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2000 NCAA Division I women's basketball tournament

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]

2000 NCAA Division I
women's basketball tournament
Teams64
Finals siteWells Fargo Center
Philadelphia
ChampionsConnecticut Huskies (2nd title)
Runner-upTennessee Volunteers (9th title game)
Semifinalists
MOPShea Ralph (Connecticut)

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.[3]

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.[4]

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.[5]

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.[6][7][8][9]

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

  • Blocks – Kelly Schumacher, Connecticut, recorded nine blocks in the championship game against Tennessee, setting the record for blocks in a Final Four game.
  • Blocks – Connecticut recorded eleven blocks in the championship game against Tennessee, setting the record for blocks in a Final Four game.
  • Points – Connecticut scored 547 points in the tournament, setting the record for most points scored in an NCAA tournament.
  • Field goal percentage – Connecticut hit 203 of 363 field goal attempts(56.1%), setting the record for the field goal percentage in an NCAA tournament.
  • Steals – Connecticut recorded 81 steals in the tournament, setting the record for most steals in an NCAA tournament.[10]
  • Turnovers – Tennessee turned the ball over 26 times, a record for a championship game.[6]

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.[10]

Automatic Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
Alcorn State University SWAC 22–8 15–3 16
Campbell University Trans America 22–8 14–4 15
University of Connecticut Big East 30–1 16–0 1
Dartmouth College Ivy League 20–7 12–2 13
Drake University Missouri Valley Conference 23–6 15–3 8
Duke University ACC 26–5 12–4 2
Furman University Southern Conference 20–10 13–5 16
University of Wisconsin–Green Bay Horizon League 21–8 12–2 13
Hampton University MEAC 16–14 11–7 16
College of the Holy Cross Patriot League 23–6 11–1 15
Iowa State University Big 12 25–5 13–3 3
Kent State University MAC 25–5 15–1 9
Liberty University Big South Conference 23–7 12–2 14
Louisiana Tech University Sun Belt Conference 28–2 16–0 1
University of Montana Big Sky Conference 22–7 13–3 16
Old Dominion University Colonial 21–8 16–0 4
University of Oregon Pac-10 23–7 14–4 6
Purdue University Big Ten 22–7 11–5 4
Rice University WAC 21–9 10–4 13
University of San Diego West Coast Conference 17–12 7–7 15
St. Francis (PA) Northeast Conference 23–7 15–3 14
Saint Peter's College MAAC 23–7 14–4 14
Stephen F. Austin State University Southland 27–3 17–1 11
University of Tennessee SEC 28–3 13–1 1
Tennessee Technological University Ohio Valley Conference 25–8 16–2 14
Tulane University Conference USA 26–4 12–4 6
University of California, Santa Barbara Big West Conference 30–3 15–0 4
University of Vermont America East 25–5 15–3 11
Xavier University Atlantic 10 26–4 13–3 6
Youngstown State University Mid-Continent 22–8 12–4 15

Qualifying teams – at-large

Thirty-four additional teams were selected to complete the sixty-four invitations.[10]

At-large Bids
    Record  
Qualifying School Conference Regular
Season
Conference Seed
University of Arizona Pacific-10 24–6 13–5 8
Auburn University Southeastern 21–7 9–5 7
Boston College Big East 25–8 12–4 5
Brigham Young University Mountain West 22–8 10–4 12
Clemson University Atlantic Coast 18–11 9–7 9
The George Washington University Atlantic 10 25–5 14–2 7
University of Georgia Southeastern 29–3 13–1 1
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign Big Ten 22–10 11–5 6
University of Kansas Big 12 20–9 11–5 8
Louisiana State University Southeastern 22–6 11–3 3
University of Maine America East 20–10 14–4 12
Marquette University Conference USA 22–6 14–2 7
University of Michigan Big Ten 22–7 13–3 8
Mississippi State University Southeastern 23–7 8–6 3
Southwest Missouri State University Missouri Valley 23–8 14–4 10
University of Nebraska–Lincoln Big 12 18–12 10–6 12
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Atlantic Coast 18–12 8–8 5
North Carolina State University Atlantic Coast 20–8 11–5 5
University of Notre Dame Big East 25–4 15–1 2
University of Oklahoma Big 12 23–7 13–3 5
Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 26–4 15–1 2
Pepperdine University West Coast 21–9 12–2 13
Rutgers University Big East 22–7 12–4 2
Southern Methodist University Western Athletic 21–8 12–2 12
Saint Joseph's University Atlantic 10 24–5 14–2 10
Stanford University Pacific-10 20–8 13–5 9
University of Texas at Austin Big 12 21–12 9–7 7
Texas Tech University Big 12 25–4 13–3 3
University of Alabama at Birmingham Conference USA 19–12 8–8 11
University of California, Los Angeles Pacific-10 18–10 12–6 10
University of Utah Mountain West 23–7 11–3 11
Vanderbilt University Southeastern 20–12 6–8 9
University of Virginia Atlantic Coast 23–8 13–3 4
Western Kentucky University Sun Belt 21–9 13–3 10

