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1982 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 1982 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament was the first Women's Basketball Tournament held under the auspices of the NCAA. From 1972 to 1982, there were national tournaments for Division I schools held under the auspices of the AIAW. The inaugural NCAA Tournament included 32 teams. Tennessee, Louisiana Tech, Cheyney State, and Maryland met in the Final Four, held at the Norfolk Scope in Norfolk, Virginia and hosted by Old Dominion University, with Louisiana Tech defeating Cheyney for the title, 76-62.[1] Louisiana Tech's Janice Lawrence was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament.[2] Her teammate Kim Mulkey went on to become the first (and to date only) woman to win NCAA Division I basketball titles as a player and coach, winning the 2005, 2012, 2019 titles as head coach at Baylor and the 2023 title at LSU. (Mulkey was also an assistant coach on Louisiana Tech's 1988 championship team).

1982 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams32
Finals siteNorfolk Scope
Norfolk, Virginia
ChampionsLouisiana Tech (1st title, 1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Runner-upCheyney State (1st title game,
1st Final Four)
Semifinalists
Winning coachSonja Hogg (1st title)
MOPJanice Lawrence (Louisiana Tech)
Attendance66,924

Notable events edit

 
Louisiana Tech women's basketball team

While the 1982 tournament was the first tournament under the NCAA, many of the participating teams had a long history of tournament experience. The Louisiana Tech team made it to the Final Four of the 1979, 1980 and 1981 AIAW Tournaments, winning the National Championship with a perfect 34–0 record in 1981. The Lady Techsters were favorites to repeat, as their team entered the 1982 NCAA tournaments with only a single loss on the season. The team included two Kodak All-Americans, Pam Kelly and Angela Turner. Pam Kelly would win the Wade Trophy, awarded to the nation's best Division I women's basketball player. Her teammates included Janice Lawrence and Kim Mulkey, both of whom would play on the gold-medal-winning Olympic team in 1984.[3] The team had two head coaches. Sonja Hogg had been head coach of the team since its formation in 1974. Hogg brought Leon Barmore on to the coaching staff in 1977. In 1982, Barmore shared head coaching duties with Hogg, which he would do until 1985, when Hogg stepped down.[4]

The Louisiana Tech team won their first game easily, beating Tennessee Tech 114–52. They easily won their next two games against Arizona State and Kentucky, to advance to the Final Four, the only number one seed to make it to the finals.

The Lady Techsters faced the Lady Vols from Tennessee in the semi-finals, and won 69–46. In the National Championship game, they faced Cheyney State, coached by future Hall of Fame coach C. Vivian Stringer. The Cheyney State team entered the match-up on a 23-game winning streak.[5] The Louisiana Tech team hit 56% of their field goals attempts to win easily, 76–62, and win the first National Championship in the NCAA era.[3]

The winners are awarded national championship rings, but this team did not receive theirs until January 13, 2017.[6]

Records edit

 
Pam Kelly cutting down the nets after the 1982 NCAA women's basketball tournament championship win

In the semifinal game between Louisiana Tech and Tennessee, Louisiana Tech's Pam Kelly made twelve of fourteen free throw attempts. Twelve made free throws, equaled twice since, remains the Women's Final Four Game Record for "Most Free Throws" through the 2015 tournament.[7]

In the west regional final between Drake and Maryland, Lorri Bauman scored 50 points in a losing effort. Her scoring mark is still the single game record for an NCAA Tournament game. Her 21 made field goals, out of 35 attempts, both of which remain as single game tournament records. In the first-round game against Ohio State, Bauman hit all 16 of her free throws. While several players have subsequently made all of their attempted free throws, no one has a perfect record with more than 16.[8]

In the three games of her tournament, Bauman scored a total of 110 points, for an average of 36.7 points per game. No player has surpassed that per game scoring mark, through 2012.[7]

