Thursday, July 2, 2015

Southland Conference Logo

The Southland Conference changed its logo in late 2012, introducing a new mark with bevels and different color shades than the previous one. The old logo still lives on via Google image search, though, leading to its appearance in media publications to this day. Not sure which logo is the right one? Use this handy guide.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Fans Pick Demons of Destiny as League Greatest Men’s Basketball Moment


The storied season of the 2005-06 Northwestern State men’s basketball team, also known as the “Demons of Destiny,” has been chosen by fans as the Southland Conference’s Greatest Moment in the sport.
In balloting on the Southland’s Facebook page (www.facebook/southlandconference), the “Demons of Destiny” outpaced a field of outstanding candidates vying for the honor of greatest men’s basketball moment.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Top Moment in Southland Conference Men's Basketball History

Nominees:


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Louisiana-Monroe’s Mike Vining and His All-Time Winning Ways


By far the Southland Conference’s all-time winningest coach, Mike Vining led the Northeast Louisiana/Louisiana-Monroe men’s basketball program as the league’s standard-bearer for many years. Vining led the Indians to 401 wins (383 as a Southland member), and made seven NCAA tournament appearances and an NIT berth in his 24 seasons leading the program.

With six 20-win seasons and nine conference championships, Vining also coaches 46 all-conference players, including seven league players of the year and five newcomers of the year. Sixteen of his players surpassed the 1,000-point scoring plateau, and 7-footer Wojciech Myrda set the NCAA record in career blocks in 2002.

For his remarkable coaching efforts, Vining was selected for induction into the Southland Conference Hall of Honor in 2006, and he entered the Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame in 2010.

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Awesome 80s Era – The Cardinals, The Mailman, Joe and More


Joe Dumars

At the turn of the decade, Lamar was on top of the Southland Conference mountain with players such as Mike Olliver and B.B. Davis leading the Cardinals to championships and postseason success from 1979 through 1981.

Opening the ‘80s with an appearance in the NCAA “Sweet Sixteen” under head coach Billy Tubbs, the Cardinals didn’t miss a beat with five more consecutive postseason appearances under new leader Pat Foster.

The decade also saw the recruitment and development of two game-changing players for the league, Joe Dumars and Karl Malone, both who would go on to be among the all-time NBA greats.

Dumars became only the second player in Southland history to be named first-team all-conference for four years, and he “bookended” his career with the 1982 freshman of the year award and the 1985 player of the year honor. Now the president of basketball operations for the Detroit Pistons, where he was a first-round draft choice and won two NBA titles as a player, Dumars finished his McNeese career with 2,607 points, second all-time in the Southland.

The Malone era of success at Louisiana Tech brought an unprecedented level of national media and fan attention to the school and Southland than at perhaps any other time. With his catchy “Mailman” nickname, Malone and his teammates scratched success in the 1984 NCAA tournament with a win over Fresno State, and parlayed that into prominent national rankings and a “Sweet Sixteen” run in 1985. Like Dumars, Malone was a NBA first-rounder and became one of the league’s most dominant power forwards with the Utah Jazz, earning a spot on the NBA’s Top 50 all-time team and winning gold medals with the U.S. Olympic Teams in 1992 and 1996.

Foster’s Lamar teams kept rolling with an 80-game home win streak, a pair of Southland tournament titles, two NCAA trips and four NIT appearances.

McNeese State also garnered an NIT appearance in 1986, and Arkansas State also played a rare postseason game against Arkansas, falling to the Razorbacks in the 1987 NIT, 67-64.

The Southland Conference tournament debuted at the Beaumont Civic Center in 1981, and Louisiana-Monroe (1986), North Texas (1988) and McNeese State (1989) all gained their first postseason championships during the decade.

In addition to Foster’s stellar coaching mark of 134-49 in his six Lamar seasons, Louisiana Tech’s Andy Russo tallied an outstanding 122-55 record from 1980-85, McNeese State’s Glenn Duhon won more than 100 games in the decade, and Louisiana-Monroe’s Mike Vining was just embarking on his record-setting coaching career.

Membership changes at the end of the decade arrived with the departures of Louisiana Tech, Arkansas State and Lamar (returned in 1998) and the additions of Northwestern State, Sam Houston State, Stephen F. Austin and Southwest Texas State.

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Splendid 60s Era – Lamar, Abilene Christian, Trinity, Arkansas State Succeed in the College Division


The initial years of Southland Conference basketball saw many great players and coaches push the league to the top of what was then known as the NCAA’s College Division (later Division II).

Almost immediately, the league was placing multiple teams into postseason play, with Abilene Christian and Lamar earning NCAA berths in 1964.

ACU received another postseason bid in 1965, and in 1966, Abilene Christian, Arkansas State and Lamar all advanced to NCAA action. In fact, ACU lost to North Dakota in the 1966 College Division National Championship game, 63-62.

Arkansas State repeated with an NCAA trip in 1967, and Trinity earned a berth in 1968, and the Tigers advanced to win the NCAA’s Third-Place Game, 68-62, against Ashland.

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1986 – Three Teams in the NIT, One in the Final Four


After terrific NCAA runs by Lamar and Louisiana Tech in recent years, the 1985-86 Southland Conference season appeared to be a bit more tranquil, although Lamar’s crushing 78-59 home win over defending national champ Villanova reminded everyone of the Cardinals’ ability to compete successfully outside the league. However, it was Louisiana-Monroe’s turn at the top of the Southland, winning both the regular season and tournament titles before falling to UNLV in the NCAA tournament.

The larger story turned out to be the “other” tournament – the National Invitation Tournament – as a record three Southland teams earned berths: Lamar, McNeese State and Louisiana Tech.

While the Cardinals suffered a tough 65-63 home loss to George Mason in the NIT first round, the McNeese Cowboys handled Dayton at home, 86-75, and Louisiana Tech won 67-61 at Northern Arizona. While not ideal, the wins forced an intra-conference matchup between Tech and McNeese in Ruston, La., that the Bulldogs won, 77-61. That sent Tech to a quarterfinal game at Providence led by a young Rick Pitino and featuring a sharp-shooting guard named Billy Donovan.

Tech edged the Friars that night, 64-63, to earn an unthinkable trip to New York City’s Madison Square Garden for an NIT semifinal game with Ohio State. The Buckeyes exacted revenge for the previous year’s NCAA loss to Louisiana Tech, dispatching the Bulldogs, 79-66. However, Tech rebounded to defeat Florida in the NIT third-place game, 67-62.

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