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.[10]

Bids Conference Teams
6 Big 12 Iowa St., Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Texas Tech
6 Southeastern Tennessee, Auburn, Georgia, LSU, Mississippi St., Vanderbilt
5 Atlantic Coast Duke, Clemson, North Carolina, North Carolina St., Virginia
4 Big East Connecticut, Boston College, Notre Dame, Rutgers
4 Big Ten Purdue, Illinois, Michigan, Penn St.
4 Pacific-10 Oregon, Arizona, Stanford, UCLA
3 Atlantic 10 Xavier, George Washington, St. Joseph's
3 Conference USA Tulane, Marquette, UAB
2 America East Vermont, Maine
2 Missouri Valley Drake, Missouri St.
2 Mountain West BYU, Utah
2 Northeast St. Francis Pa., St. Peter's
2 Sun Belt Louisiana Tech, Western Kentucky
2 West Coast San Diego, Pepperdine
2 Western Athletic Rice, SMU
1 Big Sky Montana
1 Big South Liberty
1 Big West UC Santa Barb.
1 Colonial Old Dominion
1 Horizon Green Bay
1 Ivy Dartmouth
1 Mid-American Kent St.
1 Mid-Continent Youngstown St.
1 Mid-Eastern Hampton.
1 Ohio Valley Tennessee Tech
1 Patriot Holy Cross
1 Southern Furman
1 Southland Stephen F. Austin
1 Southwestern Alcorn St.
1 Trans America Campbell

First and second rounds

 
 
Baton Rouge
 
West Lafayette
 
Storrs
 
Durham, North Carolina
 
Notre Dame
 
Knoxville
 
Lubbock
 
Charlottesville
 
Norfolk
 
Ruston
 
Ames
 
University Park
 
Athens
 
Piscataway
 
Eugene
 
Santa Barbara
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2000 NCAA NCAA first and second round 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:

  • Third seeded Mississippi State was unable to host, so sixth-seeded Oregon hosted three first- and second-round games

The following table lists the region, host school, venue and the sixteen first- and second-round locations:[11]

Region Rnd Host Venue City State
East 1&2 Louisiana State University LSU Assembly Center (Pete Maravich Assembly Center) Baton Rouge Louisiana
East 1&2 Purdue University Mackey Arena West Lafayette Indiana
East 1&2 University of Connecticut Harry A. Gampel Pavilion Storrs Connecticut
East 1&2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North Carolina
Mideast 1&2 University of Notre Dame Edmund P. Joyce Center Notre Dame Indiana
Mideast 1&2 University of Tennessee Thompson–Boling Arena Knoxville Tennessee
Mideast 1&2 Texas Tech University United Spirit Arena Lubbock Texas
Mideast 1&2 University of Virginia University Hall (University of Virginia) Charlottesville Virginia
Midwest 1&2 Old Dominion University Old Dominion University Fieldhouse Norfolk Virginia
Midwest 1&2 Louisiana Tech University Thomas Assembly Center Ruston Louisiana
Midwest 1&2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames Iowa
Midwest 1&2 Pennsylvania State University Bryce Jordan Center University Park Pennsylvania
West 1&2 University of Georgia Georgia Coliseum (Stegeman Coliseum) Athens Georgia
West 1&2 Rutgers University Louis Brown Athletic Center Piscataway New Jersey
West 1&2 University of Oregon McArthur Court Eugene Oregon
West 1&2 University of California, Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Events Center Santa Barbara California