Bauman's 50 point performance qualified as one of the top 25 moments of NCAA Tournament history as chronicled by ESPN and the NCAA.com as part of the 25th anniversary celebration of NCAA women's basketball.[8]

Qualifying teams - automatic edit

Thirty-two teams were selected to participate in the 1982 NCAA Tournament. Twelve conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1982 NCAA tournament. (Not all conference records are available for 1982) [7]

Automatic Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
season
Conference Seed
Long Beach State Western Collegiate 22–5 -– 1
Kentucky SEC 22–7 -– 2
Maryland ACC 22–6 6–1 2
Memphis State Metro[n 1] 25–4 3
Drake Missouri Valley[n 2] 26–6 -– 4
Kansas State Big Eight 24–5 -– 4
Ohio State Big Ten 19–6 -– 5
Jackson State SWAC 28–7 -– 7
Stanford Northern California 19–7 9–3 7
Howard MEAC[n 3] 14–10 -– 8
Kent State MAC 17–13 -– 8
Saint Peter's MAAC 25–4 5–0 8
  1. ^ The NCAA recognized a Metro Conference champion, although the league did not sponsor women's sports until the 1983–84 school year.
  2. ^ The NCAA recognized a MVC champion, although the league did not sponsor women's sports until the 1992–93 school year. The Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference, which began as a women's-only parallel to the MVC before evolving into today's Missouri Valley Football Conference and had Drake as a member throughout its history as a women's conference, was not founded until the 1982–83 school year.
  3. ^ The NCAA recognized a MEAC champion, although the league did not sponsor women's sports until the 1983–84 school year.

Qualifying teams - at-large edit

Twenty additional teams were selected to complete the thirty-two invitations.[7] (Not all conference records are available for 1982)

At-large Bids
Qualifying School Conference Record Seed;
Regular
season
Conference
Louisiana Tech Independent 30–1 -–- 1
Old Dominion Independent 21–5 -–- 1
USC Western Collegiate 20–3 -– 1
Cheyney State Independent 24–2 -– 2
Tennessee SEC 19–9 -– 2
North Carolina State ACC 23–5 11–2 3
Oregon Independent 20–4 -– 3
South Carolina Independent 21–7 -–- 3
Arizona State Western Collegiate 23–6 -– 4
Penn State Independent 23–5 -–- 4
Clemson ACC 20–11 6–3 5
Georgia SEC 21–8 -– 5
Stephen F. Austin Independent 15–8 -–- 5
East Carolina Independent 19–7 -–- 6
Ole Miss SEC 27–4 6
Missouri Big Eight 23–8 6
Northwestern Big Ten 21–7 -– 6
Auburn SEC 24–4 -– 7
Illinois Big Ten 21–8 -– 7
Tennessee Tech Ohio Valley Conference 20–10 -– 8

Bids by conference edit

Bids Conference Teams
8 Independent Cheyney, East Carolina, Louisiana Tech, Old Dominion, Oregon, Penn St., South Carolina, Stephen F. Austin
5 SEC Auburn, Georgia, Kentucky, Ole Miss, Tennessee
3 Western Collegiate Arizona St., Long Beach St., Southern California
3 Big Ten Illinois, Northwestern, Ohio St.
3 ACC Clemson, Maryland, North Carolina St.
2 Big 8 Kansas St., Missouri
1 SWAC Jackson St.
1 Ohio Valley Conference Tennessee Tech
1 Northern California Stanford
1 Missouri Valley Conference Drake
1 MEAC Howard
1 MAC Kent St.
1 Metro Memphis
1 MAAC St. Peter's

First round edit

The thirty-two teams were seeded, and assigned to sixteen locations. In each case, the higher seed was given the opportunity to host the first-round game, and all sixteen teams hosted.[9]

The following table lists the region, host school, venue and location, while a map of the locations is shown to the right:

 
 
