1909–10 IAAUS men's basketball season

The 1909–10 IAAUS men's basketball season began in December 1909, progressed through the regular season, and concluded in March 1910.

Rule changes

edit
  • Continuous dribbling became legal; previously, a player could bounce the ball only once at a time, the bounce had to be higher than his head, and he had to recover the ball himself, in effect passing the ball to himself.[1]
  • The double dribble became illegal; previously, a player could make as many single-bounce dribbles as he wanted as long as he recovered the ball after each bounce (as if passing to himself each time).[2]
  • A player who dribbled the ball was allowed to shoot off the dribble for the first time; previously, a dribbler was not allowed to shoot the ball immediately after dribbling and had to pass it to someone else to shoot it.[1][3]

Season headlines

edit
  • The Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United States (IAAUS) renamed itself the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) after the end of the season.
  • The new rules allowing continuous dribbling rule and permitting a dribbler to shoot the ball off a dribble converted dribbling from a defensive tactic into a powerful offensive one.[1]
  • In February 1943, the Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively selected Columbia as its national champion for the 1909–10 season.[4]
  • In 1995, the Premo-Porretta Power Poll retroactively selected Williams as its national champion for the 1909–10 season.[5]

Conference membership changes

edit
School Former Conference New Conference
Denver Pioneers Independent No major basketball program
Harvard Crimson Independent No major basketball program

Regular season

edit

Conferences

edit

Conference winners

edit
Conference Regular
Season Winner[6]
Conference
Player of the Year
Conference
Tournament
Tournament
Venue (City)
Tournament
Winner
Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association Iowa State (North);
Kansas (South)
None selected No Tournament;
Kansas was conference champion
Western Conference Chicago None selected No Tournament

Conference standings

edit
1909–10 Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
North Division
Nebraska 6 2   .750 6 10   .375
Iowa State 6 2   .750 9 7   .563
Drake 0 8   .000 0 12   .000
South Division
Kansas 7 1   .875 18 1   .947
Washington University 4 4   .500 7 5   .583
Missouri 1 7   .125 7 11   .389
† Conference championship winner
1909–10 Western Conference men's basketball standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Chicago 9 3   .750 10 3   .769
Minnesota 7 3   .700 10 3   .769
Wisconsin 7 5   .583 9 5   .643
Illinois 5 4   .556 5 4   .556
Purdue 5 5   .500 8 5   .615
Iowa 2 2   .500 11 3   .786
Indiana 3 7   .300 5 8   .385
Northwestern 0 9   .000 0 9   .000

Independents

edit

A total of 115 college teams played as major independents. Among independents that played at least 10 games, Columbia (11–0), Virginia Tech (11–0), and Williams (11–0) were undefeated, and Southern California (21–3) finished with the most wins.[7]