Regionals and Final Four

 
 
Richmond
 
Memphis
 
Kansas City
 
Portland
 
Philadelphia
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2000 NCAA regionals and Final Four

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 (Philadelphia) (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.[10]

 
NCAA Women's basketball Tournament invitations by state 2000
Bids State Teams
5 California San Diego, UC Santa Barb., Pepperdine, Stanford, UCLA
5 Texas Rice, Stephen F. Austin, SMU, Texas, Texas Tech
4 North Carolina Campbell, Duke, North Carolina, North Carolina St.
4 Virginia Hampton., Liberty, Old Dominion, Virginia
3 Louisiana Louisiana Tech, Tulane, LSU
3 Ohio Kent St., Xavier, Youngstown St.
3 Tennessee Tennessee, Tennessee Tech, Vanderbilt
2 Alabama Auburn, UAB
2 Indiana Purdue, Notre Dame
2 Iowa Drake, Iowa St.
2 Massachusetts Holy Cross, Boston College
2 Mississippi Alcorn St., Mississippi St.
2 New Jersey St. Peter's, Rutgers
3 Pennsylvania Penn St., St. Joseph's, St Francis
2 South Carolina Furman, Clemson
2 Utah BYU, Utah
2 Wisconsin Green Bay, Marquette
1 Arizona Arizona
1 Connecticut Connecticut
1 District of Columbia George Washington
1 Georgia Georgia
1 Illinois Illinois
1 Kansas Kansas
1 Kentucky Western Kỳ.
1 Maine Maine
1 Michigan Michigan
1 Missouri Missouri St.
1 Montana Montana
1 Nebraska Nebraska
1 New Hampshire Dartmouth
1 Oklahoma Oklahoma
1 Oregon Oregon
1 Vermont Vermont

Brackets

Data source[12]

* – Denotes overtime period

East regional – Richmond, Virginia

First round
March 17–18
Second round
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
March 25
Regional finals
March 27
            
1 at Connecticut 116
16 Hampton 45
1 Connecticut 83
9 Clemson 45
8 Drake 50
9 Clemson 64
1 Connecticut 102
5 Oklahoma 80
5 Oklahoma 86
12 BYU 81
5 Oklahoma 76
4 Purdue 74
4 at Purdue 70
13 Dartmouth 66
1 Connecticut 86
3 LSU 71
6 Xavier 72
11 Stephen F. Austin 73
11 Stephen F. Austin 45
3 LSU 57
3 at LSU 77
14 Liberty 54
3 LSU 79
2 Duke 66
7 Marquette 65
10 Western Kentucky 68
10 Western Kentucky 70
2 Duke 90
2 at Duke 71
15 Campbell 42

Midwest regional – Kansas City, Missouri

First round
March 17–18
Second round
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
March 25
Regional finals
March 27
            
1 at Louisiana Tech 95
16 Alcorn State 53
1 Louisiana Tech 66
9 Vanderbilt 65
8 Kansas 69
9 Vanderbilt 71**
1 Louisiana Tech 86
4 Old Dominion 74
5 North Carolina State 63
12 Southern Methodist 64
12 Southern Methodist 76
4 Old Dominion 96
4 at Old Dominion 94
13 Green Bay 85
1 Louisiana Tech 65
2 Penn State 86
6 Illinois 73
11 Utah 58
6 Illinois 68
3 Iowa State 79
3 at Iowa State 92
14 St. Francis (PA) 63
3 Iowa State 65
2 Penn State 66
7 Auburn 78
10 Southwest Missouri State 74
7 Auburn 69
2 Penn State 75
2 at Penn State 83
15 Youngstown State 63

Mideast regional – Memphis, Tennessee

First round
March 17–18
Second round
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
March 25
Regional finals
March 27
            
1 at Tennessee 90
16 Furman 38
1 Tennessee 75
8 Arizona 60
8 Arizona 73
9 Kent St. 61
1 Tennessee 77
4 Virginia 56
5 Boston College 93
12 Nebraska 76
5 Boston College 70
4 Virginia 74
4 at Virginia 74
13 Pepperdine 62
1 Tennessee 57
3 Texas Tech 44
6 Tulane 65
11 Vermont 60
6 Tulane 59
3 Texas Tech 76
3 at Texas Tech 83
14 Tennessee Tech 54
3 Texas Tech 69
2 Notre Dame 65
7 George Washington 79
10 UCLA 72
7 George Washington 60
2 Notre Dame 95
2 at Notre Dame 87
15 San Diego 61