Norfolk
 
Cheyney
 
Manhattan
 
Raleigh
 
Los Angeles
 
University Park
 
Memphis
 
Knoxville
 
Ruston
 
Tempe
 
Columbia
 
Lexington
 
Long Beach
 
Des Moines
 
Eugene
 
College Park
class=notpageimage|
1982 NCAA first round
Region Host Venue City State
East Old Dominion University Old Dominion University Fieldhouse Norfolk Virginia
East Cheyney State College Cope Hall Cheyney Pennsylvania
East Kansas State University Ahearn Field House Manhattan Kansas
East North Carolina State University Reynolds Coliseum Raleigh North Carolina
Mideast University of Southern California Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena Los Angeles California
Mideast Pennsylvania State University Recreation Building (Rec Hall) University Park Pennsylvania
Mideast Memphis State University MSU Fieldhouse (Elma Roane Fieldhouse ) Memphis Tennessee
Mideast University of Tennessee Stokely Athletic Center Knoxville Tennessee
Midwest Louisiana Tech University Memorial Gym Ruston Louisiana
Midwest Arizona State University University Activity Center (Wells Fargo Arena) Tempe Arizona
Midwest University of South Carolina Carolina Coliseum Columbia South Carolina
Midwest University of Kentucky Memorial Coliseum Lexington Kentucky
West California State University, Long Beach University Gym (Gold Mine) Long Beach California
West Drake University Drake Fieldhouse Des Moines Iowa
West University of Oregon McArthur Court Eugene Oregon
West University of Maryland, College Park Cole Field House College Park Maryland

Regionals and Final Four edit

 
 
Raleigh
 
Knoxville
 
Ruston
 
Stanford
 
Norfolk
class=notpageimage|
1982 NCAA Regionals and Final Four

The Regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 18 to March 21 at these sites:

Each regional winner will advance to the Final Four, held March 26 and 28 in Norfolk, Virginia at the Norfolk Scope.

Bids by state edit

The thirty-two teams came from twenty-one states, plus Washington, D.C. California and Tennessee had the most teams with three each. Twenty-nine states did not have any teams receiving bids.[7]

 
NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 1982
Bids State Teams
3 California Long Beach St., Stanford, Southern California
3 Tennessee Memphis, Tennessee Tech, Tennessee
2 Illinois Northwestern, Illinois
2 Mississippi Jackson St., Ole Miss
2 North Carolina North Carolina St., East Carolina
2 Ohio Ohio St., Kent St.
2 Pennsylvania Cheyney, Penn St.
2 South Carolina South Carolina, Clemson
1 Alabama Auburn
1 Arizona Arizona St.
1 District of Columbia Howard
1 Georgia Georgia
1 Iowa Drake
1 Kansas Kansas St.
1 Kentucky Kentucky
1 Louisiana Louisiana Tech
1 Maryland Maryland
1 Missouri Missouri
1 New Jersey St. Peter's
1 Oregon Oregon
1 Texas Stephen F. Austin
1 Virginia Old Dominion

Brackets edit

Mideast Regional - University of Tennessee - Knoxville, TN (Stokely Athletic Center) edit

First round
March 12 and 13
Regional semifinals
March 18 and 19
Regional finals
March 20
         
1 Southern California (20-3) 99
8 Kent St. (17-13) 55
1 Southern California 73
4 Penn St. 70
4 Penn State (23-5) 96
5 Clemson (20-11) 75
1 Southern California 90
2 Tennessee 91 (OT)
3 Memphis (25-4) 72
6 Ole Miss (27-4) 70
3 Memphis 63
2 Tennessee 78
2 Tennessee (19-9) 72
7 Jackson St. (28-7) 56

Midwest Regional - Louisiana Tech - Ruston, LA (Memorial Gymnasium) edit

First round
March 12 and 14
Regional semifinals
March 18
Regional finals
March 21
         
