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2008–09 VMI Keydets men's basketball team

2008–09 VMI Keydets men's basketball
VMI Keydets logo.svg
Conference Big South Conference
2008–09 record 24–8 (13–5 Big South)
Head coach Duggar Baucom (4th year)
Assistant coach Daniel Willis (4th year)
Assistant coach Jack Castleberry (1st year)
Assistant coach Jason Allison (4th year)
Home arena Cameron Hall
Seasons
← 2007–08
2009–10 →
2008–09 Big South men's basketball standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   PCT     W   L   PCT
Radford 15 3   .833     21 12   .636
VMI 13 5   .722     24 8   .750
Liberty 12 6   .667     23 12   .657
UNC Asheville 10 8   .556     15 16   .484
Winthrop 9 9   .500     11 19   .367
Gardner-Webb 9 9   .500     13 17   .433
Presbyterian 9 9   .500     12 17   .414
Coastal Carolina 5 13   .278     11 20   .355
High Point 4 14   .222     9 21   .300
Charleston Southern 4 14   .222     9 20   .310
2009 Big South Tournament winner
As of March 7, 2009; Rankings from AP Poll

The 2008–09 VMI Keydets basketball team represented the Virginia Military Institute during the 2008-09 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Keydets were coached by Duggar Baucom in his 4th year at VMI, and played their home games at Cameron Hall. It was VMI's 5th season in the Big South Conference and the Keydets' 101st season of basketball.

VMI opened the year with an upset over the Kentucky Wildcats in Rupp Arena on November 14, 2008, by a score of 111–103. After losses to Virginia and Jacksonville State to drop their record to 4–2, VMI then went on a ten-game winning streak and won their first six conference games before falling to Liberty 91–80, in what was the first sellout in the 27-year history of Cameron Hall.

After finishing the regular season with a 22–7 mark, VMI cruised through their first two Big South tournament games, beating Coastal Carolina 96–76 in the quarterfinals and besting Liberty 78–58 in the semifinals. The Keydets ultimately fell to Radford 108–94 in the Big South Championship game, ending their season at 24–8. The 24 wins in a season were the school's second-most all-time, trailing only the 1976–77 team who 26 wins en route to a Sweet 16 appearance.


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