West regional – Portland, Oregon

First round
March 17–18
Second round
March 19–20
Regional semifinals
March 25
Regional finals
March 27
            
1 at Georgia 74
16 Montana 46
1 Georgia 83
9 Stanford 64
8 Michigan 74
9 Stanford 81*
1 Georgia 83
5 North Carolina 57
5 North Carolina 62
12 Maine 57
5 North Carolina 83
13 Rice 50
4 at UC Santa Barbara 64
13 Rice 67
1 Georgia 51
2 Rutgers 59
6 at Oregon 79
11 UAB 80*
11 UAB 78
3 Mississippi St. 72
3 Mississippi St. 94
14 St. Peter's 60
11 UAB 45
2 Rutgers 60
7 Texas 48
10 St. Joseph's 69
10 St. Joseph's 39
2 Rutgers 59
2 at Rutgers 91
15 Holy Cross 70

Final Four – Philadelphia

National semifinals
March 31
National championship
April 2
      
E1 Connecticut 89
MW2 Penn St. 67
E1 Connecticut 71
ME1 Tennessee 52
ME1 Tennessee 64
W2 Rutgers 54

Record by conference

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

Conference # of Bids Record Win % Round
of 32
Sweet
Sixteen
Elite
Eight
Final
Four
Championship
Game
Southeastern 6 14–6 .700 6 3 3 1 1
Big 12 6 7–6 .538 3 3 1
Atlantic Coast 5 7–5 .583 4 3
Big East 4 13–3 .813 4 3 2 2 1
Big Ten 4 6–4 .600 3 1 1 1
Pacific-10 4 2–4 .333 2
Conference USA 3 3–3 .500 2 1
Atlantic 10 3 2–3 .400 2
Sun Belt 2 4–2 .667 2 1 1
Western Athletic 2 2–2 .500 2
America East 2 0–2
Missouri Valley 2 0–2
Mountain West 2 0–2
Northeast 2 0–2
West Coast 2 0–2
Colonial 1 2–1 .667 1 1
Southland 1 1–1 .500 1

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

  • Scott Yarbrough (semifinal)
  • Ron Dressander (semifinal)
  • Carla Fujimoto (semifinal)
  • Bob Trammel (semifinal)
  • Wesley Dean (semifinal)
  • Bob Trammel (semifinal)
  • Sally Bell (final)
  • Dennis DeMayo (final)
  • Art Bomengen (final) [10]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Gregory Cooper. . Archived from the original on October 20, 2009. Retrieved April 16, 2007.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on January 25, 2008. Retrieved April 16, 2007.
  3. ^ Hirsley, Michael (April 1, 2000). "Catchings Rebounds In Every Way For Tennessee Women". Chicage Tribune. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  4. ^ GUSTKEY, EARL (April 1, 2000). "Connecticut Bullies Past Penn State, 89-67". LA Times. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  5. ^ ROBBINS, LIZ (April 2, 2000). "N.C.A.A. BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT; UConn-Tennessee: Game 3 Today Is What Counts". New York Times. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  6. ^ a b GUSTKEY, EARL (April 3, 2000). "Connecticut Women Rule". LA Times. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  7. ^ "Best ever?". CNN SI. April 3, 2000. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  8. ^ "Connecticut 71, Tennessee 52". CNN SI. April 3, 2000. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  9. ^ Shipley, Amy (April 3, 2000). "In Title Roll, Connecticut Routs Tennessee, 71-52". Washington Post. Retrieved May 27, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Nixon, Rick. "Official 2022 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved April 22, 2012.
  11. ^ "Attendance and Sites" (PDF). NCAA. Retrieved March 19, 2012.
  12. ^ "Official 2012 NCAA Women's Final Four Records Book". NCAA. February 2012. Retrieved April 17, 2012.