1 Louisiana Tech (30-1) 114
8 Tennessee Tech (20-10) 53
1 Louisiana Tech 92
4 Arizona State 54
4 Arizona St. (23-6) 97
5 Georgia (21-8) 77
1 Louisiana Tech 82
2 Kentucky 60
3 South Carolina (21-7) 79
6 East Carolina (17-9) 54
3 South Carolina 69
2 Kentucky 73
2 Kentucky (22-7) 88
7 Illinois (21-8) 80

East Regional - N.C. State - Raleigh, NC (Reynolds Coliseum) edit

First round
March 13
Regional semifinals
March 18
Regional finals
March 20
         
1 Old Dominion (21-5) 75
8 St. Peter's (25-4) 42
1 Old Dominion 67
4 Kansas State 76
4 Kansas State (24-5) 78
5 Stephen F. Austin (15-8) 75
4 Kansas State 71
2 Cheyney State 93
3 North Carolina State(23-5) 75
6 Northwestern (21-7) 71
3 North Carolina State 61
2 Cheyney State 74
2 Cheyney State (24-2) 75
7 Auburn (24-4) 64

West Regional - Stanford University - Palo Alto, CA (Maples Pavilion) edit

First round
March 12–14
Regional semifinals
March 19
Regional finals
March 21
         
1 Long Beach State (22-5) 95
8 Howard (14-10) 57
1 Long Beach State 78
4 Drake 91
4 Drake (26-6) 90
5 Ohio State (19-6) 79
4 Drake 78
2 Maryland 89
3 Oregon (20-4) 53
6 Missouri (23-8) 59[7]
6 Missouri 68
2 Maryland 80
2 Maryland (22-6) 82
7 Stanford (19-7) 48

Final Four - Old Dominion - Norfolk, VA edit

National Semifinals
March 26
National Championship
March 28
      
2ME Tennessee 46
1MW Louisiana Tech 69
1MW Louisiana Tech 76
2E Cheyney State 62
2E Cheyney State 76
2W Maryland 66

Record by conference edit

Eight conferences had more than one bid, or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play:[7]

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Independent 8 12–7 .632 5 5 2 2 2
Southeastern 5 5–5 .500 2 2 2 1
Atlantic Coast 3 4–3 .571 2 2 1 1
Western Collegiate 3 4–3 .571 3 3 1
Big Ten 3 0–3
Big Eight 2 3–2 .600 2 2 1
Missouri Valley 1 2–1 .667 1 1 1
Metro 1 1–1 .500 1 1

Six conferences went 0-1: MAAC, MAC, MEAC, Northern California, Ohio Valley Conference, and SWAC[7]

All-Tournament Team edit

Game officials edit

  • David Sell (semifinal)
  • Pete Stewart (semifinal)
  • Marcy Weston (Semi-Final, Final)
  • Dan Woolridge (Semi-Final, Final)[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gregory Cooper. . Archived from the original on October 20, 2009. Retrieved March 29, 2007.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on January 25, 2008. Retrieved March 30, 2007.
  3. ^ a b Mowins, Beth (March 31, 2006). "Lady Techsters land inaugural NCAA title". ESPN. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  4. ^ Diaz, Jaime (November 19, 1986). "Belles Of The Ball". Sports Illustrated. CNNSI. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  5. ^ "History of the Wom's Final Four 1982". Sports Illustrated. CNNSI. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on January 16, 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Nixon, Rick. "2015 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved January 30, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Jackson, Melanie (January 24, 2006). "Bauman sets long-standing record, despite loss". ESPN.
  9. ^ "Attendance and Sites" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved March 19, 2012.

