2000 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament explained

Gender:Women's
Year:2000
Teams:64
Finalfourarena:Wells Fargo Center
Finalfourcity:Philadelphia
Champions:Connecticut Huskies
Titlecount:2nd
Champgamecount:2nd
Champffcount:4th
Runnerup:Tennessee Lady Volunteers
Gamecount:9th
Runnerffcount:12th
Semifinal1:Penn State Lady Lions
Finalfourcount:1st
Semifinal2:Rutgers Scarlet Knights
Finalfourcount2:1st
Coach:Geno Auriemma
Coachcount:2nd
Mop:Shea Ralph
Mopteam:Connecticut

The 2000 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament began on March 17 and ended on April 2. The tournament featured 64 teams. The Final Four consisted of Connecticut, Penn St., Tennessee, and Rutgers, with Connecticut defeating Tennessee 71-52 to win its second NCAA title.[1] Connecticut's Shea Ralph was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.[2]

Notable events

Two of the number one seeds advanced to the Final four – Tennessee and Connecticut – while two failed to advance. Penn State upset Louisiana Tech in the Midwest Regional, while Rutgers upset Georgia in the West Regional. Tennessee faced Rutgers in one of the Final Four match ups. At the end of the half, the Lady Vols held only a two-point lead 28–26. Pat Summitt challenged her players at halftime, and advised Tamika Catchings to move around more. That advice helped, as Catchings, who had only scored two points in the first half, scored eleven in the second half. Michelle Snow blocked seven shots in the game setting a Final Four record. Kara Lawson ran the offense, and scored a total of 19 points, of which 14 were scored in the second half, and ended up earning the Player of the Game award, helping her team win 64–54 and advance to the national championship.

The other semifinal match up was Connecticut against Penn State. The regional win by Penn State gave the team a chance to play in a Final Four in their home state. The Lady Lions were led by point guard Helen Darling, who would go on to win the Frances Pomeroy Naismith Award that year. However, the defense by the Huskies held Darling scoreless on this day. UConn's point guard Sue Bird, had a better day, scoring 19 points, hitting five of her seven three point attempts. 20,060 fans were in the stands, the largest crowd ever to see a college basketball game in Pennsylvania. Connecticut had a nine-point lead at halftime, but Penn State had cut the lead to five points midway through the second half. However, the Huskies responded, and ended up winning the game by 22 points.

The match up in the finals between Tennessee and Connecticut was highly anticipated. The teams have met ten times prior to this meeting, with each team winning five. In eight of the ten meetings, one of the teams has had a number one ranking in the country. Much has been at stake, not just rankings, but winning streaks, national championships and pride.

Tennessee entered the final game on a 19-game winning streak; Connecticut on a 15-game winning streak, with their only loss of the season coming by a single point at the hands of Tennessee. UConn started the game with a 9–2 run. Kelly Schumacher set a record for blocks in a championship game, and had the record, with six, at halftime. She went on to record nine blocks, setting a new Final Four record, breaking the one established by Tennessee just two days before. The Huskies led 31–19 at the half, but the second half was yet to be played. Any chance of a comeback faded early, as UConn scored eight consecutive points to start the second half. Eight UConn players would get eleven or more minutes, giving Tennessee the impression that they were seeing fresh players every few minutes. Shea Ralph would score 15 points, on her way to winning the Most Outstanding Player award, and Svetlana Abrosimova scored 14. Connecticut ultimately defeated Tennessee by a score of 71–52 to win their second national championship.

The 2000 Final Four, played at the then-First Union Center (now Wells Fargo Center) in Philadelphia, was notable for featuring three head coaches who had ties to the Philadelphia area: Penn State coach Rene Portland grew up in the Philadelphia area, played at Immaculata College (now Immaculata University) in suburban Philadelphia, and briefly coached at St. Joseph's University in Philadelphia; Rutgers coach C. Vivian Stringer coached at then-Cheyney State College (now Cheyney University) in suburban Philadelphia earlier in her career, and national championship-winning Connecticut coach Geno Auriemma spent most of his childhood living in Norristown, Pennsylvania, located approximately 20 miles from Philadelphia, and served as a high school and college assistant coach in the Philadelphia area early in his coaching career.