2000, ncaa, division, women, basketball, tournament, began, march, ended, april, tournament, featured, teams, final, four, consisted, connecticut, penn, tennessee, rutgers, with, connecticut, defeating, tennessee, second, ncaa, title, connecticut, shea, ralph,. 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 2000 NCAA Division Iwomen s basketball tournamentTeams64Finals siteWells Fargo CenterPhiladelphiaChampionsConnecticut Huskies 2nd title Runner upTennessee Volunteers 9th title game SemifinalistsPenn State Nittany Lions 1st Final Four Rutgers Scarlet Knights 1st Final Four MOPShea Ralph Connecticut NCAA Division I women s tournaments 1999 2001 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 Brackets 9 1 East regional Richmond Virginia 9 2 Midwest regional Kansas City Missouri 9 3 Mideast regional Memphis Tennessee 9 4 West regional Portland Oregon 9 5 Final Four Philadelphia 10 Record by conference 11 All Tournament team 12 Game officials 13 See also 14 NotesNotable events EditTwo 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 3 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 4 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 5 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 6 7 8 9 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 EditBlocks Kelly Schumacher Connecticut recorded nine blocks in the championship game against Tennessee setting the record for blocks in a Final Four game Blocks Connecticut recorded eleven blocks in the championship game against Tennessee setting the record for blocks in a Final Four game Points Connecticut scored 547 points in the tournament setting the record for most points scored in an NCAA tournament Field goal percentage Connecticut hit 203 of 363 field goal attempts 56 1 setting the record for the field goal percentage in an NCAA tournament Steals Connecticut recorded 81 steals in the tournament setting the record for most steals in an NCAA tournament 10 Turnovers Tennessee turned the ball over 26 times a record for a championship game 6 Qualifying teams automatic EditSixty four teams were selected to participate in the 2000 NCAA Tournament Thirty conferences were eligible for an automatic bid to the 2000 NCAA tournament 10 Automatic Bids Record Qualifying School Conference Regular Season Conference SeedAlcorn State University SWAC 22 8 15 3 16Campbell University Trans America 22 8 14 4 15University of Connecticut Big East 30 1 16 0 1Dartmouth College Ivy League 20 7 12 2 13Drake University Missouri Valley Conference 23 6 15 3 8Duke University ACC 26 5 12 4 2Furman University Southern Conference 20 10 13 5 16University of Wisconsin Green Bay Horizon League 21 8 12 2 13Hampton University MEAC 16 14 11 7 16College of the Holy Cross Patriot League 23 6 11 1 15Iowa State University Big 12 25 5 13 3 3Kent State University MAC 25 5 15 1 9Liberty University Big South Conference 23 7 12 2 14Louisiana Tech University Sun Belt Conference 28 2 16 0 1University of Montana Big Sky Conference 22 7 13 3 16Old Dominion University Colonial 21 8 16 0 4University of Oregon Pac 10 23 7 14 4 6Purdue University Big Ten 22 7 11 5 4Rice University WAC 21 9 10 4 13University of San Diego West Coast Conference 17 12 7 7 15St Francis PA Northeast Conference 23 7 15 3 14Saint Peter s College MAAC 23 7 14 4 14Stephen F Austin State University Southland 27 3 17 1 11University of Tennessee SEC 28 3 13 1 1Tennessee Technological University Ohio Valley Conference 25 8 16 2 14Tulane University Conference USA 26 4 12 4 6University of California Santa Barbara Big West Conference 30 3 15 0 4University of Vermont America East 25 5 15 3 11Xavier University Atlantic 10 26 4 13 3 6Youngstown State University Mid Continent 22 8 12 4 15Qualifying teams at large EditThirty four additional teams were selected to complete the sixty four invitations 10 At large Bids Record Qualifying School Conference Regular