1982, ncaa, division, women, basketball, tournament, first, women, basketball, tournament, held, under, auspices, ncaa, from, 1972, 1982, there, were, national, tournaments, division, schools, held, under, auspices, aiaw, inaugural, ncaa, tournament, included,. The 1982 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament was the first Women s Basketball Tournament held under the auspices of the NCAA From 1972 to 1982 there were national tournaments for Division I schools held under the auspices of the AIAW The inaugural NCAA Tournament included 32 teams Tennessee Louisiana Tech Cheyney State and Maryland met in the Final Four held at the Norfolk Scope in Norfolk Virginia and hosted by Old Dominion University with Louisiana Tech defeating Cheyney for the title 76 62 1 Louisiana Tech s Janice Lawrence was named the Most Outstanding Player of the tournament 2 Her teammate Kim Mulkey went on to become the first and to date only woman to win NCAA Division I basketball titles as a player and coach winning the 2005 2012 2019 titles as head coach at Baylor and the 2023 title at LSU Mulkey was also an assistant coach on Louisiana Tech s 1988 championship team 1982 NCAA Division Iwomen s basketball tournamentTeams32Finals siteNorfolk ScopeNorfolk VirginiaChampionsLouisiana Tech 1st title 1st title game 1st Final Four Runner upCheyney State 1st title game 1st Final Four SemifinalistsMaryland 1st Final Four Tennessee 1st Final Four Winning coachSonja Hogg 1st title MOPJanice Lawrence Louisiana Tech Attendance66 924NCAA Division I women s tournaments 1983 Contents 1 Notable events 2 Records 3 Qualifying teams automatic 4 Qualifying teams at large 5 Bids by conference 6 First round 7 Regionals and Final Four 8 Bids by state 9 Brackets 9 1 Mideast Regional University of Tennessee Knoxville TN Stokely Athletic Center 9 2 Midwest Regional Louisiana Tech Ruston LA Memorial Gymnasium 9 3 East Regional N C State Raleigh NC Reynolds Coliseum 9 4 West Regional Stanford University Palo Alto CA Maples Pavilion 9 5 Final Four Old Dominion Norfolk VA 10 Record by conference 11 All Tournament Team 12 Game officials 13 See also 14 ReferencesNotable events edit nbsp Louisiana Tech women s basketball team While the 1982 tournament was the first tournament under the NCAA many of the participating teams had a long history of tournament experience The Louisiana Tech team made it to the Final Four of the 1979 1980 and 1981 AIAW Tournaments winning the National Championship with a perfect 34 0 record in 1981 The Lady Techsters were favorites to repeat as their team entered the 1982 NCAA tournaments with only a single loss on the season The team included two Kodak All Americans Pam Kelly and Angela Turner Pam Kelly would win the Wade Trophy awarded to the nation s best Division I women s basketball player Her teammates included Janice Lawrence and Kim Mulkey both of whom would play on the gold medal winning Olympic team in 1984 3 The team had two head coaches Sonja Hogg had been head coach of the team since its formation in 1974 Hogg brought Leon Barmore on to the coaching staff in 1977 In 1982 Barmore shared head coaching duties with Hogg which he would do until 1985 when Hogg stepped down 4 The Louisiana Tech team won their first game easily beating Tennessee Tech 114 52 They easily won their next two games against Arizona State and Kentucky to advance to the Final Four the only number one seed to make it to the finals The Lady Techsters faced the Lady Vols from Tennessee in the semi finals and won 69 46 In the National Championship game they faced Cheyney State coached by future Hall of Fame coach C Vivian Stringer The Cheyney State team entered the match up on a 23 game winning streak 5 The Louisiana Tech team hit 56 of their field goals attempts to win easily 76 62 and win the first National Championship in the NCAA