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1995 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

The 1995 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament featured 64 teams. The Final Four consisted of Connecticut, Tennessee, Stanford, and Georgia. Connecticut defeated Tennessee 70-64 to win its first NCAA title and complete a 35-0 undefeated season.

1995 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams64
Finals siteTarget Center
Minneapolis, Minnesota
ChampionsConnecticut Huskies (1st title)
Runner-upTennessee Volunteers (5th title game)
Semifinalists

The first two rounds were held at the home court of the top four seeds in each region (except for San Diego State, which hosted three games in the West region). The regional semifinals and finals were held at the University of Connecticut for the East region, UCLA for the West region, the University of Tennessee for the Mideast region, and Drake University for the Midwest region. The Final Four was played in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[1]

Notable events

In a second-round game, 4 seed Alabama faced the 5 seed Duke. The game was close throughout the contest, with neither team leading the other by more than seven points. With time winding down in regulation, Alabama's Niesa Johnson hit a three-pointer to send the game to overtime. Not just one overtime, the game would eventually feature four overtimes. Johnson went on to hit two free throws at the end of the fourth overtime to give Alabama a 121–120 victory, setting records for the most overtimes, and the most points scored in an NCAA tournament game. At the time, it was called "the best women's basketball game in history".[2][3]

In the east regional semi-final involving Louisiana tech and Virginia, confusion reigned momentarily with both teams celebrating at the end of regulation. Louisiana Tech led early, with as much as a 13-point lead in the first half and a ten-point lead at halftime. The Cavaliers came back and had a 63–62 lead with seconds left in the game. With time running out, Louisiana Tech's Debra Williams went to the foul line for a one-and-one shot. She missed it, but the scorekeeper accidentally recorded it, so the scoreboard showed 63–63. Louisiana Tech tried and missed a last second shot, but thought they were headed to overtime based upon the score, while Virginia thought they had won, so both teams were celebrating. The referees met at the scores table to sort it out, then Dee Kantner emerged and pointed to the Virginia bench signaling victory.[4]

Georgia and Tennessee, both from the SEC, squared off in one of the Final Four match ups. Tennessee was a number 1 seed, while Georgia was a 3 seed, and upset top seed Colorado 82–79 in the Midwest Rational final. The two teams had faced each other in the final game of the regular season, when the Lady Vols beat the Lady Bulldogs by 22 points. Georgia coach Andy Landers complained about lack of effort in that game, but did not have the same complaints in the Final Four game, even though the final margin was identical. Tennessee's Pat Summitt emphasizes rebounds, and Tennessee out rebounded Georgia 51–33. While the Lady Bulldogs were able to get within seven points in the second half, they could get no closer and Tennessee prevailed 73–51, to send them into the champions ship game.[5]

Despite entering the game against Stanford with an undefeated record, some skeptics weren't convinced that Connecticut could win. Although UConn had beaten Tennessee earlier in the year, they then played in the Big East, which at the time wasn't a strong conference. The Big East earned just two invitations to the NCAA tournament, while eight other conferences had three or more teams in the tournament. Stanford was a representative of the Pacific-10 conference, which had five teams strong enough to earn bids. However, the Huskies jumped out to an early 16–4 lead, and ended the game with a 27-point margin, winning 87–60. Kara Wolters scored 31 points, a single point under her career high while Jamelle Elliott matched her career high with 21 points. Consensus national player of the year Rebecca Lobo added 17 points, prompting coach Auriemma to quip "The reason we're playing [in the final] is I've got these three players [and Tara VanDerveer doesn't.]"[6]

In the championship game, Tennessee had a small lead in the first half 28–25, but more importantly, two of UConn's All-Americans, Jennifer Rizzotti and Rebecca Lobo, had three fouls, while six foot seven inch Kara Wolters had two. Auriemma tried playing small, with six foot Jamelle Elliott the tallest Husky on the floor. The Tennessee lead extended, but only to six points at the half. In the second half, the lead was still four points in the Lady Vols favor when Wolters received her fourth foul. With twelve minutes left to go in the game, Lobo had but six points. Lobo then scored on four possessions, and with a steal by Rizzotti turned into a layup, the Tennessee nine point lead was down to a single point, prompting coach Summitt to call for a time-out. Jamelle Elliott tied the game with just over two minutes left, then Rizzotti made a play which would be talked about for years afterward. She grabbed a rebound, then drove the length of the court against Michelle M. Marciniak. Just before reaching the basket, she executed a cross-over dribble and sank a left-handed layup to take a lead that would never be relinquished. UConn won the game 70–64, completing the first undefeated season in NCAA history since the 1986 Texas team, and winning the first national championship for the Connecticut Huskies team.[7]

Tournament records

  • Free Throws – Connecticut made 34 free throws in the semi-final game against Stanford, setting the record for most free throws completed in a Final Four.
  • Most points – Alabama scored 121 points in a four overtime game against Duke, setting the record for most points scored in an NCAA tournament game. The 120 pins scored by Duke is the second most scored in an NCAA tournament game, and the most in a losing effort.
  • Field goals attempted – Alabama attempted 114 fields goals in the game against Duke, setting the record for most field goals attempted in an NCAA tournament game.
  • Most overtimes – Alabama and Duke played in a four overtime game, the most overtimes in an NCAA tournament game.[8]

Qualifying teams – automatic

Sixty-four teams were selected to participate in the 1995 NCAA Tournament. Thirty-two conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1995 NCAA Tournament .[8]

