1984–85 Oklahoma City Chiefs men's basketball team

American college basketball season

1984–85 Oklahoma City Chiefs men's basketball
ConferenceMidwestern City Conference
Record6–20 (1–13 MCC)
Head coach
  • Abe Lemons (20th season)
Home arenaFrederickson Fieldhouse
Seasons
← 1983–84
1985–86 →
1984–85 Midwestern City Conference men's basketball standings
  • v
  • t
  • e
Conf Overall
Team W   L   PCT W   L   PCT
No. 14 Loyola-Chicago 13 1   .929 27 6   .818
Butler 9 5   .643 19 10   .655
Oral Roberts 8 6   .571 15 15   .500
Detroit 8 6   .571 16 12   .571
Xavier 7 7   .500 16 13   .552
Saint Louis 6 8   .429 13 15   .464
Evansville 4 10   .286 13 16   .448
Oklahoma City 1 13   .071 6 20   .231
1985 MCC tournament winner

The 1984–85 Oklahoma City Chiefs men's basketball team represented Oklahoma City University in the 1984–85 NCAA Division I men's basketball season as a member of the Midwestern City Conference. They finished the season with a 6–20 overall record, and a 1–13 conference record. They were coached by Abe Lemons in his twentieth season as head coach of the Chiefs. They played their home games at Frederickson Fieldhouse in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.[1] This was the program's final season in NCAA Division I as OCU moved its athletic programs to the NAIA following the season.

Schedule

Date
time, TV
Rank# Opponent# Result Record Site
city, state
Regular season
December 1, 1984*
Southwestern (KS) W 88–69  1–0
Frederickson Fieldhouse (3,058)
Oklahoma City, OK
December 3, 1984*
Texas Wesleyan W 81–65  2–0
Frederickson Fieldhouse (3,256)
Oklahoma City, OK
December 7, 1984*
at Pacific L 67–80  2–1
Alex G. Spanos Center (3,054)
Stockton, CA
December 8, 1984*
at Santa Clara L 59–74  2–2
Toso Pavilion (2,189)
Santa Clara, CA
December 15, 1984*
at TCU L 60–71  2–3
Daniel–Meyer Coliseum (2,393)
Fort Worth, TX
December 21, 1984*
vs. George Mason
UAB Tournament
L 72–79  2–4
Birmingham Coliseum (3,931)
Birmingham, AL
December 22, 1984*
vs. Austin Peay
UAB Tournament
W 99–70  3–4
Birmingham Coliseum (4,710)
Birmingham, AL
December 29, 1984*
No. 19 Louisiana Tech
All-College Basketball tournament
L 62–90  3–5
The Myriad (9,458)
Oklahoma City, OK
December 30, 1984*
Manhattan
All-College Basketball Tournament
W 53–52  4–5
The Myriad (10,287)
Oklahoma City, OK
January 2, 1985*
at Texas Wesleyan W 81–53  5–5
Sid Richardson Center (100)
Fort Worth, TX
January 5, 1985
Evansville L 63–65  5–6
(0–1)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (4,200)
Oklahoma City, OK
January 7, 1985
Saint Louis L 60–73  5–7
(0–2)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (2,612)
Oklahoma City, OK
January 12, 1985
at Oral Roberts L 62–66  5–8
(0–3)
Mabee Center (5,760)
Tulsa, OK
January 17, 1985*
Wayland Baptist L 56–67  5–9
Frederickson Fieldhouse (2,670)
Oklahoma City, OK
January 19, 1985
at Butler L 49–65  5–10
(0–4)
Hinkle Fieldhouse (4,000)
Indianapolis, IN
January 21, 1985
at Xavier L 65–72  5–11
(0–5)
Cincinnati Gardens (6,300)
Cincinnati, OH
January 26, 1985
Loyola–Chicago L 65–80  5–12
(0–6)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (1,155)
Oklahoma City, OK
January 28, 1985
Detroit L 74–77  5–13
(0–7)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (4,555)
Oklahoma City, OK
February 2, 1985
at Evansville W 61–59  6–13
(1–7)
Roberts Municipal Stadium (6,423)
Evansville, IN
February 2, 1985
Saint Louis L 51–80  6–14
(1–8)
Kiel Auditorium (1,782)
St. Louis, MO
February 11, 1985
Oral Roberts L 61–81  6–15
(1–9)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (2,105)
Oklahoma City, OK
February 16, 1985
Butler L 62–72  6–16
(1–10)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (3,257)
Oklahoma City, OK
February 18, 1985
Xavier L 62–73  6–17
(1–11)
Frederickson Fieldhouse (1,785)
Oklahoma City, OK
February 23, 1985
at Loyola–Chicago L 84–99  6–18
(1–12)
Alumni Gym (5,259)
Chicago, IL
February 25, 1985
at Detroit L 65–82  6–19
(1–13)
Calihan Hall (2,031)
Detroit, MI
Midwestern City Conference tournament
March 7, 1985
(8) vs. (1) No. 16 Loyola–Chicago
Quarterfinal
L 85–100  6–20
Mabee Center (4,200)
Tulsa, OK
*Non-conference game. #Rankings from AP Poll. (#) Tournament seedings in parentheses.
All times are in Central Time.

