1986 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game

The 1986 NCAA Division I men's basketball championship game was the finals of the 1986 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament and it determined the national champion for the 1985–86 NCAA Division I men's basketball season The game was played on March 31, 1986, at Reunion Arena in Dallas, Texas, and featured the East Regional Champion, #1-seeded Duke and the West Regional Champion, #2-seeded Louisville.

This was the last national championship that was played in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex until 2014 which was played at AT&T Stadium in nearby Arlington, Texas due to the NCAA's preference for domed stadiums. This was also the last championship game to ever feature a team from the Metro Conference, which disbanded in 1995.

Louisville Cardinals

 * West
 * (2) Louisville 93, (15) Drexel 73
 * (2) Louisville 82, (7) Bradley 68
 * (2) Louisville 94, (3) North Carolina 79
 * (2) Louisville 84, (8) Auburn 76
 * Final Four
 * (W2) Louisville 88, (SE11) LSU 77

Duke Blue Devils



 * East
 * (1) Duke (1) 85, (16) Mississippi Valley State 78
 * (1) Duke 89, (8) Old Dominion 61
 * (1) Duke 74, (12) DePaul 67
 * (1) Duke 71, (7) Navy 50
 * Final Four
 * (E1) Duke 71, (MW1) Kansas 67

Starting lineups
Source

Aftermath
This was Louisville's last appearance in the Final Four until 2005, where they would lose to Illinois in the semifinal.

This also remains the last official national championship won by the Cardinals, along with their last official appearance in the championship game. They would return to the title game in 2013, where they defeated Michigan to win what was their third title. However, Louisville was forced to vacate their title due to a massive sex scandal involving players on the team, and as a result the Cardinals had four seasons from 2012 to 2015 wiped from the record books. The Cardinals became the first team to vacate a basketball national championship, and the second team overall to vacate a national championship in college sports after USC vacated its 2004 national championship after an investigation into the eligibility of Reggie Bush.