Automatic Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
University of Colorado at Boulder Big Eight 27–2 14–0 1
University of Connecticut Big East 29–0 18–0 1
Dartmouth College Ivy League 16–10 12–2 14
Drake University Missouri Valley Conference 24–5 13–5 5
Florida International University Trans America 26–4 15–1 9
Florida A&M MEAC 24–5 14–2 16
Furman University Southern Conference 18–11 10–4 15
The George Washington University Atlantic 10 24–5 14–2 4
College of the Holy Cross Patriot League 21–8 12–2 16
Jackson State University SWAC 22–5 12–2 15
Loyola University Maryland MAAC 20–8 7–6 10
University of Maine North Atlantic Conference 24–5 14–2 16
Marquette University Great Midwest 19–11 9–3 10
University of Montana Big Sky Conference 25–6 12–2 12
Mount St. Mary's University Northeast Conference 24–5 17–1 13
University of North Carolina ACC 28–4 12–4 3
Northern Illinois University Midwestern Collegiate 17–13 10–6 16
Old Dominion University Colonial 27–5 13–1 8
Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 25–4 13–3 2
Radford University Big South Conference 16–13 11–5 11
University of San Francisco West Coast Conference 24–4 13–1 11
University of Southern Mississippi Metro 21–8 7–5 7
Stanford University Pac-10 26–2 17–1 2
Stephen F. Austin State University Southland 22–7 15–3 11
Tennessee State University Ohio Valley Conference 22–6 12–4 12
Texas Tech University Southwest 30–3 13–1 2
University of Toledo MAC 24–6 15–3 13
University of California, Irvine Big West Conference 19–10 12–6 15
University of Utah WAC 23–6 12–2 8
Vanderbilt University SEC 26–6 8–3 1
Western Illinois University Mid-Continent 17–11 14–4 14
Western Kentucky University Sun Belt Conference 26–3 12–2 4

Qualifying teams – at-large

Thirty-two additional teams were selected to complete the six-four invitations.[8]

At-large Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
University of Alabama Southeastern 20–8 7–4 4
University of Arkansas Southeastern 22–6 7–4 6
DePaul University Great Midwest 20–8 9–3 13
Duke University Atlantic Coast 21–8 10–6 5
University of Florida Southeastern 23–8 7–4 6
University of Georgia Southeastern 24–4 8–3 3
Indiana University Big Ten 19–9 8–8 14
University of Kansas Big Eight 20–10 8–6 7
Louisiana Tech University Sun Belt 26–4 13–1 2
University of Louisville Metro 24–7 7–5 11
University of Memphis Great Midwest 21–7 10–2 8
University of Mississippi (Ole Miss) Southeastern 21–7 6–5 12
Missouri State University Missouri Valley 20–11 14–4 9
North Carolina State University Atlantic Coast 19–9 11–5 7
Ohio University Mid-American 23–6 15–3 14
University of Oklahoma Big Eight 21–8 11–3 7
Oklahoma State University–Stillwater Big Eight 17–11 7–7 12
University of Oregon Pacific-10 18–9 11–7 6
Oregon State University Pacific-10 20–7 12–6 5
University of Portland West Coast 23–6 12–2 13
Purdue University Big Ten 21–7 13–3 4
San Diego State University Western Athletic 24–5 14–0 5
Seton Hall University Big East 23–8 12–6 6
Southern Methodist University Southwest 20–9 9–5 10
University of Southern California Pacific-10 18–9 10–8 9
Saint Joseph's University Atlantic 10 20–8 11–5 9
University of Tennessee Southeastern 29–2 11–0 1
Tulane University Metro 19–9 9–3 15
University of Virginia Atlantic Coast 24–4 16–0 3
Virginia Tech Metro 21–8 10–2 8
University of Washington Pacific-10 23–8 13–5 3
University of Wisconsin–Madison Big Ten 19–8 11–5 10

Bids by conference

Thirty-two conferences earned an automatic bid. In seventeen cases, the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference. Thirty-two additional at-large teams were selected from fifteen of the conferences.[8]

Bids Conference Teams
7 Southeastern Vanderbilt, Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Ole Miss, Tennessee
5 Pacific-10 Stanford, Oregon, Oregon St., Southern California, Washington
4 Big Eight Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma St.
4 Big Ten Penn St., Indiana, Purdue, Wisconsin
4 Metro Southern Miss., Louisville, Tulane, Virginia Tech
4 Atlantic Coast North Carolina, Duke, North Carolina St., Virginia
3 Great Midwest Marquette, DePaul, Memphis
3 Sun Belt FIU, Western Ky., Louisiana Tech
2 Atlantic 10 George Washington, St. Joseph’s
2 Big East Connecticut, Seton Hall
2 Mid-American Toledo, Ohio
2 Missouri Valley Drake, Missouri St.
2 Southwest Texas Tech, SMU
2 West Coast San Francisco, Portland
2 Western Athletic Utah, San Diego St.
1 Big Sky Montana
1 Big South Radford
1 Big West UC Irvine
1 Colonial Old Dominion
1 Ivy Dartmouth
1 Metro Atlantic Loyola Md
1 Mid-Continent Western Illinois.
1 Mid-Eastern Florida A&M
1 Midwestern Collegiate Northern Illinois
1 North Atlantic Maine
1 Northeast Mt. St. Mary’s
1 Ohio Valley Tennessee St.
1 Patriot Holy Cross
1 Southern Furman
1 Southland Stephen F. Austin
1 Southwestern Jackson St.

