1970–71 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team

The 1970–71 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball team represented Villanova University during the 1970–71 NCAA University Division men's basketball season. The team was led by head coach Jack Kraft and played its home games on campus at Villanova Field House in Villanova, Pennsylvania.

1970–71 Villanova Wildcats men's basketball
ConferenceIndependent
Ranking
CoachesNo. 17
APNo. 19
Record27–7
Head coach
Home arenaVillanova Field House
1970–71 NCAA University Division men's basketball independents standings
ConfOverall
TeamW L PCTW L PCT
No. 2 Marquette 281  .966
No. 9 Fordham 263  .897
No. 11 Jacksonville 224  .846
No. 15 Duquesne 214  .840
Hawaii 235  .821
No. 19 Villanova 277  .794
St. Bonaventure 216  .778
No. 14 Houston 227  .759
Utah State 207  .741
Syracuse 197  .731
Georgia Tech 239  .719
Providence 208  .714
Fairleigh Dickinson 167  .696
Rutgers 167  .696
Holy Cross 188  .692
No. 12 Notre Dame 209  .690
Dayton 189  .667
St. John's (NY) 189  .667
Denver 179  .654
Florida State 179  .654
Loyola (LA) 1610  .615
Marshall 1610  .615
Colgate 1510  .600
Saint Francis (PA) 1510  .600
Pittsburgh 1410  .583
Boston College 1511  .577
Northern Illinois 1310  .565
Southern Illinois 1310  .565
Creighton 1411  .560
Virginia Tech 1411  .560
Manhattan 1311  .542
Cincinnati 1412  .538
Detroit 1412  .538
Niagara 1412  .538
West Virginia 1312  .520
Centenary 1313  .500
Pan American 1313  .500
Navy 1212  .500
Air Force 1214  .462
Georgetown 1214  .462
Seattle 1214  .462
Army 1113  .458
Saint Peter's 1113  .458
Iona 1012  .455
Penn State 1012  .455
George Washington 1114  .440
Seton Hall 1115  .423
Long Island 1015  .400
Butler 1016  .385
Canisius 813  .381
Fairfield 915  .375
Hardin–Simmons 916  .360
Oklahoma City 916  .360
Xavier 917  .346
DePaul 817  .320
St. Francis (NY) 817  .320
Tulane 818  .308
Boston University 718  .280
Miami (FL) 719  .269
NYU 520  .200
Portland 521  .192
Loyola (IL) 420  .167
Rankings from AP Poll

The independent Wildcats made a run through the NCAA tournament before falling to No. 1 UCLA, 68–62, in the championship game. Villanova finished with a 27–7 (.794) record.

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