The Big Ten advanced four teams to the 48-team NCAA men's basketball tournament in 1982. Indiana and Iowa won openers and were eliminated in the round of 32. Ohio State lost in the opening round. The Gophers were the conference champions. They had a first-round bye, survived Tennessee-Chattanooga 62-61, and then lost to Louisville in the round of 16 in Birmingham, Ala.
It was an unimpressive finish for a Big Ten that had come through its best-ever basketball era:
Indiana beat Michigan in the national finals in 1976 — the second tournament where more than one team per conference could get a bid. Michigan State beat Indiana State in the Magic-Bird final in 1979. Purdue and Iowa were in the Final Four in 1980. Indiana won the title again in 1981.
Jim Dutcher was Minnesota's coach, and the sideline competition was tremendous. Bobby Knight was still full of steam at Indiana. Lute Olson would be at Iowa for another season. Purdue had replaced the successful Lee Rose with the dynamic Gene Keady.
Jud Heathcote was the first of back-to-back legends at Michigan State. Lou Henson, bad hair and all, was a monstrous recruiter at Illinois. Bill Frieder was the same at Michigan, after replacing Johnny Orr (gone to Iowa State).
Elsewhere, Eldon Miller was perfectly adequate at Ohio State, Bill Cofield was getting fired and replaced by Steve Yoder at Wisconsin, and Rich Falk was about to take Northwestern to its first-ever postseason tournament (the 1983 NIT).
Dutch had his work cut out for him in that league, against those coaches. Another obstacle of that era: There was no Penn State or Nebraska to hold up the standings.
Legend has it that Jim Delany, in his sixth year as Big Ten commissioner in 1995, was so upset with the trend toward lesser-name hires in the conference that he complained when Michigan State promoted longtime assistant Tom Izzo to replace a retired Heathcote.