First and second rounds

 
 
Charlottesville
 
Storrs
 
Tuscaloosa
 
Ruston
 
Bowling Green
 
Seattle
 
Knoxville
 
Lubbock
 
Athens
 
University Park
 
Boulder
 
Washington
 
Chapel Hill
 
Nashville
 
Stanford
 
San Diego
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1995 NCAA first and second round venues

In 1995, 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:[9]

  • Fourth seeded Purdue was eligible to host, but unable to, so fifth seeded San Diego State hosted three first and second-round games

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

Region Rnd Host Venue City State
East 1&2 University of Virginia University Hall (University of Virginia) Charlottesville Virginia
East 1&2 University of Connecticut Harry A. Gampel Pavilion Storrs Connecticut
East 1&2 University of Alabama Coleman Coliseum Tuscaloosa Alabama
East 1&2 Louisiana Tech University Thomas Assembly Center Ruston Louisiana
Mideast 1&2 Western Kentucky University E.A. Diddle Arena Bowling Green Kentucky
Mideast 1&2 University of Washington Hec Edmundson Pavilion Seattle Washington
Mideast 1&2 University of Tennessee Thompson-Boling Arena Knoxville Tennessee
Mideast 1&2 Texas Tech University Lubbock Municipal Coliseum Lubbock Texas
Midwest 1&2 University of Georgia Georgia Coliseum (Stegeman Coliseum) Athens Georgia
Midwest 1&2 Pennsylvania State University Recreation Building (Rec Hall) University Park Pennsylvania
Midwest 1&2 University of Colorado CU Events Center (Coors Events Center) Boulder Colorado
Midwest 1&2 George Washington University Charles E. Smith Athletic Center Washington District of Columbia
West 1&2 University of North Carolina Carmichael Auditorium Chapel Hill North Carolina
West 1&2 Vanderbilt University Memorial Gymnasium (Vanderbilt University) Nashville Tennessee
West 1&2 Stanford University Maples Pavilion Stanford California
West 1&2 San Diego State Peterson Gym San Diego California

Regionals and Final Four

 
 
Storrs
 
Knoxville
 
Los Angeles
 
Des Moines
 
Minneapolis
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1995 NCAA regionals and Final Four

The Regionals, named for the general location, were held from March 23 to March 25 at these sites:

Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held April 1 and April 2 in Minneapolis, Minnesota at the Target Center,

Bids by state

The sixty-four teams came from thirty-three states, plus Washington, D.C. California had the most teams with five bids. Seventeen states did not have any teams receiving bids.[8]

 
NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 1995
Bids State Teams
5 California San Francisco, Stanford, UC Irvine, San Diego St., Southern California
4 Tennessee Tennessee St., Vanderbilt, Memphis, Tennessee
4 Virginia Old Dominion, Radford, Virginia, Virginia Tech
3 Florida FIU, Florida A&M, Florida
3 Mississippi Jackson St., Southern Miss., Ole Miss
3 Oregon Oregon, Oregon St., Portland
3 Texas Stephen F. Austin, Texas Tech, SMU
3 Illinois Northern Illinois, Western Illinois, DePaul
3 North Carolina North Carolina, Duke, North Carolina St.
2 Indiana Indiana, Purdue
2 Kentucky Western Ky., Louisville
2 Louisiana Louisiana Tech, Tulane
2 Maryland Loyola Md, Mt. St. Mary’s
2 Ohio Toledo, Ohio
2 Oklahoma Oklahoma, Oklahoma St.
2 Pennsylvania Penn St., St. Joseph’s
2 Wisconsin Marquette, Wisconsin
1 Alabama Alabama
1 Arkansas Arkansas
1 Colorado Colorado
1 Connecticut Connecticut
1 District of Columbia George Washington
1 Georgia Georgia
1 Iowa Drake
1 Kansas Kansas
1 Maine Maine
1 Massachusetts Holy Cross
1 Missouri Missouri St.
1 Montana Montana
1 New Hampshire Dartmouth
1 New Jersey Seton Hall
1 South Carolina Furman
1 Utah Utah
1 Washington Washington

Bracket

East region - Storrs, Connecticut

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 Connecticut 105
16 Maine 75
1 Connecticut 91
Storrs, CT
8 Virginia Tech 45
8 Virginia Tech 62
9 St. Joseph's 52
1 Connecticut 87
4 Alabama 56
5 Duke 76
12 Oklahoma State 64
5 Duke 120
Tuscaloosa, AL
4 Alabama 121****
4 Alabama 82
13 Mt. St. Mary's 55
1 Connecticut 67
3 Virginia 63
6 Florida 89
11 Radford 49
6 Florida 67
Charlottesville, VA
3 Virginia 72
3 Virginia 71
14 Dartmouth 68
3 Virginia 63
2 Louisiana Tech 62
7 Oklahoma 90
10 Loyola-MD 55
7 Oklahoma 36
Ruston, LA
2 Louisiana Tech 48
2 Louisiana Tech 90
15 Furman 52