era 3 The winners are awarded national championship rings but this team did not receive theirs until January 13 2017 6 Records edit nbsp Pam Kelly cutting down the nets after the 1982 NCAA women s basketball tournament championship win In the semifinal game between Louisiana Tech and Tennessee Louisiana Tech s Pam Kelly made twelve of fourteen free throw attempts Twelve made free throws equaled twice since remains the Women s Final Four Game Record for Most Free Throws through the 2015 tournament 7 In the west regional final between Drake and Maryland Lorri Bauman scored 50 points in a losing effort Her scoring mark is still the single game record for an NCAA Tournament game Her 21 made field goals out of 35 attempts both of which remain as single game tournament records In the first round game against Ohio State Bauman hit all 16 of her free throws While several players have subsequently made all of their attempted free throws no one has a perfect record with more than 16 8 In the three games of her tournament Bauman scored a total of 110 points for an average of 36 7 points per game No player has surpassed that per game scoring mark through 2012 7 Bauman s 50 point performance qualified as one of the top 25 moments of NCAA Tournament history as chronicled by ESPN and the NCAA com as part of the 25th anniversary celebration of NCAA women s basketball 8 Qualifying teams automatic editThirty two teams were selected to participate in the 1982 NCAA Tournament Twelve conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1982 NCAA tournament Not all conference records are available for 1982 7 Automatic Bids Record Qualifying School Conference Regularseason Conference Seed Long Beach State Western Collegiate 22 5 1 Kentucky SEC 22 7 2 Maryland ACC 22 6 6 1 2 Memphis State Metro n 1 25 4 3 Drake Missouri Valley n 2 26 6 4 Kansas State Big Eight 24 5 4 Ohio State Big Ten 19 6 5 Jackson State SWAC 28 7 7 Stanford Northern California 19 7 9 3 7 Howard MEAC n 3 14 10 8 Kent State MAC 17 13 8 Saint Peter s MAAC 25 4 5 0 8 The NCAA recognized a Metro Conference champion although the league did not sponsor women s sports until the 1983 84 school year The NCAA recognized a MVC champion although the league did not sponsor women s sports until the 1992 93 school year The Gateway Collegiate Athletic Conference which began as a women s only parallel to the MVC before evolving into today s Missouri Valley Football Conference and had Drake as a member throughout its history as a women s conference was not founded until the 1982 83 school year The NCAA recognized a MEAC champion although the league did not sponsor women s sports until the 1983 84 school year Qualifying teams at large editTwenty additional teams were selected to complete the thirty two invitations 7 Not all conference records are available for 1982 At large Bids Qualifying School Conference Record Seed Regularseason Conference Louisiana Tech Independent 30 1 1 Old Dominion Independent 21 5 1 USC Western Collegiate 20 3 1 Cheyney State Independent 24 2 2 Tennessee SEC 19 9 2 North Carolina State ACC 23 5 11 2 3 Oregon Independent 20 4 3 South Carolina Independent 21 7 3 Arizona State Western Collegiate 23 6 4 Penn State Independent 23 5 4 Clemson ACC 20 11 6 3 5 Georgia SEC 21 8 5 Stephen F Austin Independent 15 8 5 East Carolina Independent 19 7 6 Ole Miss SEC 27 4 6 Missouri Big Eight 23 8 6 Northwestern Big Ten 21 7 6 Auburn SEC 24 4 7 Illinois Big Ten 21 8 7 Tennessee Tech Ohio Valley Conference 20 10 8Bids by conference editBids Conference Teams 8 Independent Cheyney East Carolina Louisiana Tech Old Dominion Oregon Penn St South Carolina Stephen F Austin 5 SEC Auburn Georgia Kentucky Ole Miss Tennessee 3 Western Collegiate Arizona St Long Beach St Southern California 3 Big Ten Illinois Northwestern Ohio St 3 ACC Clemson Maryland North Carolina