March Madness thrives on upsets, and historically Black colleges and universities have delivered some of the tournamentâs most unforgettable shockers. With the odds stacked against them, HBCU programs have repeatedly proven they can take down the giants.
Before 1993, only a handful of double-digit seeds had toppled powerhouses in the NCAA tournament. Then, Southern shocked No. 4 Georgia Tech, setting the stage for three other HBCUs to rewrite history with stunning 15-over-2 upsets in 1997, 2001, and 2012.
As millions of fans fill out their brackets hoping to accurately predict the next Cinderella story, itâs time to revisit the legendary bracket-melting moments when HBCU teams defied expectations and changed the course of the tournament.
No. 15 Norfolk State beats No. 2 Missouri, 2012
No. 15 Norfolk State didnât just beat No. 2 Missouri in 2012. They left them shell-shocked in one of the most improbable March Madness bracket-busters. As any prognosticator would tell you at the time, the Spartans werenât even supposed to be in the conversation. Fresh off a Big 12 title, Missouri was a trendy Final Four pick. Even President Obama had them going deepâall the way to the Final Four. But Norfolk State didnât read the script.
Kyle OâQuinn, the teamâs de facto heartbeat, set the tone early, piling up 26 points and 14 rebounds like heâd been waiting for this moment his whole life. Pendarvis Williams and Chris McEachin lit it up from beyond the arc, combining for eight threes. Still, it came down to the final chaotic seconds. A botched inbounds pass somehow bounced right to Norfolk. OâQuinn had a chance to ice it at the line but missed, giving Missouriâs Phil Pressey one last shot. His three-pointer seemingly hung in the air while the entire arena held its breathâŠuntil it clanked off the rim. Game over.
âPressey got a great shot at the end,â OâQuinn admitted to The New York Times post-game. âThe ball could have bounced a different way, and we could have been on the other side. Thank God weâre on this side.â
The Spartans fell to Florida in the next round, but thatâs just a footnote in their surreal story. The 21-point underdogs from a school making its first-ever NCAA tournament appearance had just pulled off the unimaginable.
No. 15 Hampton beats No. 2 Iowa State, 2001
In 2001, just six seasons after jumping to Division I, No. 15 Hampton found itself with a coveted invitation to the big dance. The Piratesâ first-ever appearance pitted them against No. 2 Iowa State in Boise, Idahoâa battle few outside the confines of their Virginia campus expected them to win. The Cyclones had been an Elite Eight team the year before and boasted future NBA first-rounder Jamaal Tinsley. But Hampton was unfazed by pedigree, track records, or Iowa Stateâs vaunted offense.
Hamptonâs defense immediately turned the game into a slog, forcing the high-scoring Cyclones into a half-court battle. The Pirates held Iowa State to just 57 pointsâwell below their season averageâand made every possession count. Tarvis Williams racked up 16 points, 13 rebounds, and six blocks while navigating foul trouble in the second half. Marseilles Brown added 14 points, four assists, and four rebounds, providing Hampton with just enough firepower to stay within striking distance.
With 6.9 seconds left, Williams flipped in a clutch floater to give Hampton a 58-57 lead.
Iowa State had one last shot. Tinsley sprinted down the court, weaving through defenders, but his layup rolled off the rim. Ballgame.
âI saw we had 6.9 seconds left on the clock and I told our guys to foul as they were running down the court because we had a foul to give,â Hampton coach Steve Merfeld revealed to ESPN.
âThey didnât hear me, thank God.â
No. 15 Coppin State beats No. 2 South Carolina, 1997
By 1997, the NCAA tournament had only seen two No. 15 seeds take down a No. 2. No MEAC team had ever won a game in the Big Dance. No one thought Coppin State would be the one to change that. The Eagles barely made the tournament, needing two overtime wins in their conference tourney to punch their ticket. And yet, when they took the court in Pittsburgh against No. 2 South Carolinaâfresh off a dominant 15-1 SEC seasonâCoppin State ran the Gamecocks out of the gym.
The Eagles forced 19 turnovers, crushed South Carolina on the glass with a 41-30 rebounding edge, and pulled away in the second half for a 78-65 stunner. Danny Singletary led all scorers with 22 points, Antoine Brockington added 20, and Terquin Mott delivered 11 points, 11 rebounds, and three blocks. Coppin Stateâs bench outscored South Carolinaâs 40-19, proving they had the depth to hang with a high-major squad.
The Eagles never doubted themselves. âWe believed, we always believed,â Singletary said after the upset.
Coach Fang Mitchell echoed that sentiment: âIt was the biggest moment of [the playersâ] lives. They worked hard to get to that point. Basically, they felt they could go and win. They wanted to win it all.â
Years later, ESPN cemented the moment in March Madness lore with the documentary On & Coppin, available on ESPN+.
No. 13 Southern beats No. 4 Georgia Tech, 1993
Southern University entered the NCAA tournament in 1993 as the last team in the field. Their SWAC title was clinched so late that the brackets had already been announced. Their prize? A No. 13 seed and a first-round matchup against No. 4 Georgia Tech, the reigning ACC Tournament champions. But upsets are a March Madness staple, and the Jaguars were ready to prove they belonged.
After trailing by as many as 14 points in the first half, Southern erupted in the second, outscoring Georgia Tech 54-34 and holding the Yellow Jackets scoreless for nearly five minutes. Jervaughn Scales led the charge, finishing with 27 points and 18 rebounds, while Terry Thames added 20 points, and Leonard White chipped in 18. The Jaguars drained three-pointers and attacked the rim, turning a close game into a stunning 93-78 victoryâone of the tournamentâs biggest shocks.
Still, Southern refused to act like it was a fluke. âWe didnât want to jump all over the floor like it was a big upset,â Scales said. âIf we win, we win. I told [the bench players], âDonât come out on the floor and jump up and down. Letâs just go out and shake hands, go to the locker roomâand then jump up and down.ââ
Head coach Ben Jobe took the same approach. âItâs just a game,â he said. âItâs not the end of the world. Itâs not the civil rights movement. Itâs not the war on poverty. Itâs just a game.â
But Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins knew his team had been outplayed. âComplacency set in,â he said. âWe got burned, and we deserved to get burned.â
The Jaguarsâ win remains one of the most talked-about moments in HBCU basketball history.