West region - Los Angeles, California

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 Vanderbilt 90
16 Northern Illinois 44
1 Vanderbilt 95
Nashville, TN
8 Memphis 68
8 Memphis 74
9 USC 72
1 Vanderbilt 66
4 Purdue 67
5 San Diego St. 46
12 Montana 57
12 Montana 51
San Diego, CA
4 Purdue 62
4 Purdue 74
13 Portland 59
4 Purdue 58
2 Stanford 69
6 Seton Hall 73
11 Stephen F. Austin 63
6 Seton Hall 45
Chapel Hill, NC
3 North Carolina 59
3 North Carolina 89
14 Western Illinois 48
3 North Carolina 71
2 Stanford 81
7 Southern Mississippi 95
10 Southern Methodist 96*
10 Southern Methodist 73
Stanford, CA
2 Stanford 95
2 Stanford 88
15 UC-Irvine 55

Mideast region - Knoxville, Tennessee

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 Tennessee 96
16 Florida A&M 59
1 Tennessee 70
Knoxville, TN
9 Florida International 44
8 Old Dominion 76
9 Florida International 81
1 Tennessee 87
4 Western Kentucky 65
5 Oregon State 88*
12 Tennessee State 75
5 Oregon State 78
Bowling Green, KY
4 Western Kentucky 85
4 Western Kentucky 77
13 Toledo 63
1 Tennessee 80
2 Texas Tech 59
6 Arkansas 67
11 San Francisco 58
6 Arkansas 50
Seattle, WA
3 Washington 54
3 Washington 73
14 Ohio 56
3 Washington 52
2 Texas Tech 67
7 Kansas 72
10 Wisconsin 73
10 Wisconsin 65
Lubbock, Texas
2 Texas Tech 88
2 Texas Tech 87
15 Tulane 72

Midwest region - Des Moines, Iowa

First round
March 16 and 17
Second round
March 18 and 19
Regional semifinals
March 23
Regional finals
March 25
            
1 Colorado 83
16 Holy Cross 49
1 Colorado 78
Boulder, CO
9 Southwest Missouri State 34
8 Utah 47
9 Southwest Missouri State 49
1 Colorado 77
4 George Washington 61
5 Drake 87*
12 Ole Miss 81
5 Drake 93
Washington, DC
4 George Washington 96*
4 George Washington 87
13 DePaul 79
1 Colorado 79
3 Georgia 82
6 Oregon 65
11 Louisville 67
11 Louisville 68
Athens, GA
3 Georgia 81
3 Georgia 81
14 Indiana 64
3 Georgia 98
7 North Carolina State 79
7 North Carolina State 77
10 Marquette 62
7 North Carolina State 76
University Park, PA
2 Penn State 74
2 Penn State 75
15 Jackson State 62

Final Four – Minneapolis, Minnesota

National semifinals
April 1
National Finals
April 2
      
1E Connecticut 87
2W Stanford 60
1E Connecticut 70
1ME Tennessee 64
1ME Tennessee 73
3MW Georgia 51

* denotes number of overtime periods

Record by conference

Seventeen conferences had more than one bid, or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play:[8]

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Southeastern 7 15–7 .682 6 4 2 2 1
Pacific-10 5 7–5 .583 3 2 1 1
Atlantic Coast 4 8–4 .667 4 3 1
Big Ten 4 5–4 .556 3 1 1
Big Eight 4 4–4 .500 2 1 1
Metro 4 2–4 .333 2
Great Midwest 3 1–3 .250 1
Big East 2 7–1 .875 2 1 1 1 1
Southwest 2 4–2 .667 2 1 1
Sun Belt 2 4–2 .667 2 2
Atlantic 10 2 2–2 .500 1 1
Missouri Valley 2 2–2 .500 2
Mid-American 2 0–2
West Coast 2 0–2
Western Athletic 2 0–2
Big Sky 1 1–1 .500 1
Trans America 1 1–1 .500 1

Fifteen conferences went 0-1: Big South Conference, Big West Conference, Colonial, Ivy League, MAAC, Mid-Continent, MEAC, Midwestern Collegiate, North Atlantic Conference, Northeast Conference, Ohio Valley Conference, Patriot League, Southern Conference, Southland, and SWAC[8]

All-Tournament team

Game officials

  • Sally Bell (semifinal)
  • Art Bomengen (semifinal)
  • Violet Palmer (semifinal)
  • Sidney Bunch (semifinal)
  • Dee Kantner (final)
  • Larry Sheppard (final) [8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Gregory Cooper. . Archived from the original on 2009-10-20. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  2. ^ Wichman, Dan (March 20, 1995). "Game goes down as one of the best in basketball history". Duke Chronicle. Retrieved 16 Feb 2013.
  3. ^ "Alabama escapes Duke, 121-120, in longest playoff game". Lakeland Ledger. March 20, 1995. Retrieved 16 Feb 2013.
  4. ^ VOEPEL, MECHELLE (March 24, 1995). "Confusion, Cavs Reign Over La. Tech". Daily Press. Retrieved 16 Feb 2013.
  5. ^ Kent, Milton (April 2, 1995). "Tennessee overpowers Georgia, 73-51 NCAA TOURNAMENT WOMEN'S FINAL FOUR". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 16 Feb 2013.
  6. ^ Greenberg, Mel (April 2, 1995). "Uconn Shows Skeptics 87-60 Blowout Of Stanford". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 16 Feb 2013.
  7. ^ Murphy, Austin (April 10, 1995). "Storybook Ending". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 16 Feb 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Nixon, Rick. "Official 2022 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved 22 April 2012.
  9. ^ "Attendance and Sites" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved 19 March 2012.