Tournament records

Qualifying teams – automatic

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 2000 NCAA Tournament. Thirty conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2000 NCAA tournament.

Automatic Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
Alcorn State UniversitySWAC16
Campbell UniversityTrans America15
University of ConnecticutBig East1
Dartmouth CollegeIvy League13
Drake UniversityMissouri Valley Conference8
Duke UniversityACC2
Furman UniversitySouthern Conference16
University of Wisconsin–Green BayHorizon League13
Hampton UniversityMEAC16
College of the Holy CrossPatriot League15
Iowa State UniversityBig 123
Kent State UniversityMAC9
Liberty UniversityBig South Conference14
Louisiana Tech UniversitySun Belt Conference1
University of MontanaBig Sky Conference16
Old Dominion UniversityColonial4
University of OregonPac-106
Purdue UniversityBig Ten4
Rice UniversityWAC13
University of San DiegoWest Coast Conference15
St. Francis (PA)Northeast Conference14
Saint Peter's CollegeMAAC14
Stephen F. Austin State UniversitySouthland11
University of TennesseeSEC1
Tennessee Technological UniversityOhio Valley Conference14
Tulane UniversityConference USA6
University of California, Santa BarbaraBig West Conference4
University of VermontAmerica East11
Xavier UniversityAtlantic 106
Youngstown State UniversityMid-Continent15

Qualifying teams – at-large

Thirty-four additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.

At-large Bids
  Record 
Qualifying SchoolConferenceRegular
Season
ConferenceSeed
University of ArizonaPacific-108
Auburn UniversitySoutheastern7
Boston CollegeBig East5
Brigham Young UniversityMountain West12
Clemson UniversityAtlantic Coast9
The George Washington UniversityAtlantic 107
University of GeorgiaSoutheastern1
University of Illinois at Urbana–ChampaignBig Ten6
University of KansasBig 128
Louisiana State UniversitySoutheastern3
University of MaineAmerica East12
Marquette UniversityConference USA7
University of MichiganBig Ten8
Mississippi State UniversitySoutheastern3
Southwest Missouri State UniversityMissouri Valley10
University of Nebraska–LincolnBig 1212
University of North Carolina at Chapel HillAtlantic Coast5
North Carolina State UniversityAtlantic Coast5
University of Notre DameBig East2
University of OklahomaBig 125
Pennsylvania State UniversityBig Ten2
Pepperdine UniversityWest Coast13
Rutgers UniversityBig East2
Southern Methodist UniversityWestern Athletic12
Saint Joseph's UniversityAtlantic 1010
Stanford UniversityPacific-109
University of Texas at AustinBig 127
Texas Tech UniversityBig 123
University of Alabama at BirminghamConference USA11
University of California, Los AngelesPacific-1010
University of UtahMountain West11
Vanderbilt UniversitySoutheastern9
University of VirginiaAtlantic Coast4
Western Kentucky UniversitySun Belt10

Bids by conference

Thirty conferences earned an automatic bid. In fifteen cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-four additional at-large teams were selected from fifteen of the conferences.

BidsConferenceTeams
6Big 12Iowa St., Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Texas Tech
6SoutheasternTennessee, Auburn, Georgia, LSU, Mississippi St., Vanderbilt
5Atlantic CoastDuke, Clemson, North Carolina, North Carolina St., Virginia
4Big EastConnecticut, Boston College, Notre Dame, Rutgers
4Big TenPurdue, Illinois, Michigan, Penn St.
4Pacific-10Oregon, Arizona, Stanford, UCLA
3Atlantic 10Xavier, George Washington, St. Joseph's
3Conference USATulane, Marquette, UAB
2America EastVermont, Maine
2Missouri ValleyDrake, Missouri St.
2Mountain WestBYU, Utah
2NortheastSt. Francis Pa., St. Peter's
2Sun BeltLouisiana Tech, Western Kentucky
2West CoastSan Diego, Pepperdine
2Western AthleticRice, SMU
1Big SkyMontana
1Big SouthLiberty
1Big WestUC Santa Barb.
1ColonialOld Dominion
1HorizonGreen Bay
1IvyDartmouth
1Mid-AmericanKent St.
1Mid-ContinentYoungstown St.
1Mid-EasternHampton.
1Ohio ValleyTennessee Tech
1PatriotHoly Cross
1SouthernFurman
1SouthlandStephen F. Austin
1SouthwesternAlcorn St.
1Trans AmericaCampbell