Season Conference SeedUniversity of Arizona Pacific 10 24 6 13 5 8Auburn University Southeastern 21 7 9 5 7Boston College Big East 25 8 12 4 5Brigham Young University Mountain West 22 8 10 4 12Clemson University Atlantic Coast 18 11 9 7 9The George Washington University Atlantic 10 25 5 14 2 7University of Georgia Southeastern 29 3 13 1 1University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Big Ten 22 10 11 5 6University of Kansas Big 12 20 9 11 5 8Louisiana State University Southeastern 22 6 11 3 3University of Maine America East 20 10 14 4 12Marquette University Conference USA 22 6 14 2 7University of Michigan Big Ten 22 7 13 3 8Mississippi State University Southeastern 23 7 8 6 3Southwest Missouri State University Missouri Valley 23 8 14 4 10University of Nebraska Lincoln Big 12 18 12 10 6 12University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Atlantic Coast 18 12 8 8 5North Carolina State University Atlantic Coast 20 8 11 5 5University of Notre Dame Big East 25 4 15 1 2University of Oklahoma Big 12 23 7 13 3 5Pennsylvania State University Big Ten 26 4 15 1 2Pepperdine University West Coast 21 9 12 2 13Rutgers University Big East 22 7 12 4 2Southern Methodist University Western Athletic 21 8 12 2 12Saint Joseph s University Atlantic 10 24 5 14 2 10Stanford University Pacific 10 20 8 13 5 9University of Texas at Austin Big 12 21 12 9 7 7Texas Tech University Big 12 25 4 13 3 3University of Alabama at Birmingham Conference USA 19 12 8 8 11University of California Los Angeles Pacific 10 18 10 12 6 10University of Utah Mountain West 23 7 11 3 11Vanderbilt University Southeastern 20 12 6 8 9University of Virginia Atlantic Coast 23 8 13 3 4Western Kentucky University Sun Belt 21 9 13 3 10Bids by conference EditThirty 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 10 Bids Conference Teams6 Big 12 Iowa St Kansas Nebraska Oklahoma Texas Texas Tech6 Southeastern Tennessee Auburn Georgia LSU Mississippi St Vanderbilt5 Atlantic Coast Duke Clemson North Carolina North Carolina St Virginia4 Big East Connecticut Boston College Notre Dame Rutgers4 Big Ten Purdue Illinois Michigan Penn St 4 Pacific 10 Oregon Arizona Stanford UCLA3 Atlantic 10 Xavier George Washington St Joseph s3 Conference USA Tulane Marquette UAB2 America East Vermont Maine2 Missouri Valley Drake Missouri St 2 Mountain West BYU Utah2 Northeast St Francis Pa St Peter s2 Sun Belt Louisiana Tech Western Kentucky2 West Coast San Diego Pepperdine2 Western Athletic Rice SMU1 Big Sky Montana1 Big South Liberty1 Big West UC Santa Barb 1 Colonial Old Dominion1 Horizon Green Bay1 Ivy Dartmouth1 Mid American Kent St 1 Mid Continent Youngstown St 1 Mid Eastern Hampton 1 Ohio Valley Tennessee Tech1 Patriot Holy Cross1 Southern Furman1 Southland Stephen F Austin1 Southwestern Alcorn St 1 Trans America CampbellFirst and second rounds Edit Baton Rouge West Lafayette Storrs Durham North Carolina Notre Dame Knoxville Lubbock Charlottesville Norfolk Ruston Ames University Park Athens Piscataway Eugene Santa Barbaraclass notpageimage 2000 NCAA NCAA first and second round 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 Third seeded Mississippi State was unable to host so sixth seeded Oregon hosted three first and second round gamesThe following table lists the region host school venue and the sixteen first and second round locations 11 Region Rnd Host Venue City StateEast 1 amp 2 Louisiana State University LSU Assembly Center Pete Maravich Assembly Center Baton Rouge LouisianaEast 1 amp 2 Purdue University Mackey Arena West Lafayette IndianaEast 1 amp 2 University of Connecticut Harry A Gampel Pavilion Storrs ConnecticutEast 1 amp 2 Duke University Cameron Indoor Stadium Durham North CarolinaMideast 1 amp 2 University of Notre Dame Edmund P Joyce Center Notre Dame IndianaMideast 1 amp 2 University of Tennessee Thompson Boling Arena Knoxville TennesseeMideast 1 amp 2 Texas Tech