1995, ncaa, division, women, basketball, tournament, featured, teams, final, four, consisted, connecticut, tennessee, stanford, georgia, connecticut, defeated, tennessee, first, ncaa, title, complete, undefeated, season, 1995, ncaa, division, iwomen, basketbal. The 1995 NCAA Division I women s basketball tournament featured 64 teams The Final Four consisted of Connecticut Tennessee Stanford and Georgia Connecticut defeated Tennessee 70 64 to win its first NCAA title and complete a 35 0 undefeated season 1995 NCAA Division Iwomen s basketball tournamentTeams64Finals siteTarget CenterMinneapolis MinnesotaChampionsConnecticut Huskies 1st title Runner upTennessee Volunteers 5th title game SemifinalistsStanford Cardinal 4th Final Four Georgia Bulldogs 3rd Final Four NCAA Division I women s tournaments 1994 1996 The first two rounds were held at the home court of the top four seeds in each region except for San Diego State which hosted three games in the West region The regional semifinals and finals were held at the University of Connecticut for the East region UCLA for the West region the University of Tennessee for the Mideast region and Drake University for the Midwest region The Final Four was played in Minneapolis Minnesota 1 Contents 1 Notable events 2 Tournament records 3 Qualifying teams automatic 4 Qualifying teams at large 5 Bids by conference 6 First and second rounds 7 Regionals and Final Four 8 Bids by state 9 Bracket 9 1 East region Storrs Connecticut 9 2 West region Los Angeles California 9 3 Mideast region Knoxville Tennessee 9 4 Midwest region Des Moines Iowa 9 5 Final Four Minneapolis Minnesota 10 Record by conference 11 All Tournament team 12 Game officials 13 See also 14 ReferencesNotable events EditIn a second round game 4 seed Alabama faced the 5 seed Duke The game was close throughout the contest with neither team leading the other by more than seven points With time winding down in regulation Alabama s Niesa Johnson hit a three pointer to send the game to overtime Not just one overtime the game would eventually feature four overtimes Johnson went on to hit two free throws at the end of the fourth overtime to give Alabama a 121 120 victory setting records for the most overtimes and the most points scored in an NCAA tournament game At the time it was called the best women s basketball game in history 2 3 In the east regional semi final involving Louisiana tech and Virginia confusion reigned momentarily with both teams celebrating at the end of regulation Louisiana Tech led early with as much as a 13 point lead in the first half and a ten point lead at halftime The Cavaliers came back and had a 63 62 lead with seconds left in the game With time running out Louisiana Tech s Debra Williams went to the foul line for a one and one shot She missed it but the scorekeeper accidentally recorded it so the scoreboard showed 63 63 Louisiana Tech tried and missed a last second shot but thought they were headed to overtime based upon the score while Virginia thought they had won so both teams were celebrating The referees met at the scores table to sort it out then Dee Kantner emerged and pointed to the Virginia bench signaling victory 4 Georgia and Tennessee both from the SEC squared off in one of the Final Four match ups Tennessee was a number 1 seed while Georgia was a 3 seed and upset top seed Colorado 82 79 in the Midwest Rational final The two teams had faced each other in the final game of the regular season when the Lady Vols beat the Lady Bulldogs by 22 points Georgia coach Andy Landers complained about lack of effort in that game but did not have the same complaints in the Final Four game even though the final margin was identical Tennessee s Pat Summitt emphasizes rebounds and Tennessee out rebounded Georgia 51 33 While the Lady Bulldogs were able to get within seven points in the second half they could get no closer and Tennessee prevailed 73 51 to send them into the champions ship game 5 Despite entering the game against Stanford with an undefeated record some skeptics weren t convinced that Connecticut could win Although UConn had beaten Tennessee earlier in the year they then played in the Big East which at the time wasn t a strong conference The Big East earned just two invitations to the NCAA tournament while eight other conferences had three or more teams in the tournament Stanford was a representative of the Pacific 10 conference which had five teams strong enough to earn bids However the Huskies jumped out to an early 16 4 lead and ended the game with a 27 point margin winning 87 60 Kara Wolters scored 31 points a single point under her career high while Jamelle Elliott matched her career high with 21 points Consensus national player of the year Rebecca Lobo added 17 points prompting coach Auriemma to quip The reason we re playing in the final is I ve got these three players and Tara VanDerveer doesn t 6 In the championship game Tennessee had a small lead in the first half 28 25 but more importantly two of UConn s All Americans Jennifer Rizzotti and Rebecca Lobo had three fouls while six foot seven inch Kara Wolters had two Auriemma tried playing small with six foot Jamelle Elliott the tallest Husky on the floor The Tennessee lead extended but only to six points at