2000 NCAA tournament schedule and venues

In 2000, the field remained at 64 teams. The teams were seeded, and assigned to four geographic regions, with seeds 1-16 in each region. In Round 1, seeds 1 and 16 faced each other, as well as seeds 2 and 15, seeds 3 and 14, seeds 4 and 13, seeds 5 and 12, seeds 6 and 11, seeds 7 and 10, and seeds 8 and 9. In the first two rounds, the top four seeds were given the opportunity to host the first-round game. In most cases, the higher seed accepted the opportunity. The exception:

First and Second rounds

The following lists the region, host school, venue and the sixteen first- and second-round locations:

Regional semifinals and finals

The Regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 25 to March 27 at these sites:

Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held March 31 and April 2 in Philadelphia at the Wells Fargo Center (Co-hosts: St. Joseph's University and University of Pennsylvania)

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from thirty-three states, plus Washington, D.C. Two states, California and Texas, had the most teams with five bids. Seventeen states did not have any teams receiving bids.

BidsStateTeams
5CaliforniaSan Diego, UC Santa Barb., Pepperdine, Stanford, UCLA
5TexasRice, Stephen F. Austin, SMU, Texas, Texas Tech
4North CarolinaCampbell, Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina St.
4VirginiaHampton., Liberty, Old Dominion, Virginia
3LouisianaLouisiana Tech, Tulane, LSU
3OhioKent St., Xavier, Youngstown St.
3TennesseeTennessee, Tennessee Tech, Vanderbilt
2AlabamaAuburn, UAB
2IndianaPurdue, Notre Dame
2IowaDrake, Iowa St.
2MassachusettsHoly Cross, Boston College
2MississippiAlcorn St., Mississippi St.
2New JerseySt. Peter's, Rutgers
3PennsylvaniaPenn St., St. Joseph's, St Francis
2South CarolinaFurman, Clemson
2UtahBYU, Utah
2WisconsinGreen Bay, Marquette
1ArizonaArizona
1ConnecticutConnecticut
1District of ColumbiaGeorge Washington
1GeorgiaGeorgia
1IllinoisIllinois
1KansasKansas
1KentuckyWestern Kỳ.
1MaineMaine
1MichiganMichigan
1MissouriMissouri St.
1MontanaMontana
1NebraskaNebraska
1New HampshireDartmouth
1OklahomaOklahoma
1OregonOregon
1VermontVermont

Brackets

Data source

* Denotes overtime period

Final Four – Philadelphia

Record by conference

Seventeen conferences had more than one bid, or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play:

Conference
  1. of Bids
RecordWin %Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Southeastern614–6.70063311
Big 1267–6.538331
Atlantic Coast57–5.58343
Big East413–3.81343221
Big Ten46–4.6003111
Pacific-1042–4.3332
Conference USA33–3.50021
Atlantic 1032–3.4002
Sun Belt24–2.667211
Western Athletic22–2.5002
America East20–2
Missouri Valley20–2
Mountain West20–2
Northeast20–2
West Coast20–2
Colonial12–1.66711
Southland11–1.5001

Thirteen conferences went 0-1: Big Sky Conference, Big South Conference, Big West Conference, Horizon League, Ivy League, MAC, Mid-Continent, MEAC, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, SWAC, and Trans America

All-Tournament team

Game officials

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2000 NCAA National Championship Tournament . 2007-04-16 . Gregory Cooper . https://web.archive.org/web/20091020131325/http://geocities.com/Colosseum/1244/2000-bracket.html . 2009-10-20 . dead .
  2. Web site: CHN Basketball History: Most Outstanding Player. 2007-04-16. https://web.archive.org/web/20080125012447/http://www.collegehoopsnet.com/history/tournament/womensmop.htm. 2008-01-25. dead.