1953–54 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team

American college basketball season

1953–54 La Salle Explorers men's basketball
NCAA tournament National champions
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
APNo. 2
Record26–4
Head coach
  • Ken Loeffler (5th season)
Seasons
← 1952–53
1953–54 NCAA men's basketball independents standings
  • v
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Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 3 Holy Cross   26 2   .929
No. 17 Seattle   26 2   .929
No. 5 Duquesne   26 3   .897
No. 6 Notre Dame   22 3   .880
No. 2 La Salle   26 4   .867
Dayton   25 7   .781
Louisville   22 7   .759
No. 9 Penn State   18 6   .750
Oklahoma City   18 7   .720
Navy   18 8   .692
Army   15 7   .682
Villanova   20 11   .645
Lafayette   17 10   .630
Saint Joseph's   14 9   .609
Xavier   18 12   .600
No. 7 Bradley   19 13   .594
John Carroll   15 11   .577
Seton Hall   13 10   .565
Temple   15 12   .556
Muhlenberg   12 10   .545
Washington University   12 10   .545
Syracuse   10 9   .526
Cincinnati   11 10   .524
DePaul   11 10   .524
Iona   11 10   .524
Butler   13 12   .520
Boston College   11 11   .500
Loyola Marymount   14 16   .467
Rutgers   11 13   .458
Creighton   14 17   .452
Gonzaga   12 15   .444
Valparaiso   10 13   .435
Marquette   11 15   .423
Lehigh   8 12   .400
Pittsburgh   9 14   .391
Georgetown   11 18   .379
Siena   7 14   .333
Portland   9 19   .321
Loyola (IL)   7 15   .318
Drake   7 16   .304
Colgate   5 12   .294
Bucknell   4 16   .200
Rankings from AP Poll


The 1953–54 La Salle Explorers men's basketball team represented La Salle University in the 1953–54 NCAA men's basketball season. The team's head coach was Ken Loeffler. La Salle won the 1954 NCAA basketball tournament.

Season summary

Some basketball historians have called La Salle star Tom Gola the Magic Johnson of his day because, at 6-7, he could play all five positions. But not even Magic piled up the kind of numbers Gola did in leading the Explorers to the 1954 national championship - 21.7 points and 23 rebounds per game. Guard Frank O’Hara was Gola’s capable running mate along with five sophomores who played complementary roles.

Sophomore Robert Ames, later a CIA official killed in the 1983 bombing of the United States embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, averaged two points and one rebound in 14 games for the Explorers.[1]

NCAA tournament

  • West
    • La Salle 76, Fordham 74
    • La Salle 88, NC State 81
    • La Salle 64, Navy 48
  • Final Four

[2]

Rankings

Awards and honors

Team players drafted into the NBA

Round Pick Player NBA Club
11 93 Frank O'Hara Philadelphia Warriors

[4]

References

  1. ^ "NCAA champ became CIA legend. Historic La Salle team produced unsung hero - Philly.com". Articles.philly.com. January 23, 2004. Retrieved May 7, 2014.
  2. ^ "RotoWire Fantasy Football, Baseball, Basketball and More".
  3. ^ "Final Four Most Outstanding Players". cbs.sportsline.com. Archived from the original on September 7, 2008. Retrieved March 31, 2008.
  4. ^ "1954 NBA Draft on databaseBasketball.com". Archived from the original on January 5, 2013. Retrieved January 18, 2013.
  • v
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  • e
La Salle Explorers men's basketball
Venues
Culture & lore
People
Seasons
NCAA national championships in bold; NCAA Final Four appearances in italics
  • v
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  • e
La Salle Explorers men's basketball 1953–54 NCAA champions
Head coach
Ken Loeffler
  • v
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  • e
NCAA Division I men's basketball champions
1939
Oregon
1940
Indiana
1941
Wisconsin
1942
Stanford
1943
Wyoming
1944
Utah
1945
Oklahoma A&M
1946
Oklahoma A&M
1947
Holy Cross
1948
Kentucky
1949
Kentucky
1950
CCNY
1951
Kentucky
1952
Kansas
1953
Indiana
1954
La Salle
1955
San Francisco
1956
San Francisco
1957
North Carolina
1958
Kentucky
1959
California
1960
Ohio State
1961
Cincinnati
1962
Cincinnati
1963
Loyola (IL)
1964
UCLA
1965
UCLA
1966
Texas Western
1967
UCLA
1968
UCLA
1969
UCLA
1970
UCLA
1971
UCLA
1972
UCLA
1973
UCLA
1974
NC State
1975
UCLA
1976
Indiana
1977
Marquette
1978
Kentucky
1979
Michigan State
1980
Louisville
1981
Indiana
1982
North Carolina
1983
NC State
1984
Georgetown
1985
Villanova
1986
Louisville
1987
Indiana
1988
Kansas
1989
Michigan
1990
UNLV
1991
Duke
1992
Duke
1993
North Carolina
1994
Arkansas
1995
UCLA
1996
Kentucky
1997
Arizona
1998
Kentucky
1999
Connecticut
2000
Michigan State
2001
Duke
2002
Maryland
2003
Syracuse
2004
Connecticut
2005
North Carolina
2006
Florida
2007
Florida
2008
Kansas
2009
North Carolina
2010
Duke
2011
Connecticut
2012
Kentucky
2013
Louisville (Vacated)
2014
UConn
2015
Duke
2016
Villanova
2017
North Carolina
2018
Villanova
2019
Virginia
2020
No tournament
2021
Baylor
2022
Kansas
2023
UConn
2024
UConn