St 2 Big 8 Kansas St Missouri 1 SWAC Jackson St 1 Ohio Valley Conference Tennessee Tech 1 Northern California Stanford 1 Missouri Valley Conference Drake 1 MEAC Howard 1 MAC Kent St 1 Metro Memphis 1 MAAC St Peter sFirst round editThe thirty two teams were seeded and assigned to sixteen locations In each case the higher seed was given the opportunity to host the first round game and all sixteen teams hosted 9 The following table lists the region host school venue and location while a map of the locations is shown to the right nbsp nbsp Norfolk nbsp Cheyney nbsp Manhattan nbsp Raleigh nbsp Los Angeles nbsp University Park nbsp Memphis nbsp Knoxville nbsp Ruston nbsp Tempe nbsp Columbia nbsp Lexington nbsp Long Beach nbsp Des Moines nbsp Eugene nbsp College Parkclass notpageimage 1982 NCAA first round Region Host Venue City State East Old Dominion University Old Dominion University Fieldhouse Norfolk Virginia East Cheyney State College Cope Hall Cheyney Pennsylvania East Kansas State University Ahearn Field House Manhattan Kansas East North Carolina State University Reynolds Coliseum Raleigh North Carolina Mideast University of Southern California Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena Los Angeles California Mideast Pennsylvania State University Recreation Building Rec Hall University Park Pennsylvania Mideast Memphis State University MSU Fieldhouse Elma Roane Fieldhouse Memphis Tennessee Mideast University of Tennessee Stokely Athletic Center Knoxville Tennessee Midwest Louisiana Tech University Memorial Gym Ruston Louisiana Midwest Arizona State University University Activity Center Wells Fargo Arena Tempe Arizona Midwest University of South Carolina Carolina Coliseum Columbia South Carolina Midwest University of Kentucky Memorial Coliseum Lexington Kentucky West California State University Long Beach University Gym Gold Mine Long Beach California West Drake University Drake Fieldhouse Des Moines Iowa West University of Oregon McArthur Court Eugene Oregon West University of Maryland College Park Cole Field House College Park MarylandRegionals and Final Four edit nbsp nbsp Raleigh nbsp Knoxville nbsp Ruston nbsp Stanford nbsp Norfolkclass notpageimage 1982 NCAA Regionals and Final Four The Regionals named for the general location were held from March 18 to March 21 at these sites East Regional Reynolds Coliseum Raleigh North Carolina Host North Carolina State University Mideast Regional Stokely Athletic Center Knoxville Tennessee Host University of Tennessee Midwest Regional Memorial Gym Ruston Louisiana Host Louisiana Tech University West Regional Maples Pavilion Stanford California Host Stanford University Each regional winner will advance to the Final Four held March 26 and 28 in Norfolk Virginia at the Norfolk Scope Bids by state editThe thirty two teams came from twenty one states plus Washington D C California and Tennessee had the most teams with three each Twenty nine states did not have any teams receiving bids 7 nbsp NCAA Women s basketball Tournament invitations by state 1982 Bids State Teams 3 California Long Beach St Stanford Southern California 3 Tennessee Memphis Tennessee Tech Tennessee 2 Illinois Northwestern Illinois 2 Mississippi Jackson St Ole Miss 2 North Carolina North Carolina St East Carolina 2 Ohio Ohio St Kent St 2 Pennsylvania Cheyney Penn St 2 South Carolina South Carolina Clemson 1 Alabama Auburn 1 Arizona Arizona St 1 District of Columbia Howard 1 Georgia Georgia 1 Iowa Drake 1 Kansas Kansas St 1 Kentucky Kentucky 1 Louisiana Louisiana Tech 1 Maryland Maryland 1 Missouri Missouri 1 New Jersey St Peter s 1 Oregon Oregon 1 Texas Stephen F Austin 1 Virginia Old DominionBrackets editMideast Regional University of Tennessee Knoxville TN Stokely Athletic Center edit First roundMarch 12 and 13Regional semifinalsMarch 18 and 19Regional finalsMarch 20 