the half In the second half the lead was still four points in the Lady Vols favor when Wolters received her fourth foul With twelve minutes left to go in the game Lobo had but six points Lobo then scored on four possessions and with a steal by Rizzotti turned into a layup the Tennessee nine point lead was down to a single point prompting coach Summitt to call for a time out Jamelle Elliott tied the game with just over two minutes left then Rizzotti made a play which would be talked about for years afterward She grabbed a rebound then drove the length of the court against Michelle M Marciniak Just before reaching the basket she executed a cross over dribble and sank a left handed layup to take a lead that would never be relinquished UConn won the game 70 64 completing the first undefeated season in NCAA history since the 1986 Texas team and winning the first national championship for the Connecticut Huskies team 7 Tournament records EditFree Throws Connecticut made 34 free throws in the semi final game against Stanford setting the record for most free throws completed in a Final Four Most points Alabama scored 121 points in a four overtime game against Duke setting the record for most points scored in an NCAA tournament game The 120 pins scored by Duke is the second most scored in an NCAA tournament game and the most in a losing effort Field goals attempted Alabama attempted 114 fields goals in the game against Duke setting the record for most field goals attempted in an NCAA tournament game Most overtimes Alabama and Duke played in a four overtime game the most overtimes in an NCAA tournament game 8 Qualifying teams automatic EditSixty four teams were selected to participate in the 1995 NCAA Tournament Thirty two conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 1995 NCAA Tournament 8 Automatic Bids Record Qualifying School Conference Regular Season Conference SeedUniversity of Colorado at Boulder Big Eight 27 2 14 0 1University of Connecticut Big East 29 0 18 0 1Dartmouth College Ivy League 16 10 12 2 14Drake University Missouri Valley Conference 24 5 13 5 5Florida International University Trans America 26 4 15 1 9Florida A amp M MEAC 24 5 14 2 16Furman University Southern Conference 18 11 10 4 15The George Washington University Atlantic 10 24 5 14 2 4College of the Holy Cross Patriot League 21 8 12 2 16Jackson State University SWAC 22 5 12 2 15Loyola University Maryland MAAC 20 8 7 6 10University of Maine North Atlantic Conference 24 5 14 2 16Marquette University Great Midwest 19 11 9 3 10University of Montana Big Sky Conference 25 6 12 2 12Mount St Mary s University Northeast Conference 24 5 17 1 13University of North Carolina ACC 28 4 12 4 3Northern Illinois University Midwestern Collegiate 17 13 10 6 16Old Dominion University Colonial 27 5 13 1 8Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 25 4 13 3 2Radford University Big South Conference 16 13 11 5 11University of San Francisco West Coast Conference 24 4 13 1 11University of Southern Mississippi Metro 21 8 7 5 7Stanford University Pac 10 26 2 17 1 2Stephen F Austin State University Southland 22 7 15 3 11Tennessee State University Ohio Valley Conference 22 6 12 4 12Texas Tech University Southwest 30 3 13 1 2University of Toledo MAC 24 6 15 3 13University of California Irvine Big West Conference 19 10 12 6 15University of Utah WAC 23 6 12 2 8Vanderbilt University SEC 26 6 8 3 1Western Illinois University Mid Continent 17 11 14 4 14Western Kentucky University Sun Belt Conference 26 3 12 2 4Qualifying teams at large EditThirty two additional teams were selected to complete the six four invitations 8 At large Bids Record Qualifying School Conference Regular Season Conference SeedUniversity of Alabama Southeastern 20 8 7 4 4University of Arkansas Southeastern 22 6 7 4 6DePaul University Great Midwest 20 8 9 3 13Duke University Atlantic Coast 21 8 10 6 5University of Florida Southeastern 23 8 7 4 6University of Georgia Southeastern 24 4 8 3 3Indiana University Big Ten 19 9 8 8 14University of Kansas Big Eight 20 10 8 6 7Louisiana Tech University Sun Belt 26 4 13 1 2University of Louisville Metro 24 7 7 5 11University of Memphis Great Midwest 21 7 10 2 8University of Mississippi Ole Miss Southeastern 21 7 6 5 12Missouri State University Missouri Valley 20 11 14 4 9North Carolina State University Atlantic Coast 19 9 11 5 7Ohio University Mid American 23 6 15 3 14University of Oklahoma Big Eight 21 8 11 3 7Oklahoma State University Stillwater Big Eight 17 11 7 7 12University of Oregon Pacific 10 18 9 11 7 6Oregon State University Pacific 10 20 7 12 6 5University of Portland West Coast 23 6 12 2 13Purdue University Big Ten 21 7 13 3 4San Diego State University Western Athletic 24 5 14 0 5Seton Hall University Big East 23 8 12 6 6Southern Methodist University Southwest 20 9 9 5 10University of Southern California Pacific 10 18 9 10 8 9Saint Joseph s University Atlantic 10 20 8 11 5 9University of Tennessee Southeastern 29 2 11 0 1Tulane University Metro 19 9 9 3 15University of Virginia Atlantic Coast 24 4 16 0 3Virginia Tech Metro 21 8 10 2 8University of Washington Pacific 10 23 8 13 5 3University of Wisconsin Madison Big Ten 19 8 11 5 10Bids by conference EditThirty two conferences earned an automatic bid In seventeen cases