregon , the #2 Bruins successfully defended their national title with a 91–80 win over top-ranked Michigan before 13,204.
Three consecutive national championships for the Bruins, five in six years. This was the first year in which the Athletic Association of Western Universities officially adopted the name Pacific-8 Conference, although that name had been used unofficially since the 1964–65 season after Oregon and Oregon State joined the conference.