[2]

References

  1. ^ "1984–85 Oklahoma City Chiefs Schedule and Results". Sports Reference. Retrieved May 27, 2020.
  2. ^ "FINAL 1985 MEN'S BASKETBALL STATISTICS REPORT" (PDF). NCAA Statistics Service. 1985. Retrieved June 19, 2023.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Oklahoma City Stars men's basketball
Venues
People
  • Head coaches
Seasons
  • 1921–22
  • 1922–23
  • 1923–24
  • 1924–25
  • 1925–26
  • 1926–27
  • 1927–28
  • 1928–29
  • 1929–30
  • 1930–31
  • 1931–32
  • 1932–33
  • 1933–34
  • 1934–35
  • 1935–36
  • 1936–37
  • 1937–38
  • 1938–39
  • 1939–40
  • 1940–41
  • 1941–42
  • 1942–43
  • 1943–44
  • 1944–45
  • 1945–46
  • 1946–47
  • 1947–48
  • 1948–49
  • 1949–50
  • 1950–51
  • 1951–52
  • 1952–53
  • 1953–54
  • 1954–55
  • 1955–56
  • 1956–57
  • 1957–58
  • 1958–59
  • 1959–60
  • 1960–61
  • 1961–62
  • 1962–63
  • 1963–64
  • 1964–65
  • 1965–66
  • 1966–67
  • 1967–68
  • 1968–69
  • 1969–70
  • 1970–71
  • 1971–72
  • 1972–73
  • 1973–74
  • 1974–75
  • 1975–76
  • 1976–77
  • 1977–78
  • 1978–79
  • 1979–80
  • 1980–81
  • 1981–82
  • 1982–83
  • 1983–84
  • 1984–85
  • 1985–86
  • 1986–87
  • 1987–88
  • 1988–89
  • 1989–90
  • 1990–91
  • 1991–92
  • 1992–93
  • 1993–94
  • 1994–95
  • 1995–96
  • 1996–97
  • 1997–98
  • 1998–99
  • 1999–2000
  • 2000–01
  • 2001–02
  • 2002–03
  • 2003–04
  • 2004–05
  • 2005–06
  • 2006–07
  • 2007–08
  • 2008–09
  • 2009–10
  • 2010–11
  • 2011–12
  • 2012–13
  • 2013–14
  • 2014–15
  • 2015–16
  • 2016–17
  • 2017–18
  • 2018–19
  • 2019–20
  • 2020–21
  • 2021–22
  • 2022–23
  • 2023–24
NAIA national championships in bold


Flag of OklahomaSport icon

This article related to sports in Oklahoma is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e