1909–10 IAAUS men's basketball independents standings
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
Columbia   11 0   1.000
Oklahoma   8 0   1.000
Virginia Tech   11 0   1.000
Wake Forest   1 0   1.000
Washburn   4 0   1.000
Whittier   8 0   1.000
Williams   11 0   1.000
Army   14 1   .933
Southwestern (Kan.)   13 1   .929
Grinnell   12 1   .923
Cotner   11 1   .917
Ohio State   11 1   .917
Navy   10 1   .909
Rochester (N.Y.)   17 2   .895
Fordham   16 2   .889
Canisius   15 2   .882
Southern California   21 3   .875
Central University (Ky.)   20 3   .870
Utah   17 3   .850
North Dakota Agricultural   11 2   .846
Brigham Young   9 2   .818
Niagara   13 3   .813
Washington State   12 3   .800
Kansas State   11 3   .786
Oberlin   10 3   .769
Vanderbilt   10 3   .769
New York University   13 4   .765
Lehigh   6 2   .750
LSU   3 1   .750
Seton Hall   6 2   .750
St. John's (N.Y.)   15 5   .750
Swarthmore   9 3   .750
Virginia   12 4   .750
Allegheny   8 3   .727
Notre Dame   10 4   .714
Marietta   7 3   .700
Washington   14 6   .700
Georgia   2 1   .667
Michigan State   10 5   .667
Montana State   6 3   .667
Rhode Island State   6 3   .667
Wisconsin–Stevens Point   2 1   .667
Auburn   11 6   .647
Colgate   9 5   .643
Wesleyan (Conn.)   9 5   .643
Wooster   7 4   .636
Akron   5 3   .625
St. Joseph's   5 3   .625
Baylor   8 5   .615
Illinois State   8 5   .615
Cincinnati   3 2   .600
CCNY   6 4   .600
Dartmouth   6 4   .600
Maine   6 4   .600
Miami (Ohio)   6 4   .600
Bloomsburg   7 5   .583
Bucknell   7 5   .583
Colorado   7 5   .583
Grove City   7 5   .583
Wabash   7 5   .583
Millikin   4 3   .571
Penn State   8 6   .571
Oregon Agricultural   7 3   .700
SUNY-Potsdam   11 9   .550
Cornell   7 6   .538
Princeton   7 6   .538
Pennsylvania   11 10   .524
Arizona   2 2   .500
Delaware   6 6   .500
Trinity (N.C.)   4 4   .500
Kalamazoo   2 2   .500
Oklahoma A&M   3 3   .500
Butler   3 4   .429
Saint Mary's (Calif.)   1 1   .500
Washington and Lee   6 6   .500
Wyoming   3 3   .500
Idaho   8 9   .471
Tennessee   7 8   .467
Bradley   6 7   .462
Denison   6 7   .462
Texas   6 7   .462
Dayton   5 6   .455
Gettysburg   5 6   .455
Mount Union   8 10   .444
Tulane   3 4   .429
Georgetown   5 7   .417
Davidson   2 3   .400
Detroit   2 3   .400
New Mexico   2 3   .400
North Dakota   4 6   .400
Temple   4 6   .400
New Mexico A&M   3 5   .375
Brown   5 9   .357
Colorado Agricultural   1 2   .333
Franklin   3 6   .333
Kentucky   4 8   .333
Lake Forest   3 6   .333
Manhattan   7 15   .318
Springfield (Mass.)   3 7   .300
Union (N.Y.)   3 7   .300
Utah State   3 7   .300
Nebraska Wesleyan   4 10   .286
Ohio   8 11   .421
Trinity (Conn.)   4 10   .286
VMI   2 5   .286
Yale   4 11   .267
William & Mary   8 11   .421
Fairmount   3 10   .231
Syracuse   3 11   .214
Carleton   1 4   .200
Indiana State   2 9   .182
Oregon   1 5   .167
Ole Miss   0 7   .000
Santa Clara   0 5   .000
South Carolina   0 1   .000
Rankings from AP Poll

Statistical leaders

edit

Awards

edit

Helms College Basketball All-Americans

edit

The practice of selecting a Consensus All-American Team did not begin until the 1928–29 season. The Helms Athletic Foundation later retroactively selected a list of All-Americans for the 1909–10 season.[8]

Player Team
William Broadhead NYU
Leon Campbell Colgate
Dave Charters Purdue
William Copthorne Army
Charles Eberle Swarthmore
Samuel Harman Rochester
Ted Kiendl Columbia
Ernest Lambert Oklahoma
W. Vaughn Lewis Williams
Harlan "Pat" Page Chicago

Major player of the year awards

edit

Coaching changes

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Hoop Tactics "The Evolution of Basketball: A Chronological Look At The Major Refinements" Accessed 15 May 2021
  2. ^ orangehoops.org History of NCAA Basketball Rule Changes
  3. ^ Schleyer, Claudia, "The Rules of Basketball: Boy How They've Changed!", Youth Hoops 101 Accessed 15 May 2021
  4. ^ Scott, Jon (November 9, 2010). "The truth behind the Helms Committee". Retrieved May 13, 2021.
  5. ^ ESPN, ed. (2009). ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game. New York, NY: ESPN Books. pp. 526, 529–587. ISBN 978-0-345-51392-2.
  6. ^ "2009 NCAA Men's Basketball Record Book – Conferences Section" (PDF). NCAA. 2009. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
  7. ^ "1909-10 Men's Independent Season Summary". Sports Reference. Retrieved July 25, 2024.
  8. ^ The Association for Professional Basketball Research "NCAA All-American Teams, 1919–20 to 1998–99"