Under the guidance of legendary coach Pete Newell, finished with a 25-5 overall record and ranked eighth in the Associated Press poll…a shocking December road sweep of highly-touted opponents La Salle, City College of New York and Bradley vaulted the upstart Dons into the national spotlight...the Dons went 12-3 down the stretch to earn an invitation to Madison Square Garden… Once in New York, the eighth-seeded Dons defeated Manhattan (68-43), Utah (64-63), Bowling Green (49-39) and Loyola of Chicago (48-47) to win the championship…behind Don Lofgran’s 17 points and Frank Kuzara’s 13, USF pulled away from Manhattan and advanced to face favored Utah…the Utes held a 63-62 lead with less than a minute to play but with five seconds remaining, Kuzara nailed a desperation 30-footer to give the Dons a stunning one-point victory…Joe McNamee finished with 20 points, Lofgran added 14 while Kuzara and John Benington added 12 each to lead a well-balanced attack…Bowling Green brought a 15-game winning streak into the semifinal game against the Dons, but Lofgran’s 24 points paced the USF to a 10-point victory…in the championship game against Loyola-Chicago, the Dons led 27-19 at halftime only to see the Ramblers tie the game at 47 with less than a minute remaining…with 40 seconds left, Ross Guidice was fouled and calmly sank his under-handed free throws to give USF a one point lead…Loyola repeatedly fouled the Dons in the closing seconds, but rules at the time stipulated the fouled team could refuse the free throw in favor on maintaining possession...the Dons eventually ran out the clock and secured its first national championship…Lofgran was named the tournament’s most valuable player…33-year old Newell one his first national championship and would remain at the school for one more season before taking the head coaching position at Michigan State…four years later, he returned to the Bay Area to coach at Cal…under his direction, the Golden Bears won the 1959 NCAA Championship.