the automatic bid was the only representative from the conference Thirty two additional at large teams were selected from fifteen of the conferences 8 Bids Conference Teams7 Southeastern Vanderbilt Alabama Arkansas Florida Georgia Ole Miss Tennessee5 Pacific 10 Stanford Oregon Oregon St Southern California Washington4 Big Eight Colorado Kansas Oklahoma Oklahoma St 4 Big Ten Penn St Indiana Purdue Wisconsin4 Metro Southern Miss Louisville Tulane Virginia Tech4 Atlantic Coast North Carolina Duke North Carolina St Virginia3 Great Midwest Marquette DePaul Memphis3 Sun Belt FIU Western Ky Louisiana Tech2 Atlantic 10 George Washington St Joseph s2 Big East Connecticut Seton Hall2 Mid American Toledo Ohio2 Missouri Valley Drake Missouri St 2 Southwest Texas Tech SMU2 West Coast San Francisco Portland2 Western Athletic Utah San Diego St 1 Big Sky Montana1 Big South Radford1 Big West UC Irvine1 Colonial Old Dominion1 Ivy Dartmouth1 Metro Atlantic Loyola Md1 Mid Continent Western Illinois 1 Mid Eastern Florida A amp M1 Midwestern Collegiate Northern Illinois1 North Atlantic Maine1 Northeast Mt St Mary s1 Ohio Valley Tennessee St 1 Patriot Holy Cross1 Southern Furman1 Southland Stephen F Austin1 Southwestern Jackson St First and second rounds Edit Charlottesville Storrs Tuscaloosa Ruston Bowling Green Seattle Knoxville Lubbock Athens University Park Boulder Washington Chapel Hill Nashville Stanford San Diegoclass notpageimage 1995 NCAA first and second round venues In 1995 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 9 Fourth seeded Purdue was eligible to host but unable to so fifth seeded San Diego State hosted three first and second round gamesThe following table lists the region host school venue and the sixteen first and second round locations Region Rnd Host Venue City StateEast 1 amp 2 University of Virginia University Hall University of Virginia Charlottesville VirginiaEast 1 amp 2 University of Connecticut Harry A Gampel Pavilion Storrs ConnecticutEast 1 amp 2 University of Alabama Coleman Coliseum Tuscaloosa AlabamaEast 1 amp 2 Louisiana Tech University Thomas Assembly Center Ruston LouisianaMideast 1 amp 2 Western Kentucky University E A Diddle Arena Bowling Green KentuckyMideast 1 amp 2 University of Washington Hec Edmundson Pavilion Seattle WashingtonMideast 1 amp 2 University of Tennessee Thompson Boling Arena Knoxville TennesseeMideast 1 amp 2 Texas Tech University Lubbock Municipal Coliseum Lubbock TexasMidwest 1 amp 2 University of Georgia Georgia Coliseum Stegeman Coliseum Athens GeorgiaMidwest 1 amp 2 Pennsylvania State University Recreation Building Rec Hall University Park PennsylvaniaMidwest 1 amp 2 University of Colorado CU Events Center Coors Events Center Boulder ColoradoMidwest 1 amp 2 George Washington University Charles E Smith Athletic Center Washington District of ColumbiaWest 1 amp 2 University of North Carolina Carmichael Auditorium Chapel Hill North CarolinaWest 1 amp 2 Vanderbilt University Memorial Gymnasium Vanderbilt University Nashville TennesseeWest 1 amp 2 Stanford University Maples Pavilion Stanford CaliforniaWest 1 amp 2 San Diego State Peterson Gym San Diego CaliforniaRegionals and Final Four Edit Storrs Knoxville Los Angeles Des Moines Minneapolisclass notpageimage 1995 NCAA regionals and Final Four The Regionals named for the general location were held from March 23 to March 25 at these sites East Regional Harry A Gampel Pavilion Storrs Connecticut Host University of Connecticut Mideast Regional Thompson Boling Arena Knoxville Tennessee Host University of Tennessee West Regional Pauley Pavilion Los Angeles California Host University of California Los Angeles Midwest Regional Knapp Center Des Moines Iowa Host Drake University Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held April 1 and April 2 in Minneapolis Minnesota at the Target Center Bids by state EditThe sixty four teams came from thirty three states plus Washington D C California had the most teams with five bids Seventeen states did not have any teams receiving bids 8 NCAA Women s basketball Tournament invitations by state 1995 Bids State Teams5 California San Francisco Stanford UC Irvine San Diego St Southern California4 Tennessee Tennessee St Vanderbilt Memphis Tennessee4 Virginia Old Dominion Radford Virginia Virginia Tech3 Florida FIU Florida A amp M Florida3 Mississippi Jackson St Southern Miss Ole Miss3 Oregon Oregon Oregon St Portland3 Texas Stephen F Austin Texas Tech SMU3 Illinois Northern Illinois Western Illinois DePaul3 North Carolina North Carolina Duke North Carolina St 2 Indiana Indiana Purdue2 Kentucky Western Ky Louisville2 Louisiana Louisiana Tech Tulane2 Maryland Loyola Md Mt St Mary s2 Ohio Toledo Ohio2 Oklahoma Oklahoma Oklahoma St 2 Pennsylvania Penn St St Joseph s2 Wisconsin Marquette Wisconsin1 Alabama Alabama1 Arkansas Arkansas1 Colorado Colorado1 Connecticut Connecticut1 District of Columbia George Washington1 Georgia Georgia1 Iowa Drake1 Kansas Kansas1 Maine Maine1 Massachusetts Holy Cross1 Missouri Missouri St 1 Montana Montana1 New Hampshire Dartmouth1 New Jersey Seton Hall1 South Carolina Furman1 Utah Utah1 Washington WashingtonBracket EditEast region Storrs Connecticut Edit First roundMarch 16 and 17Second roundMarch 18 and 