1Southern California 20 3 998Kent St 17 13 551Southern California734Penn St 704Penn State 23 5 965Clemson 20 11 751Southern California902Tennessee91 OT 3Memphis 25 4 726Ole Miss 27 4 703Memphis632Tennessee782Tennessee 19 9 727Jackson St 28 7 56 Midwest Regional Louisiana Tech Ruston LA Memorial Gymnasium edit First roundMarch 12 and 14Regional semifinalsMarch 18Regional finalsMarch 21 1Louisiana Tech 30 1 1148Tennessee Tech 20 10 531Louisiana Tech924Arizona State544Arizona St 23 6 975Georgia 21 8 771Louisiana Tech822Kentucky603South Carolina 21 7 796East Carolina 17 9 543South Carolina692Kentucky732Kentucky 22 7 887Illinois 21 8 80 East Regional N C State Raleigh NC Reynolds Coliseum edit First roundMarch 13Regional semifinalsMarch 18Regional finalsMarch 20 1Old Dominion 21 5 758St Peter s 25 4 421Old Dominion674Kansas State764Kansas State 24 5 785Stephen F Austin 15 8 754Kansas State712Cheyney State933North Carolina State 23 5 756Northwestern 21 7 713North Carolina State612Cheyney State742Cheyney State 24 2 757Auburn 24 4 64 West Regional Stanford University Palo Alto CA Maples Pavilion edit First roundMarch 12 14Regional semifinalsMarch 19Regional finalsMarch 21 1Long Beach State 22 5 958Howard 14 10 571Long Beach State784Drake914Drake 26 6 905Ohio State 19 6 794Drake782Maryland893Oregon 20 4 536Missouri 23 8 59 7 6Missouri682Maryland802Maryland 22 6 827Stanford 19 7 48 Final Four Old Dominion Norfolk VA edit National SemifinalsMarch 26National ChampionshipMarch 28 2METennessee461MWLouisiana Tech691MWLouisiana Tech762ECheyney State622ECheyney State762WMaryland66Record by conference editEight conferences had more than one bid or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play 7 Conference of Bids Record Win Roundof 32 SweetSixteen EliteEight FinalFour ChampionshipGame Independent 8 12 7 632 5 5 2 2 2 Southeastern 5 5 5 500 2 2 2 1 Atlantic Coast 3 4 3 571 2 2 1 1 Western Collegiate 3 4 3 571 3 3 1 Big Ten 3 0 3 Big Eight 2 3 2 600 2 2 1 Missouri Valley 1 2 1 667 1 1 1 Metro 1 1 1 500 1 1 Six conferences went 0 1 MAAC MAC MEAC Northern California Ohio Valley Conference and SWAC 7 All Tournament Team editJanice Lawrence Louisiana Tech Pam Kelly Louisiana Tech Kim Mulkey Louisiana Tech Yolanda Laney Cheyney Valerie Walker Cheyney 7 Game officials editDavid Sell semifinal Pete Stewart semifinal Marcy Weston Semi Final Final Dan Woolridge Semi Final Final 7 See also edit1982 NCAA Division II women s basketball tournament 1982 NCAA Division III women s basketball tournament 1982 AIAW National Division I Basketball Championship 1982 NAIA women s basketball tournament 1982 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournamentReferences edit Gregory Cooper 1982 NCAA National Championship Tournament Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Retrieved March 29 2007 CHN Basketball History Most Outstanding Player Archived from the original on January 25 2008 Retrieved March 30 2007 a b Mowins Beth March 31 2006 Lady Techsters land inaugural NCAA title ESPN Retrieved April 22 2012 Diaz Jaime November 19 1986 Belles Of The Ball Sports Illustrated CNNSI Retrieved April 22 2012 History of the Wom s Final Four 1982 Sports Illustrated CNNSI Retrieved April 22 2012 Lady Techsters to Receive National Championship Rings 35 Years Later Archived from the original on January 16 2017 Retrieved January 14 2017 a b c d e f g h i j Nixon Rick 2015 NCAA Women s Final Four Records Book PDF NCAA Retrieved January 30 2016 a b Jackson Melanie January 24 2006 Bauman sets long standing record despite loss ESPN Attendance and Sites PDF NCAA Retrieved March 19 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1982 NCAA Division I women 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1222642478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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