University United Spirit Arena Lubbock TexasMideast 1 amp 2 University of Virginia University Hall University of Virginia Charlottesville VirginiaMidwest 1 amp 2 Old Dominion University Old Dominion University Fieldhouse Norfolk VirginiaMidwest 1 amp 2 Louisiana Tech University Thomas Assembly Center Ruston LouisianaMidwest 1 amp 2 Iowa State University Hilton Coliseum Ames IowaMidwest 1 amp 2 Pennsylvania State University Bryce Jordan Center University Park PennsylvaniaWest 1 amp 2 University of Georgia Georgia Coliseum Stegeman Coliseum Athens GeorgiaWest 1 amp 2 Rutgers University Louis Brown Athletic Center Piscataway New JerseyWest 1 amp 2 University of Oregon McArthur Court Eugene OregonWest 1 amp 2 University of California Santa Barbara UC Santa Barbara Events Center Santa Barbara CaliforniaRegionals and Final Four Edit Richmond Memphis Kansas City Portland Philadelphiaclass notpageimage 2000 NCAA regionals and Final Four The Regionals named for the general location were held from March 25 to March 27 at these sites East Regional Stuart C Siegel Center Richmond Virginia Host Virginia Commonwealth University Mideast Regional Pyramid Arena Memphis Tennessee Host University of Memphis Midwest Regional Municipal Auditorium Kansas City Missouri Host University of Kansas West Regional Veterans Memorial Coliseum Portland Portland Oregon Host Portland State University Each regional winner advanced to the Final Four held March 31 and April 2 in Philadelphia at the Wells Fargo Center Philadelphia Co hosts St Joseph s University and University of Pennsylvania Bids by state EditThe 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 10 NCAA Women s basketball Tournament invitations by state 2000Bids State Teams5 California San Diego UC Santa Barb Pepperdine Stanford UCLA5 Texas Rice Stephen F Austin SMU Texas Texas Tech4 North Carolina Campbell Duke North Carolina North Carolina St 4 Virginia Hampton Liberty Old Dominion Virginia3 Louisiana Louisiana Tech Tulane LSU3 Ohio Kent St Xavier Youngstown St 3 Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee Tech Vanderbilt2 Alabama Auburn UAB2 Indiana Purdue Notre Dame2 Iowa Drake Iowa St 2 Massachusetts Holy Cross Boston College2 Mississippi Alcorn St Mississippi St 2 New Jersey St Peter s Rutgers3 Pennsylvania Penn St St Joseph s St Francis2 South Carolina Furman Clemson2 Utah BYU Utah2 Wisconsin Green Bay Marquette1 Arizona Arizona1 Connecticut Connecticut1 District of Columbia George Washington1 Georgia Georgia1 Illinois Illinois1 Kansas Kansas1 Kentucky Western Kỳ 1 Maine Maine1 Michigan Michigan1 Missouri Missouri St 1 Montana Montana1 Nebraska Nebraska1 New Hampshire Dartmouth1 Oklahoma Oklahoma1 Oregon Oregon1 Vermont VermontBrackets EditData source 12 Denotes overtime period East regional Richmond Virginia Edit First roundMarch 17 18Second roundMarch 19 20Regional semifinalsMarch 25Regional finalsMarch 27 1at Connecticut11616Hampton451Connecticut839Clemson458Drake509Clemson641Connecticut1025Oklahoma805Oklahoma8612BYU815Oklahoma764Purdue744at Purdue7013Dartmouth661Connecticut863LSU716Xavier7211Stephen F Austin7311Stephen F Austin453LSU573at LSU7714Liberty543LSU792Duke667Marquette6510Western Kentucky6810Western Kentucky702Duke902at Duke7115Campbell42Midwest regional Kansas City Missouri Edit First roundMarch 17 18Second roundMarch 19 20Regional semifinalsMarch 25Regional finalsMarch 27 1at Louisiana Tech9516Alcorn State531Louisiana Tech669Vanderbilt658Kansas699Vanderbilt71 1Louisiana Tech864Old Dominion745North Carolina State6312Southern Methodist6412Southern Methodist764Old Dominion964at Old Dominion9413Green Bay851Louisiana Tech652Penn State866Illinois7311Utah586Illinois683Iowa State793at Iowa State9214St Francis PA 633Iowa State652Penn State667Auburn7810Southwest Missouri State747Auburn692Penn State752at Penn State8315Youngstown State63Mideast regional Memphis Tennessee Edit First