Most of the Time We Win A National Championship | The Boneyard

Most of the Time We Win A National Championship

TheShot1990

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Since 1995, 52% of the time either the men or women win an NCAA basketball championship. There is only ONE school who won BOTH in the same year. That same school accomplished this stunning feat twice – The UConn Huskies.

How amazing is this achievement, especially coming from a relatively small state school? So, enough talking about other schools, let’s talk about ours.



YearMen's ChampionWomen's ChampionChampionship Won
1995vs Tennessee (70–64)1
19960
19970
19980
1999vs Duke (77–74)1
2000vs Tennessee (71–52)1
20010
2002vs Oklahoma (82–70)1
2003vs Tennessee (73–68)1
2004vs Georgia Tech (82–73)vs Tennessee (70–61)1
20050
20060
20070
20080
2009vs Louisville (76–54)1
2010vs Stanford (53–47)1
2011vs Butler (53–41)1
20120
2013vs Louisville (93–60)1
2014vs Kentucky (60–54)vs Notre Dame (79–58)1
2015vs Notre Dame (63–53)1
2016vs Syracuse (82–51)1
20170
20180
20190
20200
20210
20220
2023vs San Diego State (76–59)1
2024vs Purdue (75–60)1
2025vs South Carolina (82–59)1
31Wins16
We win51.6%
We don't win48.4%




ChatGPT built this spreadsheet for me with a few simple queries.

I know most of you know this general knowledge, but the stats are even more impressive when they are staring you right in the face.
 
Since the year 2000 UConn has won 83% of all NCAA basketball championship tournaments in years ending with a 4. The women really dropped the ball last year.
 
We’ve actually won 18 out of 60 possible championships in that time frame. (30 men/30 women up for grabs). That settles in at exactly 30%
I know the point was EITHER/OR as far as winning one of the two up for grabs in a given year, but I think the 30% stat is just more impressive when you consider all the variables in play.
 
This math is not 52% of the time we win a title, since you're not measuring how likely it is that our teams win (which would be championships vs. total seasons not years) or something like number of years with a win (which would be how many years with a win vs. total years). You've mixed your numerator and denominator. This is titles per year, which is not really a percentage of anything.
 
Should be a couple "2" on the far right as '04 and '14 we both won but it shows a 1, not a 2. This is why 12 + 6 = 18, not 16.
 
I think he is doing years we won/number of years - so that math is right. Would be wrong if he was counting the double up years as 2. But he didn't so 16 v. 18.
 
We’ve actually won 18 out of 60 possible championships in that time frame. (30 men/30 women up for grabs). That settles in at exactly 30%

Which is awesome

30% combined
20% men
40% women

There is no close second anywhere to be found
 
Since the year 2000 UConn has won 83% of all NCAA basketball championship tournaments in years ending with a 4. The women really dropped the ball last year.

They were so close, really glad they made up for it this year.
 

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