19Regional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1Connecticut10516Maine751Connecticut91Storrs CT8Virginia Tech458Virginia Tech629St Joseph s521Connecticut874Alabama565Duke7612Oklahoma State645Duke120Tuscaloosa AL4Alabama121 4Alabama8213Mt St Mary s551Connecticut673Virginia636Florida8911Radford496Florida67Charlottesville VA3Virginia723Virginia7114Dartmouth683Virginia632Louisiana Tech627Oklahoma9010Loyola MD557Oklahoma36Ruston LA2Louisiana Tech482Louisiana Tech9015Furman52West region Los Angeles California Edit First roundMarch 16 and 17Second roundMarch 18 and 19Regional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1Vanderbilt9016Northern Illinois441Vanderbilt95Nashville TN8Memphis688Memphis749USC721Vanderbilt664Purdue675San Diego St 4612Montana5712Montana51San Diego CA4Purdue624Purdue7413Portland594Purdue582Stanford696Seton Hall7311Stephen F Austin636Seton Hall45Chapel Hill NC3North Carolina593North Carolina8914Western Illinois483North Carolina712Stanford817Southern Mississippi9510Southern Methodist96 10Southern Methodist73Stanford CA2Stanford952Stanford8815UC Irvine55Mideast region Knoxville Tennessee Edit First roundMarch 16 and 17Second roundMarch 18 and 19Regional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1Tennessee9616Florida A amp M591Tennessee70Knoxville TN9Florida International448Old Dominion769Florida International811Tennessee874Western Kentucky655Oregon State88 12Tennessee State755Oregon State78Bowling Green KY4Western Kentucky854Western Kentucky7713Toledo631Tennessee802Texas Tech596Arkansas6711San Francisco586Arkansas50Seattle WA3Washington543Washington7314Ohio563Washington522Texas Tech677Kansas7210Wisconsin7310Wisconsin65Lubbock Texas2Texas Tech882Texas Tech8715Tulane72Midwest region Des Moines Iowa Edit First roundMarch 16 and 17Second roundMarch 18 and 19Regional semifinalsMarch 23Regional finalsMarch 25 1Colorado8316Holy Cross491Colorado78Boulder CO9Southwest Missouri State348Utah479Southwest Missouri State491Colorado774George Washington615Drake87 12Ole Miss815Drake93Washington DC4George Washington96 4George Washington8713DePaul791Colorado793Georgia826Oregon6511Louisville6711Louisville68Athens GA3Georgia813Georgia8114Indiana643Georgia987North Carolina State797North Carolina State7710Marquette627North Carolina State76University Park PA2Penn State742Penn State7515Jackson State62Final Four Minneapolis Minnesota Edit National semifinalsApril 1National FinalsApril 2 1EConnecticut872WStanford601EConnecticut701METennessee641METennessee733MWGeorgia51 denotes number of overtime periodsRecord by conference EditSeventeen conferences had more than one bid or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play 8 Conference of Bids Record Win Round of 32 Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four Championship GameSoutheastern 7 15 7 682 6 4 2 2 1Pacific 10 5 7 5 583 3 2 1 1 Atlantic Coast 4 8 4 667 4 3 1 Big Ten 4 5 4 556 3 1 1 Big Eight 4 4 4 500 2 1 1 Metro 4 2 4 333 2 Great Midwest 3 1 3 250 1 Big East 2 7 1 875 2 1 1 1 1Southwest 2 4 2 667 2 1 1 Sun Belt 2 4 2 667 2 2 Atlantic 10 2 2 2 500 1 1 Missouri Valley 2 2 2 500 2 Mid American 2 0 2 West Coast 2 0 2 Western Athletic 2 0 2 Big Sky 1 1 1 500 1 Trans America 1 1 1 500 1 Fifteen conferences went 0 1 Big South Conference Big West Conference Colonial Ivy League MAAC Mid Continent MEAC Midwestern Collegiate North Atlantic Conference Northeast Conference Ohio Valley Conference Patriot League Southern Conference Southland and SWAC 8 All Tournament team EditRebecca Lobo Connecticut Jamelle Elliott Connecticut Jennifer Rizzotti Connecticut Kara Wolters Connecticut Nikki McCray Tennessee 8 Game officials EditSally Bell semifinal Art Bomengen semifinal Violet Palmer semifinal Sidney Bunch semifinal Dee Kantner final Larry Sheppard final 8 See also Edit1995 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 1995 NCAA Division II women s basketball tournament 1995 NCAA Division III women s basketball tournament 1995 NAIA Division I women s basketball tournament 1995 NAIA Division II women s basketball tournamentReferences Edit Gregory Cooper 1995 NCAA National Championship Tournament Archived from the original on 2009 10 20 Retrieved 2008 03 31 Wichman Dan March 20 1995 Game goes down as one of the best in basketball history Duke Chronicle Retrieved 16 Feb 2013 Alabama escapes Duke 121 120 in longest playoff game Lakeland Ledger March 20 1995 Retrieved 16 Feb 2013 VOEPEL MECHELLE March 24 1995 Confusion Cavs Reign Over La Tech Daily Press Retrieved 16 Feb 2013 Kent Milton April 2 1995 Tennessee overpowers Georgia 73 51 NCAA TOURNAMENT WOMEN S FINAL FOUR Baltimore Sun Retrieved 16 Feb 2013 Greenberg Mel April 2 1995 Uconn Shows Skeptics 87 60 Blowout Of Stanford Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved 16 Feb 2013 Murphy Austin April 10 1995 Storybook Ending Sports Illustrated Retrieved 16 Feb 2013 a b c d e f g h i Nixon Rick Official 2022 NCAA Women s Final Four Records Book PDF NCAA Retrieved 22 April 2012 Attendance and Sites PDF NCAA Retrieved 19 March 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1995 NCAA Division I women 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1136110959, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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