roundMarch 17 18Second roundMarch 19 20Regional semifinalsMarch 25Regional finalsMarch 27 1at Tennessee9016Furman381Tennessee758Arizona608Arizona739Kent St 611Tennessee774Virginia565Boston College9312Nebraska765Boston College704Virginia744at Virginia7413Pepperdine621Tennessee573Texas Tech446Tulane6511Vermont606Tulane593Texas Tech763at Texas Tech8314Tennessee Tech543Texas Tech692Notre Dame657George Washington7910UCLA727George Washington602Notre Dame952at Notre Dame8715San Diego61West regional Portland Oregon Edit First roundMarch 17 18Second roundMarch 19 20Regional semifinalsMarch 25Regional finalsMarch 27 1at Georgia7416Montana461Georgia839Stanford648Michigan749Stanford81 1Georgia835North Carolina575North Carolina6212Maine575North Carolina8313Rice504at UC Santa Barbara6413Rice671Georgia512Rutgers596at Oregon7911UAB80 11UAB783Mississippi St 723Mississippi St 9414St Peter s6011UAB452Rutgers607Texas4810St Joseph s6910St Joseph s392Rutgers592at Rutgers9115Holy Cross70Final Four Philadelphia Edit National semifinalsMarch 31National championshipApril 2 E1Connecticut89MW2Penn St 67E1Connecticut71ME1Tennessee52ME1Tennessee64W2Rutgers54Record by conference EditSeventeen conferences had more than one bid or at least one win in NCAA Tournament play Conference of Bids Record Win Round of 32 Sweet Sixteen Elite Eight Final Four Championship GameSoutheastern 6 14 6 700 6 3 3 1 1Big 12 6 7 6 538 3 3 1 Atlantic Coast 5 7 5 583 4 3 Big East 4 13 3 813 4 3 2 2 1Big Ten 4 6 4 600 3 1 1 1 Pacific 10 4 2 4 333 2 Conference USA 3 3 3 500 2 1 Atlantic 10 3 2 3 400 2 Sun Belt 2 4 2 667 2 1 1 Western Athletic 2 2 2 500 2 America East 2 0 2 Missouri Valley 2 0 2 Mountain West 2 0 2 Northeast 2 0 2 West Coast 2 0 2 Colonial 1 2 1 667 1 1 Southland 1 1 1 500 1 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 AmericaAll Tournament team EditShea Ralph Connecticut Svetlana Abrosimova Connecticut Sue Bird Connecticut Asjha Jones Connecticut Tamika Catchings Tennessee 10 Game officials EditScott Yarbrough semifinal Ron Dressander semifinal Carla Fujimoto semifinal Bob Trammel semifinal Wesley Dean semifinal Bob Trammel semifinal Sally Bell final Dennis DeMayo final Art Bomengen final 10 See also Edit2000 NCAA Division I men s basketball tournament 2000 NCAA Division II women s basketball tournament 2000 NCAA Division III women s basketball tournament 2000 NAIA Division I women s basketball tournament 2000 NAIA Division II women s basketball tournamentNotes Edit Gregory Cooper 2000 NCAA National Championship Tournament Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Retrieved April 16 2007 CHN Basketball History Most Outstanding Player Archived from the original on January 25 2008 Retrieved April 16 2007 Hirsley Michael April 1 2000 Catchings Rebounds In Every Way For Tennessee Women Chicage Tribune Retrieved May 27 2013 GUSTKEY EARL April 1 2000 Connecticut Bullies Past Penn State 89 67 LA Times Retrieved May 27 2013 ROBBINS LIZ April 2 2000 N C A A BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT UConn Tennessee Game 3 Today Is What Counts New York Times Retrieved May 27 2013 a b GUSTKEY EARL April 3 2000 Connecticut Women Rule LA Times Retrieved May 27 2013 Best ever CNN SI April 3 2000 Retrieved May 27 2013 Connecticut 71 Tennessee 52 CNN SI April 3 2000 Retrieved May 27 2013 Shipley Amy April 3 2000 In Title Roll Connecticut Routs Tennessee 71 52 Washington Post Retrieved May 27 2013 a b c d e f g Nixon Rick Official 2022 NCAA Women s Final Four Records Book PDF NCAA Retrieved April 22 2012 Attendance and Sites PDF NCAA Retrieved March 19 2012 Official 2012 NCAA Women s Final Four Records Book NCAA February 2012 Retrieved April 17 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2000 NCAA Division I women 27s basketball tournament amp oldid 1171293056, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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